| Does it make sense to dig for a USP in the dirt? Positioning your product is the toughest part of your identity. This article turns conventional USPs on their head and shows you how you can come up with a winner! |
Why Problem Based Positioning Is A Psychological Magnet?Are you struggling to create a memorable positioning statement or USP (Unique Selling Proposition) for your marketing? Do you want to stand out from your competition, but the uniqueness of your business seems to elude you? Here’s a sneaky, vital secret that turns conventional marketing psychology on its head. By changing your positioning statement, find out how to transform your weakest link, into your strongest marketing strategy ever! Avis Is Only Number 2. So Why Go With Them?
Years ago, in the rental car market, Hertz was chugging along merrily,
with Avis a distant second. With one Problem-Based USP, Avis closed
the gap. Their catch phrase, We’re No.2, We Try Harder,
ignited the minds of the target audience like a rampaging bush fire.
They turned a liability into an asset. Are You Doing What Sally Did?Sally is one heck of a real estate agent. Barely six months into real estate, and she’s already forging a red-hot path into the top ten salespeople in the country. While her talents and persuasive powers are formidable, there’s a little something that puts her head and shoulders above the rest of the crowd. That Little Something Is A USP On Steroids!
If she chose to be unimaginative, Sally’s USP or tagline could
have ended up as pretty run-of-the-mill. It could have ranged from
a tacky, Residential Properties for every budget, to utterly boring,
Getting Top Prices for Your Home.
All of which would see her struggling to stand out, in a dog-eat-dog
me-too marketplace. If You Sold Your Home In A Week or less, You Probably Got Too Little
That’s the USP that Sally created. Can you see what I mean?
Doesn’t that USP go for your jugular? Sally’s target
audience is sellers, not buyers. If you just sold a house, wouldn’t
you feel a twinge of regret? What if you were about to sell a house?
You’ve just witnessed the psychological power of the Problem-Based USP. How To Create A Knockout USP For Your Business
Let’s assume you’re in the wine selling business. To
own real estate in a customer’s brain, you’d have to
do battle with about a zillion other wines. Yet decades ago, Paul
Masson cut through the clutter with a simple statement. We sell
no wines before their time. With charming simplicity, they turned
a negative waiting period into an exploitable advantage. Are You Perceived To Be Too Expensive, Slow, Or Maybe Just Too Busy?
When we started our website at PsychoTactics.com, we were faced
with a similar dilemma. As human beings, we often disdain simplicity
and common sense. The distillation process needed to simplify a
concept into easy-to-munch bites is often just seen as common sense,
and of no huge intrinsic value. The Biggest Reason Why You Should Search For The Hiccup In Your Business Strategy
Finding what makes you beneficially different is a notoriously difficult
task. However, just about any client or potential buyer will very
quickly identify your weaknesses and liabilities. If it’s
a technical problem, you can fix it. If it’s a conceptual
problem such as speed or price, it is much harder to fix. Can You Make The Leap?
Creating a negative USP is a tricky, dangerous tactic, and one not
to be taken lightly. "We're slow and proud of it!" is
hardly a selling point, yet fulfills the requirements laid out in
the article. However, if you’ve been struggling with your
USP, as many companies do, this is a tactic that may work well for
you—as it has with some of the companies above. Next Step: Read more Marketing articles. Create your own marketing strategy using these marketing tactics. If you haven't done so already: |
![]() Why Do Most Headlines Fail? Sign Up for the PsychoTactics Newsletter and get access to a detailed report on "Why Headlines Fail (And how to create headlines that work)"
"I found you through MarketingProfs, whose place as favorite on my list (of reading) may be in jeopardy, now that I've found you" Sue Coueslan "I teach marketing at Northeastern State University in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, USA, and your articles have made great classroom illustrations, especially "The Secret of Sequence in Selling," "The Fundamental Flaw in Creating Your Uniqueness" and "Why Problem-Based Positioning is a Psychological Magnet." " Dick Morris
|
Unsure About Something?