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	<title>Brand Strategy &#8211; Michel Fortin</title>
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	<link>https://michelfortin.com</link>
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	<title>Brand Strategy &#8211; Michel Fortin</title>
	<link>https://michelfortin.com</link>
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	<item>
		<title>Why I Brandify Categories Instead of Branding Products</title>
		<link>https://michelfortin.com/brandifying-not-branding/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michel Fortin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2026 21:42:06 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Marketing Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Authority Building]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brand Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Positioning Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Power Positioning]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://michelfortin.com/?p=13571</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Most people use 'branding' and 'brandifying' as if they were the same word. They are not. Branding decorates what already exists. Brandifying names the thing into existence first, so it can be owned. I have been doing the second one for 35 years without a word for it. Here is the line, the move, and why expert-led firms that want to claim a category have to learn to brandify rather than brand.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<div class="wp-block-group article-summary"><div class="wp-block-group__inner-container is-layout-constrained wp-block-group-is-layout-constrained">
<h2 id="article-summary" class="wp-block-heading">Article Summary</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Most people use &#8220;branding&#8221; and &#8220;brandifying&#8221; as if they were the same word. They are not. Branding decorates what already exists. Brandifying names the thing into existence first, so it can be owned. I have been doing the second one for 35 years without a word for it. This post draws the line, names the move, and explains why expert-led firms that want to claim a category have to learn to brandify rather than brand.</p>
</div></div>


<div role="navigation" aria-label="Table of Contents" class="simpletoc toc wp-block-simpletoc-toc"><h2 class="simpletoc-title">Table of Contents</h2>
<ul class="simpletoc-list">
<li><a href="#article-summary">Article Summary</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#i-did-not-know-i-was-brandifying">I did not know I was brandifying</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#what-branding-actually-does">What branding actually does</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#what-brandifying-does">What brandifying does</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#why-most-experts-never-make-the-move">Why most experts never make the move</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#how-to-know-if-the-move-is-right-for-you">How to know if the move is right for you</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#what-brandifying-produces">What brandifying produces</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-line">The line</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions</a>
</li></ul></div>


<h2 id="i-did-not-know-i-was-brandifying" class="wp-block-heading">I did not know I was brandifying</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The thing was already in motion when I noticed it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I had been writing about positioning for a few years, doing client work, building frameworks for myself, when I sat down and wrote a booklet called <em>The 10 Commandments of Power Positioning</em>. The phrase was not the point. I needed a way to talk about a kind of thinking I had been using for a decade that did not have a name in the marketing literature. So I named it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">What happened after that was the part I did not expect. People started asking for Power Positioning by name. Clients used the phrase in calls with their boards. Other consultants started referencing the framework. Eventually I expanded the booklet into a book, and the book carried the name into rooms I had never been in. A phrase I had coined to describe what I was already doing became something I could be hired to do.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">That was not branding. Nobody had branded Power Positioning, because Power Positioning did not exist as a thing to brand. What I had done was draw a line around a way of thinking, give it a name, and then live up to the name long enough that the market began to recognize it as a category.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">There was a reason I started naming things, and the reason had nothing to do with positioning theory.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I have ADHD. I have always used mnemonics to hold what mattered. In the first edition of my book <em>Power Positioning</em>, I had a chapter called &#8220;Hooked on Mnemonics,&#8221; a deliberate riff on the Hooked on Phonics product that was selling on every late-night television channel at the time. The chapter built on a principle I had already taught in the earlier <em>10 Commandments of Power Positioning</em> booklet under the heading of top-of-mind awareness. Both were about how the mind hooks onto memorable phrases. The naming habit grew out of that same instinct.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">When I taught positioning to junior copywriters, and later when I taught marketing part-time at a local college, I needed a way to hold the principles I was teaching well enough to teach them consistently. Coining a specific name for a concept turned the concept into a recall object. I could grab it again in the next lesson without rebuilding the explanation from scratch. The acronyms followed. FAME, OATH, QUEST, FORCEPS, IDEAL, RACES are all recall tools first and frameworks second. They earned the framework status because the recall held.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The market realization came later. If the names helped me hold a principle in my head, they did the same thing for a buyer. Someone hearing a coined term once is more likely to remember the principle next week than someone hearing a paragraph of explanation. The mnemonic constraint that came from my brain became a positioning advantage in the market. The thing that made the names useful inside my own head was the same thing that made them stick outside of it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I did not understand that when I started. I was just trying to remember what I was teaching.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I did that move several more times before I had a word for what I was doing.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph"><a href="https://michelfortin.com/revenue-architecture/">Revenue Architecture</a>. The <a href="https://michelfortin.com/audience-targeting/">Bullseye Method</a>. The <a href="https://michelfortin.com/oath-formula/">OATH</a> formula. The <a href="https://michelfortin.com/quest-formula/">QUEST</a> formula. The <a href="https://michelfortin.com/forceps-framework/">FORCEPS</a> framework. <a href="https://michelfortin.com/ideal-framework/">IDEAL</a>. The UPWORDS technique. Each one started the same way. I was doing the thing without a name for it, the thing was useful to clients, and at some point I named it so we could talk about it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The naming was the move that turned the work into IP.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I was branding nothing. I was brandifying.</p>



<h2 id="what-branding-actually-does" class="wp-block-heading">What branding actually does</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Branding is the work you do on something that already exists.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">A company already has a product. A product already has features. A team already has a name. Branding takes those things and dresses them. Picks the colors. Sets the tone. Designs the logo. Writes the messaging. Aligns the look across every surface the buyer touches.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">That work is real and necessary. I have done it. I have hired others to do it. There are people in the field who do it very well and the discipline is older than most of us. But what branding cannot do is create the thing it dresses. The product was already there. The brand showed up later to make it recognizable.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Branding decorates what exists.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">That is fine when what exists is worth decorating. When the category is established, the product is solid, and the buyer already knows roughly what they are looking for, branding is the right move. You enter the room as the better-looking version of a thing the buyer already understands.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The problem is the room itself. If the room is crowded, the better-looking version still has to compete inside a category somebody else named, on terms somebody else set, against alternatives the buyer is already comparing to each other. Better dressing does not get you out of that room. It just makes you a better-dressed competitor inside it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Most experts who hire a brand consultant want to be chosen inside the existing room. The work the brand consultant delivers is good. The room stays the same.</p>



<h2 id="what-brandifying-does" class="wp-block-heading">What brandifying does</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Brandifying runs the opposite direction.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The brand comes first. The thing forms around it. You name something into existence so that it becomes a thing the market can point at, ask for, argue about, hire you for. Once it has a name, it becomes a position in the room rather than a competitor inside it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">When I coined <a href="https://michelfortin.com/power-positioning/">Power Positioning</a>, I did not have a tactic I was relabeling. I had a way of thinking that I believed was distinct from how positioning was usually taught, and the way I made it distinct was by drawing a line around it and giving it a name nobody else was using. The phrase forced a separation. People who heard Power Positioning could not immediately reduce it to brand strategy or to Trout-and-Ries positioning, because the phrase signaled a different thing.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Whether the phrase was a perfect description of the principle is a separate question. What it did was create a referent. Once the referent existed, the work could be hired by name. Other people could describe the work without needing me in the room. The principle began to live inside other people&#8217;s vocabulary, and that is when it stopped being a personal insight and started being a category.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">That is the move brandifying performs. It is not about taglines. It is not about logos. It is about creating the noun the market needs to refer to the thing you do.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The brand consultant brands the noun. The brandifier creates it.</p>



<h2 id="why-most-experts-never-make-the-move" class="wp-block-heading">Why most experts never make the move</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Almost every expert I work with has at least one thing they are doing that nobody else does, or that everybody else does badly, or that they do in a way that combines disciplines in a specific arrangement nobody has named yet. The raw material for a brandified category is sitting in their work.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">They almost never name it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Some of the reasons are practical. Naming the thing feels presumptuous. The expert is not sure the principle is generalizable. The phrase they would coin sounds awkward when they say it out loud. The branding consultant they hired told them to use the category term the market already knows because it ranks better in search.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The deeper reason is harder to admit. Naming the thing makes it claimable, and claimable means defensible. The moment you name a category, you have to live up to the name, explain it, and be the one the market thinks of when the name comes up. That is exposure most experts have spent careers avoiding by staying inside the safer language of the existing category.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The brand consultant gives you a logo. You can hide behind it. The brandified category gives you a name. You cannot hide behind a name you coined, because you are the thing it points at.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">This is the part the discipline does not talk about. Brandifying is a positioning move first and a marketing move second. The marketing comes for free once you have made the call. The call is the hard part, and the call is the one most experts decline to make.</p>



<h2 id="how-to-know-if-the-move-is-right-for-you" class="wp-block-heading">How to know if the move is right for you</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Not every expert should brandify. Some categories are too large to be claimed by one practitioner. Some practices are too tactical to need a name. Some experts genuinely want to compete inside an existing room, and there is nothing wrong with that.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The signals that a brandified category might be the right move are recognizable.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">You catch yourself describing what you do with phrases that take more than one sentence to land. The market keeps reducing your work to the wrong category because there is no better word for it. You have written one or two pieces that articulate the principle behind your work and people quote them back to you. The most valuable work you do for clients is the work nobody else seems to be doing exactly the way you do it.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">If those land, the raw material is there. What is missing is the name.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The name is not a marketing exercise. It is a positioning decision. The right name for your work is the one that, once it exists, makes the work claimable and defensible without forcing you to use the language of a category somebody else owns.</p>



<h2 id="what-brandifying-produces" class="wp-block-heading">What brandifying produces</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">When a name lands, three things change.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The work becomes hireable on its own terms. A client who needs Revenue Architecture work hires you for Revenue Architecture, not for &#8220;marketing strategy&#8221; or &#8220;growth consulting.&#8221; The phrase carries the scope, the deliverable, and the position before the first call happens.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The work becomes referable. People who have not worked with you can describe what you do to other people who have not worked with you, because the phrase carries the meaning. Word-of-mouth begins to operate on the brandified noun rather than on personal impressions, which is the only way authority scales beyond your immediate network.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The work becomes durable. Other firms will eventually imitate parts of your method. They cannot imitate the name without crediting you, because the name is the thing the market remembers as yours. Imitation no longer dilutes your position. It reinforces it, because every imitator is operating inside a category you named.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Branding gets you a logo. Brandifying gets you a category.</p>



<h2 id="the-line" class="wp-block-heading">The line</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">This is the line I would draw, after 35 years of running both moves and watching what each one produces.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Branding decorates what already exists. Use it when the room is already worth being in.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Brandifying creates the thing you get to own. Use it when the room is crowded, the language you have for your work is borrowed, the principle you teach has no name yet, and you have done the work long enough to know the principle is distinct.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I have spent most of my career doing the second one. I just did not know the word for it until recently. Now I do, and now you do, and the conversation worth having with yourself is whether the work you do has the raw material for a category you have not yet named.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">If it does, the name is the move.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 id="frequently-asked-questions" class="wp-block-heading">Frequently Asked Questions</h2>



<div class="wp-block-wpseopress-faq-block-v2 is-layout-flow wp-block-wpseopress-faq-block-v2-is-layout-flow">
<details id="what-is-brandifying" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary>What is brandifying?</summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Brandifying is the act of naming a way of working into existence so it can be owned. Unlike branding, which dresses something that already exists, brandifying creates the referent the market needs to point at the thing you do. You name the category yourself, then live up to the name long enough that the market begins to recognize it.</p>
</details>



<details id="how-is-brandifying-different-from-branding" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary>How is brandifying different from branding?</summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Branding decorates what already exists. It picks the colors, designs the logo, sets the tone, and aligns the look across every surface the buyer touches. Brandifying runs the opposite direction. The brand comes first, and the thing forms around it. Branding is a marketing discipline. Brandifying is a positioning move that produces a category you get to own.</p>
</details>



<details id="should-i-brandify-what-i-do" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary>Should I brandify what I do?</summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Not every expert should. Some categories are too large for a single practitioner to claim. Some practices are too tactical to warrant a name. But if you catch yourself needing more than one sentence to describe your work, if the market keeps reducing your work to the wrong category, or if the most valuable thing you do for clients is something nobody else does the way you do it, the raw material is there. What is missing is the name.</p>
</details>



<details id="how-do-i-coin-the-name-for-what-i-do" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary>How do I coin the name for what I do?</summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Start with the principle. Describe the thing in plain language until you have a one-sentence version of it. Then look for the noun the sentence implies but does not contain. The right name is usually a familiar noun used inside an unfamiliar combination, not an invented word. The test is whether you can say it out loud without flinching, and whether a client can repeat it to their board without losing the meaning.</p>
</details>



<details id="what-if-my-coined-term-sounds-awkward-at-first" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary>What if my coined term sounds awkward at first?</summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Most do. The discomfort is the cost of plant-the-flag work. Once the name lives in the market, the awkwardness fades. The first hundred times you say it, the term feels presumptuous. By the thousandth time, it feels obvious. The market needs the noun before it can ask for the work.</p>
</details>



<details id="why-is-brandifying-more-important-now-than-it-used-to-be" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary>Why is brandifying more important now than it used to be?</summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Because AI is flattening the language layer of marketing. Generic category terms get summarized and recombined by models trained on millions of examples of the same words. A category somebody else named is now competing with a model&#8217;s average version of it. A category you named is something the model has to cite, not approximate. Brandifying produces vocabulary the AI layer cannot flatten, because there is no average version of a term that exists only inside your work.</p>
</details>
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<p class="wp-block-paragraph"></p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
			</item>
		<item>
		<title>Power Positioning and What It Really Means to Own a Place in Your Market</title>
		<link>https://michelfortin.com/power-positioning/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Michel Fortin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 03 Apr 2026 19:39:20 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Marketing Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Brand Strategy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fractional CMO]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Marketing Frameworks]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Power Positioning]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Revenue Architecture]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://michelfortincom.bigscoots-staging.com/?p=6975</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Power Positioning isn't a marketing tactic. It's the strategic framework I've built over 35 years and $1B+ in revenue to help growth-stage firms stop competing on price and start owning a category. Here's the full framework.]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<div class="wp-block-group article-summary"><div class="wp-block-group__inner-container is-layout-constrained wp-block-group-is-layout-constrained">
<h2 id="article-summary" class="wp-block-heading">Article Summary</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph"><em>Power Positioning</em> is the discipline of occupying a specific, irreplaceable place in your buyer&#8217;s mind, not just a share of your market. It helps experts, firms, and growth-stage brands build presence through implied authority and category ownership, so that if a competitor ever copies them, the market just remembers who got there first. Two tools tie the system together: the OATH Formula, which maps where your buyer is on the awareness spectrum, and the QUEST Formula, which structures the conversation that moves them to act. The framework also draws a sharp line between stating superiority and implying it, because a conclusion your buyer reaches on their own carries more persuasive weight than any claim you make. Power Positioning is supported by four pillars, called FAME: Focus, Aim, Multiply, and Engage. Used well, they turn positioning from a vague idea into a system that makes being chosen feel almost inevitable. The goal isn&#8217;t to be the best. It&#8217;s to be the only.</p>
</div></div>


<div role="navigation" aria-label="Table of Contents" class="simpletoc wp-block-simpletoc-toc"><h2 class="simpletoc-title">Table of Contents</h2>
<ul class="simpletoc-list">
<li><a href="#article-summary">Article Summary</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#positioning-isnt-what-most-people-think-it-is">Positioning Isn&#8217;t What Most People Think It Is</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#why-being-the-best-rarely-wins">Why Being the Best Rarely Wins</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-principle-most-companies-miss-is-the-power-of-implication">The Principle Most Companies Miss is The Power of Implication</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-oath-formula-and-meeting-your-buyer-where-they-actually-are">The OATH Formula and Meeting Your Buyer Where They Actually Are</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-quest-formula-and-the-conversation-that-follows">The QUEST Formula and the Conversation That Follows</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-fame-framework-four-pillars-one-coherent-system">The FAME Framework: Four Pillars, One Coherent System</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-more-automated-we-become-the-more-human-connection-matters">The More Automated We Become, the More Human Connection Matters</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-mind-is-the-real-marketplace">The Mind Is the Real Marketplace</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#heres-what-that-looks-like-when-i-apply-it-in-practice">Here&#8217;s What That Looks Like When I Apply It in Practice</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#the-goal-isnt-to-be-the-best-its-to-be-the-only">The Goal Isn&#8217;t to Be the Best. It&#8217;s to Be the Only.</a>
</li>
<li><a href="#frequently-asked-questions">Frequently Asked Questions</a>
</li></ul></div>


<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I&#8217;ve spent more than 35 years helping companies grow, and the question I get asked more than any other isn&#8217;t about SEO or AI or content strategy. It isn&#8217;t about funnels or conversion rates or channel optimization. It&#8217;s this:</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">&#8220;Why aren&#8217;t we getting traction?&#8221;</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The company has a strong product. A capable team. Real customers who love what they do. But they&#8217;re visible, and nothing sticks. They&#8217;re working hard but not getting chosen.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Something between what they offer and how the market perceives them is broken. That&#8217;s the diagnostic. And in almost every case, the answer comes back to the same root cause.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">They haven&#8217;t positioned themselves. Not really.</p>



<h2 id="positioning-isnt-what-most-people-think-it-is" class="wp-block-heading">Positioning Isn&#8217;t What Most People Think It Is</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The word &#8220;positioning&#8221; gets thrown around constantly in marketing circles. Most people use it interchangeably with &#8220;branding&#8221; or &#8220;messaging&#8221; or &#8220;value proposition.&#8221; They treat it as a communication exercise: write a better tagline, clarify the homepage headline, sharpen the pitch deck.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">That&#8217;s not positioning. That&#8217;s copywriting.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">True positioning is about place. Specifically, the place your company, your product, or your name occupies in the mind of your ideal buyer. Not your market. Not your category. The mind of one individual at a time.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Jack Trout and Al Ries made this point definitively when they argued that the marketplace isn&#8217;t a physical space. It&#8217;s a mental one. Every buying decision begins and ends in the mind of the buyer. The company that wins isn&#8217;t necessarily the best. It&#8217;s the one the buyer thinks of first when they need what you offer.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Once you see that difference, you start playing a completely different game.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I wrote my book <em>Power Positioning</em> nearly three decades ago because I saw companies consistently confuse activity for strategy. They were promoting when they should have been positioning. Generating traffic when they should have been building trust. Selling features when they should have been occupying a mental space that made them the obvious choice.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The framework in that book, updated and applied across more than 200 industries and over a billion dollars in career revenue, is built on a single conviction: your goal isn&#8217;t to be the best in your market. It&#8217;s to be <em>first in your buyer&#8217;s mind</em>. Those two things aren&#8217;t the same, and most companies pursue the first while neglecting the second entirely.</p>



<h2 id="why-being-the-best-rarely-wins" class="wp-block-heading">Why Being the Best Rarely Wins</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Most executive teams spend enormous energy on product improvement, feature development, and operational excellence. All of that matters. But here&#8217;s the uncomfortable truth I&#8217;ve had to deliver in more boardrooms than I can count: a better product doesn&#8217;t automatically produce a stronger position.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Trout and Ries called it the Law of Leadership. In almost every category, the brand that got there first and held the position consistently outperforms technically superior competitors who arrived later. Avis built an entire campaign around not being first. A brilliant move. But Hertz still leads the category.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The mind, once made up, is remarkably resistant to change.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">This doesn&#8217;t mean quality is irrelevant. It means quality alone is insufficient. You can build the best revenue system, the most sophisticated product, the most credentialed team, and still lose to a competitor who owns a clearer, more specific position in your buyer&#8217;s mind.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Power Positioning is the discipline of getting there first and staying there.</p>



<h2 id="the-principle-most-companies-miss-is-the-power-of-implication" class="wp-block-heading">The Principle Most Companies Miss is The Power of Implication</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">One of the most powerful concepts in the book, and one I still apply daily in fractional engagements, is the distinction between what you say and what you imply.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Most companies tell their market what they are. &#8220;We&#8217;re the leading provider of X.&#8221; &#8220;Our platform delivers Y.&#8221; &#8220;We specialize in Z.&#8221; These are specifications. They state a fact and expect the buyer to interpret its significance.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Implication works differently. Instead of stating your superiority, you architect the context around your brand so that superiority becomes the only logical conclusion your buyer can reach on their own.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Think about how Rolls-Royce positioned itself for decades. The most famous ad in its history said: &#8220;At 60 miles an hour the loudest noise in this Rolls-Royce comes from the electric clock.&#8221; Not &#8220;we build the world&#8217;s most luxurious cars.&#8221;</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The implication of extraordinary engineering precision was left for the reader to conclude. And that conclusion, reached independently, carried infinitely more persuasive weight than any direct claim ever could.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The more a position is implied rather than stated, the more powerfully it lodges in the mind. When a buyer arrives at a conclusion themselves, they own it. It becomes their belief, not your claim.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">One of the first things I look for when I step into an engagement is the gap between what a company says, what its market hears, and what its buyers actually believe. Those three things are almost never aligned, and that gap is exactly where growth stalls.</p>



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  <svg viewBox="0 0 640 560" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" role="img" aria-labelledby="gaps-title gaps-desc">
    <title id="gaps-title">The three gaps in positioning</title>
    <desc id="gaps-desc">Three overlapping circles showing what the company says, what the market hears, and what buyers actually believe. The center where all three converge is Power Positioning.</desc>

    <circle cx="220" cy="220" r="160" fill="#7c3aed" fill-opacity="0.14" stroke="#7c3aed" stroke-width="2"></circle>
    <circle cx="420" cy="220" r="160" fill="#8b5cf6" fill-opacity="0.14" stroke="#8b5cf6" stroke-width="2"></circle>
    <circle cx="320" cy="380" r="160" fill="#a78bfa" fill-opacity="0.14" stroke="#a78bfa" stroke-width="2"></circle>

    <text x="158" y="187" font-size="16" font-weight="700" fill="#18181b" text-anchor="middle" font-family="inherit">What you say</text>
    <text x="482" y="187" font-size="16" font-weight="700" fill="#18181b" text-anchor="middle" font-family="inherit">What the market hears</text>
    <text x="320" y="455" font-size="16" font-weight="700" fill="#18181b" text-anchor="middle" font-family="inherit">What buyers believe</text>

    <text x="320" y="278" font-size="13" font-weight="800" fill="#7c3aed" text-anchor="middle" font-family="inherit" letter-spacing="1.5">POWER</text>
    <text x="320" y="298" font-size="13" font-weight="800" fill="#7c3aed" text-anchor="middle" font-family="inherit" letter-spacing="1.5">POSITIONING</text>
  </svg>
  <figcaption class="mf-gaps-caption">Most companies say one thing, the market hears another, and buyers believe a third. Where all three converge is the position you actually own.</figcaption>
</figure>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">This principle also shows up in how your messaging is constructed at the word level. The language you choose either creates instant mental pictures or forces the reader to do extra cognitive work. I&#8217;ve written about this in depth in my post on <a href="/upwords-technique/">the UPWORDS technique</a>, which explains why the most effective marketing language creates vivid, immediate associations rather than abstract claims.</p>



<h2 id="the-oath-formula-and-meeting-your-buyer-where-they-actually-are" class="wp-block-heading">The OATH Formula and Meeting Your Buyer Where They Actually Are</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Before you can position anything effectively, you need to understand the mental state of the person you&#8217;re positioning to. This is where most marketing fails before it even starts.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Over the years I developed a framework I call the <a href="https://michelfortin.com/oath-formula/" data-type="post" data-id="612">OATH Formula</a>. It maps the awareness spectrum of any given buyer across four states. A buyer can be completely unaware to fully aware.</p>



<ul class="wp-block-list">
<li><strong>Oblivious</strong> buyers need context. They don&#8217;t know they have the problem you solve, so they&#8217;re not searching for solutions. Reaching them requires education, not persuasion.</li>



<li><strong>Apathetic</strong> buyers need relevance. They&#8217;re aware of the problem but haven&#8217;t felt enough pressure to act. Reaching them requires a reason to care and subtle urgency.</li>



<li><strong>Thinking</strong> buyers need proof. They&#8217;ve started exploring options and are comparing vendors and evaluating credentials. Reaching them requires differentiation and evidence.</li>



<li><strong>Hurting</strong> buyers need clarity. The pain is acute, the decision timeline is compressed, and friction kills deals. Reaching them requires clarity, confidence, and direction.</li>
</ul>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Every positioning decision, every <a href="/content-architecture/">content strategy</a>, every sales conversation should be anchored in understanding where your ideal buyer sits on that spectrum at any given time. A message built for a &#8220;Hurting&#8221; buyer lands flat in front of an &#8220;Oblivious&#8221; one, and vice versa.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">When I step into a fractional CMO or CRO engagement, one of the first diagnostics I run is <a href="https://michelfortin.com/services/" data-type="page" data-id="63">an OATH audit</a> across the client&#8217;s full funnel. And frankly, it still surprises me how often I find the same thing: the messaging was built for one state and deployed indiscriminately across all four. The result is a funnel that leaks at every stage because the message never meets the buyer where they actually are.</p>



<h2 id="the-quest-formula-and-the-conversation-that-follows" class="wp-block-heading">The QUEST Formula and the Conversation That Follows</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Knowing where your buyer is on the awareness spectrum is half the work. The other half is knowing how to structure the conversation that moves them from that point to action.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">That&#8217;s what the <a href="https://michelfortin.com/quest-formula/">QUEST formula</a> provides. Qualify, Understand, Educate, Stimulate, Transition. Five stages. Every buyer needs to move through all five before they&#8217;ll act — the question is where you pick them up.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">OATH tells you the starting point. QUEST maps the path from there.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The connection to positioning is direct. Strong positioning determines what your buyer believes about you. QUEST determines the sequence in which they come to believe it. The most common funnel failure I diagnose isn&#8217;t a bad offer or weak copy. It&#8217;s a journey that skips stages. The messaging jumps to Educate before the buyer has been Qualified or made to feel Understood. The positioning is sound. The conversation breaks down in execution.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Used together, OATH and QUEST close that gap. One diagnoses the buyer&#8217;s state. The other structures the response.</p>



<h2 id="the-fame-framework-four-pillars-one-coherent-system" class="wp-block-heading">The FAME Framework: Four Pillars, One Coherent System</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Power Positioning operates through <a href="https://michelfortin.com/power-positioning-pillars/">four interconnected pillars</a> I call FAME. The best-positioned companies in every industry I&#8217;ve worked in operate all four simultaneously and systematically.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Focus</strong> is the position you own. Narrow your scope, specialize, and build every customer-facing element around the specific, ownable edge your business can claim.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Aim</strong> is the buyer you&#8217;re built to close. Define who they are, where they search, and how they decide, then show up at the moment of intent. I use <a href="https://michelfortin.com/audience-targeting/">The Bullseye Method</a> to map this across direct buyers, adjacent audiences, and broader oriented markets.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Multiply</strong> is how authority compounds. Build leverageable assets (the book, the framework, the methodology) that others can reference, share, and recommend. When I led organic growth at Consulting Success, applying multiplication principles produced a 924% year-over-year increase in organic traffic without scaling content volume proportionally.</p>



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<aside class="mf-stat-callout">
  <div class="mf-stat-number">924%</div>
  <p class="mf-stat-caption">
    <span class="mf-stat-label">Consulting Success, YoY</span>
    Organic traffic growth after applying multiplication principles, without scaling content volume proportionally.
  </p>
</aside>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Engage</strong> is how trust converts. Treat the client journey as a sequence of micro-commitments, inviting feedback, conversation, and referral instead of pushing for the sale.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The four pillars work as a system, and skipping any one weakens the rest. For the full breakdown including the strategic questions I use in each area, read my article on <a href="https://michelfortin.com/power-positioning-pillars/">The Four Pillars of Power Positioning</a>.</p>



<h2 id="the-more-automated-we-become-the-more-human-connection-matters" class="wp-block-heading">The More Automated We Become, the More Human Connection Matters</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The futurist John Naisbitt observed that whenever society takes a significant technological leap forward, it triggers a proportional human response in the other direction. The more impersonal and mechanized our world becomes, the more people crave genuine interaction, personal connection, and the warmth of being known rather than processed.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">He wrote an entire book on this principle called <em>High-Tech/High-Touch</em>, and I referenced it in my own writing because I believed then, and believe even more strongly now, that it would define the future of marketing.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">We&#8217;re living in the world he predicted.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">We&#8217;re surrounded by AI-generated content, automated outreach, algorithmic recommendations, and synthetic personalization at a scale that would have seemed implausible a decade ago. The average buyer is more sophisticated, more skeptical, and more selective than at any point in the history of commerce.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">And in all that noise, buyers are reaching for one thing Naisbitt foresaw: genuine human connection. The sense that <a href="https://michelfortin.com/high-tech-high-touch/" data-type="link" data-id="https://michelfortin.com/high-tech-high-touch/">there&#8217;s a real person behind the brand</a> who understands their specific situation, not a prompt-engineered approximation of one.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">This is why the Engage pillar has grown in strategic weight. Visibility and credibility are table stakes. The companies pulling ahead are the ones that have found ways to be genuinely present, personally relevant, and humanly connected to their buyers at scale.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">For growth-stage firms especially, this is both a challenge and an opportunity. The challenge is obvious: scale and intimacy feel like opposing forces. The opportunity is that most competitors are moving in the wrong direction, automating at the expense of connection, which means the bar for standing out through genuine engagement is lower than it appears.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">It&#8217;s also worth noting that a strong guarantee — one that absorbs risk on behalf of the buyer rather than shifting it to them — is one of the most direct expressions of the Engage pillar in practice. I cover that argument in full in my post on <a href="/guarantee-strategy/">guarantee strategy</a>.</p>



<h2 id="the-mind-is-the-real-marketplace" class="wp-block-heading">The Mind Is the Real Marketplace</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The market doesn&#8217;t exist out there. It exists in the minds of the people you&#8217;re trying to reach. And the mind isn&#8217;t a rational, information-processing machine. It&#8217;s an association engine. It connects what it encounters to what it already believes, knows, and feels. It builds mental models and then defends them against contradictory information.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">This is why first impressions are so durable. And it&#8217;s why the most expensive mistake a growth-stage company can make isn&#8217;t a bad campaign or a failed product launch. It&#8217;s occupying the wrong position in the mind — or no position at all — for years while the window to own a clear and specific place in their market gradually closes.</p>



<h2 id="heres-what-that-looks-like-when-i-apply-it-in-practice" class="wp-block-heading">Here&#8217;s What That Looks Like When I Apply It in Practice</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">When I work with growth-stage firms as a <a href="https://michelfortin.com/services/" data-type="page" data-id="63">fractional CMO, CRO, or CSO</a>, Power Positioning is the lens through which I assess everything.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">I start with diagnosis, using the <a href="https://michelfortin.com/ideal-framework/">IDEAL framework</a> to map the system before I touch the message. I look at what the company says it is, what its marketing implies it is, and what the market actually believes it is. Those three things are rarely the same. The gap between them is where growth stalls.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">From there, I work through the FAME framework systematically. Where is the focus blurred? Where is the targeting diffuse? Where are multiplication opportunities being left on the table? Where is the engagement shallow when it could be building durable trust?</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The work is different in every company. The framework is always the same.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">In one recent engagement with a SaaS firm that had stalled at the same revenue plateau for three years, running the OATH diagnostic revealed the core problem within the first two weeks: their positioning was built for an Apathetic buyer (someone who understood the problem but wasn&#8217;t urgent about it), while their funnel was structured for a Hurting buyer who was ready to buy immediately.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Realigning the messaging to the <em>actual buyer state</em> produced a 197% increase in qualified pipeline within 90 days, without changing the product, the price, or the ad spend.</p>



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  <div class="mf-stat-number">197%</div>
  <p class="mf-stat-caption">
    <span class="mf-stat-label">Recent SaaS engagement</span>
    Qualified pipeline increase in 90 days, with no change to the product, the price, or the ad spend.
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<p class="wp-block-paragraph">For a deeper look at each of the four pillars, including the strategic questions I use in each area, read the full breakdown at my article on <a href="/power-positioning-pillars/">The Four Pillars of Power Positioning</a>.</p>



<h2 id="the-goal-isnt-to-be-the-best-its-to-be-the-only" class="wp-block-heading">The Goal Isn&#8217;t to Be the Best. It&#8217;s to Be the Only.</h2>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The companies I&#8217;ve worked with that grow most predictably aren&#8217;t necessarily the best in their categories. They&#8217;re the most precisely positioned. They&#8217;ve done the harder, quieter work of deciding exactly what they stand for and who they stand for it with, then building every customer-facing system around that decision with discipline and consistency.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">They aren&#8217;t chasing every trend. They aren&#8217;t pivoting their messaging every quarter. They&#8217;ve earned a specific place in the mind of a specific buyer. And that place, once owned, is remarkably hard for a competitor to take.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">That&#8217;s the promise and the practice of Power Positioning.</p>



<p class="wp-block-paragraph">If you&#8217;d like to talk about what this could look like for your business, I&#8217;d be glad to start with a conversation. <a href="/contact">Book a discovery call</a> and we&#8217;ll figure out where your positioning stands and what it would take to sharpen it.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity"/>



<h2 id="frequently-asked-questions" class="wp-block-heading">Frequently Asked Questions</h2>



<div class="wp-block-wpseopress-faq-block-v2 is-layout-flow wp-block-wpseopress-faq-block-v2-is-layout-flow">
<details id="what-is-power-positioning" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary><strong>What is Power Positioning?</strong></summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Power Positioning is the practice of owning a specific, irreplaceable place in your buyer&#8217;s mind — not competing on features or price, but making your brand the only logical choice in a defined category. It&#8217;s a strategic discipline, not a messaging exercise.</p>
</details>



<details id="what-does-fame-stand-for-in-power-positioning" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary><strong>What does FAME stand for in Power Positioning?</strong></summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">FAME stands for Focus, Aim, Multiply, and Engage. It&#8217;s the four-pillar framework behind Power Positioning. Focus defines what you own. Aim identifies who you serve. Multiply amplifies your reach. Engage converts attention into lasting trust and action.</p>
</details>



<details id="what-is-the-oath-formula" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary><strong>What is the OATH Formula?</strong></summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">OATH maps where a buyer sits on the awareness spectrum: Oblivious, Apathetic, Thinking, or Hurting. It determines how to open the conversation and at what level of urgency. Messaging built for a Hurting buyer lands flat in front of an Oblivious one — and vice versa.</p>
</details>



<details id="how-is-positioning-different-from-branding" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary><strong>How is positioning different from branding?</strong></summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">Branding shapes how people feel about you. Positioning shapes how people think about you relative to every alternative. Branding is emotional; positioning is strategic. Positioning comes first — it defines the context in which your brand gets interpreted.</p>
</details>



<details id="how-do-you-know-if-your-positioning-is-working" class="wp-block-details is-layout-flow wp-block-details-is-layout-flow"><summary><strong>How do you know if your positioning is working?</strong></summary>
<p class="wp-block-paragraph">The clearest signal is whether buyers choose you without comparison shopping. If you&#8217;re consistently asked to justify your price, compete in RFPs, or explain why you&#8217;re different, your positioning hasn&#8217;t landed. Strong positioning makes the question of &#8220;why you&#8221; feel almost unnecessary.</p>
</details>
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