HomeNewsBusinessPositioning? Have a clear customer focus first

Positioning? Have a clear customer focus first

When the brand hits its peak, a repositioning may work but not always.

December 09, 2020 / 16:44 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Photo by Scott Graham on Unsplash
Photo by Scott Graham on Unsplash

Decades ago my friend Al Ries and his partner Jack Trout coined the term “positioning” as a way to differentiate a product, service, company or brand in the consumers’ minds. It is still one of the most used and useful marketing tools for driving differentiation for business.

Has anything changed in the concept of positioning in this digital and disruptive age?  Executives seeking to successfully position or re-position brands clearly face a number of challenges. These hurdles can often be overcome if they follow some fundamentals.

Story continues below Advertisement

Foremost, executives must adequately understand and appreciate the principles of marketing. A prerequisite for successful branding is creating an environment where marketing is both understood and appreciated. There are many ways to accomplish this: By taking key executives out to the marketplace and also on client visits. Or by conducting focus group sessions with customers and making sure the groups are observed by management. Most employees don’t understand brand or brand positioning. It is a difficult proposition when your company is not into consumer products. By getting employees out in the field a couple of times, you will have made them quite a good respect for what marketing is doing. They will also get some ideas on how the company needs to be viewed in the outside world. Another way is to videotape the focus group sessions for showing to internal managers.

As a small or medium business, you may want to allocate sufficient resources to understanding the category, the brand, and the customer. Brand positioning based on true consumer insights provides the greatest opportunity for success. The most fundamental thing to getting the repositioning right is the work that happens up front. It goes back to having that unique insight and being sure that your hypothesis is right. The worst thing that one can do is becoming off the mark with the customer. Without having the insight that smaller families need fresh, no-preservative/healthy dosa batter, ID would not have made a success of its business.