2. A concept so simple,
people have difficulty understanding
how powerful it is!
3. What…
• Positioning is owning a piece of consumer’s mind
• Positioning is not what you do to a product
– It’s what you do to the mind of the prospect
• You position the product in the prospect’s mind
– ‘It’s incorrect to call it Product Positioning’ – Ries & Trout
4. Examples
• Colgate is Protection
• Lux is Glamour
• Pond’s DFT is Confidence
• Axe is Sexual Attraction
• Gillette is Quality
5. Why…
The assault on our mind…
• The media explosion
• The product explosion
• The advertising explosion
• So little message gets through that you
ignore the sender and concentrate on
the receiver
6. How…
• The easy way to get into a person’s mind is to
be first
– Xerox, Kodak, Polaroid, Sun TV, The Hindu, F&L
• If you didn’t get into the mind of your prospect
first, then you have a positioning problem
– Better to be first than be best
• In the positioning era, you must, however, be
first to get into the prospect’s mind
7. How…
• The basic approach is not to create something
new or different, but manipulate what’s already
in the mind
• To find a unique position, you must ignore
conventional logic
• Conventional logic says you find concept inside
product
– Not true; look inside prospect’s mind
• You won’t find an uncola idea inside 7-up; you
find it inside cola drinker’s head
8. ‘You concentrate
on the perceptions of the prospect,
not the reality of the product’
- Al Ries & Jack Trout
9. ‘It’s difficult to change behaviour,
but easy to work with it’
- Paco Underhill
10. What you need…
• Understand the role of words and how
they affect people
– Turtle vs. Lexus
• Be careful of change
– Disney
• Need vision
– Long term / Not on technology or fad
11. What you need…
• Courage
– To slug it out when others watch and wait
• Objectivity
– You need a backboard / a springboard
• Simplicity
– Not complicated or convoluted
12. What you need…
• Subtlety
– Unique position and appeal that’s not narrow
• Willingness to sacrifice
– The case of Nyquil
– Rexona wooing male and female
• Patience
– Geographical roll out / Demographic /
Chronological
• Global outlook
– Taj Mahal tea
13. Guidelines
• Start by looking not at the product but at the
position in the market that you wish to occupy, in
relation to competition
• Think about how the brand will answer the main
consumer questions
– What will it do for me that others will not?
– Why should I believe you?
• Try to keep it short and make every word count
and be as specific as possible
– Vagueness opens the way to confused executions
14. Guidelines
• Keep the positioning up-do-date
– Give as careful consideration to change as you did to
the original statement
• Look for a Key Insight!
– An ‘Accepted Consumer Belief’
15. What is key insight?
• Key Insight is ‘seeing below the surface’ /
‘seeing inside the consumer’
• Insight expresses the totality of all that we know
from seeing inside the consumer
• An insight is a single aspect of this that we use
to gain competitive advantage
• By identifying a specific way…
– That the brand can either solve a problem or
– Create an opportunity for the consumer
19. More on key insight…
• It will require two separate thoughts to be related
to each other in a new and fresh way
• Insight will generally be enduring
• Often the process will lead to several insights
• The one to use is the one that offers to be the
source of greatest competitive advantage
20. More on key insight…
• No need for insight to change if you have
identified the higher-order needs of
consumers
• Keep asking ‘why’ to find the real need
behind the obvious insight
• Remember, the insight is always the basis
for a brand’s positioning
21. How to find one?
• What are the ways in which the category / brand
can improve someone’s life?
• What are the conflicting needs that people face
and that the brand can solve?
• How important is it that the product delivers?
Who will notice?
• What is standard of excellence in the category?
• With every answer you get, you need to probe
deeper:
– ‘Why is that?’
22. The 3C’s of positioning
• Be Crystal clear
• Be Consumer-based
– Be relevant and credible to the consumer
– Write in consumer language and from consumer’s view point
• Be Competitive
– Be distinctive
– Focus on building brand elements into powerful discriminator
– Be persuasive
– Be sustainable
23. And then…
• The brand name!
• The name is the first point of contact
between the message and the mind
• ‘The brand name is a knife that cuts the
mind to let the brand message inside’
– Ries & Trout
24. Guidelines
• It’s not the goodness or badness of the name in
an aesthetic sense that determines effectiveness
– It’s the appropriateness of the same
• Name begins the positioning process, tells the
prospect what the product’s major benefit is
– Fair & Lovely
– Close Up
– Krack
– Head & Shoulders
– Vaseline Intensive Care Body Lotion
25. Checklist: Brand name
• Should be simple
• Should be acceptable in all key languages
• Should be appropriate when geographically spread
• Should be amenable for easy registration