Positioning_(marketing) Positioning_(marketing)

Positioning (marketing) - Definition

Related Words: Assignment, Collocation, Deployment, Deposit, Deposition, Loading, Localization, Location, Packing, Situation, Spotting, Storage

In marketing, positioning is the technique in which marketers try to create an image or identity for a product, brand, or company. It is the 'place' a product occupies in a given market as perceived by the target market. Positioning is something that is done in the minds of the target market. A product's position is how potential buyers see the product. Positioning is expressed relative to the position of competitors.

Re-positioning involves changing the identity of a product, relative to the identity of competing products, in the collective minds of the target market.

The ability to spot a positioning opportunity is a sure test of a persons' marketing ability. Successful positioning strategies are usually rooted in a product's sustainable competitive advantage. The most common basis' for constructing a product positioning strategy are:

  • positioning on specific product features
  • positioning on specific benefits, needs, or solutions
  • positioning on specific use categories
  • positioning on specific usage occations
  • positioning against another product
  • positioning through product class dissociation

More generally, there are three types of positioning concepts:

  • 1 functional positions
    • solve problems
    • provide benefits to customers
  • 2 symbolic positions
    • self-image enhancement
    • ego identification
    • belongingness and social meaningfullness
    • affective fulfillment
  • 3 experiential positions
    • provide sensory stimulation
    • provide cognitive stimulation

Positioning is facilitated by a graphical technique called perceptual mapping, various survey techniques, and statistical techniques like multi dimensional scaling, factor analysis, conjoint analysis, and logit analysis.

Generally, the product positioning process involves:

  • 1 identifying competing products
  • 2 identifying the attributes (also called dimensions) that define the product 'space'
  • 3 collecting information from a sample of customers about their perceptions of each product on the relevant attributes
  • 4 determine each products' share of mind
  • 5 determine each products' current location in the product space
  • 6 determine the target market's preferred combination of attributes (referred to as an ideal vector)
  • 7 examine the fit between:
    • the positions of competing products
    • the position of your product
    • the position of the ideal vector
  • 8 select optimum position

The term was coined in 1969 by Jack Trout in his paper: Trout, J., ""Positioning" is a game people play in today’s me-too market place", Industrial Marketing, Vol.54, No.6, (June 1969), pp.51-55.

See also

References

  • Trout, J., (1969) ""Positioning" is a game people play in today’s me-too market place", Industrial Marketing, Vol.54, No.6, (June 1969), pp.51-55.
  • Ries, A. and Trout,J. (1981) Positioning, The battle for your mind, Warner Books - McGraw-Hill Inc., New York, 1981, ISBN 0-446-34794-9
  • Trout, J. and Rivkin, S. (1996) The New Positioning : The latest on the worlds #1 business strategy, McGraw Hill, New York, 1996, ISBN 0-07-065291-0
List of Marketing TopicsList of Management Topics
List of Economics TopicsList of Accounting Topics
List of Finance TopicsList of Economists
Copyright 2009 WordIQ.com - Privacy Policy  :: Terms of Use  :: Contact Us  :: About Us
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the this Wikipedia article.