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Positioning
Position is your identity in the marketplace: how you want the
market and your competitors to perceive your product or
service. While your USP is based on features of your product or
service, your positioning is based on your customers and
competition. Federal Express positioned itself as a reliable and
dependable overnight delivery service for businesses. MTV and VH1
play many of the same music videos, but MTV is positioned as the
choice for young, hip viewers, while VH1 is considered the station
for more mature viewers.
If you run a dry cleaning business you can be the fastest, the
most dependable, the cheapest, or the business providing the best
service. A mail-order gift business can emphasize price,
convenience, a flexible returns policy, unique products, or some
combination of these. A hairdresser may be positioned as hip,
traditional, pampering, inexpensive, or convenient.
You may think that positioning is based on image.
Develop your position by answering the following questions with brief, direct statements:
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What is unique about your product or service?
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What customer needs does your product fulfill?
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How do you want people to view your products or services?
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How do your competitors position themselves?
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Tips
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Research your competitors by shopping their stores or
calling them to see what they offer and what they charge for
it.
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To create a list of your competitors strengths and weaknesses,
look at areas such as distribution, pricing, value, service,
timeliness. If you were undertaking market research, for example, you would look at depth of research, price, frequency of survey, add-on services, and reputation in the marketplace. A dry cleaner
would look at pricing, location, services such as delivery, hours
of operation, quality of their cleaning, whether or not they are
computerized and if they provide services such as tailoring and
mending.
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If appropriate, research your competitors in trade
magazines to unearth their strengths and weaknesses.
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In order to position yourself in the market you will need
to understand standard industry practices, such as pricing,
billing, distribution. This information is usually available
from trade organizations. Call the reference librarian or
visit the reference section of your library to find the
appropriate association in a book called the Gale
Encyclopedia of Business and Professional Associations.
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Back To Creating an Effective Business Plan
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