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Positioning for Credit UnionsToday’s noise level — the vast amounts of communication seen daily by each person — is staggering. Each year in the U.S., the average person has more than 200,000 advertising messages pushed at them, 30,000 books are published (enough to keep you reading 24 hours a day for 17 years), while 25,000 new trademarks are added. It is said that a college grad has a speaking vocabulary of 8,000 words, yet your basic grocery store has more than 12,000 items on display. The average person can only soak up so much information. So how does a person deal with this noise level? The only way the human mind can cope is to categorize items, ranking them in their head. Think of soft drinks, and you would probably list Coke as #1, Pepsi #2, and 7-Up #3. If you think of almost any product or service, you can probably come up with a list. That list in your head marks how you position each product or company in order, by category. How do you get heard among all the noise? Positioning. Your credit union is already positioned in the minds of your members, whether you have researched it or not. If you ask non-members to list the top financial institutions in your market, your credit union may not even make it on the list. If you ask either group to rank financial institutions by “where to go for an auto loan” you may get a different order. These lists affect people’s reactions to your membership, marketing, and more. In addition to positioning products and services in customers’ minds, it also works for prospective employees or investors. In the minds of the public, the “best people” work for the best company, and lesser companies get the “leftovers.” Plus, good positioning can transcend every aspect of a company and its employees, providing a framework for both daily work and future growth. So where do you start? Start with this brutal truth: it does not matter if you believe your products and services are better than the competition’s. It does not matter what management thinks either. What matters are the perceptions of your members, both current and prospective. You have to get on the list that’s in their heads. You have to find a way to hook into what’s already there. Now roll up your sleeves:
Specific points to remember when positioning a credit union:
Kent Dicken is President and Marketing Evangelist at iDiz, a collection of adcraftsmen and graphic artisans specializing in every aspect of credit union marketing. |
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