1 / 24

BRAND POSITIONING

BRAND POSITIONING. Prof. Chaitali Chandarana. MeANING. A brand can hope at best to occupy such a position as a tenant, for periods that will vary according to the quality and quantity of marketing efforts behind that brand.

taran
Download Presentation

BRAND POSITIONING

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BRAND POSITIONING Prof. Chaitali Chandarana

  2. MeANING • A brand can hope at bestto occupy such a position as a tenant, for periods that will vary according to the quality and quantity of marketing efforts behind that brand. • Once the core product concept is chosen, it defines the character of the product space in which the new product has to be positioned. • This is the core thought behind brand positioning - the idea that each brand (if at all noticed) occupies a particular point or space in the individual consumer's mind, a point that is determined by that consumer's perception of the brand in question and in its relation to other brands. • Positioning, therefore, starts with our understanding or 'mapping' of a prospect consumer's mental perceptions of products.

  3. Brand position is the part of the brand identity and value proposition that is to be actively communicated to the target audience and that demonstrates an advantage over competing brands. • The four salient characteristics of a brand position as reflected by the phrases “part”, “target audience”, “actively communicated”, and “demonstrates advantage”.

  4. Comparisionwith brand identity: Comparison of the identity with the image will usually result in one of three very different communication tasks being reflected in a brand position statement. Any brand image can be • Augmented (if a dimension needs to be added or strengthened) e.g., add social group acceptance • Reinforced and exploited (if the image associations are consistent with the identity and are strong) e.g., reinforce fun and humor ous personality • Diffused, softened or deleted (if the image is inconsistent with the brand identity) e.g., soften middle-aged-user imagery

  5. Brand positioning Demonstrates An Advantage • Resonate with the Customer • Differentiate Oneself from Competitors • Matching Versus Beating Competitors

  6. KEY points about positioning • It is a strategic, not a tactical, activity • It is aimed at developing a strategic, sustainable competitive advantage • It is concerned with managing perceptions • Brand image and reputation are the result of the positioning process

  7. Components of positioning The four basic components of the positioning concept are: • Product class • Consumer segmentation. • Consumer perception • The benefits offered by the brand.

  8. I. PRODUCT CLASS Positioning • Position in relation to attributes • Positioning the product in relation to users/ image. • Position in relation to competetion • Position directly against competetion • Positioning away from competetion. • Positioning in relation to a different product class

  9. II. Approaches to Consumer segmentation positioning • Undifferentiated Strategy (Commodities like Chilly powder, Rice etc) • Concentrated strategy (Air Deccan concentrating on Cost factor and not on better seating arrangement/ food) • Differentiated Strategy (Different size of packaging, Business and Economic Class in airline sector.)

  10. III. Perceptual mapping • How a product relates to the competition • Who the nearest competitirs are • Which product/ service attributes best describes each product.

  11. IV. Brand benefits & Attributes • Attributes are simple characterstics of a particular product. • Benefits are a approach about how a brand meets a consumer need. • Benefits rather than attributes is more powerful in motivating consumers. • Attribute: Sugarfree is low on calories • Benefits: Helps you feel good about yourself.

  12. Cornerstone of positioning strategy • Know your target market • Distinctive product positioning • Positioning statements differentiating from competitors by adding value & creating brand personality.

  13. Part Of The Identity • Look to the Core Identity • Identify Points of Leverage • The Value Proposition • The Target Audience • Active Communication

  14. Comparing Positioning and Identity • Comparison of the identity with the image will usually result in one of three very different communication tasks being reflected in a brand position statement. Any brand image can be • Augmented (if a dimension needs to be added or strengthened) e.g., add social group acceptance • Reinforced and exploited (if the image associations are consistent with the identity and are strong) e.g., reinforce fun and humor ous personality • Diffused, softened or deleted (if the image is inconsistent with the brand identity) e.g., soften middle-aged-user imagery

  15. Advantages • Resonate with the Customer • Differentiate Oneself from Competitors • Matching Versus Beating Competitors

  16. Not Every brand is in a Competition…

  17. Positioning Opportunities for a Product • Finding an unmet consumer need . • Identifying a product strength that is both unique & important • Determining how to correct a product weakness and thereby enhance a product’s appeal. • Changing consumer usage patterns. • Identifying market segments, which represent the best targets for a product

  18. Qualities of a Successful Positioning • Relevance • Clarity • Distinctiveness • Coherence • Commitment • Patience • Courage

  19. Types • Positioning by Corporate Identity • Positioning by Brand Endorsement • Category-related positioning • Benefit-related positioning • Positioning by usage occasion and time • Price-Quality positioning • Positioning on specific product features: • Positioning a product by its performance • Positioning on benefits, problem solutions or needs:

  20. THANK YOU

More Related