Positioning
Positioning
Positioning
Preview of positioning
In marketing, positioning has come to mean the process by which marketers try to create an image or identity in the minds of
their target market for its product, brand, or organization. It is the 'relative competitive comparison' their product occupies in a
given market as perceived by the target market.
Re-positioning involves changing the identity of a product, relative to the identity of competing products, in the collective
minds of the target market.
De-positioning involves attempting to change the identity of competing products, relative to the identity of your own product,
in the collective minds of the target market.
The original work on Positioning was consumer marketing oriented, and was not as much focused on the question relative to
competitive products as much as it was focused on cutting through the ambient "noise" and establishing a moment of real
contact with the intended recipient. In the classic example of Avis claiming "No.2, We Try Harder", the point was to say
something so shocking (it was by the standards of the day) that it cleared space in your brain and made you forget all about
who was #1, and not to make some philosophical point about being "hungry" for business.
The growth of high-tech marketing may have had much to do with the shift in definition towards competitive
positioning.Contents
Definitions
Although there are different definitions of Positioning, probably the most common is: "A product's position is how potential
buyers see the product", and is expressed relative to the position of competitors.
Positioning is a concept in marketing which was first popularized by Al Ries and Jack Trout in their bestseller book "
Positioning - a battle for your mind".
This differs slightly from the context in which the term was first published in 1969 by Jack Trout in the paper "Positioning" is a
game people play in today’s me-too market place" in the publication Industrial Marketing, in which the case is made that the
typical consumer is overwhelmed with unwanted advertising, and has a natural tendency to discard all information that does
not immediately find a comfortable (and empty) slot in the consumers mind. It was then expanded into their ground-breaking
first book, "Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind", in which they define Positioning as "an organized system for finding a
window in the mind. It is based on the concept that communication can only take place at the right time and under the right
circumstances." (p. 19 of 2001 paperback edition).
What most will agree on is that Positioning is something (perception) that happens in the minds of the target market. It is the
aggregate perception the market has of a particular company, product or service in relation to their perceptions of the
competitors in the same category. It will happen whether or not a company's management is proactive, reactive or passive
about the on-going process of evolving a position. But a company can positively influence the perceptions through enlightened
strategic actions.
The process is similar for positioning your company's services. Services, however, don't have the physical attributes of
products - that is, we can't feel them or touch them or show nice product pictures. So you need to ask first your customers and
then yourself, what value do clients get from my services? How are they better off from doing business with me? Also ask: is
there a characteristic that makes my services different?
Write out the value customers derive and the attributes your services offer to create the first draft of your positioning. Test it on
people who don't really know what you do or what you sell, watch their facial expressions and listen for their response. When
they want to know more because you've piqued their interest and started a conversation, you'll know you're on the right track.
Positioning concepts
Positioning is facilitated by a graphical technique called perceptual mapping, various survey techniques, and statistical
techniques like multi dimensional scaling, factor analysis, conjoint analysis, and logit analysis.
Repositioning a company
In volatile markets, it can be necessary - even urgent - to reposition an entire company, rather than just a product line or brand.
Take, for example, when Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley suddenly shifted from investment to commercial banks. The
expectations of investors, employees, clients and regulators all need to shift, and each company will need to influence how
these perceptions change. Doing so involves repositioning the entire firm.
This is especially true of small and medium-sized firms, many of which often lack strong brands for individual product lines.
In a prolonged recession, business approaches that were effective during healthy economies often become ineffective and it
becomes necessary to change a firm's positioning. Upscale restaurants, for example, which previously flourished on expense
account dinners and corporate events, may for the first time need to stress value as a sale tool.
Repositioning a company involves more than a marketing challenge. It involves making hard decisions about how a market is
shifting and how a firm's competitors will react. Often these decisions must be made without the benefit of sufficient
information, simply because the definition of "volatility" is that change becomes difficult or impossible to predict.