5C Strategy

Built for the decision
before design.

Digital strategy fails when teams skip the foundation. 5C maps the competitive landscape, the real needs of each audience, and where the strategic opportunity sits.

Overview

Strategy that sees the whole board.

Most digital teams have the data. They often have a baseline strategy. What’s harder to see from inside is the depth and breadth of what’s actually shaping decisions in your specific market.

5C maps five forces that internal teams rarely see in full: the company, the customer, the competition, the collaborators, and the context. Together they reveal what is actually shaping decisions in your specific market and where the real leverage is.

That brief becomes the foundation for everything that follows: I3R Evaluation, Design Foundry, and the full ASAP engagement. It defines what the asset is really competing against, what it needs to achieve, and what the research needs to find out.

01ASAP Foundation — Every ASAP engagement starts here.
025C Full Strategic Lens — Five forces. One brief. Built for your specific situation.
03AI Accelerated Synthesis — Faster landscape coverage. Sharper strategic judgment.
What 5C Strategy Does

Five forces. One strategic brief.

A website, app, or digital platform does not sit in a vacuum. It competes for attention and trust in a context that keeps shifting. 5C Strategy maps that context before anything is evaluated or changed.

01.

Company

What the brand can credibly own, communicate, and deliver. Capabilities, strengths, and limitations that should shape the digital experience.

02.

Customer

The moments where confidence is built or lost. What users need to understand, trust, and decide and the specific points in their journey where the digital experience either earns or loses them.

03.

Competition

What the asset is actually competing against. Direct competition, category norms, best-in-class digital experiences, and indirect alternatives that set user expectations.

04.

Collaborators

The people and platforms that shape what a digital experience can deliver. Partners, internal stakeholders, technology platforms, and ecosystem dependencies that define what is possible and what must be accounted for.

05.

Context

The market forces, vertical dynamics, platform shifts, regulatory considerations, and cultural expectations that frame the opportunity.

The output is a focused strategic brief built around the specific project goal, asset type, vertical, and competitive situation.
Why Weblab’s 5C Is Different

AI helps us cover the landscape. Our strategists decide what’s worth acting on.

There is no shortage of competitive data. Search results, review platforms, analyst reports, analytics tools. The information exists. The problem has always been turning it into something a team can act on.

Weblab uses AI to gather and organize evidence across the five forces. Our strategists handle the part that requires judgment: connecting the patterns, identifying the specific competitive pressures and audience dynamics that actually shift decisions, and writing a brief built around the client’s situation, not a generic framework.

  • A hospital website does not compete like an ecommerce platform.
  • A destination site does not work like a financial services app.
  • A corporate portal does not follow the same rules as a B2C product site.

Generic strategy frameworks produce generic direction. Weblab’s 5C is built around the vertical, the platform, the user situation, and the competitive dynamic. The brief it produces is specific to the problem, not to the methodology.

Broad Evidence

AI covers the landscape. Fast, comprehensive, and across all five forces.

Vertical Intelligence

Every brief is built around your industry and audience, not a generic template.

Platform Awareness

Channel, technology, and UX context mapped before anything is recommended.

Focused Interpretation

Strategists decide what the evidence means and what to do about it.

Case Study

When traffic isn’t the problem.

The data said something was wrong. It couldn’t say what.

Millionsof annual visitors
Under 1%Primary CTA conversion
Nearly allleaving without engaging

What Weblab Did

Rather than starting with the data, Weblab started with strategy — running a 5C analysis tailored to this platform, audience, and competitive moment.

What It Found

  • The site was built for one visitor type at one stage of their journey; others had to search for a path.
  • Multiple high-value audience segments were arriving, not finding value and leaving.
  • The competitive landscape was shifting in ways internal analytics had no visibility into.
  • The conversion focus was potentially working against the brand, not for it.

What Came Out

Ten platform-specific research propositions — the precise questions that gave the entire engagement its strategic direction.

The Point

A 5C engagement isn’t a competitive scan. It reframes what the digital asset is actually doing, who it’s doing it for, and where the real strategic leverage is. Every research decision, design direction, and optimization that follows depends on getting that foundation right.

What You Get

A strategic brief that changes what gets built.

The 5C brief does more than describe the competitive environment. It defines the strategic problem precisely enough that every research question, design direction, and prototype that follows is built around solving the right thing.

Strategic problem definition
Customer needs and decision-context analysis
Collaborator and ecosystem view
Evaluation priorities for I3R
Company and brand opportunity map
Competitive and category landscape
Platform and vertical implications
Direction for Design Foundry and prototyping
Get Started

Request a
5C Strategy Engagement.

Available as a standalone engagement or as Stage 1 of a full ASAP platform engagement. The best digital decisions start with the clearest strategic foundation — and that is what 5C delivers.

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