---
title: Positioning — definition | RGM® Glossary
url: https://realgrowthmatters.com/glossary/positioning/
updated: 2026-06-10
source_html: https://realgrowthmatters.com/glossary/positioning/
---

# Positioning

po·si·tion·ing/pəˈzɪʃənɪŋ/noun

Not what you do to the product — what you do to the mind that's deciding about it.

Term
:   Positioning

Coined
:   Ries & Trout, 1969-72

Modern process
:   April Dunford's five components

Test
:   Can buyers say what you are, for whom, versus what?

## Forms & parts of speech

position statement · noun phrase

The internal one-liner.

"The **position statement** writes the homepage — for mid-market CFOs, the only close tool built for auditors."

## Definition in plain terms

Positioning is the place a product occupies in the buyer's MIND — what it is, for whom, and against what alternatives — chosen deliberately rather than left to chance. Ries and Trout coined the discipline (1969-72): the mind is a crowded shelf that admits few brands per category, so winning means owning a sharp slot. Dunford's modern process operationalizes the choosing: alternatives → unique attributes → value → segments → market category, in that order.

## The mechanics

Positioning's outputs cascade: the category you claim sets buyer expectations (the shelf), the segment focus sets relevance, the differentiated value sets the story every asset retells. The working tests: the ONLINESS test (we're the only X that Y for Z), the sacrifice test (a position that excludes no one attracts no one), and the repeatability test (do customers replay your positioning unprompted in sales calls and reviews?). Its relationship to neighbors: positioning is the STRATEGY; messaging is its wording; brand identity is its costume; category design is its radical cousin (don't fight for a slot — build a new shelf).

## When it matters

Positioning matters most at launches, at growth stalls with 'great demos, confused prospects' symptoms (the weak-positioning signature), and at competitive shifts that re-shelve you. It is the highest-leverage document in marketing: every ad, page, and pitch inherits it, so a week spent here re-prices every downstream dollar. The discipline's hardest truth stays Ries and Trout's: the battle is in the mind, and minds resist re-positioning — choose like it's permanent.

**Worked example.** A horizontal project tool positions as 'work management for everyone' and loses every deal to specialists. The repositioning sprint runs Dunford's order: real alternatives (spreadsheets, not rivals), sharpest attribute (client-facing views), who cares most (agencies juggling external stakeholders), category claim ('client work management'). The homepage, pricing, and sales deck rewrite themselves from the one-liner. Two quarters later: win rate up 18 points in-segment, and prospects open calls with 'you're the client-work one, right?' — the slot, finally occupied, doing the selling.

**Failure modes to watch.** Positioning by internal pride instead of buyer alternatives; claiming five slots and owning none; refusing the sacrifice that makes a position sharp; and rewriting messaging while leaving the position vague underneath.

## Synonyms & antonyms

### Synonyms

positioningmarket positioningproduct positioning

### Antonyms

unpositioned ('for everyone')category design (the redraw cousin)

## Origin & history

Coined by Al Ries and Jack Trout — first in a 1969 Industrial Marketing article, then the 1972 Advertising Age series 'The Positioning Era Cometh,' then the 1981 book; the word relocated marketing's battlefield from shelves and airwaves into the prospect's mind, where it stayed.

Etymology: [source](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positioning_(marketing)).

## Usage trends

Search interest for this term over the last five years:

[View interest-over-time on Google Trends →](https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?q=positioning%20marketing&date=today%205-y)

## Common questions

What is positioning?
:   The deliberate occupation of a distinct, valuable place in the buyer's mind — what you are, for whom, versus what.

Who coined positioning?
:   Al Ries and Jack Trout — the 1972 Ad Age series and 1981 book made it marketing's core discipline.

How is positioning done today?
:   Dunford's sequence — alternatives, unique attributes, value, segment, category — tested by oneliness, sacrifice, and customer playback.

## Related tools & calculators

- tool[CAC calculator](/tools/cac-calculator/)
- tool[LTV-to-CAC ratio](/tools/ltv-to-cac-ratio-calculator/)

## Resources & people to follow

- book*Positioning* — Ries & Trout
- book*Obviously Awesome* — Dunford
- referenceRGM analysis — the customer-playback test is the audit

Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.

## Related training

- module[Growth marketing foundations](/training/growth-marketing-foundations/)

## Disciplines

Areas of marketing where positioning is a core concern:

[Growth strategy](/training/growth-marketing-foundations/)[Fundamentals](/training/growth-marketing-foundations/)

## Read next

## Related terms

[Positioning (book)](/glossary/positioning-the-battle-for-your-mind/)[April Dunford](/glossary/april-dunford/)[Obviously Awesome (book)](/glossary/obviously-awesome/)[Brand positioning](/glossary/brand-positioning/)[Category design](/glossary/category-design/)

## Sources

1. trends[Google Trends — "positioning marketing"](https://trends.google.com/trends/explore?q=positioning%20marketing&date=today%205-y)
