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brand-positioning-theory

Provides brand positioning frameworks, the 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, ZAG methodology, Onliness Statement formula, and positioning templates. Auto-activates during positioning strategy, competitive mapping, and market positioning work. Use when discussing brand positioning, onliness statement, positioning statement, 22 laws, ZAG, Ries and Trout, Neumeier, cherchez le creneau, positioning map, ladder concept, or trueline.

$ Installer

git clone https://github.com/mike-coulbourn/claude-vibes /tmp/claude-vibes && cp -r /tmp/claude-vibes/plugins/vibes/skills/brand-positioning-theory ~/.claude/skills/claude-vibes

// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill


name: brand-positioning-theory description: Provides brand positioning frameworks, the 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, ZAG methodology, Onliness Statement formula, and positioning templates. Auto-activates during positioning strategy, competitive mapping, and market positioning work. Use when discussing brand positioning, onliness statement, positioning statement, 22 laws, ZAG, Ries and Trout, Neumeier, cherchez le creneau, positioning map, ladder concept, or trueline.

Brand Positioning Theory Framework

Quick reference for positioning a brand using methodologies from Al Ries, Jack Trout, and Marty Neumeier.

"Marketing is not a battle of products, it's a battle of perceptions." — Al Ries & Jack Trout

"When everybody zigs, zag." — Marty Neumeier


Ries & Trout's 5 Core Principles

  1. Positioning happens in the mind: You don't position products; you position perceptions. The only reality that counts is what's already in the prospect's mind.

  2. The mind is limited: In an "over-communicated society," the mind can only hold a few brands per category. Simplicity wins.

  3. First is powerful: Being first to get into the prospect's mind is more vital than having a superior product. "It's better to be first than it is to be better."

  4. Own a word: Successful positioning means associating your brand with a specific word. Volvo owns "safety." FedEx owns "overnight." Crest owns "cavities."

  5. Find the hole (Cherchez le Creneau): Look for an unoccupied position in the marketplace. "To find a creneau, you must have the ability to think in reverse, to go against the grain."


The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing

#LawCore Principle
1LeadershipBetter to be first than to be better
2CategoryIf you can't be first, create a new category you can be first in
3MindBeing first in the mind trumps being first in the marketplace
4PerceptionMarketing is a battle of perceptions, not products
5FocusOwn a word in the prospect's mind
6ExclusivityTwo companies cannot own the same word
7LadderStrategy depends on which rung you occupy
8DualityEvery market becomes a two-horse race long-term
9OppositeIf you're #2, position as the alternative to #1
10DivisionCategories divide into two or more over time
11PerspectiveMarketing effects take place over extended time
12Line ExtensionExtending the brand dilutes its power (most violated law)
13SacrificeYou must give up something to get something
14AttributesFor every attribute, there's an opposite effective attribute
15CandorAdmitting a negative earns you a positive
16SingularityOnly one bold stroke will produce substantial results
17UnpredictabilityYou can't predict the future
18SuccessEgo is the enemy of successful marketing
19FailureFailure should be expected and accepted
20HypeSituation is often the opposite of how it appears in press
21AccelerationBuild on trends, not fads
22ResourcesWithout adequate funding, ideas won't get off the ground

Most Critical Laws for Positioning

Law of Sacrifice: "The essence of positioning is sacrifice. You must be willing to give up something in order to establish that unique position." Three things to sacrifice:

  • Product line (stay narrow)
  • Target market (don't appeal to everyone)
  • Constant change (maintain consistency)

Law of Line Extension: "The most violated law. When you try to be all things to all people, you wind up in trouble."

Law of Focus: The most powerful concept in marketing is owning a word in the prospect's mind.


Neumeier's ZAG Methodology

Core Philosophy: In an extremely cluttered marketplace, traditional differentiation is no longer enough. You need "radical differentiation."

The Four Core Elements

  1. Focus: Narrow your offering
  2. Differentiation: Be radically different
  3. Trend: Ride a wave of change
  4. Communication: Surround your zag with compelling messages

The 17 Checkpoints (3 Phases)

Part 1: Finding Your Zag

  • What wave are you riding? (trends)
  • Who shares the brandscape? (competitors)
  • What makes you the "only"? (differentiation)

Part 2: Designing Your Zag

  • Develop your onliness statement
  • Create your trueline
  • Build compelling communication

Part 3: Renewing Your Zag

  • How to stretch your brand without breaking it
  • Navigate the competition cycle
  • Avoid the four deadly dangers of brand portfolios

Positioning Statement Formula

"For [target audience], [Brand] is the [category] that [key benefit] because [reason to believe]."

ElementQuestionPurpose
Target AudienceWho specifically are you for?Define your customer
CategoryWhat mental category do you compete in?Frame of reference
Key BenefitWhat's your unique claim?Point of difference
Reason to BelieveWhat proof supports your claim?Credibility

Onliness Statement Formula (Neumeier)

Basic Formula:

"Our brand is the ONLY [category] that [unique differentiator]."

Detailed Formula (The 5W's):

ElementQuestionExample (Harley-Davidson)
WHATWhat category?"motorcycle manufacturer"
HOWHow are you different?"makes big, loud motorcycles"
WHOWho is the audience?"macho guys and macho wannabes"
WHEREWhat geography?"mostly in the United States"
WHYWhat need state?"who want to join a gang of cowboys"

Complete Example (Harley-Davidson):

"We are the ONLY motorcycle manufacturer that makes big, loud motorcycles for macho guys (and macho wannabes) mostly in the United States who want to join a gang of cowboys."

The Test: "If you can't keep it brief or use the word 'only,' then you don't have a zag."


The Ladder Concept

In every category, customers have a mental "ladder" of brands:

    ┌─────────────────────┐
    │   #1 - Leader       │ ← Owns the category definition
    ├─────────────────────┤
    │   #2 - Challenger   │ ← Must position as alternative
    ├─────────────────────┤
    │   #3 - Also-ran     │ ← Fighting for relevance
    ├─────────────────────┤
    │   Everyone else     │ ← Invisible to most customers
    └─────────────────────┘

Strategy by Rung:

  • If #1: Reinforce category ownership; block competitors from claiming your word
  • If #2: Position as the opposite/alternative (Law of Opposite)
  • If lower: Create a new ladder (new category) where you can be #1

Cherchez le Creneau (7 Types of Holes)

Creneau TypeStrategyClassic Example
SizeGo smaller or largerVW "Think Small" vs. Detroit's big cars
PriceGo higher or lowerBudget vs. luxury positioning
SexTarget specific genderMarlboro Man, Virginia Slims
TimingOwn a time of day/occasionNyquil owns "nighttime cold relief"
AgeTarget specific life stageGerber (babies), Geritol (seniors)
DistributionNew channelL'eggs in supermarkets vs. department stores
Heavy-userTarget enthusiastsProducts designed for power users

Trueline Concept

A trueline is "a tagline before it becomes a tagline"—the one true thing you can say about your brand that's both differentiating and compelling.

Brand Messaging Hierarchy (most permanent → most changeable):

LevelDurationDefinition
PurposeNever changesFundamental reason for existence
Mission10-25 yearsOver-arching strategy
Vision7-15 yearsBold picture of the future
Trueline3-10 yearsInternal expression of compelling differentiator
Tagline1-5 yearsExternal, customer-facing expression

Examples:

  • Southwest Airlines: "You can fly anywhere for less than it costs to drive"
  • Harley-Davidson: "Join a gang of American rebels"

Repositioning Case Studies

7Up "Uncola" Campaign

  • Situation: Wanted to compete against Coca-Cola and Pepsi
  • Strategy: Positioned as "The Uncola"—an alternative to cola, not a competitor
  • Result: Linked to what was in the prospect's mind while claiming different territory

Tylenol vs. Aspirin

  • Situation: Aspirin dominated pain relief for 70+ years
  • Strategy: Repositioned aspirin as "the pain reliever that irritates stomachs"
  • Result: Displaced aspirin-based medicines, became best-selling analgesic

Avis vs. Hertz

  • Situation: Hertz was the dominant #1 rental car company
  • Strategy: Acknowledged being #2 with "We Try Harder"—implying Hertz doesn't
  • Result: Went from losing millions to making millions

Volvo: Safety Positioning

  • Situation: Crowded automotive market
  • Strategy: Consistently owned "safety" since 1927
  • Key Action: Invented three-point seatbelt (1959), shared it open-source
  • Result: Global recognition as the safety leader

Pattern: The most successful repositioning attacks the leader's strength by reframing it as a weakness or limitation.


10 Common Mistakes & Anti-Patterns

#MistakeThe Fix
1Lack of Differentiation (same buzzwords as everyone)Find what makes you THE ONLY
2Trying to Appeal to EveryonePick a specific audience and own them
3Confusing Messaging with PositioningStrategy first, then messaging
4Developing Positioning in a SiloCross-functional alignment from start
5Line Extension (putting brand on unrelated products)One brand = one position
6Overcomplicating the Value PropositionOne clear idea
7Inconsistent Brand IdentitySingle position everywhere
8Not Testing and ValidatingTest with real customers
9Stopping After the StatementPosition must drive decisions
10Filling a Hole in the Factory, Not the MindStart with customer perception

Key Principles & Mental Models

From Ries & Trout

  1. "The mind is like a dripping sponge": Simplicity wins.
  2. "Marketing is a battle of perceptions, not products": Customer perception is reality.
  3. "The name is the hook": It hangs the brand on the product ladder.
  4. "Go around obstacles, not over them": Find a different ladder.
  5. "Big fish in a small pond": Own narrow category, then expand.

From Marty Neumeier

  1. "A brand is not what you say it is. It's what they say it is."
  2. "When everybody zigs, zag."
  3. "A charismatic brand is one that people believe there is simply no substitute for."
  4. "Onliness is by far the most powerful test of a strategic position."

Positioning Validation Tests

Apply these tests to validate positioning:

TestQuestionPass Criteria
Onliness TestCan you use the word "only"?Must be literally true
Simplicity TestCan you explain it in one sentence?Clear and memorable
Memorability TestWill customers remember it?Sticks in the mind
Credibility TestCan you actually deliver on it?Have proof points
Differentiation TestIs it meaningfully different?Competitors can't claim it
22 Laws CheckWhich laws support or contradict?Aligned with principles

Templates

See reference/templates.md for:

  • Positioning Statement Template
  • Onliness Statement Template (with 5W's)
  • Competitive Landscape Analysis Template
  • Positioning Map Template
  • Creneau Analysis Template
  • 22 Laws Application Checklist
  • ZAG Opportunity Template
  • Sacrifice Analysis Template
  • Positioning Validation Checklist
  • Quick Reference Card

When to Apply This Knowledge

During Competitive Analysis

  • Map where competitors sit on mental ladders
  • Identify what words competitors own
  • Find open creneaus using the 7 types

During Positioning Development

  • Craft Onliness Statement (all 5 W's)
  • Develop Positioning Statement
  • Create candidate truelines
  • Apply the 22 Laws check

During Positioning Validation

  • Run all 6 validation tests
  • Check against common mistakes
  • Apply Law of Sacrifice analysis

During Final Documentation

  • Include complete frameworks
  • Document differentiation test results
  • Provide positioning map visualization
  • Create quick reference card