Al Ries
![Al Ries](/assets/img/authors/al-ries.jpg)
Al Ries
Al Ries is a marketing professional and author. He is also the co-founder and chairman of the Atlanta-based consulting firm Ries & Ries with his partner and daughter, Laura Ries. Along with Jack Trout, Ries is crediting with coining the term "positioning", as related to the field of marketing, and authored Positioning: The Battle For Your Mind, an industry standard on the subject...
people
Everyone is interested in what‘s new. Few people are interested in what‘s better.
way advertising brands
Advertising is the way great brands get to be great brands.
two answers three
What's your brand? If you can't answer that question about your own brand in two or three words, your brand's in trouble.
law focus stronger
THE LAW OF THE CONTRACTION: A brand becomes stronger when you narrow its focus.
sacrifice essence mind
To get into the consumer's mind, you have to sacrifice. You have to reduce the essence of your brand to a single thought or attribute. An attribute that nobody else already owns in your category.
mind products
Positioning is not what you do to a product. Positioning is what you do to the mind of the prospect.
giving-up sacrifice unique
The essence of positioning is sacrifice. You must be willing to give up something in order to establish that unique position.
donald trump younger
She is the Donald Trump of the younger generation,
marketing cows looks
A branding program should be designed to differentiate your cow from all the other cattle on the range. Even if all the cattle on the range look pretty much alike.
mind strive should
A brand should strive to own a word in the mind of the consumer.
leader important behavior
What should a brand leader advertise?Brand leadership, of course. Leadership is the single most important motivating factor in consumer behavior.
effort focus mind
If you want to build a brand, you must focus your branding efforts on owning a word in the prospect's mind. A word that nobody else owns.
successful people forever
Successful brands get into the mind slowly. A blurb in a magazine. A mention in a newspaper. A comment from a friend. A display in a retail store. After a slow buildup, people become convinced that they have known about the brand forever.
successful mind perception
A successful branding program is based on the concept of singularity. It creates in the mind of the prospect the perception that there is no product on the market quite like your product.