Strategic Positioning and Planning
Strategic Positioning
We make an important distinction in our practice between traditional strategic planning and strategic positioning.

Strategic planning is a linear process, typically with a lot of known variables or assumptions in place. It is the stuff of marketing and corporate policy textbooks from an age of a less-intense competitive environment: goals, objectives, actions, timelines, and performance measurements.

Strategic positioning, in our view, is about creating and maintaining a competitive advantage in a hyper-competitive environment that is constantly changing. It is a non-linear approach which aligns core competencies and inner strengths with enduring market opportunities to create truly sustainable competitive advantage.

When technological advances and global competition can change your competitive position overnight, you need to center your organization around core competencies that don’t change easily. When markets are a moving target, you need to look below the surface at what are the enduring characteristics and needs of your customers and be unflinching in satisfying those while extremely flexible in how you do so. Strategically positioning your organization to compete is what we are here to do.

Case studies

Related experience

Client wanted a better understanding of the organization’s true market share. They needed to assess healthcare management segments to identify prime targets for membership and identify effective strategies to reach them. They also wanted to examine the healthcare landscape to gain insight on actions needed to advance in the marketplace.
This Industry Association had seen a dramatic decline in membership as technology and changes in markets began to marginalize its original purpose.
After identifying a need in grease/oil removal products the client wants to gauge the market to understand if the new product development makes sense. Addressing this need represents a huge opportunity and the client needs to test the concept, performance, and appeal before launching the new product into the market.