Marketing Management Assignment 2 Various Positioning Strategies Followed by Companies Submitted By: Date: 14 Sep 2018
Marketing Management Assignment 2 Various Positioning Strategies Followed by Companies Submitted By: Date: 14 Sep 2018
ASSIGNMENT 2
VARIOUS POSITIONING STRATEGIES FOLLOWED BY COMPANIES
SUBMITTED BY: DATE: 14 SEP 2018
No company can win if its products and services resemble every other product and
offering. As part of the strategic brand management process, each offering must
represent the right kinds of things in the minds of the target market.
Creating products and services for which there are no direct competitors. Instead of
searching within the conventional boundaries of industry competition, managers should
look beyond those boundaries to find unoccupied market positions that represent real
value innovation.
Bert Claeys, a Belgian company that operates movie theaters, and its introduction of
the 25-screen, 7,600-seat Kinepolis megaplex. Despite an industry slump, Kinepolis has
thrived on a unique combination of features, such as ample and safe free parking, large
screens and state-of-the-art sound and projection equipment, and roomy, comfortable,
oversized seats with unobstructed views. Through smart planning and economies of
scale, Bert Claeys created Kinepolis’s unique cinema experience at a lower cost.
2. STRADDLE POSITIONING
Occasionally, a company will be able to straddle two frames of reference with one set
of points-of-difference and points-of-parity. In these cases, the points-of-difference for
one category become points-of-parity for the other and vice versa.
Example: Subway
A lower price strategy may require compromises in product quality or to reduce the
range of offerings. Whereas consumers perceive products with higher prices as having
superior quality and are worth the price. However, to create this perception in the
mind of the consumer, the company must focus its advertising on how its features and
benefits are superior to those of its competitors.
Example: The Five Guys hamburger chain has created the impression that their
hamburgers and fries are higher quality than McDonald's and Burger King. As a result,
Five Guys is able to charge higher prices, and people will stand in line to pay.
Companies can create the perception of better value by restricting the distribution of
their products.
Example: Golf equipment manufacturers have certain clubs and balls that are only
available in pro shops and are sold at higher prices The golfer believes that the
products must be of higher quality because they're not available in Target or Walmart.
4. BRAND JOURNALISM
McDonald’s former CMO Larry Light advocated an approach to brand positioning that
he called “brand journalism.” Just as editors and writers for newspapers and
magazines tell many facets of a story to capture the interests of diverse groups of
people, Light believes marketers should communicate different messages to different
market segments, as long as they at least broadly fit within the basic broad image of
the brand.
Rather than outlining specific attributes or benefits, some marketing experts describe
positioning a brand as telling a narrative or story. Narrative branding is based on deep
metaphors that connect to people’s memories, associations, and stories.
(2) the consumer journey in terms of how consumers engage with the brand over time
and touch points where they come into contact with it,
(4) the manner in which the narrative is expressed experientially in terms of how the
brand engages the senses, and
Based on literary convention and brand experience, they also offer the following
framework for a brand story:
• Cast. The brand as a character, including its role in the life of the audience, its
relationships and responsibilities, and its history or creation myth
• Narrative arc. The way the narrative logic unfolds over time, including actions,
desired experiences, defining events, and the moment of epiphany
Building brands for a small business is a challenge because these firms have limited
resources and budgets. Nevertheless, numerous success stories exist of entrepreneurs
who have built their brands up essentially from scratch to become powerhouse
brands.
Example: Vitaminwater