Brand Positioning
Overview
Brand positioning defines the distinct place a brand occupies in the target customer's mind relative to competitors. It combines a positioning statement (verbal), a perceptual map (visual), and brand personality (emotional). Positioning is the bridge between STP (who to target) and execution (how to communicate).
When to Use
Trigger conditions:
- User creating or refreshing a brand identity
- User needs to differentiate from competitors
- User asks "what makes us different?" or "how do customers perceive us?"
- User's brand feels generic or unfocused
When NOT to use:
- For market segmentation → use STP first (positioning comes after targeting)
- For tactical marketing mix → use 4P/7P
- For product feature decisions → use Value Proposition Canvas or JTBD
Framework
IRON LAW: Positioning Is in the Customer's Mind, Not Your Brochure
Positioning is about PERCEPTION, not reality. You don't decide your position —
customers do. You can influence it through consistent signals, but the ultimate
test is: "When customers think of [category], do they think of us?"
A positioning statement is a GOAL — verify it matches actual perception
through customer research.
IRON LAW: One Position Per Brand
A brand cannot own two positions simultaneously. "We're the cheapest AND
the most premium" is not positioning — it's confusion. If you need to serve
different segments with different positions, use different brands or sub-brands.
Step 1: Define the Competitive Frame
Before positioning, clarify:
- Category: What category does the customer place you in?
- Competitive set: Who are you compared against? (may differ from who you think your competitors are)
- Target segment: From STP — whose mind are you positioning in?
Step 2: Craft the Positioning Statement
Use this template:
For [target segment],
[brand] is the [category/competitive frame]
that [point of difference — the ONE thing that sets you apart]
because [reason to believe — proof that you can deliver].
Rules:
- One point of difference, not a list
- The POD must be relevant to the target AND different from competitors
- The reason to believe must be verifiable, not aspirational
Step 3: Build the Perceptual Map
Plot your brand and competitors on a 2D map:
- Choose two axes that matter most to the target segment (e.g., price vs quality, convenience vs customization)
- Plot all brands in the competitive set based on customer perception (not your internal view)
- Identify white space — gaps where no brand is positioned
Step 4: Define Brand Personality
Select 3-5 personality traits using the Aaker framework:
| Dimension | Traits |
|---|
| Sincerity | Down-to-earth, honest, wholesome, cheerful |
| Excitement | Daring, spirited, imaginative, up-to-date |
| Competence | Reliable, intelligent, successful |
| Sophistication | Upper-class, charming, elegant |
| Ruggedness | Outdoorsy, tough, strong |
Step 5: Identify Brand Archetype (Optional)
Map the brand to one of 12 Jungian archetypes:
- Hero, Outlaw, Magician, Innocent, Explorer, Sage, Creator, Ruler, Caregiver, Jester, Lover, Everyman
The archetype guides tone of voice, visual identity, and storytelling.
Output Format
markdown
# Brand Positioning: {Brand}
## Competitive Frame
- Category: ...
- Competitive set: {list competitors}
- Target segment: {from STP}
## Positioning Statement
For {target}, {brand} is the {category} that {POD} because {RTB}.
## Perceptual Map
|-------|---------------------|---------------------|
| Our brand | H/M/L | H/M/L |
| Competitor A | ... | ... |
| Competitor B | ... | ... |
**White space identified**: {gap description}
## Brand Personality
- Traits: {3-5 traits}
- Aaker dimension: {primary dimension}
- Archetype: {archetype name}
- Tone of voice: {description}
## Positioning Validation
- Relevance to target: ✓/✗
- Differentiation from competitors: ✓/✗
- Credibility / deliverability: ✓/✗
Examples
Correct Application
Scenario: Positioning for a Taiwanese craft beer brand
Statement: "For adventurous 25-40 urban professionals who seek unique drinking experiences, 島嶼啤酒 is the Taiwanese craft beer that celebrates local ingredients (longan honey, oolong tea, lychee) because we brew exclusively with Taiwan-sourced botanicals in small batches from our Taipei brewery."
Perceptual map (Price vs Local Identity):
| Brand | Price | Local Identity |
|---|
| 島嶼啤酒 | High | Very High |
| 台灣啤酒 | Low | Medium |
| Kirin / Asahi | Medium | Low (imported) |
| Jim & Dad's | High | Medium |
Brand personality: Excitement (imaginative, spirited) + Sincerity (wholesome). Archetype: Explorer.
Incorrect Application
What went wrong:
- "We're positioned as premium, affordable, and convenient" → Three points of difference = no clear position. Violates Iron Law: one position per brand.
- Positioning statement based on CEO's vision without customer research → Positioning is perception, not intention. Violates Iron Law: positioning is in the customer's mind.
Gotchas
- Positioning ≠ tagline: A tagline is a creative expression of positioning, not the positioning itself. "Just Do It" is a tagline; Nike's positioning is "For serious athletes, Nike is the performance brand that inspires competitive greatness because of its endorsement by world-class athletes and innovative product technology."
- Perceptual map axes matter enormously: Wrong axes = misleading map. Choose axes from customer research (what dimensions do customers actually use to compare?), not internal metrics.
- Repositioning is expensive: Changing an established position requires significant investment and consistency over years. Get it right initially when possible.
- Brand personality must be consistent across all touchpoints: If your personality is "exciting and daring" but your website looks like a bank's, there's a disconnect.
- Category choice shapes competition: Defining your category defines your competitors. A "healthy snack bar" competes with KIND and Clif. A "meal replacement" competes with Soylent and Huel. Same product, different category, different positioning.
References
- For brand archetype details, see
references/brand-archetypes.md
- For perceptual mapping methodology, see
references/perceptual-mapping.md