Most marketing mistakes stem from the assumption that you’re fighting a product battle rooted in reality.
Don’t play semantic games with the prospect. Advertising is not a debate. It’s a seduction.
Building your brand on quality is like building your house on sand. You can build quality into your product, but that has little to do with your success in the marketplace.
Quality is a nice thing to have, but brands are not built by quality alone.
You build brand loyalty in a supermarket the same way you build mate loyalty in a marriage. You get there first and then be careful not give them a reason to switch.
Marriage, as a human institution, depends on the concept of first being better than best. And so does business.
The basic approach of positioning is not to create something new and different, but to manipulate what’s already up there in the mind, to retie the connections that already exist.
Success in business inflates the egos of top management.
You want to change something in a computer? Just type over or delete the existing material. You want to change something in a mind? Forget it.
When you try to be everything, you wind up being nothing.
Today brands are born, not made. A new brand must be capable of generating favorable publicity in the media or it won’t have a chance in the marketplace. And just how do you generate publicity? The best way to generate publicity is by being first. In other words, by being the first brand in a new category.
The Avis campaign will go down in marketing history as a classic example of establishing the “against” position.
Positioning is an organized system for finding a window in the mind. It is based on the concept that communication can only take place at the right time and under the right circumstances.
The easy way to get into a person’s mind is to be first.
The most difficult part of positioning is selecting that one specific concept to hang your hat on. Yet you must, if you want to cut through the prospect’s wall of indifference.
If you were forced to drink a beaker of di-hydrogen oxide, your response would probably be negative. If you asked for a glass of water, you might enjoy it. That’s right. There’s no difference on the palate. The difference, in the brain.
Traditional marketing is not focused on creating new categories. Traditional marketing is focused on creating new customers. Traditional marketing involves finding out what consumers want and then giving them what they want, better and cheaper than the competition.
In politics,” said John Lindsay, “the perception is the reality.” So, too, in advertising, in business, and in life.
In our overcommunicated society, the paradox is that nothing is more important than communication.
In the communication jungle out there, the only hope to score big is to be selective, to concentrate on narrow targets, to practice segmentation. In a word, “positioning.