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Brand Positioning Fundamentals - Point of Difference

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Marketing amateurs believe that positioning is just about what makes a brand different. As I’ve explained in previous posts, it is far more. To recap, positioning done right, includes:
 
1. Your target customer
2. Their need
3. Their frame of reference
4. Your point of difference(s)
5. Your reason(s) to believe

Why is the point of difference so important? Because it is why a customer will chose to resolve their need with your promise instead of the competition's.

What's the diff?
What does your idea do better than the competition? What feature or quality makes your idea unique? Perhaps your idea takes place in a one of a kind permanent location. Maybe you’ve acquired a patent for a unique material or process. Or, perhaps your idea stands out for something simple that may not sound revolutionary - but is dramatically different in your industry or niche. (Like decent customer service or rates for wireless in Canada!)

Unique, Compelling, Relevant, Credible
A great point of difference is hard to come by. It needs to be unique, compelling, relevant, and credible. By "compelling" I mean the point of difference forcefully engages the customer's attention. By "relevant" I mean it is very important or significant to the customer. By "unique" I mean exactly that. No one else is delivering on the difference, and you can convince people that only you can do it. By "credible" I mean solid, not an abstract fluffy idea that has no teeth nor authenticity.

The biggest blunder right off the bat
It is sad that so many people misunderstand the basic concept of positioning. The term itself implies "positioning" against something else. The customer's need and frame of reference are not what is being positioned. What is being positioned is your brand's difference against other brands' differences. Don't make the all too common mistake of leaving the competition out of the question. And saying that there is no competition is no excuse. Defined honestly, even if you are the only game in town, the customer’s need should be able to be fulfilled – however partially -- by alternatives.

This is how we do it
In our Distility 1day1brand sessions, we make sure everyone understands how positioning works. Only then do we go forth and...
  1. The team brainstorms all the emotional benefits, functional benefits and key features the competition credibly promises the customer.
  2. We brainstorm what additional benefits and features we might credibly promise the customer.
  3. We extract the features, emotional benefits and functional benefits that we think are most different than the competition.
  4. We review each one and ask "How well does this resolve the need we identified for the customer?"
  5. We brainstorm fresh differences, purely from the customer's perspective. This is because sometimes the client is so steeped in the details of their brand that they can't see the most brilliant point of difference because it is so blindingly obvious.
  6. We promote the differences that are compelling, relevant, unique and credible. We demote those that are not.
  7. We rinse and repeat until we settle on one point of difference.
Occasionally, if a very strong case can be made that two differences are equally strong and important, we choose both.

Innovation is a dangerous point of difference
Sometimes our clients are so enamored by their innovation that they can’t think of anything else they would rather have for their point of difference. We have to work hard to remind them that what they perceive as a positive difference, Ex. First use of X technology, may be seen as a negative by the target customer. Most customers don’t want to buy something that is different because it is new. To the contrary, they want to buy solutions that are proven, and no risk.

More on this in my next post: Innovation and the Point of Difference

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Brand Positioning Fundamentals - Innovation and Frame of Reference

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brand positioning model 

We're now half-way through my mini-series on Brand Positioning Fundamentals. You'll recall the key elements:

1. Your target customer
2. Their need
3. Their frame of reference
4. Your dramatic difference(s)
5. Your reason(s) to believe

In my last post, we covered the customer's frame of reference. Let's go a bit deeper here because it is especially easy to get this wrong if you are marketing a highly innovative or disruptive brand.

Take a look at the iPhone. When Steve Jobs introduced it what frame of reference could he have used? He could have invented any term for the frame of reference and the fanboys would have internalized it instantly. Internet Telephone Device? Web Handset? Superphone? What term did Apple use? The video below makes it pretty clear.
 
The iPhone frame of reference 



Apple took great pains to make the frame of reference the dumb old "phone", showing 70+ years of cinema stars answering them. Apple understood that using the phone as a frame of reference made the device instantly familiar to the masses. Notice that they didn't use a frame of reference for their fanboys. They were focused on the mass market opportunity. Too many innovators overlook this most basic piece of brand positioning hygiene - focusing on the right target audience.

Was that it then? Decided and done? No. As mentioned in previous posts, brand positioning must be ready to change with the competition, the market and the customer. When the iPhone as familiar phone-like object was successfully embedded in the minds' of the masses, the company then expanded its' frame of reference to include browsing the web, email, music, applications, and much more.
 
Motorola Droid frame of reference
Jump ahead three years to the recent launch of the Motorola Droid. As previously posted, I've intuited the droid brand positioning at launch to be:
 
For the technology leader who needs the latest and greatest device, the Motorola Droid is the iphone killer, with a giant screen and the ability to run multiple applications with ease. 

Notice the frame of reference in the video below...
 

 

In the subsequent commercials, the brand gets way more creative and I have to admit to being a little uncertain. Is the frame of reference iPhone or "robot"? The robot theme is played hard, saying "Instead of a smartphone, we made a robot phone."
 
  
But without getting into the semantics of artificial life, I think they are simply saying they made a phone that kicks iPhone butt. (comments welcome).
 
This is something Blackberry or Windows Phones don't have the feature set to do, but the Droid does. If you really can take on the number one player, and their brand is ubiquitous like the iPhone, you can make them your frame of reference with brilliant results.
 
Palm Pre - Missed positioning opportunity 

Sadly, this is a tactic Palm could have taken with the Pre. Instead, their frame of reference was just like Apple but two years too late: the plain old phone. And now, as the Droid grabs mind share with their strategic brand positioning, Palm, Windows, Blackberry and other smartphone players are getting pushed down the brand ladder, while the Droid gets comfortable (at least for now) in the number two customer loyalty spot behind the iPhone.

Brand Positioning is not some abstract concept. It is a set of simple, plug and play rules that you can ignore or exploit to your advantage.
 
Ask yourself (especially if your brand is innovative):

  • Is my frame of reference designed for my target audience?
  • Is it instantly familiar and orienting?
  • Am I missing a massive brand positioning opportunity? One where I could use a ubiquitous competitor as a point of reference, and in so doing slingshot my brand into greater awareness?

 

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Brand Positioning Fundamentals - Frame of Reference

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Brand Positioning Model 
In my last post on brand positioning fundamentals, I reviewed the target audience need. The Motorola Droid was used as our example to illustrate the key elements in a classic positioning statement which are:

1. Your target customer
2. Their need
3. Their frame of reference
4. Your dramatic difference(s)
5. Your reason(s) to believe
 
Together they give us a positioning statement such as the one I've intuited for the Motorola Droid:
 
For the technology leader who needs the latest and greatest device, the Motorola Droid is the iphone killer, with a giant screen and the ability to run multiple applications with ease. 

You'll note that we've set the Droid's frame of reference as "iPhone". Before we explain why, we need to cover the fundamentals.

Frame of reference can be dead simple or hard - it depends on the nature of your brand. As the name suggests, it is the target audience's in-built mental frame of reference for your brand. Your frame of reference for Coke-a-Cola is likely "soft-drink". Your frame of reference for Nintendo Wii is likely "gaming system".

Bad frame. Bad brand.

The wrong frame of reference reduces brand awareness because your target audience doesn't immediately "get it." Perhaps the most famous example of this situation is TiVo. Today the idea of a PVR - Personal Video Recorder - is a commonly understood frame of reference. But when TiVO launched they ignored the importance of frame of reference. They should have used "VCR" as the customer's frame of reference saying, "TiVO is like a VCR that can also...". Sure it may have hurt their pride to lump themselves into the category of the technology they were disrupting, but it would have increased awareness and consideration of their brand. Instead, it took a long time, too long, for their brand to catch-on.

Frame of reference frames the competition too

One very helpful quality assurance test of your frame of reference is the competitors it creates. This is because the frame of reference determines the competition. So if TiVO had used VCR as its' frame of reference, buyers would have seen other VCR brands as the competition and TiVO could have given their marketing some bite. But without a quality frame of reference, buyers weren't sure with what to compare TiVo. This is also a great reminder of the essence of positioning: to position your brand against others.

Closer to home, a marketing agency client of ours was of two minds - some felt that they were a "branding agency", others a "digital agency". So we had to have a conversation about their frame of reference. It was the discussion about competitors that resolved the split. I said "If you are a branding agency, then you are going to compete against Interbrand, BBDO, and JWT. And you are going to compete for television spots, direct mail, and lots more. Is that the kind of business you want to pitch?" The answer was a clear "no." Their portfolio was perfect for winning against digital agencies like Organic. Thus "digital agency" became the frame of reference they use for their positioning statement.

When considering your frame of reference ask yourself:

1. Is it one your target audience can instantly grasp without explanation?
2. Is it the right frame of reference?
3. Does it define competitors for your brand?

In my next post, I'll tackle the frame of reference used for the Apple iPhone and the Motorola Droid. Both are great examples of strategic positioning wherein frame of reference plays a critical role.

 

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Brand Positioning Fundamentals - The Need

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Brand Positioning Model  
In my last post, I reviewed the classic brand positioning model we use here at Distility for 1day1brand. As well, we reviewed getting the target audience right. The Motorola Droid was used as our example to illustrate the key elements in a classic positioning statement which are:
 
1. Your target customer
2. Their need
3. Their frame of reference
4. Your dramatic difference(s)
5. Your reason(s) to believe
 
Together they give us a positioning statement such as the one I've intuited for the Motorola Droid:
 
For the technology leader who needs the latest and greatest device, the Motorola Droid is the iphone killer, with a giant screen and the ability to run multiple applications with ease.
 
Their need is not your need
Understanding the customer's needs usually goes awry because it seems so easy to do. You have a brand after all. You are passionate about using your brand to fix some problem. So you figure "the problem my brand fixes is their need." This kind of thinking tends to create irrelevant positioning because you have assumed the customer's needs, rather than authentically discovering them. Not only that, but you've probably also eliminated the competition from the equation with such a granular definition.
 
Key point: If you are the only person who can fulfill the need as you have defined it, you have probably got it wrong. The need should be something they can fulfill through a variety of solutions, including yours.

Let's get back to the example of the Motorola Droid. Compared to the iPhone it has a larger screen and can run many applications at the same time. So is that what our target audience - the technology leader - needs? No, that would be presumptious and far too granular. A good need is not satisfied by a feature. It is enduring. In the case of the Motorola Droid I'd intuit that the audience needs "the latest and greatest device." This kind of need can be satisfied momentarily, by many different brands, but for this target audience it will always return.

Ask yourself
During Distility 1day1brand, we specifically ask participants:
  1. Is this a genuine need of the target audience? How do you know?
  2. Are there others who seek to fill this need? Directly or indirectly?
  3. Is this an enduring need? Something you can build a brand around long-term?
Stay tuned for our next post on possibly the most difficult brand positioning facet: the Frame of Reference.

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Brand Positioning Fundamentals - The Customer

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Brand Positioning Template

As noted in the post Positioning - Much Abused. How to Use here at Distility Branding, for 1day1brand, we use the classic positioning statement that is made up of the elements in the above diagram.

1. Your target customer
2.
Their need
3.
Their frame of reference
4.
Your dramatic difference(s)
5.
Your reason(s) to believe

Together they give us a positioning statement such as the one I've intuited for the Motorola Droid:

For the technology leader who needs the latest and greatest device, the Motorola Droid is the iphone killer, with a giant screen and the ability to run multiple applications with ease.

This week, I'd like to breakdown the statement components, starting with...

The customer

Of course it all starts with getting the customer right! And this is where all too often it goes wrong, especially in B2B branding, where targeting a job title is very helpful.

Can you describe the customer?
Ask yourself, "How well does your firm know the customer?"

Can your team describe the customer clearly with a good sense of their age, education, aspirations and pains? Can you easily find real examples of your "typical" customer? You may not have the budget of Motorola, but that doesn't excuse your team from doing their homework.

Does the customer have a pain or desire you resolve?
Although the target customer's pain or desire is not explicitly mentioned in the positioning statement, it is very important that it exist. A customer that has no pain or desire for your solution is the wrong customer. A vegan is not a good target customer for a brand that is made out of meat. In the case of the Motorola Droid, they know that iphone super-users can be pained by the lack of multi-tasking. They know that while it isn't a pain, a larger screen is something they desire.

Are you really sure?

Ask your team: "Have we missed the blindingly obvious?" For instance, if you are developing a solution for routine laboratory analysis, is the primary target audience the laboratory technician who uses the solution? Or is it the laboratory manager who makes the buying decision? If you aren't sure, you must figure it out before you do any further branding.

What about Motorola? They have targeted a tiny market - disaffected iPhone users. Why wouldn't they copy Apple? After all, when Apple introduced the iPhone, they originally took great pains to sell it as a... phone. Apple didn't want to scare people away by being technologic out the gate. But in the case of the Droid, the choice of this niche customer was conscientious and in keeping with technology marketing best practices when introducing a cutting edge device in a highly competitive market - they targeted the early-adopters, the super influencers. And since - secretly - Motorola knows it can't kill the iPhone, it is actually trying to make the early adopters evangelists for the Droid brand, effectively pushing the desirability of Blackberry, Palm, Windows, Nokia and others down in the mind of the market.

It is key to remember that positioning must be adaptive. Unlike a brand promise or personality which should be designed to endure, positioning should change as it needs in reaction to, and anticipation of changes with the customers, competitors, and the brand's own capabilities. Motorola will soon expand its positioning to bring more customers into the fold.

Next post: Understanding your customer's need.

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Why Mission Statements are Dumb

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Alfred E. Neuman from Mad Magazine 

The reason so many mission statements are dumb is because the idea that every company needs one is dumb.

There are some organizations that need to decide who they are, why they are here, and what they do. Salt of the earth stuff. For them mission statements make sense.

Some companies are fueled by vision, and are attracted to vision statements. Specifically, what they aim to concretely manifest in the future.

Others are driven by their values, so doing their corporate values makes perfect sense.

Purely competitive firms can focus their day around their positioning statement.

Passionate firms can seek a statement that combines their passion with their customer's need. They are perfect candidates for a brand promise statement.

But does a company need all of the above to succeed?

I believe that marketers and branders must be pragmatic. Understand the culture, the need, and only then recommend the simplest thing that will work.

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My Dirty Little Mission Statement Secret

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Axle Davids shhhing 
 
As I mentioned in my last post, Mission Statements make me cry.

They are typically misunderstood, impractical, and poorly facilitated. Nobody remembers them except those that have the misfortune of having them mounted on a plaque in their lobby. And frankly, even they don't remember it.
 
So what do I do when someone comes to our firm and says they need a Mission Statement? I sell them a brand promise, brand positioning and brand personality instead.
 
Brand promise, brand position, brand personality
 
Unlike Mission Statements, these can galvanize an organization or team.
 
The brand promise is the fusion of the customer's need and your team's passion.
 
The brand position is why the customer should resolve their need with your brand, instead of the competition.
 
The brand personality is how you deliver.
 
I'd like to see Mission Statements become the exception, not the rule. Use them infrequently and use them well for organizations that are so large they need to institutionalize common sense. But for everyone else? Seriously, is it what you really need?

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Brand Positioning - The Droid Problem

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With their "Droid Does" campaign, Motorolla is using the “Repositioning the Competition” strategy, using the iPhone's entrenched brand status as the way to get sticky in our minds. It is the same strategy used when Avis fought Hertz with their classic "“We're number two. We try harder” brand strategy. Key difference here is that the positioning is narrowly focused on the uber geek, male, early adopter.

It is great to see this gutsy positioning, but will it work?

To succeed, positioning must be three things: unique, relevant and compelling.

The Droid positioning is unique - no doubt about it. The hardware, software, and styling all stand apart. The aggressive, robotic branding is world's away from any competitor. Actually, it is the first superphone commercial that some attitude a la Apple's landmark 1984 television advertisement directed by Ridley Scott. The contrast is actually delicious. Apple branded itself as the human, destroying the machine. Droid is branded as the machine.

The Droid positioning is relevant - superphones are the new PCs, and consumers want choice, especially if they are with Verizon.

But is the positioning compelling? I'm an early adopter and don't find any of the things "Droid Does" to be a compelling reason to desire this new device. Higher resolution screen? Nice to have? Yes. Need to have? No. Multi-tasking? The same. And so on.

Where the strategy does succeed, is in manipulating me quite successfully into thinking that the Droid must be the number two choice. Suddenly, Blackberry, Palm, Windows, and the other brands out there seem a lot less relevant, a lot less unique, and far less compelling.

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Positioning - Much Abused. How to Use.

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Brand Positioning - Image of Rubber Chicken 

Positioning - Much Abused. How to Use.

 
Sales Guy #1: So What's Your Positioning?
 
Sales Guy #2: We're a global leading manufacturer of rubber chickens. 
 
Ouch. Poor Positioning. She is so misunderstood. Maybe even the most abused term in Marketing.
 
Here's the bottom line. Positioning needs to be relative to something else. You don't say "Position that rubber chicken on the table." You say "Position that rubber chicken next to the whoopee cushion."
 
Even when the term isn't being abused, it doesn't help that marketing experts have many different positioning methods and models. No wonder buying branding can be so frustrating.
 
How we separate the signal from the noise
Here at Distility we respect two schools of positioning. The first is the more classic definition. We call it "Market Positioning". The best description of this type of positioning I've ever read is in "Kellogg on Branding" in the first chapter written by Alice m. Tybout and Brian Sternthal.
 
The key components in this model are: 
1. Your target customer
2. Their need
3. Their point of reference
4. The dramatic difference(s)
5. The reason(s) to believe
 
Here is said model applied to Distility 1day1brand:
 
Brand Positioning of Distility

Take note that the positioning here is taking place relative to the customer, their need, their frame of reference, and most importantly your competitors.
 
It is easy to get any one of these wrong if you're rushed or not careful. Technology firms typically get the point of reference wrong. Tivo, according to Tybout and Sternthal, fell down here. They should have used the VCR as their point of reference. "We're like a VCR except you can..." Because they never clarified their Point of Reference, it took way too long for consumers to make sense of their technology.
  
The Trout & Ries model
Jack Trout and especially Al Reis were the big thinkers in the early days of branding. Reading the Reis book "The 22 Immutable Laws of Branding" was a milestone event in my development as a branding expert. But it was their collaboration, and the book "Positioning: The Battle for your Mind" that most influenced my techniques in the early days of running aXle Branding (now Distility).

Trout & Ries taught how positioning happens in the mind of the customer. That was key. They also explained brand categories. According to them, the customer can only remember a few rungs of the ladder for any brand category. So when s/he thinks smart phone, they think of the iPhone at #1, then Blackberry at #2, then a mess of other players at #3, #4, etc. To grossly simplify, Trout & Reis wrote about the critical nature of category leadership, and ways to "reposition" the #1 player, or become #1 by creating your own category or sub-category.
 
To distinguish this from the "Market Positioning" we described further above, we call this "Brand Positioning." I suppose you could also call it "Brand Categorizing" but that just sounds off.
 
Most companies are naturally averse to creating a new brand position/category. Their desire for legitimacy is stronger than their desire to differentiate.
 
One of our first clients was a software firm from Montreal. Their software helped game and movie makers work with huge digital crowds. They considered themselves to be in the "3D Animation" category. We worked with them and developed a new category "AI Animation" (AI - Artificial intelligence). Before this "repositioning" they would meet prospective customers and say "We're in 3D Animation Software..." customers knew that category, and they knew that the #1 and #2 player were multimillion dollar software plays, not our client. Our client wasn't being remembered.

But when they dared to be different, and said "We're the first AI Animation solution" the audience had just one thing to say: "What's AI Animation?" That's the golden moment. You've just created a NEW category in the customer’s head. And you are at the top. Trout and Reis showed how this new, top position was far more meaningful and memorable, the sticky way to establish yourself in the minds that matter most to you.
 
To come back to Distility, our brand positioning is Distility 1day1brand is "The world's first team-based brand development system."
 
Putting it all together
As mentioned at the top, with Distility we use both models. For us "Market Positioning" is really all about positioning in the marketplace. The Trout & Reis style "Brand Positioning", actually dovetails into the classic method fairly well. But is far more focused, and exclusively about the category in the customer's head - creating a new one, or pushing your way up an existing one.
 
Afternote: This video for Moto’s Droid superphone is a good example of the Trout & Reis “Repositioning the Competition” strategy.

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Great Positioning Video - Motorola Droid Takes on iPhone

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It is great to see some seriously tough positioning coming out of Motorola for their new super phone - The Motorola Droid.

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