
In "Positioning," Al Ries and Jack Trout reveal why being first in consumers' minds trumps being better. This 1981 marketing bible - endorsed by industry titans and ranked among the greatest marketing books ever - transformed how brands compete for mental real estate.
Al Ries (1926–2022) and Jack Trout (1935–2017), co-authors of Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind, revolutionized modern marketing strategy as pioneers of positioning theory.
Ries, a DePauw University graduate, and Trout, a U.S. Navy veteran and Iona College alumnus, built their authority through decades advising Fortune 500 companies like Apple, IBM, and Procter & Gamble. Their 1981 business classic argues that brands must own distinct mental real estate in consumers’ minds—a framework refined through their joint consulting firm and expanded in sequels like Marketing Warfare and The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing.
Trout later led Trout & Partners, a global consultancy with offices in 20 countries, while Ries authored solo works on focus and branding. Translated into 40+ languages with over 2 million copies sold, Positioning remains required reading in MBA programs worldwide, with 400,000+ copies sold in China alone.
Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind explains how to create a distinct mental space for brands in consumers' minds by leveraging existing perceptions rather than product features. Authors Al Ries and Jack Trout argue that successful marketing requires simplifying messages, analyzing competitors, and being first in a category or creating a new one.
Marketers, entrepreneurs, and business leaders seeking to differentiate their brands in crowded markets will benefit most. It’s particularly valuable for those crafting messaging strategies, launching new products, or repositioning existing offerings against competitors.
They define positioning as strategically shaping how a brand is perceived relative to competitors in the consumer’s mind—not altering the product itself. It’s about identifying and occupying an uncontested mental “niche” through targeted communication.
Critics argue it oversimplifies modern marketing dynamics, particularly in digital ecosystems where consumer attention fragments across channels. Some examples feel dated, but the core principles remain widely applied.
Unlike Contagious (viral messaging) or Influence (psychology of persuasion), Positioning focuses solely on competitive mindshare strategies. It’s more tactical for brand differentiation than theoretical.
Yes—principles like simplicity, category creation, and competitor analysis translate to SEO, social media, and content marketing. For example, brands like Slack dominated “team communication” by reframing email’s weaknesses.
Yes. While communication channels evolved, the cognitive principles—limited attention, preference for simplicity, and category-based thinking—remain foundational to branding.
The 200-page book can be read in 4-6 hours. Key concepts are summarized in introductory chapters, with case studies providing depth.
Pair with Differentiate or Die (Trout) for advanced tactics, Building a StoryBrand (Miller) for messaging frameworks, or Blue Ocean Strategy (Kim/Mauborgne) for category creation.
저자의 목소리로 책을 느껴보세요
지식을 흥미롭고 예시가 풍부한 인사이트로 전환
핵심 아이디어를 빠르게 캡처하여 신속하게 학습
재미있고 매력적인 방식으로 책을 즐기세요
The easiest way to get into someone's mind is to be first.
It's better to be first than it is to be better.
Marketing is not a battle of products, it's a battle of perceptions.
The essence of positioning is sacrifice. You must be willing to give up something in order to establish that unique position.
Positioning의 핵심 아이디어를 이해하기 쉬운 포인트로 분해하여 혁신적인 팀이 어떻게 창조하고, 협력하고, 성장하는지 이해합니다.
Positioning을 빠른 기억 단서로 압축하여 솔직함, 팀워크, 창의적 회복력의 핵심 원칙을 강조합니다.

생생한 스토리텔링을 통해 Positioning을 경험하고, 혁신 교훈을 기억에 남고 적용할 수 있는 순간으로 바꿉니다.
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"Reading used to feel like a chore. Now it’s just part of my lifestyle."
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"It is great for me to learn something from the book without reading it."
"The themed book list podcasts help me connect ideas across authors—like a guided audio journey."
"Makes me feel smarter every time before going to work"
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Picture a supermarket aisle. Twelve thousand products stare back at you-more items than words in a college graduate's vocabulary. Now imagine trying to remember even a fraction of them. You can't. Your brain won't let you. This isn't a failure of memory; it's a survival mechanism. In 1972, two advertising mavericks discovered something revolutionary: the battle for customers isn't won in factories or on store shelves. It happens in the three pounds of gray matter between your ears. The insight was deceptively simple-perception matters more than reality. Your product could be objectively superior, meticulously engineered, and competitively priced, yet still fail spectacularly. Why? Because in the marketplace of the mind, being better means nothing if you're not first. This realization transformed how we think about marketing, branding, and even ourselves. The question isn't whether your product is good. It's whether your product owns a clear, defensible position in the mental real estate of your customers. Consider this unsettling math: American companies spend $376 per person annually on advertising, compared to just $16.87 in the rest of the world. Yet that million-dollar campaign translates to less than half a cent of messaging per person across an entire year. Advertising isn't a sledgehammer-it's a light fog.