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Published on: May 6, 2025
Video Market & Brand Trends

Maximising Positioning Returns for Fast Impact

Summary

Under pressure, you see whether your positioning actually steers commercial choices. It shows whether the narrative truly guides who you target and what you promise. The shift is to make positioning the operating system you use to prioritise and ship. From there, sales and marketing move with pace and conviction again.



Watch The Video

In this video on positioning budgets, Preetum Mistry (CEO & Managing Partner) outlines the steps to ensure your budget works where it counts.


→ Watch more videos in this playlist on YouTube

Our Perspective

What this means for leaders navigating growth, change or transformation in their organisation.

The Real Cost

Positioning isn’t a slide deck exercise; it’s an investment decision that shapes how quickly your organisation converts interest into revenue. When clarity is thin, budgets get diverted into more creative rounds, broader targeting, heavier enablement, and avoidable discounting. The signal is already visible in the market: The CMO Survey by Deloitte and the American Marketing Association notes that 16% of chief marketing officers rank positioning as the second most expensive part of launching a brand.

Treat that cost as a prompt. If positioning is expensive, the return must be measured, fast, and compounding. The goal is not a grand reveal; it’s a small set of decisive moves that reduce friction and pay back quickly.

Sequence For Return

The quickest wins come from sequencing by effort-to-outcome, not by internal preferences. Think of it as a short, deliberate sprint that produces assets your commercial teams can trade with the market within days, not months.

  • Focus a must‑win audience by mining recent victories; you reduce scatter and lift near‑term conversion.
  • State one value promise backed by two proofs customers can’t ignore; objections fall and pricing holds firmer.
  • Ship the essentials: homepage headline, first‑screen copy, and an outreach narrative; pipeline quality improves and handoffs tighten.

Leadership Implications

Positioning should reduce debate and increase the rate of good decisions. That requires governance that’s light, commercial, and time‑boxed. In our experience with growth‑stage organisations, the fastest returns follow three moves:

  • Treat positioning as the operating system for choices; track payback via shorter sales cycles, fewer creative iterations, and steadier deal margins.
  • Fund work in two‑week blocks attached to explicit tests; stop low‑yield activity quickly and redirect to messages that show signal.
  • Create a cross‑functional language group with 48‑hour sign‑offs; it preserves speed without sacrificing rigour.

Compounding Clarity

Clarity compounds because it reduces the tax of indecision. Each precise win theme you validate shrinks options, tightens narrative, and improves how teams coordinate in the field. Sales hears fewer new objections. Marketing refines rather than reinvents. Product decisions reflect what buyers actually value, not what internal stakeholders prefer.

As those effects layer, you spend less to be understood and more to be chosen. And that’s the quiet advantage: when positioning is managed as a sequence of value proofs, momentum accumulates, turning each week’s learning into a larger commercial edge.

Sources:

  • CMO Survey by Deloitte / AMA
  • Further Resources

    1. Maximising Brand Investment for Long-Term ROI
    2. Maximising Referrals: The Key to Early-Stage Engagement
    3. Navigating Consumer Expectations on Societal Brand Impact


    Every organisation hits brand questions it can’t solve alone — if you’d like an outside perspective, we’re here. Let’s talk.

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    Video Market & Brand Trends