| name | brand-positioning |
| description | Develop brand positioning strategy using proven frameworks. Use when defining or refining how a brand is perceived in the market. |
| origin | ECM |
Brand Positioning
When to Activate
- Launching a new brand or product and need to define market position
- The brand feels undefined, generic, or interchangeable with competitors
- Entering a new market or audience segment
- Competitors have shifted and the current position is no longer differentiated
- A merger, acquisition, or pivot requires repositioning
- Internal teams cannot articulate what makes the brand different
- Customer perception research reveals a gap between intended and actual positioning
First Questions
- What category do you compete in? (And is that the right category?)
- Who is your ideal customer? Be specific — not "everyone."
- What is the single most important thing you want customers to believe about your brand?
- What proof do you have that this claim is true?
- Who are your top three competitors, and how do customers choose between you?
- If your brand disappeared tomorrow, what would customers miss most?
- What would you like customers to say about you that they are not saying today?
Positioning Statement Formula
Geoffrey Moore's Classic Framework
For [target customer]
who [statement of need or opportunity],
[brand name] is a [product category]
that [key benefit / reason to buy].
Unlike [competitive alternative],
our product [primary differentiation].
Example — Slack (early days):
For teams who struggle with scattered communication across email and chat, Slack is a workplace messaging platform that brings all your conversations, tools, and files into one place. Unlike email or basic chat apps, Slack organizes communication into searchable channels by topic, project, or team.
Rules for Effective Positioning Statements
- One primary benefit, not a laundry list
- The differentiation must be provable, not aspirational
- The competitive alternative should be what customers actually use today (may not be a direct competitor — could be "spreadsheets" or "doing nothing")
- Keep it to one paragraph — if you cannot, the positioning is not focused enough
Positioning Canvas
Use this canvas to build positioning from the ground up:
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ TARGET CUSTOMER │
│ Who are they? What do they care about? │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ MARKET CATEGORY │
│ What category do customers put you in? │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ KEY PROBLEM │
│ What pain or unmet need do you address? │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ UNIQUE VALUE PROPOSITION │
│ What benefit do you deliver better than anyone? │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ PROOF POINTS │
│ What evidence supports your claim? │
│ (Data, testimonials, awards, features, patents) │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ COMPETITIVE ALTERNATIVES │
│ What do customers use if they don't use you? │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│ PRIMARY DIFFERENTIATION │
│ What is the one thing that sets you apart? │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Perceptual Mapping
Plot your brand and competitors on a two-axis map to visualize positioning gaps and opportunities.
How to Build a Perceptual Map
-
Choose two axes that represent the most important dimensions in your category. Common pairs:
- Price (low ↔ high) vs Quality (basic ↔ premium)
- Traditional ↔ Innovative vs Specialist ↔ Generalist
- Simple ↔ Complex vs Self-serve ↔ Full service
- Mass market ↔ Niche vs Functional ↔ Emotional
-
Plot competitors based on customer perception (not your own opinion — use research if available).
-
Identify white space — quadrants or zones with no strong player. Evaluate whether the white space is a real opportunity or a "dead zone" (empty because there is no demand).
-
Plot your desired position and assess the distance from your current position. Large gaps require more investment and time.
Category Design
Sometimes the most powerful positioning move is to define a new category rather than fight for position in an existing one.
When to Consider Category Design
- You genuinely do something no existing category describes
- The existing category has a dominant incumbent you cannot displace
- Customer language does not match any established category
Category Design Steps
- Name the category (short, descriptive, memorable)
- Define the problem the category solves (not your product — the category)
- Articulate why the old way of solving the problem is broken
- Position your brand as the category leader and definer
- Educate the market on the category (this takes significant investment)
Example: Drift did not position itself as "another live chat tool." They defined the category "Conversational Marketing" and positioned the entire approach as new.
Warning: Category creation requires significant marketing investment and time. Do not create a category just to avoid competition — do it when you genuinely represent a new approach.
Differentiation Strategies
Five levels of differentiation, from easiest to defend to hardest:
1. Feature Differentiation
"We have X and they don't."
- Easiest to communicate, easiest for competitors to copy
- Works in the short term, especially for technical buyers
- Example: "The only CRM with built-in video messaging"
2. Benefit Differentiation
"Using us, you achieve Y."
- Translates features into outcomes customers care about
- More defensible than features alone
- Example: "Close deals 40% faster" (not "we have pipeline automation")
3. Experiential Differentiation
"Working with us feels like Z."
- Product experience, customer service, community, design quality
- Harder to copy because it is systemic
- Example: Apple's retail experience, Zappos customer service
4. Emotional Differentiation
"We make you feel W."
- Taps into identity, aspiration, belonging
- Very durable but requires consistent brand investment
- Example: Nike's empowerment, Patagonia's environmental stewardship
5. Cultural Differentiation
"We stand for V."
- Takes a position on how the world should work
- Polarizing by design — attracts true believers, repels others
- Example: Basecamp's stance on work-life balance, Ben & Jerry's social activism
Positioning Validation
Test positioning before committing with these methods:
- The bar test. Can you explain your positioning to a stranger in 30 seconds and have them understand what you do and why it matters?
- The competitor swap test. If you replaced your brand name with a competitor's, would the positioning still be true? If yes, it is not differentiated enough.
- The "so what" test. After stating your key benefit, ask "so what?" three times. If you cannot answer, the benefit is not compelling enough.
- Customer language match. Does your positioning use words your customers actually use, or internal jargon?
- Team alignment test. Ask five team members to describe the brand's positioning independently. If answers diverge significantly, the positioning is not clear or embedded.
Repositioning Considerations
Repositioning an existing brand is harder than positioning a new one. Consider:
- Is it necessary? Repositioning costs brand equity. Only do it if current position is untenable.
- How far is the move? Adjacent repositioning (premium to ultra-premium) is easier than radical repositioning (budget to luxury).
- Customer base impact. Will existing customers feel alienated? What is the churn risk?
- Gradual vs sudden. Evolutionary repositioning (slowly shifting over 12-24 months) is usually safer than a sudden pivot.
- Internal alignment. Repositioning fails when the team does not believe in or execute the new position. Get buy-in before going to market.
Quality Gate
Before finalizing a positioning strategy: