Positioning is putting yourself in the right place in the eyes of your market. You get your market to know you as an expert that can be trusted. You get looked on as a reliable resource for information.
Positioning is easy to do. Just give free information of interest to your market. Your market is the people who would be likely to buy the services or products you offer.
Let's say your market is people who like to fish. What they buy are reels, poles, lure...things they need to fish with. You could tell them the Best Ways To Fish For Salmon, Bass, Trout...The Fine Art Of Fly-Tying...How To Cast For The Best Catch...How To Find The Best Fishing Spots...Cleaning And Cooking Fish In A Snap.
If you sell reels, poles, lure, etc. - then such reports will attract readership from your target market - the people most likely to buy from you.
Chances are if those readers found something useful in your report, then they would be interested in reading more. Give it to them - have them sign up on your list.
That is how positioning works, and the reward is great. Having a list built up of targeted, loyal, and responsive prospects is the very best thing a business can have.
Not only can you tell them how to catch more fish with the least possible effort, but also how your products can help them to do it even more so. Since you are an expert, it's only natural that you would have the greatest tools and tackle.
There is a special thing about having a list, so treat it special. Consider it for what it will be - the marketing life-blood of your business.
Most businesses, if they keep lists, just have lists of customers who bought from them, and yet do not even send them as much as a Thank You Note or Christmas Card.
The people on your list will have a more connected relationship with you. You are not just a seller to them, and they are not just a customer to you. They will look forward to contact from an expert giving out the latest fishing tips and you will be ready for any questions they might bring you. Your answer will most likely be of interest with your whole list, so share it with all of them.
The more you can make the people feel privileged to be on your list the better. You can give your list exclusive deals, free offers, deep discounts, holiday specials, even the chance to sign-up for a paid subscription service where they get the meanest down and dirty underground secrets of fishing success where the fish don't stand a chance in Neptune.
This works for any marketing niche you happen to be in, not just fish. Positioning is the very best way to 'fish' for prospects in your market. Lure them with the knowledge and service you provide, and soon you have your own stocked pond full of hungry fish that you can catch over and over again.
It pays to know as much about your market as you can. Communicate with your market about the ups and downs, advantages and disadvantages, progress and problems associated with it. Do what they do, read what they read, know their likes and dislikes, search and study resources.
Above all, look for answers and innovations. Then find a way to use them in your marketing and advertising. People will always be interested in new and better things and are drawn to those who have them.
This will not only help in positioning yourself as an expert, but also in finding ways to position your products or service as having unique benefits. You do this by finding unsolved needs and thinking up solutions. Being the first at something also affirms you as an expert par excellence.
If you do these things, you and your business will be positioned. You will have the MARKETING EDGE.
Marketing On The Edge
Many site owners never consider that watching their competitors can give them an edge when it comes to maximizing their online marketing efforts. Most inexperienced website owners simply think that all they need is good content, quality keywords and incoming links and they are set and ready to climb to the top of the search engine ranks.
The truth is that in addition to content, keywords and incoming links, your site needs to stand out in the SERPs with usefulness and offer value to your site visitors. Watching what your competitors are doing, and how they are presenting their content to site visitors can give you valuable inside information on what your site should and should not be doing.
The focus of your site's marketing campaign should be in finding a perfect balance in making your site appealing to human viewers and easy to crawl by the search engine robots. While it is important to maintain this balance, there are still many factors that you must consider when it comes to improving your site's exposure on the internet. This is where watching what your competitors are doing comes into play.
The first step in monitoring your competitors on the internet is to use a database or spreadsheet to record and track their statistics and the elements they employ on their site. There are many quality SEO programs available that will capture and record the basic SERP stats, but you will still need a separate method to record non-SEO elements.
It is highly recommended that you create a spreadsheet that includes the common SEO information, such as PR, incoming links, SERPs index, and keywords. In Addition you will record notes and information about the presentation of your competitors sites, and the elements they are using to make their sites more useful to their visitors. The types of elements would include but are not limited to: subscription forms for newsletters, contact and information requests, survey/poll forms, free downloads or links, chat tools, or any elements that would enhance the over all usefulness of the site.
Once you have this information of your top competitors, then your next step is to compare the elements of your site versus the competition. Once you identify elements that could be helpful to your site visitor, look for ways to add them into your site without appearing to be copying your competitors, but rather offer it in a way that makes your site more unique. And it goes without saying that when you see elements that could be detrimental to your site, or make your site less useful, include those notes to your spreadsheet and look for ways to either make those elements valuable or omit those elements from your website.
Both Ryan Ginster & Anil Vij are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Consultant & Independent Contractor Agreements However, if necessary, this can also be a point of negotiation between a contractor with extreme leverage and a company desperate to acquire the services of that particular contractor