SlideShare a Scribd company logo
What is Positioning Prepared by Rabie Soubra
What is positioning This is a theory presentation Intended to familiarize you with the concept and definition of positioning in a theoretical framework As a basic understanding of the fundamentals of positioning
Why is there positioning Simply because of choice We choose brands Before we buy products When you have chosen a brand, you already bought it in your mind
Why is there positioning Because of the nature of our business
Why is there positioning Marketers have brands and products to sell People have needs to fulfil Those two principles converge in the form of a transaction A  DECISION  BY THE TARGET GROUP TO ACTUALLY SPEND MONEY
Why is there positioning This decision is a behaviour And just like any behaviour It is based on a stimulus that the brain responds to in a specific manner This is called conditioning
Why is there positioning POSITIONING IS CONDITIONING.
“ Just give me one good reason to choose you over the competition.”  What your customer is telling you always
What Makes you: Different Better Special  Brand choice and product purchase fundamentals
Economics is based on supply and demand. Strategic marketing is based on different and better.
Positioning  -  The act of seeking, placing and optimizing something  in relationship to the competition and surrounding environment   From a marketers point of view
Definition of Positioning Theory:     The science of perceptual strategy.  It is based on a theory that strategy can only  be planned in the mind of the consumer Not the marketplace.    Laws and principles about how the mind  categorizes, ranks and files concepts in the directory  system of the mind govern this science.  In other words, it is study of how the mind indexes brands.  
Basically, positioning is a strategy game of “capture the concept.
Kit Kat, Mercedes, Apple, Lexus, Levi’s, Prada
Relativity Positioning is about relativity and understanding dynamics.  A common misconception is viewing positioning as a singular  position.  Take for instance a geographic position,  43 degree longitude by 36 degree latitude. Is it a good position?  It all depends on what surrounds the position.  A single position is meaningless until it is put into context of what surrounds it. 
Dynamics However, the environment is constantly changing  Which constantly changes the perception of the position.  You should always be aware of the environment in which you are competing
Dynamics product positioning, advertising positioning, image positioning,  brand positioning, perceptual positioning, market positioning,  competitive positioning, price positioning, channel positioning,  retail positioning, corporate positioning, political positioning,  real estate positioning, economic development positioning,  social positioning Positioning is not singular
Product positioning deals with reality.  It is straight comparison of product features.  New product development usually tries to create  product differentiation  Bigger, more improved, new look, same taste, more value, free 200 grams
Advertising Positioning is sometime confused with brand  management.  There are two main differences.  First, advertising exist in the media  and brands exist in the mind.  Advertising is only a part of how consumers form brand  perception. It is the main highway that people will take to  come to that brand It is through advertising that features are converted to benefits
Image positioning is an evolution of advertising  into total marketing communications.  An integrated marketing portrays a consistent image  over all mediums  Creating a complete identity (overall image)  The key to integration is contact point analysis IMC, the total is larger than the sum of the parts
Brand positioning deals with consistent transferring  of the brand image into the consumer's mind  creating brand perception.  Transferring a perfect image is very difficult because  external  interference clutters or warps the perception.     Why client servicing should also be creative
Perceptual positioning is about registering  the brand perception correctly in the mind's directory.  Perceptual mapping focuses on mapping the mind to figure out optimal positioning.  It works with what already exists in the consumers mind.  Importance of qualitative research
Market positioning is about trend analysis. It takes a macro view of the marketplace dealing with the macro  market forces (economic, political, competitive, distribution,  technology, geography, infrastructure, publics, culture and  demographics)  Winning brands are the ones that can best adapt.
Competitive positioning was born out of micro economics. It looks at how companies position themselves against  each other in the marketplace.  Sustainable competitive advantages are developed through  core competencies, patents and operational efficiencies.   Any of the P’s can be an advantage
Price positioning is about perceived value.  Price also becomes an indicator of value to many consumers.  They can easily tell your rank simply from the price.     Price strategy can work both ways
Channel positioning works by "owning" distribution  channels which creates barriers of entry to competitors.  Carefully selecting channels helps  create a powerful position.  The importance of retail audits
Retail positioning is about property values. The most important positioning decision in retail is location. Property values depends on the amount of traffic vs.  number of competitors. 
Corporate positioning deals with perception  of an entire company.  In many ways it is similar to product  positioning but the objective is to create  and transfer an image for an entire company. Stock value is heavily based on perceived value. 
Positioning model
What is positioning Positioning is a battle of concepts The objective is to find and then attach a brand and product  to a concept in the consumer’s mind.  A sample of various positioning concepts for toothpaste  would be Cavity fighter (Crest). Tartar, gum disease (Colgate),  Fresh breath (Close Up), White teeth (Pearl drop)
Companies battle over the best concepts (terrain) on which  to position their products. Ideally, the brand identity becomes its street reputation. Positioning strategy directly affects market share. Basically, positioning is a strategy game of “capture the concept”
What is the hourglass It is a macro vision of how all the processes and steps  are integrated and linked. From both ends To keep track of the concept development Let us see some examples
Category segmentation Categories can be clearly shown and compared In the category of bicycles, the various sub-categories Are segmented by  product use Durable Fast Racing Mountain Normal
Attribute ranking “The Terrain” The battle within a category is based on the attributes Of the product. In the category of toothpaste,  cavity fighter  is the Number 1 ranking attribute. Followed by  gum/tartar, fresh breath, white teeth Fresh Breath White Teeth Cavity Fighter Gum Disease
Finding a good Position The number of consumers wanting this position Is illustrated by the size of the triangle above the positioning line In the category of toothpaste, a great number of  people want cavity fighting Fresh Breath White Teeth Cavity Fighter Gum Disease Toothpaste
Fresh Breath White Teeth Cavity Fighter Gum Disease Toothpaste Start of Positioning: Names and Slogans Names and slogans can be developed using the category name and attributes. The name, Crest Toothpaste, categorizes the  product and the slogan No cavities
Family branding: Family brands are built on one concept or category. Kraft  has built both their brand mix and product mix  by focusing on  cheese. Each product reinforces the main concept of cheese Milk Brick Cheese Yoghurt Dairy Products Liquid Solid Sliced Cottage Kraft Kinds
Late Meals Early Meals Market Size Product Mix: Loss of Focus Kelloggs  means “Breakfast Cereals” to most people. When they changed it to “Makes morning better” They unfocused the concept Because  “breakfast”  expanded to  “mornings” And  “Cereals”  expanded to  “Cereals and snacks”   Breakfast Dinner Lunch Mid Morning Cereals Kelloggs
Product Mix: Loss of Focus (Line extensions) 7 UP  clearly stood for the Un-Cola concept When they extended their line to Gold, Cherry and Diet They diluted the original concept  Unhealthy Market Size Lemon-Lime Cola Fruit 7 UP Soft Drinks Healthy Diet Cherry Gold Diet
Terrain changes New categories emerge. Traditional  photo   processing  is being  replaced by  digital   imaging . How does a brand cope? Electronic Market Size 1998 Photo Processing Photo Images Chemical Digital Imaging Market Size 1998 Market Size 2010 Market Size 2010 Kodak Product mix? Brand
Change Market Size Original Cola Stability New Coca Cola Coke Classic The real thing New  Generation Market Size New Coke Repositioning a  brand When Coca Cola tried re-positioning itself as “New Coke” The consumers had already given the “new” attribute to Pepsi Within 60 days, Coca Cola returned to its original position  “ Classic”
Flanking The big 3 auto makers were flanked From the left by the Japanese From the right by the Germans They lost 30% of the American market Expensive Market Size Economy Cars Cheap Luxury Japanese The big 3 GM Ford Chrysler Market Size Market Size German Mid Range
Expensive Market Size Economy Cars Cheap Luxury Japanese The big 3 GM Ford Chrysler Market Size Market Size German Mid Range Market  Size Ferrari Exotic Guerillas Some marketers find niches that are too small for the big Manufacturers. Ferrari produces exotic cars
Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Toys R Us Furniture Hardware Electronics Books Toys Clothing Shoes Generalist Department store Chapters Future Shop Focus Theory: Category Killers Some marketers rip out a category from a generalist environment to a more specialized one The strong (sharp) vs the weak (broad) Hard Goods Soft Goods
Summary In marketing, positioning is everything. It directly affect market share The hourglass concept is a very powerful tool to arrive  at the best positioning strategy If you get the strategy right, everything falls right into place.
Next week Marketing planning principles

More Related Content

PPTX
Brand Positioning Model
PPT
STIMA Congres 2014 - The Festival Edition: Presentation Kevin Lane Keller
PPTX
The Power of Branding - Seminar by Mohan Kumar G
PPTX
Branding ppt
PDF
Why People Talk
PPT
Brand strategy
PDF
International Brand Management Handout For Students
PPT
Product & Brand Positioning
Brand Positioning Model
STIMA Congres 2014 - The Festival Edition: Presentation Kevin Lane Keller
The Power of Branding - Seminar by Mohan Kumar G
Branding ppt
Why People Talk
Brand strategy
International Brand Management Handout For Students
Product & Brand Positioning

What's hot (20)

PPT
Branding presentation 15 mins
PDF
4. douglas branding, advantages and disadvantages
PDF
Crafting The BRAND Positioning
PPTX
Brand Position
PPT
brand managament
PDF
Successful Brand Repositioning
PPTX
Brand management
PPT
Brand strategy & building tool kit
PPTX
Brand positioning Strategy
PPT
Brand and its main attributes
PPTX
Chap 3, brand positioning
PPT
Essentials Of Branding
PDF
Strategic Brand Management
PPTX
From product brands to concept brands the evolution of brand management
PPTX
Brand repositioning
PPTX
The brand strategy toolkit_workbook
DOCX
Marketing - Brand Positioning
DOCX
Brand planning
PDF
Measuring Brand Equity
PDF
Brand strategy
Branding presentation 15 mins
4. douglas branding, advantages and disadvantages
Crafting The BRAND Positioning
Brand Position
brand managament
Successful Brand Repositioning
Brand management
Brand strategy & building tool kit
Brand positioning Strategy
Brand and its main attributes
Chap 3, brand positioning
Essentials Of Branding
Strategic Brand Management
From product brands to concept brands the evolution of brand management
Brand repositioning
The brand strategy toolkit_workbook
Marketing - Brand Positioning
Brand planning
Measuring Brand Equity
Brand strategy
Ad

Viewers also liked (6)

PPTX
insurance sales planning and organizing
DOC
My documentation
DOC
Television violence
PDF
MBA Operations Management Assignment
DOCX
Chapter 2-Realated literature and Studies
PPSX
Conceptual and theoretical framework
insurance sales planning and organizing
My documentation
Television violence
MBA Operations Management Assignment
Chapter 2-Realated literature and Studies
Conceptual and theoretical framework
Ad

Similar to Pos Theory (20)

PPTX
Product and Service Management
PPT
P Ositioning
PPT
Brand Positioning Pbm
PPT
Unit2 market segmentation2
PPSX
Product Positioning
PPTX
Positioning - How To Stand Out In The Customer's Mind
PPTX
Market positioning in services
PPTX
brandpositioningbyashish11111111111.pptx
PPTX
Positioning
PPTX
Brand positioning
PPTX
Brand positioning
PDF
Brand Positioning .pdf
PPT
positioning.pptstrategies of positioning
PPT
Positioning
PPTX
FLATPositioningUNIT3 about postion on the level.pptx
PDF
6th Alex Marketing Club (Brand Positioning) by.Dr.Amany Sabry
PPTX
Positioning
PPTX
Positioning: An Instrument of Marketing Success.pptx
PDF
How to Choose a Positioning Strategy to Stand Out From Your Competitors
PPT
How to position a brand powerfully 04 11-2013
Product and Service Management
P Ositioning
Brand Positioning Pbm
Unit2 market segmentation2
Product Positioning
Positioning - How To Stand Out In The Customer's Mind
Market positioning in services
brandpositioningbyashish11111111111.pptx
Positioning
Brand positioning
Brand positioning
Brand Positioning .pdf
positioning.pptstrategies of positioning
Positioning
FLATPositioningUNIT3 about postion on the level.pptx
6th Alex Marketing Club (Brand Positioning) by.Dr.Amany Sabry
Positioning
Positioning: An Instrument of Marketing Success.pptx
How to Choose a Positioning Strategy to Stand Out From Your Competitors
How to position a brand powerfully 04 11-2013

More from rabie soubra (9)

PDF
ليش اسمه بترول
PDF
انواع المحتوى
PDF
قاتلي الاجتماعات
PDF
ايها المسوقون
PDF
10 steps for a content strategy
PDF
١٠ خطوات لبناء استراتيجية محتوى
PDF
أجمل ما قيل في المحتوى
PPTX
Content is king
PDF
المستهلك الاجتماعي
ليش اسمه بترول
انواع المحتوى
قاتلي الاجتماعات
ايها المسوقون
10 steps for a content strategy
١٠ خطوات لبناء استراتيجية محتوى
أجمل ما قيل في المحتوى
Content is king
المستهلك الاجتماعي

Recently uploaded (20)

PPTX
svnfcksanfskjcsnvvjknsnvsdscnsncxasxa saccacxsax
PDF
How to Get Business Funding for Small Business Fast
PPTX
job Avenue by vinith.pptxvnbvnvnvbnvbnbmnbmbh
PDF
Laughter Yoga Basic Learning Workshop Manual
PDF
Ôn tập tiếng anh trong kinh doanh nâng cao
PDF
Roadmap Map-digital Banking feature MB,IB,AB
PDF
Deliverable file - Regulatory guideline analysis.pdf
PPTX
Lecture (1)-Introduction.pptx business communication
PDF
Nidhal Samdaie CV - International Business Consultant
PPTX
New Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation - Copy.pptx
PDF
Katrina Stoneking: Shaking Up the Alcohol Beverage Industry
DOCX
Business Management - unit 1 and 2
PDF
How to Get Funding for Your Trucking Business
PPTX
Belch_12e_PPT_Ch18_Accessible_university.pptx
PPTX
CkgxkgxydkydyldylydlydyldlyddolydyoyyU2.pptx
PDF
Cours de Système d'information about ERP.pdf
PDF
Unit 1 Cost Accounting - Cost sheet
PDF
Solara Labs: Empowering Health through Innovative Nutraceutical Solutions
PPTX
3. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE UNIIT 3^..pptx
PPTX
HR Introduction Slide (1).pptx on hr intro
svnfcksanfskjcsnvvjknsnvsdscnsncxasxa saccacxsax
How to Get Business Funding for Small Business Fast
job Avenue by vinith.pptxvnbvnvnvbnvbnbmnbmbh
Laughter Yoga Basic Learning Workshop Manual
Ôn tập tiếng anh trong kinh doanh nâng cao
Roadmap Map-digital Banking feature MB,IB,AB
Deliverable file - Regulatory guideline analysis.pdf
Lecture (1)-Introduction.pptx business communication
Nidhal Samdaie CV - International Business Consultant
New Microsoft PowerPoint Presentation - Copy.pptx
Katrina Stoneking: Shaking Up the Alcohol Beverage Industry
Business Management - unit 1 and 2
How to Get Funding for Your Trucking Business
Belch_12e_PPT_Ch18_Accessible_university.pptx
CkgxkgxydkydyldylydlydyldlyddolydyoyyU2.pptx
Cours de Système d'information about ERP.pdf
Unit 1 Cost Accounting - Cost sheet
Solara Labs: Empowering Health through Innovative Nutraceutical Solutions
3. HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE UNIIT 3^..pptx
HR Introduction Slide (1).pptx on hr intro

Pos Theory

  • 1. What is Positioning Prepared by Rabie Soubra
  • 2. What is positioning This is a theory presentation Intended to familiarize you with the concept and definition of positioning in a theoretical framework As a basic understanding of the fundamentals of positioning
  • 3. Why is there positioning Simply because of choice We choose brands Before we buy products When you have chosen a brand, you already bought it in your mind
  • 4. Why is there positioning Because of the nature of our business
  • 5. Why is there positioning Marketers have brands and products to sell People have needs to fulfil Those two principles converge in the form of a transaction A DECISION BY THE TARGET GROUP TO ACTUALLY SPEND MONEY
  • 6. Why is there positioning This decision is a behaviour And just like any behaviour It is based on a stimulus that the brain responds to in a specific manner This is called conditioning
  • 7. Why is there positioning POSITIONING IS CONDITIONING.
  • 8. “ Just give me one good reason to choose you over the competition.” What your customer is telling you always
  • 9. What Makes you: Different Better Special Brand choice and product purchase fundamentals
  • 10. Economics is based on supply and demand. Strategic marketing is based on different and better.
  • 11. Positioning - The act of seeking, placing and optimizing something in relationship to the competition and surrounding environment From a marketers point of view
  • 12. Definition of Positioning Theory:   The science of perceptual strategy. It is based on a theory that strategy can only be planned in the mind of the consumer Not the marketplace.   Laws and principles about how the mind categorizes, ranks and files concepts in the directory system of the mind govern this science. In other words, it is study of how the mind indexes brands.  
  • 13. Basically, positioning is a strategy game of “capture the concept.
  • 14. Kit Kat, Mercedes, Apple, Lexus, Levi’s, Prada
  • 15. Relativity Positioning is about relativity and understanding dynamics. A common misconception is viewing positioning as a singular position. Take for instance a geographic position, 43 degree longitude by 36 degree latitude. Is it a good position? It all depends on what surrounds the position. A single position is meaningless until it is put into context of what surrounds it. 
  • 16. Dynamics However, the environment is constantly changing Which constantly changes the perception of the position. You should always be aware of the environment in which you are competing
  • 17. Dynamics product positioning, advertising positioning, image positioning, brand positioning, perceptual positioning, market positioning, competitive positioning, price positioning, channel positioning, retail positioning, corporate positioning, political positioning, real estate positioning, economic development positioning, social positioning Positioning is not singular
  • 18. Product positioning deals with reality. It is straight comparison of product features. New product development usually tries to create product differentiation Bigger, more improved, new look, same taste, more value, free 200 grams
  • 19. Advertising Positioning is sometime confused with brand management. There are two main differences. First, advertising exist in the media and brands exist in the mind. Advertising is only a part of how consumers form brand perception. It is the main highway that people will take to come to that brand It is through advertising that features are converted to benefits
  • 20. Image positioning is an evolution of advertising into total marketing communications. An integrated marketing portrays a consistent image over all mediums Creating a complete identity (overall image) The key to integration is contact point analysis IMC, the total is larger than the sum of the parts
  • 21. Brand positioning deals with consistent transferring of the brand image into the consumer's mind creating brand perception. Transferring a perfect image is very difficult because external interference clutters or warps the perception.     Why client servicing should also be creative
  • 22. Perceptual positioning is about registering the brand perception correctly in the mind's directory. Perceptual mapping focuses on mapping the mind to figure out optimal positioning. It works with what already exists in the consumers mind.  Importance of qualitative research
  • 23. Market positioning is about trend analysis. It takes a macro view of the marketplace dealing with the macro market forces (economic, political, competitive, distribution, technology, geography, infrastructure, publics, culture and demographics) Winning brands are the ones that can best adapt.
  • 24. Competitive positioning was born out of micro economics. It looks at how companies position themselves against each other in the marketplace. Sustainable competitive advantages are developed through core competencies, patents and operational efficiencies.   Any of the P’s can be an advantage
  • 25. Price positioning is about perceived value. Price also becomes an indicator of value to many consumers. They can easily tell your rank simply from the price.     Price strategy can work both ways
  • 26. Channel positioning works by "owning" distribution channels which creates barriers of entry to competitors. Carefully selecting channels helps create a powerful position.  The importance of retail audits
  • 27. Retail positioning is about property values. The most important positioning decision in retail is location. Property values depends on the amount of traffic vs. number of competitors. 
  • 28. Corporate positioning deals with perception of an entire company. In many ways it is similar to product positioning but the objective is to create and transfer an image for an entire company. Stock value is heavily based on perceived value. 
  • 30. What is positioning Positioning is a battle of concepts The objective is to find and then attach a brand and product to a concept in the consumer’s mind. A sample of various positioning concepts for toothpaste would be Cavity fighter (Crest). Tartar, gum disease (Colgate), Fresh breath (Close Up), White teeth (Pearl drop)
  • 31. Companies battle over the best concepts (terrain) on which to position their products. Ideally, the brand identity becomes its street reputation. Positioning strategy directly affects market share. Basically, positioning is a strategy game of “capture the concept”
  • 32. What is the hourglass It is a macro vision of how all the processes and steps are integrated and linked. From both ends To keep track of the concept development Let us see some examples
  • 33. Category segmentation Categories can be clearly shown and compared In the category of bicycles, the various sub-categories Are segmented by product use Durable Fast Racing Mountain Normal
  • 34. Attribute ranking “The Terrain” The battle within a category is based on the attributes Of the product. In the category of toothpaste, cavity fighter is the Number 1 ranking attribute. Followed by gum/tartar, fresh breath, white teeth Fresh Breath White Teeth Cavity Fighter Gum Disease
  • 35. Finding a good Position The number of consumers wanting this position Is illustrated by the size of the triangle above the positioning line In the category of toothpaste, a great number of people want cavity fighting Fresh Breath White Teeth Cavity Fighter Gum Disease Toothpaste
  • 36. Fresh Breath White Teeth Cavity Fighter Gum Disease Toothpaste Start of Positioning: Names and Slogans Names and slogans can be developed using the category name and attributes. The name, Crest Toothpaste, categorizes the product and the slogan No cavities
  • 37. Family branding: Family brands are built on one concept or category. Kraft has built both their brand mix and product mix by focusing on cheese. Each product reinforces the main concept of cheese Milk Brick Cheese Yoghurt Dairy Products Liquid Solid Sliced Cottage Kraft Kinds
  • 38. Late Meals Early Meals Market Size Product Mix: Loss of Focus Kelloggs means “Breakfast Cereals” to most people. When they changed it to “Makes morning better” They unfocused the concept Because “breakfast” expanded to “mornings” And “Cereals” expanded to “Cereals and snacks” Breakfast Dinner Lunch Mid Morning Cereals Kelloggs
  • 39. Product Mix: Loss of Focus (Line extensions) 7 UP clearly stood for the Un-Cola concept When they extended their line to Gold, Cherry and Diet They diluted the original concept Unhealthy Market Size Lemon-Lime Cola Fruit 7 UP Soft Drinks Healthy Diet Cherry Gold Diet
  • 40. Terrain changes New categories emerge. Traditional photo processing is being replaced by digital imaging . How does a brand cope? Electronic Market Size 1998 Photo Processing Photo Images Chemical Digital Imaging Market Size 1998 Market Size 2010 Market Size 2010 Kodak Product mix? Brand
  • 41. Change Market Size Original Cola Stability New Coca Cola Coke Classic The real thing New Generation Market Size New Coke Repositioning a brand When Coca Cola tried re-positioning itself as “New Coke” The consumers had already given the “new” attribute to Pepsi Within 60 days, Coca Cola returned to its original position “ Classic”
  • 42. Flanking The big 3 auto makers were flanked From the left by the Japanese From the right by the Germans They lost 30% of the American market Expensive Market Size Economy Cars Cheap Luxury Japanese The big 3 GM Ford Chrysler Market Size Market Size German Mid Range
  • 43. Expensive Market Size Economy Cars Cheap Luxury Japanese The big 3 GM Ford Chrysler Market Size Market Size German Mid Range Market Size Ferrari Exotic Guerillas Some marketers find niches that are too small for the big Manufacturers. Ferrari produces exotic cars
  • 44. Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Market Size Toys R Us Furniture Hardware Electronics Books Toys Clothing Shoes Generalist Department store Chapters Future Shop Focus Theory: Category Killers Some marketers rip out a category from a generalist environment to a more specialized one The strong (sharp) vs the weak (broad) Hard Goods Soft Goods
  • 45. Summary In marketing, positioning is everything. It directly affect market share The hourglass concept is a very powerful tool to arrive at the best positioning strategy If you get the strategy right, everything falls right into place.
  • 46. Next week Marketing planning principles