Showing posts with label unique value proposition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unique value proposition. Show all posts

Sunday, May 30, 2021

Brand Positioning 101

Earlier, I discussed the unique value proposition (UVP) concept, ie a special aspect of your offering that provides true or perceived value (emotional and functional benefits) to consumers. However, this post will extend that discussion to consider how your brand's UVP fits or is positioned within the context of your competitive market landscape. When measured properly, brand positioning aka benchmarking can even allow you to plot your and competing brands on a single graph using each brand's score where each score is based on consumers' perceptions of UVP. The scatter plot graph will therefore allow you to see the relative position of each brand. To further clarify; the graph would represent said 'market landscape' and the UVP score of each brand would be positioned as a plot point (perhaps using the brand's logo) on that graph.

On that basis, can you now see how 'brand positioning' may be understood to be the strategic process of creating competitive advantage in consumers' mind, especially at the 'evaluating alternatives' phase of their buying decision? Continual horizon scanning and proactive brand positioning or repositioning are the cornerstones for creating and maintaining a premium brand.

Why is brand positioning important?
The point of brand positioning is answering the question 'What value proposition sets (or can set) you apart from the competition?' Let's face it! If a brand is to be competitive to enjoy high income streams from an appreciative market, it needs bragging rights, about something.

Just imagine how, if your brand positioning makes you a clear outlier, your brand will be more 'recognizable' or better yet, can be 'recalled' (the 2 measures of 'brand awareness'). In turn, a brand with greater brand awareness is one that is sought after more.

As discussed previously, de-commoditizing, aka differentiating your product, even if it is an otherwise boring commodity allows you to communicate value and justify your price. 

Brand positioning is the sine qua non for effective market communication. It is afterall a means of using your bragging rights to establish your brand as a leader its unique way within the collective consumer mind. 

Differentiate on the basis of attributes that your customers use  for measuring significant value 
When customers compare brands, they do so on the basis of single variables (at a time) that are meaningful to them. For instance, legal customers may use the extent to which lawyers listen to them analytically, a form of customer service. A car buyer would not have the same criteria for a car salesman, even if he is concerned with customer service. In short, the positioning must be customized for each industry, segment, brand, product, etc.

Some attributes that are commonly used for brand positioning include the following. 
  • product quality
  • customer service
  • convenience
  • price
  • differentiation
To illustrate, the quality-based positioning approach, companies may highlight their superior quality through product performance (perhaps in resolving a pain point), compliance with well established industry standards for quality (like ISO certification), exceptional craftsmanship, raw materials that meet well esteemed specifications, sustainable practices, small-batch production, ... in short, whatever it is that defines 'quality' in their industry. 

What attributes are important in your industry? How does your brand offer something that feels like a breath of fresh air to customers? For instance, if your industry offers a product  or service whose implementation or use are renowned as being complicated, does your brand offer strong customer support that makes the process much easier? 

Think insurance policies and their tedium! This is arguably the reason why Geico selected their famous 'grunt test' campaign. They wanted to show the world how their sign up process was so easy, that even a grunting cave man can understand it.

Attributes of focus should also change with emerging market trends. However, attributes can be anything that really matters to your consumers. Was your brand the first of its kind which is a fact that your customers value? Are you just the most popular? Are you the only one that responded to certain events that are near and dear to the hearts of your target market? Have you done a SWOT analysis of your competition and want to use a campaign to directly call out a competitior's weakness?

Most industries have multiple key attributes that can be simultaneously represented on 'perceptual maps' like below. Like in this example, consumers rate each key attribute so that brand managers can observe the relative position of all competing industry players. Each brand manager then contemplates "Do I like my current brand position?" "Is there a gap in the market that I can fill?


In the example above, taste and being natural are the 2 key attributes for 3 key players in the sugar industry. A gap exists in the quadrant for more tasty and less natural, which would be better than Equal's current position of low ratings on both attributes. Should Equal fill that gap? However, the brand manager may also consider shifting the brand's positioning to the right if trends emerge in which consumers are happy to sacrifice taste for more natural products. If Equal's brand manager wants to respond to that trend, that brand may produce a variant that is more natural, perhaps only to a marginal extent to perhaps offer a natural option that is likely more affordable than Truvia. 

The SWOT analysis of industry players (ie strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) can provide many attribute ideas. 

Repositioning

Repositioning is brand risk management. Brand managers must continuously scan the horizon for changes that warrant significant branding response. Common prompts include changing target market (perceived) needs, improvements in your competitors' UVP, new product substutes and waning consumer interest. 

Case study: Perceptions of the Old Spice brand changed over time. Specifically, the brand was unable to attract younger male demographic because it was associated with 'old men'. To counteract this, the brand changed its image. It appealed to younger men by changing its personality with style elemnts like younger very masculine male models and campaign slogans like 'Smell like a man, man!' are cases in point. This not only changed the brand's demographic by raised sales by 27% within only the first 6 months of the campaign's launch in 2010 but also emerged its category leader as a consequence.

Case study: Starbucks lost over 28% profits over 2 years following the 2008 economic crisis. In the face of economic hardship, consumer attitudes changed. They began to see coffee as a commodity - an ostensible existential nightmare for a brand that built on presenting coffee as a luxury. Consumers were opting for cheaper options like McDonalds coffee. In response to this risk management 'white swan', the brand hired BBDO, an agency that specializes in branding to reconvince the market that their coffee was worth the extra cost. Its campaign included slogans like "If your coffee isn't perfect, we'll make it over. If it still isn't perfect, you must not be in a Starbucks." and "Beware of a cheaper cup of coffee. It comes with the price". In short, the brand used the quality positioning strategy

Case study: McDonalds recognized that consumer perceptions were becoming disfavorable. Specifically, consumers began to perceive it as unhealthy. The brand improved this reputation with healthier options like salads.


The brand positioning statement

A brand positioning statement briefly 1) identifies the target market, 2) describes benefits / value to the target and 3) implies current relative exploitable weakness in your competition or industry. This statement can be used for recreating mission statements for internal and or external customers. 

Examples.

  • For serious athletes, Nike gives confidence that provides the perfect shoe for every sport.
  • To cultured millenials, Starbucks is a premium coffee house that adds an intimate and valuable experience to a consumer's life style by integrating caffeine with a comproftable environment.


Steps: How to establish your brand positioning

  • Know the key industry attributes and how to measure them.
    • In most cases, a variable is simply a contiuum of the same thing. For instance 'price' is either low or high or range in dollar values. 
    • In footwear, one key attribute is a categorical scale that has 'performance' and 'fashion' on either of its extremes. ('Correspondence analysis' is used for statistically for mapping categorical variables).  
  • Determine your current brand positioning. This can be an informal 'back of an envelope' exercise and or part of a formal beta testing survey. 
  • Analyze your compeitition; identify them and perform SWOT analyses for them (while also incorporating into them considerations of the PESTLE analsyis). In addition to this simple video, see the other more comlex discuss at the end of this post.  
  • Analyze your industry for weaknesses that you can resolve. 
    • When Geico realized that an inherent weakness in its (insurance) industry was that consumers found the standard application process upsettingly difficult, they differentiated the brand by providing the value of convenience with an application process that was uniquely so much simpler that it could even pass a cave man's 'grunt test'.  
  • If any, know your industriy's inherent shortcomings.
  • Know your UVP
  • Create a positioning statement for a promotional campagin. 
  • Establish a suitable positioning strategy. This is particularly important when your attribute-related market positioning is similar to that of competing brands. In such cases, select a strategy as the basis of differentiation. Strategies may be one of the other attributes like one listed above; price, convenience and so on. The price-quality trade-off is very common. 
    • M&Ms emphasized the product quality by stressing the product's durability, safety, reliability. Its tagline "Melts in your mouth, not in your hands" is consistent with that
                   
  • Integrate your brand's differentiating qualities throughout your brand's organization, especially into all elements of the front line including brand personality like brand style, a 'differentiating tagline' and so on.
  • Constantly evaluate how well your positioning is working.
  • Scan the horizon for emerging trends that can change the nature of the market landscape and, by so doing, present new risks (opportunities or threats). 
  • Reposition to adapt to emerging trends and circumstances. This often involves changing key brand elements like the product (qualities), price and even brand personality. 

     

  • Avoid brand extensions that are generally unsuccessful and, over time, may even dilute the power of your brand position in the mind of consumers. Line extensions may include extending the product mix to include other types of products. The risk appears to occur when brands attempt to do something contrary to the key characteristic  that helped to gain its position with clarity in the minds of consumers. Examples include the following. 
    • Bayer's was a leader as a pain relieving medicine because of 'Aspirine'. However, a subsequent attempt to use the well established name to introduce an alternative non-Aspirine pain reliever 'Bayer Migraine' failed.
    • Dial was a well established brand for soap. However, when it introduced deodorant, the deodorant failed.
    • My gag reflex is still strong every time I remember the case of Colgate, a well established brand renowned for clearn dirty mouths that then attempted to use their name Colgate for food products. Am I the only one that has this strong a reaction? Possibly not because the new food product was unsuccessful.

  • You can use perceptual mapping not only for single brands against others but also for different iterations (formulas, colors, etc) while doing new product development. Furthermore, you can make the graph three dimensional to include the variable of unassisted brand recall if respondents needed to name the competing brand. The plot for each brand will not be a dot but a circle whose size reflects the number of times it was recalled.

      CONTENT RELATED TO BRAND POSITIONING

      • Positioning is very important in the 'evaluating alternatives' phase within the customer's buying decision process.
      • 'De-commoditizing' aka differentiating your product,
      • Unique Value Propositions (UVP)
      • Branding 101
      • Brand core values
      • Brand personality
      • Brand mascot
      • Brand awareness & brand awareness srategy
      • Emotional marketing to emotionally engage your target market.
      • Industry analysis
      • Packaging design strategy
      • LIfestyle branding strategy
      • SWOT analyses of key players in different industries.
        • When completing your SWOT analysis, pay special attention to the strengths of your competitors, especially the leaders. Those strengths should not be the basis on which you should try to compete with them. You will need to find some alternative.
      • Protecting your intellectual property
      • Product demand matrix is essentially another type of brand positioning tool. However, its two variables are price and number of customers demanding the product. It therefore plots sales channel locations where your and competing brands may enjoy demand that corresponds with your product offering based on its level of high endedness and price. It is useful for figuring your more direct competitors and provides an opportunity to know which competitors to observe for inspiration for packaging, pricing and so on.
      • Perceptual maps. When analyzing your perceptual map, see if the plots exist in all or most quadrants. This is favorable to a straight line. For instance, in simpler plots, price and quality are commonly used as the 2 attributes, However, since these variables are often highly correlated in the minds of the market, the plot essentially measures only 1 (and not 2) variables. In such a case, all of the plots form a clear straight line, often a diagonal one. This type of result is not ideal as it suggests that the research process was not designed to get maximum value from the data. To counteract this issue, it is advisable to use variables that are not as highly correlated. Having said this, note that patterns with wide gaps do not necessarily indicate this issue. In some cases, they suggest a gap that can be exploited or one tjat is undesirable. Examples of undesirable gaps include cases in which manufacturers will not make expensive products to be sold cheaply .... or customers won't buy expensive products that are low quality.
      • The other way. Can you plot how you perceive key characteristics of your target market personality type? ... If your target's problems are special or outlying somehow, you might have the opportunity to personalize your messaging even further. For instance, Skinny-fat solution, a muscle building plan might signal to its target by saying, "It's hard enough for regular guys to build muscle. But us; the skinny-fat guys? It's impossible with the typical advice ..." Notice how this brand is making a very clear distinction between the regular segment and its own. It also shows how the competition is failing this niche. "... This is why I don't follow typical advice. Instead, I use my own 3-step system. Want to learn 
      • Abovementioned case studies in other content
        • Bayer's
        • Colgate
        • Dial
        • McDonalds
        • Nike
        • Old Spice
        • Starbucks
      • Internal links: brand position statement;
    • Sunday, January 8, 2017

      Unique Selling Proposition (USP)

      When considering brand positioning, brand managers must ask how their brand adds value to its market. What problems (ie pain points) are you resolving and or perceived needs you are satisfying? Think of Maslow's 'hierarchy of needs
      '. Unspoken, often unconscious, visceral customer needs are powerful considerations because they are your customer's truest motivation. Perceived problems are often only symptomatic of needs. For instance,  a customer searching for lipstick perceives the problem of having lips that are too pale in color. However, the need from which that perceived problem arises is social, specifically, wanting to look attractive to others. It corresponds with the need for social belonging, in this case, possibly 'belonging' to a romantic life partner. From a marketing perspective, this need is always useful to note because red lipstick is only one of several competing ways in which the customer can meet her need. Consequently, this understanding may help you to use emotional marketing to also communicate how your product meets that visceral need in the form of your unique value proposition. To be clear, stating value delivery is hardly about listing features but mostly about meeting often unspoken needs that delivers value to customers, from their unique perspective. The 'unique' aspect of the concept is noteworthy. As seen in brand During the 
      brand positioning exercise, brands may have the same or very similar value propositions as their competition. However, they must find or create something unique about themselves to make differentiate the brand much like how Uber and Lyft are very comparable regarding quality service and product. However, Uber uses image in its website presentation to differentiate itself as being more upscale and then charges a higher price accordingly.  

      Unique selling proposition (USP) aka Unique value proposition (UVP)

      A unique selling proposition (USP) is a statement. When formulated well, it is a guarantee of value. It revolves around something that the target market truly values or perceives as valuable, or the bundle of emotional and functional benefits as perceived by consumers. It is the concise answer a customer will give when asked why choose to buy from your business. In other words, this value is a key motivator for the market's demand (like convenience, reliability, courtesy and so on). It creates customer expectations as if saying, 'if you buy into our brand, product, service and so on, you will get X'. As its name suggests, a unique selling proposition also highlights the product's uniqueness when compared with your competition. A compelling B2B unique value propositions will often relate to increasing profitability or decreasing costs other key business driver, like 'we will increase your customer base (by X% within X days).' For private consumers, compelling unique value propositions meet human needs, resolve pain points and so on. BTW, if you were to categorize human needs into latent vs blatant and aspirational vs critical, the ideal / easiest needs to speak to are blatant and critical. BTW, if you are having trouble formulating your unique value proposition, you can ask your customers why they come. 

      Uses of the unique selling proposition (unique value proposition)
      • In new business development, the unique selling proposition helps businesses analyze whether their new business idea will have the necessary element of differentiation or innovation in the market place. The more unique and truly in demand the new offering, the more likely the new venture's potential success. The unique selling point should answer the question, 'Why should a customer choose you over the competition?' Ideally, your USP caters to a pain point. For instance, if a market's pain point is that X types of product work slowly, your USP may be 'We sell the only X that eliminates ___ within 3 days'. It is noteworthy that, if you are in an industry in which high quality and performance are already the norm, do not waste time creating a USP to compete on these redundant propositions. Instead, find something unique that resolves a pain point as the basis of your USP. Be fearless! You may even need to be create an innovative offering that essentially 'creates' your niche and, by so doing, the competition. For instance, this would be the case if you are the only X service provider catering specifically to teachers, or selling frozen desserts to vegans. However, ensure that a demand exists. In other words, teachers must need the service and vegans must desire the frozen desserts. As these example illustrate, a niche or product innovation can also be achieved by focusing on a narrow target market. On a happy side note; just imagine how much easier and cheaper it will be to advertise with Google text ads.
      • A reminder to administration and management professionals. When formulating your website's homepage title and meta description, standard operating procedures, recruiting staff and so on, the USP is reminder of the business' raison d'etre and should therefore guide these tasks. After all, a slogan would amount to being a collection of pretty words if it is not deliverable in every aspect of your business. In short, every good, service, employee, job interviewbrand awareness promotion, email, image and so on must exude your brand's USP.
      • Slogans are often a company's USP. Remember however that a USP turned into slogan should be the by-product of corporate strategic planning. The USP must be a truthful reflection of your offering rather than a catchy phrase. Ideally, a unique selling proposition should be very concise to be catchy. Shorter USP slogans are like catchy advertisement jingles; they are more memorable and spread more easily. In short, do not write a unique selling point only for the sake of marketing as that defeats the purpose of a USP and lead to customer dis-satisfaction if you build expectations that are not met.
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      Examples:
      Disney is known as the most fun place to be.

      Domino's Pizza implemented this excellent slogan. Although it is arguably too long, it offers a clear guarantee
      You get fresh, hot pizza delivered to your door in 30 minutes or less or it's free.

      Earthly offers a more personalized approach by promising consumers who are nostalgic for the olden days that their products are not only natural but even handmade. 
      100% Handcrafted

      Kiva invites entrepreneurs and the rest of the public to offer loans that help change the lives of people in many parts of the world
      Loans that change lives

      Avis had been the second-largest to Hertz in the car rental business when they implemented this sloagan. With a well implemented USP (ie one that is supported by congruent action), Avis experienced over 300% growth in market share.
      We're # 2. We try harder

      Target considers psychographics, in this case the target market's purchase motivation factor - price.
      Expect More. Pay Less

      Zappos is a shoe store that became very well known because of its returns policy that may be considered extreme for its industry, especially online. Specifically, personal items (like shoes) are notorious for their high incidence of returns, especially online. They can therefore be disallowed or incur hefty penalties for returns. 
      It's easy, and it's FREE! If you are not 100% satisfied with your purchase from ZapposLuxury you can return your item(s) for a full refund within 365 days of purchase. (Returns must be unworn, in the state you received them, and in the original packaging.) Some items ship with an attached security tag.
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      CONTENT RELATED TO UNIQUE VALUE PROPOSITION