| By Derek Harris | Article Rating: |
|
| November 30, 2011 03:44 PM EST | Reads: |
1,330 |
Erich Flynn, CEO, TreeHouse Interactive
You have spent weeks researching your markets, building competitive taxonomies and calling together disparate company stakeholders to get your positioning statement complete. Now what? This is a really good question.
Just to refresh, the objective of positioning is to find a perception you want to create in your target customer’s mind—one that addresses customer issues and enables you to focus on the highly desired and highly competitive features of your product relative to your competitors products in your target market (see How to Create Positioning that Works - A 5-Part Methodology). Once you find the perception you want to create, you need to take steps to make it happen.
It is important to know what a positioning statement is, and what it isn’t. It is not a tagline, advertising slogan, marketing copy for websites and datasheets, or company mission statement. A positioning statement is a perception you want to create in your target customer's mind. It sets the competitive agenda, focuses on your solution's most compelling attributes and much more, literally touching every aspect of your company.
If your positioning is truly competitive, your sales teams should be almost unbeatable when properly trained and provided with the sales tools needed to win business. The positioning statement won’t likely be the message, but it will greatly influence the messages, strategies and tactics to create the desired perception in the target customer’s mind.
For more information about marketing and marketing automation, visit
Published November 30, 2011 Reads 1,330
Copyright © 2011 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By Derek Harris
Derek Harris Sr. is a senior technology writer and blogger with more than 20 years experience in journalism. While covering a broad spectrum of technology segments, his focus is weighted on enterprise technologies in the data storage, security and infrastructure spaces.
- Ubuntu-based Open Source Linux Mint Tests KDE Version
- NetArt Chooses Open-Xchange to Enter into Cloud Application Business
- Rackspace Starts the Great OpenStack Migration
- Cloud Expo: Architect Full Performance Potential of IaaS Cloud Services
- Hot Tech Firms at the 2012 DoDIIS Conference
- Microsoft Sets Up an Open Source Subsidiary
- Dell and Morphlabs Partner on SSD Cloud
- Piston to Integrate Cloud Foundry & OpenStack
- Smarter Computing and IT Consolidation with IBM's Enterprise Linux Server
- Informatica Upgrades Its iPaaS
- Dell Buys Mainframe Modernizer in Cloud Push
- Inktank to Commercialize Ceph Big Storage
- Red Hat Executive Appointed to Technology Services Industry Association (TSIA) Support Services Advisory Board
- Ubuntu-based Open Source Linux Mint Tests KDE Version
- What Kind of Software Company Should You Work For?
- NetArt Chooses Open-Xchange to Enter into Cloud Application Business
- Rackspace Starts the Great OpenStack Migration
- TeamDrive 3.0 Unveiled at CeBIT: Brings Enterprise-Grade Security to Cloud File Sharing on the iPhone, iPad and Android
- Cloud Expo: Architect Full Performance Potential of IaaS Cloud Services
- Hot Tech Firms at the 2012 DoDIIS Conference
- Sorting Through the APM Clutter
- Microsoft Sets Up an Open Source Subsidiary
- Dell and Morphlabs Partner on SSD Cloud
- SMEStorage Provides Hybrid Cloud File Server Appliance Through Integration with Eucalyptus
- The i-Technology Right Stuff
- Linux.SYS-CON.com Exclusive: Linus Discloses *Real* Fathers of Linux
- After Ubuntu, Windows Looks Increasingly Bad, Increasingly Archaic, Increasingly Unfriendly
- A Closer Look at Damn Small Linux
- Linus' Top Ten SCO Barbs
- SCO CEO Posts Open Letter to the Open Source Community
- Netscape Co-Founder's 12 Reasons for Growth of Open Source
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- *POINT - COUNTERPOINT SPECIAL* What's Wrong with the Open Source Community?
- Introducing "Cooperative Linux" - Linux for Windows, No Less
- Linux.SYS-CON.com Exclusive: What Would UserLinux Look Like?
- Why Recovering a Deleted Ext3 File Is Difficult . . .























