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Positioning: Battle for Your Mind - Understanding the Power of Brand Positioning, Lecture notes of Marketing

The concept of positioning in marketing, emphasizing the importance of being first in a person's mind, understanding the mind's categorization process, and the significance of consistency in establishing a unique brand position. It also discusses the strategies for successful positioning, such as taking advantage of existing positions and repositioning competitors' products.

What you will learn

  • What is the importance of being first in a person's mind in marketing?
  • What strategies can be used to successfully position a brand?
  • How does the mind categorize products, and what is the significance of this process in marketing?

Typology: Lecture notes

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Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind
Al Ries2001.
Chapter 1: what positioning is all about?
The average person can tolerate being told something which he or she knows nothing about.
(Which is why “news” is an effective advertising approach.) But the average person cannot
tolerate being told he or she is wrong. Mind-changing is the road to advertising disaster.
The folly of trying to change a human mind became one of the most important tenets of the
positioning concept. This is the one principle most often violated by marketing people.
Since so little material about your candidate is ever going to get into the mind of the voter, your
job is really not a “communication” project in the ordinary meaning of the word. It’s a selection
project. You have to select the material that has the best chance of getting through.
By turning the process around, by focusing on the prospect rather than the product, you simplify
the selection process. You also learn principles and concepts that can greatly increase your
communication effectiveness.
Chapter 2: the assault on the mind.
Chapter 3: getting into the mind.
Easy way to get into a person’s mind is to be first.
It’s better to be a big fish in a small pond (and then increase the size of the pond) than to be a
small fish in a big pond.
For many people or products today, one roadway to success is to look at what your competitors
are doing and then subtract the poetry or creativity which has become a barrier to getting the
message into the mind. With a purified and simplified message, you can then penetrate the
prospect’s mind.
Chapter 4: those little ladders in your mind.
One prime objective of all advertising is too high in expectations. To create the illusion that the
product or service will perform the miracles you expect. And presto, it does.
To cope with the product explosion, people have learned to rank products and brands in the mind.
A competitor wants to increase its share of the business must either dislodge the brand above (a
task that is usually impossible) or somehow relate its brand to the other companies position. Yet
too many companies embark on marketing and advertising programs as if the competitor’s
position did not exist. They advertise their products in a vacuum and are disappointed when their
messages fail to get through.
“Avis is only No. 2 in rent-a-cars, so why go with us? We try harder.” For 13 years in a row, Avis
lost money. Then they admitted that they were No. 2 and Avis started to make money. The first
year Avis made 1.2 million. The second year, $2.6 million. The third year, $5 million. Then the
company was sold to ITT.
Almost two out of every three soft drinks consumed in the United States are cola drinks. By
linking the product to what was already in the mind of the prospect, the “uncola” position
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Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind Al Ries—2001. Chapter 1: what positioning is all about?

  • The average person can tolerate being told something which he or she knows nothing about. (Which is why “news” is an effective advertising approach.) But the average person cannot tolerate being told he or she is wrong. Mind-changing is the road to advertising disaster.
  • The folly of trying to change a human mind became one of the most important tenets of the positioning concept. This is the one principle most often violated by marketing people.
  • Since so little material about your candidate is ever going to get into the mind of the voter, your job is really not a “communication” project in the ordinary meaning of the word. It’s a selection project. You have to select the material that has the best chance of getting through.
  • By turning the process around, by focusing on the prospect rather than the product, you simplify the selection process. You also learn principles and concepts that can greatly increase your communication effectiveness. Chapter 2: the assault on the mind. Chapter 3: getting into the mind.
  • Easy way to get into a person’s mind is to be first.
  • It’s better to be a big fish in a small pond (and then increase the size of the pond) than to be a small fish in a big pond.
  • For many people or products today, one roadway to success is to look at what your competitors are doing and then subtract the poetry or creativity which has become a barrier to getting the message into the mind. With a purified and simplified message, you can then penetrate the prospect’s mind. Chapter 4: those little ladders in your mind.
  • One prime objective of all advertising is too high in expectations. To create the illusion that the product or service will perform the miracles you expect. And presto, it does.
  • To cope with the product explosion, people have learned to rank products and brands in the mind.
  • A competitor wants to increase its share of the business must either dislodge the brand above (a task that is usually impossible) or somehow relate its brand to the other companies position. Yet too many companies embark on marketing and advertising programs as if the competitor’s position did not exist. They advertise their products in a vacuum and are disappointed when their messages fail to get through.
  • “Avis is only No. 2 in rent-a-cars, so why go with us? We try harder.” For 13 years in a row, Avis lost money. Then they admitted that they were No. 2 and Avis started to make money. The first year Avis made 1.2 million. The second year, $2.6 million. The third year, $5 million. Then the company was sold to ITT.
  • Almost two out of every three soft drinks consumed in the United States are cola drinks. By linking the product to what was already in the mind of the prospect, the “uncola” position

established 7-Up as an alternative to a cola drink. (The three rungs on the cola ladder might be visualized as; One, Coke. Two, Pepsi. And three, 7-Up.)

  • More than anything else, successful positioning requires consistency. You must keep at it year after year.
  • That’s advertising your aspirations. Wrong psychologically. And wrong strategically. Chapter 5: you can’t get there from here.
  • The operative word, of course, was “head-on.” And while it’s possible to compete successfully with a market leader (the article suggested several approaches), the rules of positioning say it can’t be done “head-on.”
  • A better strategy for IBM’s competitors would be to take advantage of whatever positions they already own in the minds of their prospects and then relate them to a new position m computers. Chapter 6: positioning of the leader.
  • Leaders should do the opposite. They should cover all bets. This means a leader should swallow his or her pride and adopt every new product development as soon as it shows signs of promise. Too often, however. The leader doesn’t wake up until it’s too late.
  • The ultimate objective of a positioning program should be to achieve leadership in a given category. Chapter 7: positioning of a follower.
  • William Benton, founder, along with Chester Bowles the Benton & Bowles advertising agency, but it this way: “I would look for the soft spot in the business structure of the great corporations.” The French have a marketing expression that sums up this strategy rather neatly. Cherchez le aeneau. “Look for the hole.” Cherchez Je aeneau and then fill it.
  • Too often, however, greed gets confused to positioning thinking. Charging high prices is not the way to get rich. Being the first to (1) establish the highprice position (2) with a valid product story (3) in a category where consumers are receptive to a highpriced brand is the secret of success. Otherwise, your high price just drives prospective customers away.
  • Sex, age, time of day, distribution, heavy user.
  • “But today in the product arena and in the political arena, you have to have a position. There are too many competitors out there. You can’t win by not making enemies, by being everything to everybody. To win in today’s competitive environment, you have to go out and make friends, carve out a specific niche in the market. Even if you lose a few doing so. Chapter 8: repositioning the competition.
  • For a repositioning strategy to work, you must say something about your competitor’s product that causes the prospect to change his or her mind.
  • What happened to Pringle’s potato chips? Introduced with a $15 million fanfare from Procter & Gamble, the “new-fangled” potato chips rapidly gobbled up 18 percent of the market. Then the old-fangled brands like Borden’s Wise struck back with a classic repositioning strategy. They “In Wise, you find: Potatoes. Vegetable oil. Salt. “In Pringle’s, you find: Dehydrated potatoes. Mono-

Chapter 11: the free ride to trap.

  • “Good thinking, Harry,” and another money-saving idea is instantly accepted, as most money- saving ideas usually are. But lo and behold, instead of eating into the Dristan and Contac market, the new product turns around and eats into the Alka-Seltzer market.
  • You’ll find many house names in the Colgate Palmolive line. To name a few: Coleate Dental Cream, Colgate Instant Shave, Colgate 100 Oral Antiseptic, Colgate Toothbrushes and Colgate Toothpowder. Also Palmolive Liquid Detergent, Palmolive Rapid Shave, Palmolive Shaving Cream and Palmolive Soap. You won’t find any house names in the Procter k Gamble lineup. (To consumers, Proctor, the iron, is as well known as Procter, the gamble.) Procter & Gamble carefully positions each product so that it occupies a unique niche in the mind. For example: Tide makes clothes “white.” Cheer makes them “whiter than white.” And Bold makes them “bright.” With fewer brands (51 major brands versus 65 for Colgate-Palmolive) Procter & Gamble does twice as much business and makes three times as much profit as Colgate-Palmolive.
  • When a really new product comes along, it’s almost always a mistake to hang a well-known name on it. Chapter 12: the line extension trap.
  • The consumer and the manufacturer see things in totally different ways.
  • This, of course, is the essence of positioning. To make your brand name stand for the generic. So the prospect freely uses the brand name for the generic.
  • While line extension is usually a mistake, the reverse can work. Reverse line extension is called “broadening the base.” One of the best examples is Johnson’s baby shampoo. By promoting the mildness of the product to the adult market, the company has made Johnson’s baby shampoo one of the leading brands of adult shampoo. Notice the characteristics of this broadening the base strategy. Same product, same package, same label. Only the application has changed. If Johnson & Johnson had line-extended the product and introduced Johnson’s adult shampoo, the product would not have been nearly as successful. Chapter 13: when line extension can work.
  • ‘The classic test for line extension is the shopping list. Just list the brands you want to buy on a piece of paper and send your spouse to the supermarket: Kleenex. Crest, Listerine, Life Savers, Bayer and Dial. That’s easy enough. Most husbands or wives would come back with Kleenex tissue, Crest toothpaste, Listerine mouthwash. Life Savers candy, Bayer aspirin and Dial soap. Line extensions like Kleenex towels, Life Savers gum, Bayer non-aspirin and Dial antiperspirants have not destroyed the brands’ original positions. Yet. But give them enough time to hang themselves.
  • Where is the strength of the Kraft name? It’s too diffuse. Kraft means everything and nothing. Line extension is a weakness, not strength.
  • In addition to the shopping list test, there’s the bartender test. What do you get when you order the brand by name? “J&B on the rocks” should get you scotch. “A Beefeater martini” should arrive with gin. And “a bottle of Dom Perignon” will definitely get you champagne. What about

“Cutty on die rocks”? You’ll get scotch, of course, but will you get Cutty Sark or the more expensive 12-year-old Cutty 12?

  • What do you know about Cadillac? How long is it? What colors does it come in? What’s the horsepower of the engine? What options are available? To the average automobile prospect, General Motors has succeeded in communicating almost nothing about Cadillac. Except its position as the top-of-the line, domestic luxury automobile.
  • It will stretch, but not beyond a certain point. Furthermore, the more you stretch a name, the weaker it becomes. (Just the opposite of what you might expect.) Chapter 14: positioning a company, Monsanto
  • It’s a basic principle of positioning to avoid the areas that everyone else is talking about. Chapter 15: positioning a country, Belgium.
  • First, it related Belgium to a destination that was ‘’already in the mind of the traveler, Amsterdam. In an positioning program, if you can start with a strongly held perception, you’ll be that much ahead in your efforts to establish your own position,
  • The lesson here is that positioning may require you to oversimplify your communications. So be it. There is no other way. Confusion is the enemy. Simplicity is the Holy Grail. Chapter 16: positioning a product, milk duds. Chapter 17: positioning a service, Mailgram Chapter 18: positioning a Long Island bank.
  • But conventional wisdom is not positioning thinking. Positioning theory says you must start with what the prospect is already willing to give you. And the only thing the prospect gave Long Island Trust was the “Long Island position.” Accepting this position allowed the bank to repel the invasion of the big city banks. The first ad stated the theme. Chapter 19: positioning the Catholic Church. Chapter 20: positioning yourself and your career.
  • Their own promotional strategy is often based on 4he naïve assumption that ability and hard work are all that counts. And so they dig in and work hard waiting for the day that someone will tap them on shoulder with the magic wand. But that day seldom comes. The truth is, the road to fame and fortune is rarely found within yourself. The only sure way to success to find yourself a horse to ride. It may be difficult f the ego to accept, but success in life is based more that others can do for you than on what you can do for yourself. Chapter 21: 6 steps to success.
    1. What Position Do You Own? o Positioning is thinking in reverse. Instead of starting with yourself, you start with the mind of the prospect. Instead of asking what you are, you ask what position you already