Newsletter Subject

Marketing Examples #057 — My Guide to Brand Positioning

From

marketingexamples.com

Email Address

harry@marketingexamples.com

Sent On

Thu, Dec 10, 2020 07:06 PM

Email Preheader Text

Friends, Romans, countrymen and women. Lend me your ears! I spent the last few weeks reading pretty

Friends, Romans, countrymen and women. Lend me your ears! I spent the last few weeks reading pretty much everything I could find about [Marketing Examples Logo](%2F%2Fmarketingexamples.com/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/yex--LPS_6OaibtTEPrpjC2Mmy6it2xMb_v7AMHHi3U=171) #057 - My guide to brand positioning (Differentiation • 3 mins • [Read on website](%2F%2Fmarketingexamples.com%2Fbrand%2Fpositioning/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/WlG8H00HRtXLiQXdcUnVWTYe3CO34i6GFaCYJq1ip10=171)) Friends, Romans, countrymen and women. Lend me your ears! I spent the last few weeks reading pretty much everything I could find about how brands differentiate themselves. And I turned it into this mini guide. Hope you enjoy it. * * * Let's start with this line by Ted Morgan. Positioning is like finding a seat on a crowded bus Most brands sleepwalk onto the bus and sit on top of one another. The smart brands look left, right, find an empty row, paint their logo on it and start singing sweetly like the Sirens. [Sea of sameness brand positioning] Positioning is an easy thing to complicate so let's keep it simple. Your goal is to own a space in the customer's mind. You do this by differentiating yourself. Differentiation is not a dark art. It's something you can learn. Here's how you can achieve it. 1/ Through contrast Point at the status quo and pit yourself against it. Contrast burns your brand into the customer's mind. • Hey pit themselves against mainstream email • Lemonde pit themselves against insurance stereotypes • The “[I'm a Mac](%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv=sdF5IsyOxU4/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/p0Rj_CNxRBNfijuTya1EHEc34eP8EqbR9oNQ8p50AL0=171)” ads pit themselves against the PC [Pick a fight against status quo brand positioning] 2/ Through values Think Patagonia and the environment, Ben and Jerry's and social justice, Black Rifle Coffee and gun rights. Some will hate it. Others will rally behind you. And that's the point. Fence sitters don't buy. [Positioning through brand values] 3/ Through contrast Invent a new category and you haven't got any competitors. When Drift launched in 2016 they were just another startup in the mushy bucket of live chat software. How to stand out? Well, they reframed live chat as conversational marketing and made it their mission to own this new category. [Drift's brand positioning] 4/ Through personality Turn yourself into the product and no one can compete with you. Think Kanye's shoes, Nigella's cookbook, Wicks's workout. [Productize yoursel] 5/ Through limitation Instead of trying to be everything for everyone go all-in on one niche or one feature. Limitation makes you easy to sum up. Being easy to sum up makes you memorable. [Brand positioning] Writing this made me think back to how I positioned Marketing Examples. • Contrast - Marketing content was fluffy. My goal was no fluff • Personality - Well, I write them all • Limitation - Just examples. No agency, jobs board, etc... One last thing Positioning isn't something you make up on a whim. Behind great positioning is a story. Positioning is the one line summary. The story makes it memorable. Look at Drift. Conversational marketing isn't plucked out the sky. It's the final bullet point in their story. [Marketing Examples Product Hunt] You made it! Thank you for reading. And for your patience. I'm going to be back with one more next week, before Christmas. Forgive my self indulgence: But it was my goal to reach 50,000 readers by the new year and I'm 5,000 away. If you're feeling the Christmas spirit please do forward to a pal, share on [Twitter](%2F%2Ftwitter.com%2FGoodMarketingHQ%2Fstatus%2F1337049576029769732/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/g8X-j7U5SPUPOlWSuERR9BCyYz2eyfYs73KqM3K1ie4=171), wherever. Here's the [link](%2F%2Fmarketingexamples.com%2Fbrand%2Fpositioning/2/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/jIPoA0kEf4-NVfjlU0WHx7GEuTkbY2vPnv_ThtWKtqQ=171). Maybe we can get there. Oh, and shoutout to [this](%2F%2Fcxl.com%2Fblog%2Fdifferentiation-strategy%2F/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/yuVQDtg-BNChEzULOIEyM3nfm3yehtaRXp_ZHz09JD0=171) article by Peep and Louis Grenier's [LinkedIn](%2F%2Fwww.linkedin.com%2Fin%2Flouisgrenier%2F/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/sk8LOIdZWFje0qR5jH1o5RymVpoIY1ccvI-IHSVCDO4=171) which I learnt a lot from. Tuesday's “Thursday evening” tip Social media marketing in a line. Find the overlap between what your brand wants to say and what your audience wants to hear — Matthew Kobach [don't try] Sponsored by Ahrefs The kind folk at [Ahrefs](%2F%2Fahrefs.com/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/U5duY6FYp4LG679oNtTF6PCOjjnzDsEk89qAGwUX8xM=171) are currently sponsoring me. I've used them for a while to help grow my search traffic. Go check them out. Over and out — Harry New round here? Welcome aboard. Previous case studies [here](%2F%2Fmarketingexamples.com/2/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/N_gTlL86cXxsw38iFxMVAJbnFkW6SINl3_UM73sTznU=171). Or, you can join the fun [here](%2F%2Fmarketingexamples.com%2Fsubscribe/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/sXwjE-ehEPbZ0oqM6pwMHgPcw5kLU3yAWHMnzWrNCqs=171) :) You are receiving this email because you signed up for the Marketing Examples mailing list. [Marketing Examples](%2F%2Fmarketingexamples.com/3/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/wD7Yt1UHlJgvVxudrXrmd-2_qulAzhJ7vOJWLnhJV-U=171) | [Unsubscribe](%2F%2Faction.marketingexamples.com%2Funsubscribe%3Fl=8c5e1f0f-83bf-11e9-9307-06b4694bee2a%26lc=10dede52-2710-11eb-a3d0-06b4694bee2a%26p=39c16b70-3b15-11eb-a3d0-06b4694bee2a%26pt=campaign%26spa=1607625886%26t=1607627202%26s=448937fae87ec964a1d62a78aff1349249b913e84f4fef97972bebdf87bf0c8b/1/010001764e0c5ff6-04d78d16-a0a9-435e-8596-e3bbd6600cba-000000/HZ9yq17vnjZy_8c3qkH5xCskwXzDEhRBsmTRjQCpViw=171) | Wimbledon, London, SW19 5AE

Marketing emails from marketingexamples.com

View More
Sent On

19/07/2024

Sent On

16/04/2024

Sent On

05/03/2024

Sent On

20/02/2024

Sent On

16/11/2023

Sent On

31/08/2023

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.