You have probably heard about the three rules of real estate - location, location, location.
Well, the same principle applies to strategic marketing, and the three rules are positioning,
positioning, positioning.
It doesn’t matter if you’re running a consumer brand or a business-to-business product or
service, how you position the brand or business within the marketplace is the cornerstone of
strategic marketing. Internally, this positioning strategy should be formally articulated with
a positioning statement.
What should a great positioning statement include?
1. Target
The single most important element of a great positioning is a clearly defined customer target.
This decision should drive everything your business does. Because it is not effective or
efficient to try and reach out to every possible customer, a clearly defined target allows you
to focus your resources. This is especially true for your marketing and sales efforts, but it
also impacts the trailing functions, such as manufacturing and R&D. A common mistake is to try
to be everything to everyone, making your brand or business confusing in the eyes of the customer.
A clearly defined target ties to your overall business strategy as well. (See my article called
“Sure You Have a Vision For Your Company, but What Will Your Staff Do on Monday Morning?”) In
this article I illustrate the importance of segmenting the market to better understand which
market segments or target markets to pursue.
2. Frame of Reference
Frame of reference simply describes what type of product or service you offer relative to the
marketplace. It gives the targeted customer a reference point, such as financial services,
manufacturer of injection-molded parts, or breakfast cereal.
3. Benefit
The next element is the benefit your product or service is to the targeted customer. What need
are you filling for the customer with your product or service? This could also include the needs
of prospective customers that are currently not being met. Many companies sell the wrong thing.
They articulate how great their product or service is in the company’s terms, but not answer the
ultimate question by the customer, “What’s in it for me?” You see this particularly in a
business-to-business market where the manufacturer is selling the “widget” itself, and not what
the widget does for the customer. This might be increasing the customer’s productivity or help
the customer sell more to their customers.
4. Point of Difference
The final element, which is probably the second most important element and which is often
missing, is the point of difference. How your brand or business uniquely serves the customer’s
need is your point of difference. In general, it is the proof or support for the benefit.
Recently, Schick surprised the men’s shaving market, especially Gillette, when it provided a
better shave for men with four blades instead of Gillette’s three. You could also provide a
similar product while providing more service than your competitor. If all is equal, the customer
will just go to price, so develop a way to differentiate your product or service from the
competition.
What I have described in this brief article is only the framework for the positioning. Therefore
this might appear simple, but if done right, formalizing the positioning will take time and
strategic thought and may involve conducting research on the market or your customers. However,
this hard effort will pay huge dividends in providing the strategic direction your brand or
business needs to be competitive.
Source: Ed Lahue, President and Sr. Consultant of The ELM Group (www.elmgrp.com) Ed Lahue is an
accomplished business professional with over 20 years experience in identifying new growth
opportunities for his clients. He has successfully marketed several brand name consumer
products as well as developed winning business strategies for major businesses and industry.
http://www.insideindianabusiness.com/contributors.asp?ID=486
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