BA Theories (Business Administration & Management)

Brand Positioning: Concepts

brand positioning framework

Brand positioning is about creating a suitable image for a brand in the minds of the target audience. As part of this process, the unique features of the brand are indetified and is communicated effectively to create a distict image of that brand to the target market.

While brand positioning and positioning are part of the STP (Segmentation, Targeting, and Positioning) model in marketing are related concepts, they are not exactly the same.

Positioning in the STP model involves creating a unique value proposition (for the products or services) and communicating that value proposition effectively to the target market.

Brand positioning, on the other hand, focuses specifically on creating a distinctive image for the brand itself rather than on the positioning of products or services in the market.

Brand Positioning: Factors to Consider

When positioning a brand, these things must be considered:

Developing Brand Concepts

Here’s how to develop Brand Concepts. This involves appealing to Consumer Needs by addressing their following needs:

Functional needs (solving problems): products that attempt to fulfill the consumer’s consumption-related problems (quality, convenience, ease of use). It communicates that the brand’s benefits are capable of solving consumers’ consumption-related problems.

Symbolic needs (associating the brand with symbolic objects): directed at consumers’ desire for self-enhancement, role position, group membership, and belongingness (friendly, serious, professional). It is about associating brand ownership with a desired group, role, or self-image.

Experiential needs (sensory pleasures, personal experience): products that provide sensory pleasure, variety, and/or cognitive stimulation (I am important, trendy, young). It promotes brand’s extraordinary sensory value, or rich potential for cognitive stimulation.

Adoption Process and Marcom Tools

The adoption process in brand positioning refers to the process by which a company positions its brand in the minds of their target audience to encourage adoption or acceptance of their brand.

Use of Marcom Tools in the Adoption Process:

Hierarchy of Marcom Effects

The hierarchy of effects metaphor implies that for marketing communications to be successful it must move consumers from one goal to the next goal.

The hierarchy of effects related to advert.

  1. Advancing Consumers from Unawareness to Awareness: Creating awareness is essential for new or unestablished brands.

  2. Creating an Expectation: Instill in consumers an expectation of what product benefit(s) they will obtain from buying and experiencing a brand.

  3. Encouraging Trial Purchases: The consumer tries the brand for the first time. This is the role of the sales promotion component of marcom.

  4. Forming Beliefs and Attitudes: Upon trying a brand for the first time, the consumer will form beliefs about its performance. These beliefs, in turn, form the basis for developing an overall attitude toward the brand. Beliefs and attitudes are mutually reinforcing.

Consumer’s MAO to Process the Message

Enhancing Consumers’ Motivation, Opportunity, and Ability (MAO) to Process Brand Information.

Enhance Consumers’ MOTIVATION to Attend to the message by:

Enhance Consumers’ MOTIVATION to Process brand information by:

Enhance Consumers’ OPPORTUNITY to Encode information by:

Enhance Consumers’ OPPORTUNITY to Reduce processing time by:

Enhance Consumers’ ABILITY to Access knowledge structures by:

Enhance Consumers’ ABILITY to Create knowledge structures by:

Specifying Media Objectives

Media Objectives are different from Campaign Objectives:

Continuity

Continuity involves the matter of how advertising should be allocated during the course of an advertising campaign.

Related: Marcom, its objectives & tools used to achieve them

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