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CRAFTING THE BRAND POSITIONING | CHAPTER 10 277<br />

frame of reference are closely linked to target market decisions. Deciding to target a certain type of<br />

consumer can define the nature of competition, because certain firms have decided to target that<br />

segment in the past (or plan to do so in the future), or because consumers in that segment may already<br />

look to certain products or brands in their purchase decisions.<br />

IDENTIFYING COMPETITORS A good starting point in defining a competitive frame of<br />

reference for brand positioning is to deter<strong>min</strong>e category membership—the products or sets of<br />

products with which a brand competes and which function as close substitutes. It would seem a<br />

simple task for a company to identify its competitors. PepsiCo knows Coca-Cola’s Dasani is a major<br />

bottled-water competitor for its Aquafina brand; Citigroup knows Bank of America is a major<br />

banking competitor; and Petsmart.com knows a major online retail competitor for pet food and<br />

supplies is Petco.com.<br />

The range of a company’s actual and potential competitors, however, can be much broader than<br />

the obvious. For a brand with explicit growth intentions to enter new markets, a broader or maybe<br />

even more aspirational competitive frame may be necessary to reflect possible future competitors.<br />

And a company is more likely to be hurt by emerging competitors or new technologies than by current<br />

competitors.<br />

• After having spent billions of dollars building their networks, cell phone carriers AT&T,<br />

Verizon Wireless, and Sprint face the threat of new competition emerging as a result of a number<br />

of changes in the marketplace: Skype and the growth of Wi-Fi hotspots, municipal Wi-Fi<br />

networks built by cities, dual mode phones that can easily switch networks, and the opening<br />

up of the old analog 700 MHz frequency used for UHF broadcasts. 5<br />

• The energy-bar market created by PowerBar ultimately fragmented into a variety of subcategories,<br />

including those directed at specific segments (such as Luna bars for women) and some<br />

possessing specific attributes (such as the protein-laden Balance and the calorie-control bar<br />

Pria). Each represented a subcategory for which the original PowerBar was potentially not as<br />

relevant. 6<br />

Firms should identify their competitive frame in the most advantageous way possible. In the<br />

United Kingdom, for example, the Automobile Association positioned itself as the fourth “emergency<br />

service”—along with police, fire, and ambulance—to convey greater credibility and urgency.<br />

Consider the competitive frame adopted by Bertolli. 7<br />

The energy bar market has<br />

fragmented into a number of<br />

sub-categories, each appealing<br />

to different people in different<br />

situations.

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