Effective brand positioning can be referred as the extent to which a brand is perceived as favorable, different and credible in consumers’ minds. This article will define brand positioning in simple terms and show you how to us it to create a powerful brand for your business.
If you’re a marketer or an entrepreneur, you’ve probably heard about the concept of brand positioning. But if you feel like this concept remains too abstract and unclear, then this article is for you! This article will define brand positioning in simple terms and show you how to use it to create a powerful brand for your business.
Brand positioning – a simple definition:
Brand positioning has been defined by Kotler as “the act of designing the company’s offering and image to occupy a distinctive place in the mind of the target market”. In other words, brand positioning describes how a brand is different from its competitors and where, or how, it sits in customers’ minds.
A brand positioning strategy, therefore, involves creating brand associations in customers’ minds to make them perceive the brand in a specific way.
Why is brand positioning important?
By shaping consumer preferences, brand positioning strategies are directly linked to consumer loyalty, consumer-based brand equity, and the willingness to purchase the brand. Effective brand positioning can be referred as the extent to which a brand is perceived as favorable, different and credible in consumers’ minds.
How to create a powerful brand position for your business (3 simple steps)
STEP 1: In order to create a unique and successful positioning for your brand, you need to analyze the following:
Understand what your consumers want
Understand what your company’s and brand capabilities are
Understand how each competitor is positioning their brand
STEP 2: Once you’ve done that, you will need to choose a positioning statement that:
Will resonate with your consumers
Can be delivered by your company (capabilities)
That is different from your competitors
An easy way to define a brand positioning statement is to summarize it in three words. For example, “vegan, traditional & feminine”. Try not to choose generic words such as “quality-products, unique, successful” because this is the aim of every brand.
STEP 3: The remaining challenge is to then reflect this brand positioning in everything that you do (visual identity design, packaging design, website design, communications, product, service, etc).
Example: Australian Yellow Tail Wines
A great example of a powerful brand positioning is the one of Australian Yellow Tail Wines. Their objective was to enter the US market and to be perceived very differently from the vast majority of wine brands, which all sell complicated products with sophisticated and hard-to-understand wine terminology. Yellow Tail focused their positioning strategy on being perceived as
“approachable, easy-to-choose, and fun”.
This is how they achieved this brand positioning:
The product: Yellow Tail developed a wine that is soft and sweet in taste and as approachable as beer and ready-to-drink cocktails. It resulted in an easy-drinking wine that did not require years of experience to develop an appreciation for it.
The name: A fun and adventurous name that represents the tail of a Kangaroo (as a reference to the Australian origins).
The visual identity: Designing a fun, colorful, and unintimidating packaging design without complicated enological terms.
The communication strategy: Focusing their communication on in-store activities with the brand ambassador that helped the product to be perceived as approachable and funny/down-to-earth ads.
The price: Offering a price of less than $10 to fit be perceived as “approachable” and being used at every festive occasion.
Did this article help you understand the meaning of brand positioning? Do you know other brands
that excelled at finding a great brand positioning?
References (academic sources): – Kotler, P., 2003. Marketing Management. 11th ed. Englewoods Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. – Fuchs, C. & Diamantopoulos, A., 2010. Evaluating the Effectiveness of Brand-Positioning Strategies from a Consumer Perspective. European Journal of Marketing, 44(11/12), pp. 1763-1786.
Article edited by Creative Instinct. Original article by Marion - The Branding Journal
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