The challenge
Verusen had built genuinely differentiated AI for materials intelligence — the kind of capability that should win on merit in MRO inventory optimization. The problem was visibility. When buyers and analysts searched the terms that drove the category, they found IBM's Maximo, not Verusen. Competing for attention against an incumbent with that much brand gravity is a losing game if you fight it on the incumbent's terms; the challenger has to own the language of the category, not echo it.
The approach
Innovation Park repositioned the brand around the specific, high-intent vocabulary the most valuable buyers actually used, then rebuilt the search authority to back that positioning — aligning the message, the content, and the signals that determine who ranks for the terms that convert. The goal wasn't generic traffic; it was to own the handful of terms where a buyer is closest to a decision, and to make Verusen the answer that appears there.
The result
Verusen outranked IBM (Maximo) on the highest-value MRO inventory-optimization terms — the challenger above the incumbent precisely where it mattered most to pipeline. The repositioning gave a ~$15M-revenue company the category visibility of a much larger one, and it did so during a period that included a $25M Series B.

