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AI Summary
Key Moments
Laser‑Focus Target
Choose a narrow, specific audience to force clear trade‑offs and brand focus.Strategic Category Fight
Treat the category as a battle you can win, not just a label, and decide where to compete.Hard‑to‑Copy Benefit
Offer a benefit that solves a specific problem and is difficult for rivals to imitate.Verifiable Reason to Believe
Back claims with concrete, demonstrable proof rather than vague marketing language.Most positioning statements are little more than templates with the blanks filled in. You know the format: “For [target], [brand] is the [category] that [benefit], because [reason to believe].” The template itself isn’t the problem. What people put into it usually is.
Take this example:
“Fresh Brew is the coffee brand for busy people aged 18–45 who want premium quality and great taste, because we care about sourcing the best beans.”
Read it again. That positioning statement could have almost any competitor’s name on it and still be true. It’s aimed at everyone, promises benefits everyone wants, and backs them up with a reason that means almost nothing. That’s not positioning. That’s a horoscope.
Why Most Positioning Statements Fail
A good positioning statement forces you to make choices. If it could describe half the brands in your category, it isn’t doing its job.
The first fix is choosing a real target. “Busy people aged 18–45” isn’t a target—it’s a population. Positioning starts to become useful when you’re specific enough to make trade-offs and accept that your brand isn’t for everyone. Narrow isn’t a limitation; it’s the whole point.
The next mistake is treating the category as nothing more than a label. In reality, the category you choose is a strategic decision. Sometimes it makes more sense to compete with energy drinks than with other coffees because that’s the comparison you can win. Decide which fight you want to be in.
The benefit you claim also has to be something competitors can’t easily copy. If your closest rival could make the same promise tomorrow, it isn’t differentiating. “Premium quality” fails immediately. “Cold brew that’s smooth enough to drink black, with no sugar needed” is much harder to imitate because it identifies a specific problem and offers a distinctive solution.
Then there’s the “reason to believe,” which is where most positioning statements become vague. Saying you’re passionate about quality isn’t proof. Saying your coffee is brewed slowly for 18 hours before being flash-chilled is. One is marketing language; the other is something people can actually verify.
A stronger positioning statement for Fresh Brew might read:
For people who’ve given up on black coffee because it’s always bitter, Fresh Brew is the cold brew that’s smooth enough to drink straight because it’s brewed slowly for 18 hours instead of being rushed with heat.
It’s still not perfect, but it does something important. It starts a fight. It rules things out. It identifies an enemy: bitterness.
That’s the real test of a positioning statement. It’s not the benefits you claim; it’s what you’re willing not to be. If your positioning statement could apply to half the market, it isn’t positioning anything.
Lose some customers on purpose. That’s usually how you win the right ones.