Find a local brand positioning & messaging in Melbourne
Post a gig in 60 seconds, get bids from brand positioning & messagings nearby. You pick the one that fits.
Best brand positioning & messagings in Melbourne
Ranked by verified rating, review volume, proximity and profile completeness. Every freelancer joins with an ABN and an Australian mobile.
Anthony A.
josh M.
Josephine S.
Carolina Ramirez D.
What's the cost of a brand positioning & messaging in Melbourne?
Not sure who's best for the job? Post a gig and let local brand positioning & messagings send you a quote.
What is Unjumble?
Post a gig. Pick a local freelancer. Pay in stages. All in one web app. Finding great help shouldn't be hard work.
Post a gig.
01Tell us what you need, time-based or outcome-based. Takes 60 seconds and it's free to post.

Pick a person.
02Compare bids from local freelancers, view portfolios and past work.

Wrap it up.
03When the work lands and you're happy, sign it off and release the payment securely through Stripe. Done and dusted.

Not sure who's best for the job? Post a gig and let local freelancers send you a quote.
Brand positioning & messaging in Melbourne, questions
The core deliverable is a positioning statement (who you're for, what you offer, and why you over the alternatives) plus a messaging framework: your value proposition, three or four key messages, and a tone of voice description with example lines. Most freelancers add a proof points list and a short do-and-don't guide so anyone writing for you stays on message. The result is a one or two page doc your website, ads and sales chat can all pull from.
Positioning is the decision: the space you own in a customer's head, like the premium appointment-only option rather than the cheap-and-fast one. Messaging is how you say it out loud, the actual words on your homepage, your ads and your bio. Positioning comes first and rarely changes; messaging flexes by channel and audience. Get the positioning wrong and even sharp copy points in the wrong direction.
Brand strategy is the wider piece: customer research, competitor mapping, values and personality, with positioning as one output. A positioning and messaging gig is tighter and faster, it takes the strategic thinking you've likely already done and turns it into the words you'll actually use. If you're starting from scratch in a crowded category, brand strategy first. If you know who you are but keep describing it five different ways, this is the gig.
The tells are familiar: your homepage could belong to any competitor, prospects ask what you actually do, you compete on price because nothing else stands out, or two team members pitch the business two different ways. Sharp positioning fixes that by making one thing true and memorable about you. If you can't finish the sentence we're the only ones who in one breath, that's the work.
It's the one or two lines that explain the value you deliver, who it's for, and why it beats the alternative. You need one the moment anyone lands on your site or reads your ad, because it's the first thing that decides whether they stay. A good value prop is specific and provable, not we deliver quality service. A freelancer pressure-tests it against what customers actually say, not what you wish they'd say.
Most run 2 to 4 weeks: a working session to dig into your customers and competitors, a draft positioning and messaging set, then a round of refinement. Add time if the freelancer is interviewing a few of your customers first, which is worth it. It moves at the speed of your sign-off more than the writing, so line up whoever has the final say before you start.
You can get a long way with honest answers to four questions: who's my best customer, what do they really buy from me, who else could they choose, and why should they pick me. Free frameworks like the Value Proposition Canvas help you organise it, and AI tools can draft variations to react to. The hard part is seeing yourself from outside; you're too close to spot the angle a customer would, and you tend to back the message you already like. A freelancer brings that outside read and writes it tighter than you would.
A working document, not a theory deck. At minimum: a positioning statement, your value proposition, three or four key messages, a tone of voice guide with real example sentences, and a one-page summary the whole team can remember. Ask to see a past deliverable before you pick a freelancer. If it's slides of archetypes with no line you could put on your site tomorrow, keep looking.
A positioning and messaging gig in Melbourne typically runs $2,000 to $5,000. A focused value proposition and messaging sprint can start around $1,200, while a deeper engagement with customer interviews and competitor analysis pushes toward $8,000. Some freelancers charge a day rate of $800 to $1,500 for a workshop-led version. Scope drives it: how much research sits behind the words.
Look for one who talks about your customers and competitors before they talk about adjectives, and who can show messaging they've written that you can go and read live. Ask how they'll gather input, customer interviews beat guesswork every time. Read their verified reviews on Unjumble for whether the words they delivered actually got used. Be wary of anyone who jumps to taglines before they understand who you're for.
Post a brand positioning and messaging gig in under five minutes. Describe the work, set your budget and timeframe, and choose whether it is time-based or outcome-based. Local freelancers send a bid with a quote, you compare their profiles, portfolios and reviews, then pick the one that fits. Posting is free, so you only pay for the work.
Every gig is split into stages you both agree on up front. You fund each stage before the work starts and it is held securely through Stripe, then released once you sign off. No chasing invoices, and no paying for work that is not done.