Brand Management
Brand Management
Brand Management
Credits: 4
SYLLABUS
Branding Concepts
Introduction to Brand; Brand and Branding Basics; Relationship of Brands with Customers; Building
Successful Brands.
Terms associated with Brands
Understanding Various Terms; Brand Names and Brand Extensions; Co-Banding and Corporate Branding;
Brand Associations and Brand Image.
Management of Brand
Brand Loyalty; Brand Relationship; Brand Equity; Brand Management
Brand Processing
Brand Evolution; Value of Brand; Brand Planning and Brand Potential.
Brand Selection
Brand and Consumer Buying Process; Consumer Search for Brand Information; Issues associated with
Effective Brand Name; Added Values Beyond Functionalism; Brand Personality; Branding to make Tangible
the Intangible.
Suggested Reading:
BRAND MANAGMENT
COURSE OVERVIEW
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
CONTENTS
.
vi
Lesson No.
Topic
Page No.
Lesson 1
Introduction to Brand
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
13
Lesson 4
21
Lesson 5
29
Lesson 6
35
Lesson 7
43
Lesson 8
48
Lesson 9
Brand Loyalty
55
Lesson 10
Brand Relationship
63
Lesson 11
Brand Equity
68
Lesson 12
75
Lesson 13
Brand Evolution
83
Lesson 14
Value of brands
90
Lesson 15
94
Lesson 16
101
Lesson 17
108
Lesson 18
114
Lesson 19
122
Lesson 20
Brand Personality
131
Lesson 21
137
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
CONTENTS
.
Chapter No.
Topic
Page No.
Lesson 22
144
Lesson 23
152
Lesson 24
Consumer Segmentation
157
Lesson 25
162
Lesson 26
Perceptual Mapping
168
Lesson 27
175
Lesson 28
181
Lesson 29
Successful Repositioning
187
Lesson 30
194
Lesson 31
202
Lesson 32
210
Lesson 33
221
Lesson 34
232
Lesson 35
Online Branding
236
Lesson 36
247
Lesson 37
251
vii
UNIT I
FOUNDATION OF BRAND MANAGEMENT
LESSON 1:
UNIT 1
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION TO BRAND
BRANDING CONCEPTS
Step One
Read about successful brand management. This course
provides you with illustrations and anecdotes from the world
of brand management. Youll see what worked for other
companies and find ideas that you can apply to your own
brand.
BRAND MANAGMENT
Objectives
Step Two
Learn the principles and practices. Subscribe to our Shared
Learning newsletter and learn the principles and practices of
successful brand management - youll be another step closer to
unlocking the potential of your brand.
Step Three
Apply proven tools and techniques. This brand Manual
provides proven tools and techniques - and a complete brand
management process - to help you unlock the value of your
most important asset, your brand.
Glossary of Terms
A. Awareness The percentage of population or target market
who are aware of the existence of a given brand or
company. There are two types of awareness: spontaneous,
which measures the percentage of people who
spontaneously mention a particular brand when asked to
name brands in a certain category; and prompted, which
measures the percentage of people who recognise a brand
from a particular category when shown a list.
B. Brand A brand is a mixture of attributes, tangible and
intangible, symbolised in a trademark, which, if managed
properly, creates value and influence.
Value has different interpretations: from a marketing or
consumer perspective it is the promise and delivery of an
experience; from a business perspective it is the security
of future earnings; from a legal perspective it is a
separable piece of intellectual property. Brands offer
customers a means to choose and enable recognition within
cluttered markets.
Brand Architecture How an organization structures and
names the brands within its portfolio. There are three main
types of brand architecture system: monolithic, where the
corporate name is used on all products and services offered
by the company; endorsed, where all sub-brands are linked
to the corporate brand by means of either a verbal or visual
endorsement; and freestanding, where the corporate brand
operates merely as a holding company, and each product or
service is individually branded for its target market.
Brand Associations The feelings, beliefs and knowledge
that consumers (customers) have about brands. These
associations are derived as a result of experiences and must
be consistent with the brand positioning and the basis of
differentiation.
1
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Notes
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 2:
BRANDS AND BRANDING BASICS
Topics Covered
Introduction to product and brands, Importance and
characteristics of Brands, Nature of relationship of brand with
customers and Building successful brands through industry
cases.
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
Basics of Branding
a. Concepts of brand management
b. Importance of brands and
c. Characteristics of brand
After going through the Introduction to the subject in first
lesson let us now discuss the Brands and Branding basics in
detail. This is very important as if the basics are not clear you
may not be able to understand the subject well.
Have you ever given a thought that why branding gained so
much importance in the past few years? Why companies are
spending lavishly on branding their product? To understand
this we need to discuss brands in detail and importance of
branding.
Kellers Definition
A product, but one that adds other dimensions that
differentiate it in some way from other products designed to
satisfy the same need.
Rational and tangible
Symbolic, emotional and intangible
The psychological response to a brand can be as important as
the physiological response.
Product = Commodity
A product is a produced item
always possessing these
characteristics:
Tangibility
Attributes and Features
Example
Macdonald sums this up nicely in the following quote
emphasising the importance of brands:
it is not factories that make profits, but relationships with
customers, and it is company and brand names which secure
those relationships
Businesses that invest in and sustain leading brands prosper
whereas those that fail are left to fight for the lower profits
available in commodity markets.
BRAND MANAGMENT
Activity 1
Lets see how many separate product lines can you spot from
their web site? http://www.hp.com
Managing brands is a key part of the product strategy of any
business, particularly those operating in highly competitive
consumer markets.
Additional Definitions
Brand image is defined as consumers perceptions as reflected by
the associations they hold in their minds when they think of
your brand.
Brand awareness is when people recognize your brand as yours.
This does not necessarily mean they prefer your brand (brand
preference), attach a high value to, or associate any superior
attributes to your brand, it just means they recognize your
brand and can identify it under different conditions.
Brand awareness consists of both brand recognition, which is
the ability of consumers to confirm that they have previously
been exposed to your brand, and brand recall, which reflects the
ability of consumers to name your brand when given the
product category, category need, or some other similar cue.
Aided awareness occurs when you show or read a list of brands
and the person expresses familiarity with your brand only after
they hear or see it.
Top-of-mind awareness occurs when you ask a person to name
brands within a product category and your brand pops up first
on the list.
When you think about fast foods and Luxury cars, Mc Donalds
and Mercedes Benz come to mind? These brands enjoy strong
top-of-mind awareness in their respective categories.
What is Branding?
Branding is the business process of managing your trademark
portfolio so as to maximize the value of the experiences
associated with it, to the benefit of your key stakeholders,
especially current and prospective:
employees
BRAND MANAGMENT
customers
stock/share holders
suppliers
intermediaries
opinion leaders
local communities
Opinion leaders - the media, politicians and nongovernment organisations are more respectful of strong
brands
n
n
A Brand is a ..
Name,
Term,
Sign,
Symbol, or
Design
intended to
distinguish the goods
and services from
one another
Dalrymple & Parsons/Marketing Management 7th edition: Chapter 7
New
Existing
Line
Brand
Extension Extension
New
Flanker
Brand
Brand
Name
New
Product
31
Characteristics of Brands
Our definition of a brand adheres to a model which shows the
extent to which a product or service can be augmented to
provide added value to increasing levels of sophistication. This
model, views a brand as consisting of four levels
generic
expected
augmented
potential
The generic level is the commodity form that meets the buyer,
or users basic needs, for example the car satisfying a transportation need. This is the easiest aspect for competitors to copy and
consequently successful brands have added values over and
above this at the expected level.
Within the expected level, the commodity is value engineered to
satisfy a specific targets minimum purchase conditions, such as
functional capabilities, availability, pricing, etc. As more buyers
enter the market and as repeat buying occurs, the brand would
evolve through a better matching of resources to meet customers needs (e.g; enhanced customer service).
With increased experience, buyers and users become more
sophisitated, so the brand would need to be augmented in
more refined ways, with added values satisfying non-functional
(e.g. emotional) as well as functional needs. For example,
Slogan
How are you going to describe the essence of the brand to your
customers in one short, memorable, and motivating sentence?
This should hint at the central organizing thought, without
necessarily stating it.
As an example, the central organizing thought of the BMW
brand is competitive achievement, but the slogan is the
ultimate driving machine.
The Personality of the Brand
What does the brand stand for? What does it believe in? What
would it make a stand on?
Tastes/Appearance
What does the brand like? What does it look like? What does it
wear? How does it speak?
This will include the iconography of the brand - the icons, the
symbols, the trade dress, the typeface, and the look and feel.
Heritage
All great brands have stories about them. Some are favorable,
some are less favorable, but all of them work to explain what
the brand is all about. Telling stories about the brand is one of
the strongest ways of communicating the essence of your
brand.
Emotional Benefits
Avoids pain
Reduces pain
Gives pleasure
Hard Benefits
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Establishing a Brand
Public relations are the way a strong brand is truly established
and advertising is how the brand is maintained. If a brand is
successful in making a connection with people and
communicating its distinct advantage, people will want to tell
others about it and word-of-mouth advertising will develop
naturally-not to mention writers in the press will want to write
about the brand. Once that type of differentiation is established
in the markets mind, advertising can help maintain and shape
the brand.
What you need to do in branding is to communicate what the
brand distinctively stands for using as few words or images as
possible.
So remember, branding is all about creating singular distinction,
strategic awareness, and differentiation in the mind of the target
market-not just awareness. When you have been successful, you
will start building equity for your brand.
Points of Parity
Discussion of strategic awareness, points of singular
distinction, and brand equity would not be complete without
discussion of brand points of parity.
Points of parity are those associations that are often shared by
competing brands. Consumers view these associations as being
necessary to be considered a legitimate product offering within a
given category.
In other words, if you create what you consider to be a
wonderful point of differentiation and position, they might
not be enough if consumers do not view your product or
service as measuring up on minimum product expectations.
Points of parity are necessary for your brand but are not
sufficient conditions for brand choice.
For example, Maruti might produce a wonderful new automobile that uses advanced global positioning and sensor
technologies that render a driver obsolete by automatically
routing the car, adjusting speed for traffic conditions, recognizing and complying with all traffic laws, and delivering
passengers and cargo to the proper destination without the
need for operator intervention. They have invented the first car
with functional autopilot. What a strong position and unique
selling proposition!
However, unless they have fully consider their brands points of
parity with other products in the category, they probably will not
meet with success.
Consumers might expect that at minimum Marutis automobile
have four wheels with rubber, inflatable tires, be street legal, run
on a widely-available fuel source, be able to operate during both
10
Brand Equity
Brand Equity is the sum total of all the different values people
attach to the brand, or the holistic value of the brand to its
owner as a corporate asset.
Brand equity can include: the monetary value or the amount of
additional income expected from a branded product over and
above what might be expected from an identical, but unbranded product; the intangible value associated with the
product that can not be accounted for by price or features; and
the perceived quality attributed to the product independent of
its physical features.
A brand is nearly worthless unless it enjoys some equity in the
marketplace. Without brand equity, you simply have a commodity product.
More Things to Know About Brands
First of all, you must understand that you already have a brand.
Everyone has at least one brand. Your name and who you are
is, in fact, your personal brand. The brand called you. The
issue then is not whether you have a brand; the issue is how
well your brand is managed.
Here are just a few benefits you will enjoy when you create a
strong brand:
Branding will help you fence off your customers from the
competition and protect your market share while building
mind share. Once you have mind share, your customers will
automatically think of you first when they think of your
product category.
11
BRAND MANAGMENT
Brand Management
If a brand is not effectively managed then a perception can be
created in the mind of your market that you do not necessarily
desire. Branding is all about perception.
Wouldnt it be nice to have people perceive you the way you
would like them to perceive you? That is what branding and
brand management are all about.
Brand management recognizes that your markets perceptions
may be different from what you desire while it attempts to
shape those perceptions and adjust the branding strategy to
ensure the markets perceptions are exactly what you intend.
So you may now have a better understanding of what a brand
is and why awareness about your brand does not necessarily
mean your brand enjoys high brand equity in the marketplace.
You might even understand that brand management is all
about shaping and managing perceptions. You may still be
asking yourself, however, why you should care about branding
in the first place.
BRAND MANAGMENT
but only Nordstrom will turn it into an experience you will talk
about with friends and colleagues.
This clarity guides Nordstrom as they build on their current
business. When they developed their on-line store, they did so
in a way to ensure that customers would experience the same
level of service they have come to expect from the Nordstrom
brand.
Consistency
In addition to being clear about who they are, strong brands are
also consistent. They are always what they say they are.
For Volvo, they are always about safety. They dont change their
focus from model to model. When new editions come out each
year, they are safe too. And Volvo consistently communicates
that.
Or look at Madonna. Madonna is the chameleon brand of
entertainment. She reinvents herself with each CD that she
produces. She didnt change for her first five CDs and then stay
the same for the next two. She consistently changes.
And the one thing we can be sure of with regard to her
upcoming CD is that it will be nothing like any of the others
she has done before. Madonnas ability to change consistently
throughout her career separates her from other entertainers,
thereby strengthening her brand.
Constancy
Notes
12
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 3:
THE NATURE OF RELATIONSHIP OF BRAND WITH CUSTOMERS
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Concepts of brand management
b. Importance of brands and
c.
Characteristics of brand
If I ask you to name a brand of each of the following categories: Soft Drink, Wrist watch, Detergent powder and Motor
Bike. Answer this before you read ahead. Now check whether
anyone of it matches given hereunder.
Thums up, HMT, Nirma, Honda These are not preferences of
Consumers. They just indicate the probability level of brand
consciousness in the respective product category. With global
brands around in most product categories, there is an interesting battle of brands in the marketing area. Battle of not just
brands but a battle based on how effectively they have penetrated into the psyche of consumers.
The Indian scenario provides challenges of all kinds to brand
managers who have to conceptually figure out how they can
place and sustain their brands in the minds of consumers. It is
simply not warfare between mega-brands. For established
brands, it is a question of enhancing their equity. For others it is
a matter of building up the brand image and these will have to
be done in a country which is replete with regional, social,
cultural and linguistic variations where the governing marketing
parameters for a given product/market situation cannot always
be predicted.
As you must have studied in the Consumer buying behaviour
(with regard to any product or service, especially in consumer
products) the consumer is influenced by the brand-pull. This
may be because of several reasons and could vary across product
categories (from footwear to pagers) but certain generalisation
could be drawn for the kind of behaviour. They may be:
Time Frame
Each of the above factors is not mutually exclusive from this
viewpoint of the brand-pull. There are traditional product
categories like toothpastes, footwear, audio products, balms,
cigarettes and scooters, which have been in the Indian market
(as compared to products like pagers, personal computers,
shampoo in a sachet, electric shavers and credit cards).
Now just think of 5 very old brands in any of the segment like
FMCG or Electronics?
a. Product Category
In a new product or service categories, which could be associated
with liberalisation, global brands may create a higher level of
brand consciousness among consumers. This may be because
of perceived premium associated traditionally with foreign
brand names.
Examples could be Motorola in cellular phones, McDonalds in
food chains and Citibank in credit cards or you can name many
more in the list.
b. Social Value
In product categories which are relatively old like ready-made
garments (this category has been in existence for a long time but
has exploded in the recent years), an audio products and
household appliances, global brand names may make a greater
impact on the customers. In this context, the social signalling
value of products (the visibility a product ahs in the eye of the
other customers- consumer durables are placed generally in the
room where visitors are received at homes and cars which are
bought for personal use have more of signalling value than the
geyser, water purifier or contact lens) provides the symbolic
association which consumers look for in attempting to give a
13
BRAND MANAGMENT
Activity
Just close your eyes and try to recollect all the brands of
electronics goods you have at home. (like Refrigetor, Television,
Iron, Microwave, Washing Machine and others.)
India, with its markets fragmented in most product categories,
has offered enough scope for brand building in the respective
segments if marketers have had the inclination to build brands.
Vicks very carefully built up it brand from the fifties and carved
a niche for itself as a cold remedy in a balm market where
segmentation was totally absent. This enabled the brand
extension over a period of time (to adults and headaches). Bajaj
strongly built a value for money image and this could be very
stressful for the brand if it starts scanning the lower end of its
passenger car market which has been left untapped. (Maruti was
successful and now it is building up-market brands).
Philips has an interesting brand development history in Indiait has been around for sixty-five years and in a closed economy
(not much of specific brand personality was required). During
recent times, its brand development has been in tune with its
product development introduction of a spate of TV models
for the upmarket and entering into household appliances and
pagers, to reinforce the technological prowess that the brand has
in global markets in the minds of consumers. This is a brand
which is already on the top of the mind consciousness level
and its trying to create a position even at this level as there are a
number of competitive brands which have an equally good
equity.
In the non-durables category, brand consciousness has to be
viewed differently. Colgate, Horlicks, Lifebuoy, Sunlight, Ponds,
Lux, Farex are all global brands but they have been very much a
part of the consumer psyche because of their time frame
association.
Any brand cannot be successful without consumers support.
Success of any brand depends on brand loyalty showed by
14
The routine change of oil as Lubricants for two and fourwheelers has become an area of consumers decision
making with consumers asking for specific brands.
Consumers Involvement
As you yourself is the consumer of almost all the brands of
products mentioned here. Again try to co-relate with your own
example for each brand when you read ahead. This will give you
better understanding of the topic.
It is involvement everywhere with anything from morning tea
to air-conditioners. The concept of involvement assumes
significance against the marketing backdrop described. With the
battle of brands and minds in any product category, the
consumer spends more time and effort in the purchase of
product category, products, which have been uninspiring to him
all these years.
The concept of involvement characterises the difference in the
intensity of interest with which consumers make buying
decisions. This has an important impact on:
Some Examples
15
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Discontinuity (habits)
16
Triability
Culture
CONSUMER
communication
MINDSET
Timing of
communication
Functional Value
Discontinuity In Habits
Take your own example when you go through this. As habits
are strongly associated with behaviour, there are two
dimensions to them physical and psychological. The growth of
the two-wheeler category is an interesting example. Till the mid
eighties, the category grew at a slow pace. One reason was that
consumers were comfortable with cycles or whatever mode of
transport they were used to. Hence the people were neither
motivated nor readily amenable to the idea of using an enginebased two-wheeler for personal transport. Getting used to the
two-wheeler would have meant getting used to the acceleration,
the controls and of course periodical maintenance and running
expenses. However, consumers exhibit a mindset to accept
discontinuity of their learned habits (physical dimensions)?
When life-styles change, there is increased pressure on time and
consumers become mentally prepared to accept new product
concepts though it may involve a change in habits. The
assumption is that the new product is not prohibitively
expensive.
The psychological dimension of habits is associated with certain
non-functional, non-phjysical aspects like taste and preparation,
which may be involvement before the consumption of the
product. The penetration of coffee makers even in the urban
markets (South) is an example. Coffee being a hedonistic
drink, consumers used to the filter-taste may be wary of
changing the method of preparation by using a machine. The
success of rice grinder Elgi Ultra Grind in southern markets
is a good example of how a company overcame this barrier.
This product is a sleek version of the traditional stone grinder.
The working of the machine is such that it convinces the
consumer of a standardised taste (applies to traditional food
items of a South).
While changes in the environment and life style could bring
changes in the physical dimension, changes in psychological
dimensions are relatively more difficulty to achieve. Instant
coffee (pure and chicory mixed) has been in the market for a
long time but hasnt penetrated phenomenally inspite of being
convenient to use. Marketing communication can build in lifestyle aspects (apart from highlighting product attribute - taste it
the case of instant coffee) to create an impact in the minds of
consumers. Bru, after hammering down the stereotype of
Trialability
Cielo opened up a new dimension with its promotional
strategy of offering the car for a test ride for 18 months (for 200
customers). These prospective customers had the option of
returning the car after the test drive period. This promotional
method is suitable from product categories like durables .The
modalities of offering this kind of trialability depends on the
product, type of prospective customers and the launch budget
of the company. In certain product categories where a niche is
targeted, this may be more effective than advertising. This
method not only builds credibility of the new product but also
helps in word-of mouth publicity.
As more and more products appear in the Indian market,
breaking the barriers in the consumer mindset will be as
important as the product offering.
The Concept of Perception
Sony the brand name could usher in images of quality and
innovation in the mind of a person who has never used any
product of the brand. Raymond is the fabric for the complete
man and Allen Solly is the designer wear for corporate
executives who prefer an aura of casualness in their corporate
setting. Pepsi could be associated with the fun and frolic
moments of the younger generation. If one wonders about
the logic and reality associated with the various kinds of
marketing communication in todays context, the principles of
perception could be used to reason out the development of
brand images attempted by marketers.
Principles of perception
In simple terms perception is an important psychological
process in which you can add meaning to what has been sensed
by your sensory organ. This is precisely the reason why two
individuals have different kinds of perception about products,
brands ideas, places and people. In the marketing context the
conditioning of the consumers psyche over a period of time
because of the individual s exposure to products, brands
trends, etc gets associated with the incoming marketing stimuli,
which could be a brand, advertising message, product or a
companys name, to complete the process of perception. The
conditioning aspect is the relevant information which is already
stored in the memory of the individual.
Consumer notices
the brand at the
retail store
Incoming
Marketing stimuli
Brand of Soap
freshness
conditioning achieved
over time through
Stored Information
advertising
Mechanism of Perceptions
17
BRAND MANAGMENT
south Indian coffee, is currently associating itself with contemporary life style.
BRAND MANAGMENT
For each of the factors given above, write atleast two brands
each.
Principles of Proximity
The principle of proximity could be used as a part of a brand
image development. This involves associating visuals which are
appropriate to t he positioning of the brand with the brand
name. ITCs Classic brand of cigarette, a brand positioned to
the upper strata of smoker, is associated with the game polo,
which has an upmarket image. The logic is to associate a visual,
which could elicit perception that will be favourable to the
development of the brand image. Peter England, the value for
money brand, has used the proximity principle in its retailing
decisions. It has not followed the exclusive showroom
arrangement. In tune with its value proposition, it has entered
into small retail showrooms where the brand is displayed along
with a number of other brands. This enables a consumer to
compare the value aspect of the brand with other brands. It is
interesting to note that this usage of the proximity principle has
taken into consideration the other aspects of the value
proposition the honest shirt and a wide range of colours
offered.
In the last decade, there has been a proliferation of shampoo
brands in sachets. Shampoo was a category exclusively associated
with upper middle/ upper class consumers. It was sold in
200ml bottles at selective shops and advertised in selective
media vehicles. The product form (sachets) and the display of
these sachets in millions of small outlets (including rural areas)
have radically altered the perception of consumers of the
product category. It is well within the reach of millions of
middle class consumers, and about sixty five per cent of the
shampoo volume is realised through sachets. The proximity in
this context is simply the association of the product/brands
with small retail outlets. Currently even premium brands are
launched in sachets, probably to upgrade consumers from value
brands. The compact detergent sub-category (Ariel, Surf Excel)
18
Activity
19
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Notes
20
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:0
a) Concepts and strategies of Building strong Brands.
As we have discussed the foundation and basics of Branding.
Let us discuss through cases how to marketers build strong
brands. This cannot be taken up as classroom text. So you need
to be very observant now. Wherever you go, whatever you wear
or eat have a close watch on the brand. Always keep a track of
the strategies by companies whenever you go to market to
purchase anything.
To be a good brand person you need to have open eyes and
open mind always.
21
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 4:
BUILDING SUCCESSFUL BRANDS
BRAND MANAGMENT
22
Brand identity
Brand awareness
Familiarity and knowledge of the brand
Consideration to evaluate the brand
Purchase
Brand loyalty (or brand equity)
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
towards the housewife and kids, and the Real Active juice is
targeted towards the young adults between the age of 24 to
35. We are very clearly focused on the in-home segment and
soft drink is more out- of- home impulse purchase.
Advertising does help in building brand recall, but
advertising alone does not sustain a brand
Vikram Bakshi, MD,, McDonalds
25
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Activity
Study 5 successful brands and make down notes as above how
they have been able to achieve that success.
Is it Creativity that Drives Marketing?
November 19, 03
Anushree Madan Mohan
Is it creativity that drives marketing? Or is it the rationality
factor? The fourth session of the National FMCG Conclave
attempted to shed some light on the same subject and featured
Sanjay Johri (Managing Director, Readers Digest), Ashok
Dhingra (Director, Sales and Marketing, Perfetti India), Shripad
Nadkarni (Vice President, Marketing, Coca Cola India Ltd) and
Neeraj Swaroop (Country Head-Retail Banking, HDFC Bank
Ltd) as the key panelists. The moderator of the session was
Vivek Sharma, Brand Director, Ogilvy &Mather Pvt Ltd.
Sanjay Johri, Managing Director, Readers Digest asserts, How
important is creativity in advertising in comparison with the
other elements of the marketing mix? For every issue, Readers
Digest distributes around 500,000 copies. Around 435,000
copies goes to subscribers and 65,000 copies are sent to
bookstores and newspaper outlets. For Readers Digest, its the
rational approach, which has led to much success in our
marketing activities. We rely primarily on direct marketing
wherein subscriptions are sold via direct mail and serviced
through the postal system. We have a detailed database of all
our customers; each list is coded separately for all the tests that
we undertake with regard to our marketing mix. High cost per
contact is unavoidable but in the process, we get a high
response rate as well.
He adds, Statistical sampling is our mode of operation,
through which we examine the value proposition. As far as our
target group tests are concerned, our telephone lists garner a
response of around 2.5% whereas referrals offer a response of
around 15%. As per our price and offer tests, we found that the
subscription price of Rs.299 did 6% better than a price tag of
Rs.300. Enclosing a gift raised responses upto 22% and a
money back guarantee added around 10% to the overall
responses. A credit offer also manages to pull three times more
responses than a cash offer. Johri highlights that accurate
targeting makes a huge difference to any kind of business.
Johri also addresses the role of copy and visuals, within the
overall marketing mix. He believes, From the tests that we
have taken on, it is quite visible that creative changes have
limited effects on sales, as compared to target groups, prices and
offers. For instance, we were relying on creative approach A,
when we were garnering an order rate of 10.2%. We changed
our approach to B, and the order rate went up to 11.5%. The
difference was marginal.
A rational approach may have worked for Readers Digest. But
AK Dhingra, Director Sales & Marketing, Perfetti India has
another story to tell!
Says Dhingra, Packaging, promotion and pricing may be
important but its creativity which is paramount in generating
business. Marketing for Perfetti, has always been led by
creativity. The common perception is that all marketing must be
logic led and low on gut feel and innovation. But at Perfetti, we
26
are used to breaking all the rules. For instance, candy has always
been associated with kids, but when we launched Alpenliebe,
the creatives were primarily revolving around grown ups.
Inspite of that, Alpenliebe has been outperforming its
expectations, year on year. Again with Alpenliebe lolliepop, the
ads certainly dont pass any test of rationale.
He adds, After the problems that CenterFresh faced during
the World Cup 1996, we werent in a position to advertise for it
at all. It was after that particular lean period that we launched
CenterShock, which again flaunted all conventional rules for
advertising. With Center Shock, there was no concept of a
chocolate hero, an iconic heroine or an appetizing approach to
the product. The colloquial style worked in our favor. And
Center Shock is the number one player in the category today.
Meanwhile, Neeraj Swaroop (Country Head-Retail Banking,
HDFC Bank Ltd) takes on a different tangent. He asserts,
Ideas are definitely born out of creativity. But every creative idea
gets replicated with time and sooner or later, its going to give
rise to more competition. With the multiplicity of choices in the
current day, there is a need for greater segmentation within the
market and hence, a greater thrust towards rationality when it
comes to the marketing mix. Research and data management,
the right kind of pricing for value added services and feedback
on consumer insight go a long way in building the brand.
Swaroop adds, As far as the rational approach of HDFC is
concerned, we try and understand behavioral patterns of
consumers through our database, bring in relationship pricing
or preferential rates on the basis of the customer value and
management services for high net worth customers (fee waivers
and the kind). Our marketing efforts are geared towards greater
segmentation.
Shripad Nadkarni, Coca Cola argues in favor of creativity being
the driving force behind marketing. He asserts, Creativity
confers a distinct point, as far as the competition is concerned.
The right creative can give you the competitive edge. For
instance, Pepsi had launched its Chotta Pepsi way earlier than
us. But the Paanch ad did the trick for us and now its known as
the Chotta Coke!
He adds, With McKinley bottled water, we departed from
what would seem as logical and rational within the category, and
included the Boond Boond Mein Vishwaas TVC which made
an emotional connect with the people. We highlighted safety
and trust, and perhaps it was the lilting music that added to the
impact. Till the Boond Boond TVC, Bisleris approach was
completely towards highlighting the rational benefits of the
product. Thereafter they went for a complete reversal and took
on an ad which was more or less out of character for them, a
step which worked in our interest. Nadkarni discussed at some
length as to how the term Thanda lifted Cokes perception and
place in the market, in addition to making it a household name.
Creativity? Or the rational approach? Or the right blend between
the two? Well its upto the marketing gurus to figure that one
out! But from all that occurred in the fourth session of the
National FMCG Conclave, the overall consensus in the audience
was that it is indeed creativity, which is the driving force behind
any kind of a marketing mix. Thums up to the creative guys!
When you think Pampers you think of what-diapers of courseexpensive diapers at that. These rather narrow associations were
not helping the Pampers brand.
Although the brand commands a 24% share in the diaper
category, it was and is now under siege from lower priced
counterparts, particularly in the wake of new and improved
store brands that have greatly upped quality. The economic
recession doesnt help-particularly since Pampers price is 50%
higher than that of store brands. Nor did Pampers advertising
which, since 1961 had changed relatively little and tended to talk
down to mothers. Pampers (and other diapers) are also in some
sense responsible for their own slowed growth as improvements in diapers means fewer diaper changes (see Emily
Nelson, Wall Street Journal, December 27, 2001, B1).
How can companies build and enhance their brand franchiseboth deepening the meaning of the core brand and insulating
the brand from price-based competition? Attention to a few
simple concepts provides a start.
Brand Longevity Through Line Extensions
27
BRAND MANAGMENT
Case Study
BRAND MANAGMENT
Extending the brand name from diapers to say-sunscreenrepresents a potential challenge since consumers may
immediately think that the product is- well, not so sweet
smelling.
However, extending first from diapers to pleasant smelling
diaper wipes and then to sunscreen applied through a wipe
based product eliminates that immediate association. The sweet
smelling wipe is not only linked logically with diapers and
protection, one of its critical ingredients (its scent) counters and
otherwise inappropriate association that might be transferred to
the sunscreen extension.
Again, strategic thinking is required here. A company brainstorming session might identify a bunch of potential
extensions (and licensing opportunities) that fit the goal derived
category things that protect kids from the elements. Among
those that seem feasible, tactical considerations of when each
should be introduced relative to others is helpful in building a
core brand image that doesnt run into interference from other
associations linked to the brand.
Discussion Questions
1. Analyze the Pampers communication strategy at the time of
the launch. How did it fit in with past advertising efforts?
How did it contribute to brand equity?
2. How would you characterize the Pampers brand image?
What makes up its brand Extensions?
3. Describe some of the Brand Extension strategies? Are they
good enough strategically and tactically to maintain their
strong leadership status in the coming years?
Notes
28
CHAPTER 2
TERMS ASSOCIATED WITH
BRAND
UNIT
2
LESSON 5:
UNDERSTANDING VARIOUS TERMS
or
Initial step
Highlight distinct benefits
like contents
Ongoing actions
Use the tangibles or positioning to
create an identity.
Exceptional Handling
Efficient Packaging
Innovative
promotion,
communication
Auxillary Services
Objectives
Loyalty
development
programmes
Retain customer interest
by
repeated
communication
Develop customer pull by
different marketing mix
b. brand symbols
c.
brand character
Brand Symbol
We can describe Brand symbol as a visual entity and includes
Brand Character and Brand Logo. Both are elements of brand
identity. Brand Symbols lead to:
Awareness of brand, e.g the Doughboy for Pillsbury, the
Captain for Captain Cook, the devil for ONIDA, Gattu for
Asian Paints, the rabbit for Energizer, and the penguin for
Kelvinator.
Brand associations, e.g. lightning for Rin, jetfighter for Jet
Mosquito repellents, rose for breeze, lime for Cinthol Fresh,
and mangoes for Frooti.
29
BRAND MANAGMENT
Topics Covered
BRAND MANAGMENT
Brand Character
Marketers develop living or non-living characters and add
personality and meaning to it in the context of brand
development. These characters are called Brand Symbols.
Marketers present their brand character in a static manner.
Captain Cook does not walk and Mc Donalds sits. However to
create likeability among consumers, their interactivity (i.e not
static) could be exploited. Doughboy plays a role in the ads of
Pillsbury. Internationally, the movements and action of
Doughboy have been defined. Its belly poke and giggle was
used in the launch ad of Pillsbury atta in India. Apart from
making the character loveable, this action is supposed to
connote softness of the chapatti made from the product. When
the Doughboy interacts with the housewife playfully with
humour, it is projecting the interaction with the brand of the
housewife. The brands pack or logo cannot do this.
30
Qualitative Research
You would require understanding the following:
Personality (projective techniques to determine whether the
brand and the customer are made for each other or not.
Fitness with name of each option, along with rationale.
Fitness with slogan of each option, along with rationale.
Fitness with brand associations (current for existing brand
and proposed for a new brand) of each option, along with
rationale
Fitness on Pack
Fitness with proposed role in advertising (appropriate
stimuli to be used) of each option, along with rationale.
Comparison among character options, along with rationale.
Fitness with specific brand extension options, and reasons
for the same.
Quantitative Research
This would focus on ascertaining the following:
Thoughts evoked on seeing each option, and grouping of
thoughts as positive and negative.
Likeability of each option
Specific likes and dislikes of each option, reasons for the
same.
Uniqueness of each option.
Comparison of each option with symbols of competition.
Rating of each options fitness with pack.
Rating of each options fitness across a battery of general
and specific traits, e.g. cute, stylish, friendly, matured and
loveable. Specific brand associations and brand slogan
(desired or current) should also be included.(A ten point
numeric scale could be used).
Brand Logo
In order to make a word in a page standout, we highlight it,
underline it or circle it. This increases the noticeability. It gives an
identity to the word. Similarly, for a brand name to stand our
marketers use shapes and colours. This we see on packs and
across communication media. This combination of shape and
colour is called Brand Logo. Note that the brand name may or
may not form a part of it, e.g Coca-Cola is in the logo, but
Pepsi is not.
Elements of a Brand
A brand logo consists of five distinct elements:
Brand Name: ( Castrol in Castrol Logo)
Geometric Shape: This includes non copy visuals like
Maruti, whirlpool, Star TV, Maggi and Nestle have.
Colour: This is anecessary condition as the brand name also
is in the colour and the latter is a necessary condition for a
brand logo.
Slogan: Brand slogan in the brand logo is a rare
observation. One such example is Britannia: Eat Healthy,
think Better.
Font: All copy matter including the brand name has a
specific font, e.g: Coca Cola is always written in a particular
manner.
Dos and Donts in a Brand Logo
1. Use Creative elements than can be printed on all types of
material and can be reproduced with consistency. Coke has
different logos on the bottle and cans. There is a printing
constraint on the glass bottles and these do not have the
bottle in the logo. But surprisingly, the geometric shape
varies .It is rectangular on bottles and mostly circular
elsewhere.
2. In some cases the logo and the name are separate, i.e. the
name is not in the logo, e.g. Pepsi. In these cases the
consumer has to learn two different entities. Learning is
simpler otherwise. Eyes have to stop at two places to learn
instead of one. Besides, if the brand has a symbol not in
the logo, it leads to the same issue. A good integration of
all these elements is MRF, where the man is in the logo and
the body of the man ends on the name and in the case of
Frooti, the mangoes rest on the name.
3. A brand name is an identity, a signature and these are
consistent in definition. Brands should similarly stay in the
minds. If we try recalling Cinthol, do we get any specific
colour or geometric shape in mind?
4. If a brand does not have a form, the same should be
developed. If a brand does not have specific colour, the
same should be developed. It would pay in the long term.
It would pay during extensions, which would lead to
different packs having different dominant colours. The only
consistency is the logo.
5. The geometric shape should not have edges. It defines
boundaries and lack of dynamism perceptually. Wavy shapes
connote dynamism and flexibility. There is no consistency
on this across strong brands. E.g. Pepsi, Coke, Thums up,
etc.
6. The Pack of colour(s) should contrast the logo colour(s).
Brooke Bonds Red Label tea is a leading brand. When we
recall its logo, red and white colour comes to mind. The red
on the pack clearly overpowers the dark green logo of
Brooke Bond.
Logo Change
Logo changes of increased of late, mostly to have a common
identity across a range of businesses or product categories.
Some example follow:
The Korean group Lucky Goldstar changed its name to
two letters, i.e LG, primarily to bring synergy through the
name across all its businesses. Earlier, Lucky stood for
bulk sale items and Goldstar was used for electronics.
Apart from becoming omnipresent across all group
companies, the brand LG became smaller and smarter.
Aditya Brilas group also, like LG, developed a similar logo
for its group companies, namely Indian Rayon, Hindalco,
Indo Gulf and Grasim. This new identity is to be.
Tata Modifies its logo in 1999 to suit its changing business
structure, rejuvenates the old Tata logo, and increase
visibility through use across.
Lakme changed its logo in the 1990s. The new
development included intensive qualitative, quantitative and
competition-based research with employees, customers, and
consumers. The new logo was a deep green with a pink
brush stroke, touches of gold, and a wavy border line. The
logo was supported with a line: The Beauty.
The Overall Research Process
For a new logo, evaluation is advised so as to effectively
improve, select and finalize the same. The research should be
undertaken between two independent sets of people- one to
evaluate the logo in isolation, and the other to evaluate the logo
on the pack. In real life, the logo has to stand out in both these
contexts.
Evaluation of Logo in Isolation
This would involve ascertaining the following:
Likeability (across a five-point scale, Disliked it very much
Liked it very much) of each logo option.
Specific likes and dislikes and reason for the same, for each
logo option.
Distinctiveness (across a four-point scale, Not at all
distinctiveDistinctive).
Comprehension of message conveyed, by logo options.
Preference among logo options (through Constant Sum
Preference scale).
Preference of each logo among key competition (through
constant sum preference scale).
Evaluation of Logo on Pack
31
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Colour Associations
People have grown up with a range of colours. Let us
understand the associations of colours.
Table 6.2 show a list of colours and their conjectured associations.
Colour
White
Association(s)
Purity
Black
Luxury
Purple
Royalty
Green
Red
Blue
Yellow
Choosing Colours
You should consider following key factors while choosing
colours as:
Climatic conditions:
Colours fade over time. Direct exposure to sunlight and
intensity of sunlight lead to fading of colours. Among all
colours red, clue and green do not fade fast.
Product category
It is believed by some that because red and orange are more
connected to emotions, they fit better as a food product
colour. Blue is perceived to better suit as a corporate colour.
One needs to know mood/benefit associations linked to a
brand or category and decide on such aspects.
32
Lack of awareness between the real thing and not the new
thing (due to packaging deception).
Fake goods are about 50 per cent cheaper (and India has
enough poor people who cannot dream of better things
and products in life).
BRAND MANAGMENT
VALUE ($billions)
COCA-COLA
69.6
MICROSOFT
64.1
IBM
51.2
GE
41.3
INTEL
30.9
NOKIA
30.0
DISNEY
29.3
McDONALD'S
26.4
MARLBORO
24.2
MERCEDES
21.0
Interbrands Assessment
is of Brand Power the
fullest possible view of
each brands strengths
and potential as a
marketing and financial
asset.
Data: Interbrand Corp., J.P. Morgan Chase & Co /
Business Week AUGUST 5, 2002
Brand Vision
MUST BE:
So big, so bold and so audicious that
expressing it never mind executing it
has a transformational effect. You start to
become what you want to be. The dream
and the reality fuse.
Kevin Clancy, Copernicus, Counter Intuitive
33
BRAND MANAGMENT
What is a Brand?
Kotlers Five Levels
Potential Product
of A Product
Augmented Product
Expected Product
Generic Product
Brand
Name
Well Known
But Similar
Strong Brand
Brand
Distinctive
Perceived by the
Consumer as
Unique
OWN Something
CORE BENEFIT
Discussion Questions
1. What do brands mean to you? What are your favorite
brands and why? Check to see how your perceptions of
brands might differ from those of others.
Answers will vary widely, and discussion could center
around reasons for such differences.
2. Who do you think has the strongest brands? Why? What
do you think of the Business Week list of the strongest
brands in Figure 1-10? Do you agree with the rankings?
Why or why not?
These two questions can be used to illustrate the similarities
and differences between favorite brands and strong
brands. The discussion could include evaluation of the
criteria for inclusion on the Business Week list.
3. Can you think of anything that cannot be branded? Pick an
example of a branded product that was not discussed in
each of the categories provided (physical good, services,
retailers and distributors, person, and organization, place,
and idea) and describe how it is a brand.
Discussion might involve why anything can become a
brand. (Because of the way perception functions, the
differential effect of when a brand is present vs. the
commodity product can always be achieved.) Students will
come up with many different examples of branded
products, and the discussion can be used to examine what
makes a brand.
4. Can you think of yourself as a brand? What do you do to
brand yourself?
People resemble brands themselves in many ways with
their name, their mode of dress, their pattern of speech,
their interests and activities, etc. because each aspect of a
person contributes to the differentiation of that person
from other people.
5. What do you think of the new branding challenges and
opportunities that were listed? Can you think of any other
issues?
34
Notes
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 6:
BRAND NAMES AND BRAND EXTENSIONS
Objectives
Name Change
d. Brand Extension
e. Sub Brands
Have you ever thought of why did your parents give you a
name. Or if you and your brother never had a name. How
difficult it would have been for the teacher to call you or your
friend when you dont have any name.
Same is the case with the products. If you go to the market to
purchase soap how would you let the shopkeeper know that
you need Pears or Lux had their parent companies not named
them, as both are soaps?
Activity 1
Write down in your notebook 2 brands each of the categories
(a to f) mentioned above
Think???
Brand Relationship
= Brand Image + Attitude
As per the Branding Model, which in a way is a branding process:
Brand Image
Brand Associations
Brand Looks
Brand Symbol
PRODUCT
35
BRAND MANAGMENT
Brand Names
It has been observed, what a brand name is all about could vary
over a time continuum. It is the effect of what the brand does,
what its competitor does, how customers change, how
technology changes, how customer interactivity changes, etc.
Time has a great role to play in giving form to a name in the
minds of the consumers. . The same could be by design or by
default. Some elements are avoidable and unavoidable.
Think about Surf before Ariel was launched. Now think about
Surf and Ariel after Tide was introduced. Also think about
Robbin Blue after Ujala was launched. Does your mind notice
these changes?
Descriptive
Close up
Glucovita
Glucon C
Band Aid
Ganga
Babool
Doordarshan
Frooti
Real
Fair & Lovely
Ujala
Suggestive
Flora
Whisper
Surf
Pepsi
Digene
Limca
Tropicana
Jumpin
Thums-up
Sunsilk
Pampers
Free Standing
Kodak
Xerox
Activity 2
What clicks to your mind first when I say this: Brand Name
Associations
Acceptable
If you are smart enough Im sure you can guess what it should
be about. Lets discuss it in detail.
Easy to recognize
Word Association
Easy to pronounce
36
Image Associations
These include images stimulated/provoked by the name. It
could consist of situation(s), scenes and types of people in the
scene. These could be clear or vague, positive or negative in first
person or in third person, of current times or past about living
things or non-living things, etc. For example Fair &Lovely
could provoke images about a beautiful woman. It could bring
Aishwarya Rai to your mind. It could recall compliments
received from friends
Product Associations
It includes any specific products or product categories associated
with names. Asprin, Coldarin and Anacin could provoke
associations with tablet, medicine or pain reliever. Usually, it is
believed by psychologists that human relationship (customers
are human) thrives on positive aspects. It is a qualitative aspect
and no answer is arguably correct. Interestingly, most successful
brands do not have negative associations.
Read this table No 7.3 you will get even a clearer idea.
Brand Name Associations: Positive, Negative or Neutral?
Activity 4
Good Oil
Why?
Good
Health
Brand Name
Sundrop
Dhara Health
Why?
Economy
Lighter
Cooklite
Active
Energetic
Normal Life
Active
Energetic
Dalda Active
Shakti
Name Change
When the main part of the name in a multi word brand name
remains the same, the disturbance of the change is less and can
be well managed. But if the main word or the complete name
changes, all can be lost overnight by the marketing organization.
Without resorting to a complete change of name, the brand can
benefit from a slight modification thereof. Some examples of
name change are listed below:
Tata Nihar became Nihar after HLL purchased it
Binaca became Cibaca through an international acquisition
by Ciba Geigy.
Teenopol became Ranipol
Jyoti appliances became Jaipan Appliances.
Annapoorna became Kissan Annapoorna
Brand Extension
Brand extensions are a familiar phenomenon for most
marketers. Organizations see them as the easiest way of
entering new markets or segments. Establishing a new
consumer brand internationally costs at least a 100 million
rupees. Thus brand extensions are seen as an easy and possibly
inexpensive way of entering new business lines or
strengthening old ones if done with caution.
Broadly speaking, there are three types of brand extensions:
Product related extensions, Image-related extensions and
Unrelated Extensions
Product-related extension is more popularly called line
extensions. A line extension is typically a product or flavour or
fragrance variant. Examples of this are Nirma detergent powder
extending into cake and Frooti soft-drink extending into other
variants besides the mango flavour.
Image-related extensions are those where the brand extension
bears some logical or emotional relationship with the parent
brand. Examples of this are Cinthol moving into talcs from
toilet soaps and Zodiac moving into belts from shirts. In both,
the same consumer is targeted demographically and psychographically.
Unrelated extensions are those where the parent and the
brand extensions have little in common but for the brand
name. A classic case of this is the brand name Godrej appearing
on soaps, safety locks, almirahs, typesetters, hair-dyes, refrigerators and other products.
Think when is a brand extension a success and when is it a
failure? What situations aid the success or failure of brand
extensions?
Let us discuss the Brand name extensions in detail with a few
more examples. Try to remember further more examples while
you read ahead.
Product-Related Extensions
There are several reasons for having line extensions. These are:
a. giving the consumer more options (e.g. Five variants of
Cinthol),
b. cornering more shelf space (e.g. variants of Yardley talcum
powder)
c. creating some excitement around an old brand (e.g. Rin
Supreme)
d. expanding core promise to new users (e.g. Ariel Super
Soaker)
e. managing a changed market situation (e.g. Colgates Gel
extension fight Close Up).
But by and large the important underlying reasons for line
extension are
an unfulfilled need
37
BRAND MANAGMENT
Brand Name
Good Knight
Raid
Hit
Mortein
All Out
Baygon
BRAND MANAGMENT
novelty.
Image-Related Extensions
Image-related extensions and unrelated extensions need to
ensure two things if they have fit, namely image fit and
business fit. A brand extension is said to have, an image fit if
the parent brand and the extension are closely linked in th,
consumers mind. For instance, Colgate toothpaste extending
into brushes is a classic example of proper image fit. Similarly,
the extension of Prestige pressure cookers into non-stick ware.
Lakme nail polish becoming a cream, Maggie noodle stretching
into success and Dettol antiseptic liquid becoming a soap are all
good examples of suitable image fit. Some of the above
extensions like Lakme, Maggie and Colgate are complementary
in their use. They have all been successful.
Probably the single most factor important for image fit is
consistency between the brand personality of the parent and the
extension. The most commonly accepted definition of brand
personality is that it is the set of human associations with
which the brand is linked. The reason for the initial failure and
subsequent succes of Dettol soap is rooted in the issue of
consistency of brand personality. In fact poor image fit almost
ensures failure. Dettols initial attempt at becoming a beauty
soap is an example of this mistake. Dettol has fundamentally
been used as a brand for cuts and gashes. Thus attempts to
make Dettol a beauty met with stiff resistance in the market
place. On the other hand, when Dettol extended to become a
germ-kill soap (100 per cent bath) it was a success. In fact Dettol
later used the same anti-germ equity to become a shaving cream.
38
Unrelated Extensions
Image fit and business fit are important in unrelated extensions
as well. But here the image of the organization itself is as
important. In some way successful unrelated extensions are
closely linked to the history of the development of industry in
India. This is demonstrated by the growth ofTata and Godrej
brand in the past. Both Tata and Godrej have been among the
first few Indian brands to be known to the consumer. Besides,
the commitment of Tatas to quality and employee welfare
(TISCO) and Godrej to product innovation (use of vega table
oil instead of animal fat for making soap) is well known. When
Tata branded salt or when Godrej branded safe they were
among the first to do so. Thus unrelated diversification is more
likely to be successful if the brand possesses
a. early entry advantage
b. quality image
c. respected family or organizational name.
Nurturing Sub-brands
As Competition intensifies in the Indian context, marketers are
trying to stretch, successssful brands into extensions in related
and unrelated product categories. The widely held belief is that
the image, trust and goodwill of a brand could be extended
new category in the hope that it would trigger off positive
associations among the target segment.
Ries and Trout, the gurus of the positioning concept, warned
marketers about brand extensions decades back. Studies in
developed markets - revealed that brand extensions have been
just a myth with regard to financial bottom lines. David Aaker
who is well known for his work on building brands, advocates
that managers should avoid vertical extensions whenever
possible, within the same product category consisting of
different offerings, in one of his recent articles. Closer home,
Hindustan Lever, Colgate and Proctor and Gamble are some of
the top companies which. have consistently used extensions
within the same category, and some of these have been quite
successful.
Though there is some literature on the Indian context which
seems to suggest that an extension would need
as
much of advertising support as a new brand, some companies
pursue extensions. The framework advocated by Aaker could be
useful to Indian marketers (product and brand managers) who
may perpetually be in a to be or not to be dilemma
regarding these extensions. The distinguishing aspect of the
framework is that it leverages on the cumulative equity of
brands built up over a period of time, without going overboard on extensions. It prescribes optimal ways in which
marketers could plan extensions.
Why are sub-brands necessary?
A sub-brand is a mother brand plus an additional brand name.
Lifebuoy Gold, Junior Horlicks, and Cadburys Perk are
examples. Sub-brands are essential because:
i.
39
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Activity 5
Now that we have had a thorough understanding of subbrands, you have to list down at least 5 brands each which are
cannibalising their mother brands market share and also 5
examples of those which have gained more brand awareness
than their respective mother brand?
Exercises and Assignments
41
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
look written, carry with them a certain feeling before we, the
people our names are supposed to represent, even enter the
picture. Yes, this means we are often pre-judged by the associations our names conjure up even before someone has met us.
Companies are also pre-judged. Think back to the first moment
you heard the name Verizon. Did you think about it at all? If
so, what was your immediate thought? You dont know what
the company looks like. You dont know whom the company
hangs out with. All you have to go on is the company name,
those three syllables chosen for greatness out of 8,500 groupings of sounds.
Companies are inherently different from people in three crucial
ways that impact the naming process.
1. Companies, or at least the good ones, tend to be based on
certain core competencies which essentially carve out their
market positions. Their names either capture their positions
from early on, think IBM, or come to represent their
positions, think Toyota.
2. Companies, unlike the vast majority of people, usually have
marketing budgets in order to cultivate their brand names
and thus reinforce these positions. Think Coke and Ford.
People know these companies and their products, yet the
marketing continues.
3. It is generally assumed that being able to hold on to this
position, or deftly move to a new, more profitable one, will
improve the companys long-term financial prospects. Think
AT&T. It owned the phone company position; now it
wants to be the infrastructure, if not the content provider,
for all your communication and entertainment needs.
Back to Verizon and why should we care. Ultimately, when you
have a company that large, willing to spend that much money, a
name with almost any backstory probably wont doom the
company.
On the other hand, I feel in my gut that the people in charge are
missing a strategic opportunity. Companies such as Ford,
Toyota, and Wells Fargo could grow into their names because
they were named in the early moments of their industries.
Leaders at the companies that became IBM and WorldCom
took another approach. They chose aspirational names. They
looked into the future and asked, Who do we want to be? and
then they went for it.
Bell Atlantic should have used this naming process as a chance
to stake out the area they aspire to dominate, as well as how
they plan to do it, meaning their positioning. Verizon, truth in
the horizon, doesnt do it for me, doesnt establish who they
are and what they do.
http://www.marketingprofs.com/2/verizon.asp
Notes
42
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 7:
CO-BRANDING AND CORPORATE BRANDING
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Co- Branding : Its meaning and purpose
b. Corporate branding: Why is it important
A Fruitful Relationship
By way of example, consider the successful marriage of
Starbucks and Barnes & Noble. Starbucks has definitely created a
well articulated brand for itself and it realizes its about more
than just coffee. Its about sociability, an experience reminiscent
of the dolce vita coffee house culture-an inviting and appealing
place to be. Barnes & Noble venues, more than merely
bookstores, are welcoming and social places in which to browse,
to relax, to partake of a cultural experience-and now, to do so
over a comforting latte. The end game: compatible user groups,
complementary brand personalities, and enhanced end benefits
for the consumer. Theyve been able to capture a market and
differentiate themselves more than any of their respective
competitors.
The same can be said for the pending alliance between Starbucks
and Microsoft with the offering of wireless Internet access in
Starbucks locations. The benefit, again, for the socially oriented,
is a familiar community environment in which to access your
extended community. First mover advantage-totally connected
customer. (If youre thinking bigamy here, dont. The world of
co-branding has a totally different and publicly accepted code of
fidelity.)
Also appropriate to me are Wal-Mart and AOL: a strong
marriage that exhibits an understanding of Americas shopping
mall culture-online and off. Another shoppers dream team:
Amazon and Toys R Us. The new and the old economy
together for the fast relief of harried parents everywhere. For
fuel yourself road warriors of every age, McDonalds and
Coke, Haldiram Chips and Coke, Citibank credit cards and
Indian Oil Company make a nice match. And looking at
Hindustan Times and Radio City, any companies that merge to
ease the effects of the common cold have got to have the
consumers best interest at heart.
An example of brands that took the time to look at themselves
carefully before tying the knot are Filmfare magazine and
Parachute Oil from Marico. After analysis, they recognized this
was not a match bound to work. Trying to combine incompatible brand personalities can only send confusing messages to
the consumer.
43
BRAND MANAGMENT
2. Will you get as much as you give?/Will it bring out the best
in you?
3.
Make sure your name and presence will be felt across all
touch points.
44
Creative Exploration
A Qualitative Process
Part of the initial process comprises qualitative interviews with
internal and external audiences. The internal interviews are
conducted at all levels of the organisation, from frontline staff
and backroom support personnel to senior management and
the Board of Directors. The interviews with external audiences
will include key customers, end users, joint venture or other
business partners, shareholders or other stakeholders, suppliers,
distributors, retailers, prospective customers and partners,
government officials, senior media people and other outside
influencers, competitors, and members of the general public.
The objective is to gain an understanding of the markets
perception of the organisation by its customers, partners and
competition, and to contrast these perceptions with those held
by its own employee and management staff. Another aim is to
identify the organisations internal willingness and current
acceptance levels for change.
The interview process answers these key questions:
How is the corporate image being portrayed and projected
today?
How is the organisation perceived by its key internal and
external audiences?
How does the image of the organisation compare with
those of its competitors?
How does the image of the organisation compare to the
image desired by management?
Will the current corporate image enable the organisation to
reach the goals and objectives set for it over the next three to
five years?
By starting the corporate brand development process with a
review of the existing corporate brand perceptions, the
organisation has a clear view and understanding of where it is
today, an important criterion when trying to decide how one
wants to be perceived in the foreseeable future.
From here, you can conclude it is a matter of relatively simple
steps to create a well-defined corporate brand positioning
platform that is supported by the core attributes of the
organisation and a series of strategic image marketing objectives
that will help to guide future business directions and brand
development.
Your corporate brand image needs to be thoroughly thought
out, planned, nurtured, executed, monitored and, when
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
46
Why?
If you brag about all the copyrighted music you downloaded
for free from Napster, what message does this send to your
subordinates and colleagues?
If you take your spouse or significant other out to dinner and
put it on your corporate expenses, what message does this
convey?
If you lift materials out of some one elses presentation, or
download data off the Internet without crediting the source,
what other actions does this suggest as allowable?
Ethics is not a gray issue.
If you have a single seed of doubt about what you are doing,
or planning to
do, is wrong, it probably is!
As Dr. Martin Luther King wrote:
Cowardice asks the question - is it safe?
Expediency asks the question - is it politic?
Vanity asks the question - is it popular?
But conscience asks the question - is it right?
And there comes a time when one must take a position that is
neither safe, nor politic,
nor popular; but one must take it because it is RIGHT.
What does this have to do with marketing?
Everything
Because, if it touches the customer, its a marketing issue.
Your business ethics will eventually be directly reflected in the
way you interact and do business with customers, suppliers,
channel partners, and others.
Conducting business the RIGHT way is the ONLY way. This
principle should be
a nucleus of your marketing strategy and corporate culture.
As Nelson Mandela said, the time is always right to do right.
If you dont, then your organization could well be on its way to
a future induction in the Hall of Shame & Failures.
Todays Most Important Managerial Issue
BRAND MANAGMENT
But the one thing a competitor cannot mimic or copy is a welldefined corporate personality.
As I always advise my clients, if it touches the customer, its a
marketing issue. And nothing, nothing touches your customers more than how he or she perceives your corporate image.
This makes the management of your corporate image one of
the most potent marketing and management tools available for
senior executives to use in ensuring the viable execution of your
corporate vision
Source - From the book Corporate Image Management: A
Marketing Discipline for the 21st Century by Steven Howard.
Contributor - Steven Howard
Notes
47
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 8:
BRAND ASSOCIATIONS AND BRAND IMAGE
Objectives
Brand associations get created or expressed as per the consumers. It is difficult to ask them to express in any particular
manner. However, the contents can be controlled to an extent
by marketers. And in this context advertising has a major role to
play. BA, quite often, is the brands advertising managers try. So,
a marketer who fails to keep the memories fresh takes an
enormous risk.
J & J launched toilet soaps for kids under the brand Kids
fruit flavours. Then they introduced talc.
48
Bumol is for burns. No other brand comes to the mind for the
same problem. Krack cream is for cracks on the feet. No other
brand comes to the mind for it. Further, all examples for
Differentiate have a reason to loose.
Ilicit Feelings
Cadburys Dairy Milk is for all age groups. I can have it too.
It would not be embarrassing if I am seen having it
Onjus is a juice.
Competitors
Some brands have used specific competitor in a subtle manner
to create a reference point for generating association. These are
mostly on tangible aspects. Examples are Mortein twelve hour
red mat (versus normal eight-hour blue mat-Good night),
Wheel detergent powder (versus Nirma-does not n. my hands),
and Captain Cook salt (free flow versus your favourite salt- Tata
salt). Just talking of the attribute/benefit would not have as
much intensity as it has when used against a strong brand. Care
should be taken that the real-life performance is no different
from the claim, else such a route could be the brands
Waterloo.A classic example for all times in this context is We are
No.2. we try harder, by Avis car rentals.
Celebrity Personality
Brands are increasingly using it-Sachin Tendulkar for Visa, Pepsi,
Gillette, and Boost, Kapil Dev for Samsung, Rapidex,
palmolive and S Kumars, a host of cricketers for Pepsi, and
Saurav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid for Britannia.
Price
Price is used to segment appeal value based on affordability and
heterogeneity in the marketplace. Mostly it is the lower economy
pricing that can be exploited. Some good examples in this
context are provided below. This association is a great busiiness
opportunity. Further, this can be effectively used if cost
structure can be re-engineered (decentralized product sourcing
could be a way out; another could be franchising).
Edible oils: Gemini, Goldwinner
Detergents: Nirma, Wheel
Toothpaste: Babool
You can note this opportunity exists for the entire category and
not just for a specific brand. The first mover has the advantage
but it can be effectively copied.
The reverse of economy pricing is also possible. Premium
pricing has to be supported by a valid/credible reason. Scotch
whisky is not normal whisky and justifies higher price point.
Much better quality can also be used to support this, like Ford
Ikon and Hyundai Accent passenger cars.
Value for money perception can also be created through
characters like Surf s Lalitaji (Surf ki khariddari mein samajhdari
hai).
Good Knight twelve-hours mat last much longer than the
normal eight-hour mats, and hence provide significant additional benefit leading to justification of a higher MRP. Such
pricing appeals also go further in terms of defining user profile,
which is also a BA parameter.
Place of Origin
Certain places have some speciality and these can be converted
into focused BA. Darjeelingi/Assam are known for great quality
tea. Some such international examples are as below:
France - Fashion, Perfume, Champagne
Russia - Vodka
Italy - Shoes, Leather goods
Germany - Beer,
Quality automobiles
The only fear with this is that these could change over long-time
period or other places could catch up. There has been no
noticeable use of this parameter in India.
49
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Use Of Product/Service
Some examples are:
Any-Time Money (for banking services)
Beer even in monsoon (ad for kingfisher in 2000)
Monsoon time is soup time (ad for maggie soup in 2000)
For making ice quickly (Whirlpool refrigerator in 2000)
These usage occasions provide association opportunities and
though promoted by specific brands are actually opportunities
for almost all brands in the concerned category. Whoever does
it first loudly steals the association.
50
What is good about the brand Lux? One might not have an
answer. One might never have thought about it, and it is
the first time that one has to, because of the question in the
research.
Free Association
These include:
Word association, and
Sentence completion.
Word association:
This involves the following steps:
Respondents are exposed to a battery of brand names.
Respondents are then asked to express the first set of we that
come to mind.
(Before the brands under study are presented, a short warm
up/trial run is advised. Verbal expressions obtained help
capture spontaneous thoughts.)
After generating the associated words, the reasons for the same
are obtained.
Quantitative ratings are obtained for the test brand and its
competitor as to how well the words fit the brand through a
scale.(Fits very well,fits quite well, fit to some extend and does
not fit at all.
Sentence Completion
For example,
People like Hero Puch because. . .
A friend of your brother has just bought a washing machine.
He asks you what he should do to wash clothes effectively in it.
You would say, You should. . .
Picture interpretation
The steps are as below:
51
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
A: Physical comfort.
Decision-Making Process
52
Brand Image
The perception of your product or your brand by the
consumer.
53
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Has your airline also suffered a setback in lieu of the postAfghan strikes?
Surprisingly, we did not receive a major setback, even during the
worst time we were doing at least 50 per cent load factor. We did
better than we expected. Overall, there has been a slowdown in
the aviation industry so I wont be surprised, if we do not
register scaling sales figures. The emphasis right now is on
sustenance with nominal growth. Judging by those standards
things are looking up in our favour.
54
Objectives
The learning objective: this lecture will help you to understand:
a. Brand Loyalty its types and importance for branded
products.
In the previous lesson we discussed about Brand Relationship
in detail. This gives us an insight to understand Brand Loyalty
better.
Brand loyalty is a very interesting topic as it relates very closely to
our daily lives. Im very sure you can name atleast 10 great
brands of Jeans, Shoes, Shirts, Sun glasses, Jackets you are crazy
for.
Just think for a while.??
Now think that how many of these brands you have used more
than once.
Introduction
Retaining an existing consumer is often more profitable than
finding a new consumer. This is known to marketers for the
last two decades though one has not seen too many retention
strategies in India, until recently. While retaining brand loyal
customers, it is important to consider its impact on the bottom
line of the company. Research across product categories has
shown that 100 per cent retention of customers will not be
always profitable to the brand and retaining customers
indiscriminately would not lead to profitability. A basic
understanding of retention strategies is required for a marketer
even before CRM (customer relationship management)
strategies are planned. There cannot be a better time to
understand and implement customer retention strategies (in
both consumer and business-to-business marketing) given the
economic downturn in several markets and the need to retain
profitable customers.
Customer equity deals with the manner in which customers can
add value to the profitability of the company (customer equity
also looks at how the company can create value for the customer
but this article deals with the other aspect). Loyalty and retention strategies would have to be understood before customer
equity strategies are formulated. The following aspects of
customer equity may be useful for marketers:
UNIT 3
Brand Loyalty
Brand loyalty is the repeat purchase made by the consumer out
of commitment to the brand. In many cases of loyalty,
marketers may do well to check if the repeat purchases are made
out of commitment or if they are inertia purchases. You may
keep buying a brand of soap or toothpaste because of its
availability with regard to a specific stock-keeping unit which he
can afford (50 grams or 75 grams package is the specific stock
keeping unit referred in this context). Brand loyalty is indicated
when the consumer deliberately chooses a brand from a set of
alternative brands.
You may not go through a decision process to select a brand
when you are brand loyal. Though there is a great deal of
similarity/overlap between habit and loyalty, the repeat purchase
made out of convenience can be classified under habit whereas
purchases made out of commitment is loyalty.
When you develop loyalty towards a brand you develop a
favourable attitude towards the brand resulting in commitment. Brand loyalty offers a number of advantages to the
marketer. Brand loyal consumers start building a relationship
with the brand. You may become advocates of the brand by
the positive word of mouth.
Brand loyal consumers may become passionate about the
brand and form clubs which results in further strengthening the
brand.
Bajaj, the motorcycle brand in India, is an example of how
passion among consumers has been instrumental in reflecting
the loyalty to the brand.
The members get together and go out on adventure trips on
the bikes wearing special garments created by the brand. The
linkages involved in brand visibility and the display of loyalty
results in a positive rub-off on the equity of the brand.
There is even research evidence to show that brand loyal
consumers may even actually avoid advertisements of competitive brands. Loyal consumers may also be prepared to try out
the variants of the brand and in certain categories may even be
prepared to pay a premium (high priced cigarettes and perfumes
may be examples).
Brand loyal consumers may try out other offerings (other
categories) brought out by the brand. Fabmart, the Internet
store, which is into books, jewellery, music and groceries, has
consumers who are loyal to the brand and are likely to order
several categories from the store - this indicates store loyalty.
Under certain conditions, consumers may also transfer their
brand loyalty across product categories.
Virgin is a brand in the US, which is into financial services, cola
drink, music and airline and the brand is doing well in all the
categories.
55
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 9:
BRAND LOYALTY
BRAND MANAGMENT
Recently there has been research which reflects that brand loyalty
could be enhanced if the product tried results in a high degree
of satisfaction. This is because the consumer feels that the time
invested in learning about the brand has resulted in a positive
outcome.
If you spend significant time in choosing a readymade apparel
brand and find that it gave you high level of satisfaction, there
is a high degree of probability that you would become a loyal
consumer of the brand.
This is because the time invested in learning about the category
and the brand has resulted in a positive outcome which is likely
to discourage you from experimenting with other brands
during your subsequent cycles of the category purchase.
There is a need to investigate you as a consumer learn about a
product category and brands as this would be useful to provide
the learning experience (besides providing a good product or
service) which may also have an impact on loyalty.
For instance, the experience of logging on to Amazon.com may
be important because of the benefits offered by the Web site.
56
Retention
As stated earlier 100 per cent retention may not be a very
practical retention strategy. An airline like Jet Airways or Indian
Airlines would certainly like to retain 100 per cent of its
customers in the top segment (perhaps Business class). But
there is a vast segment which is highly price sensitive and several
dimensions are to be analysed before a decision is taken to
retain these price-sensitive customers with rewards and freebies.
Price-sensitive customers may shift to another brand which
offers them more freebies; besides it may be worthwhile to
analyse the purchase pattern of these price- sensitive customers what is the potential profitability of retaining these customers?
The Brand Loyalty Challenge: An Indian Perspective
By
Chandranath Chakraborty & Nandini Jayaram M, NITIE
Indian consumers have always exhibited Multiple Brand Loyalty
(MBL). The increasing brand variety in the Indian Market is
eroding brand loyalty per se and the multiple-brand loyalty
brand bouquet is witnessing greater variety-seeking behavior.
The most important factors contributing to this phenomenon
are the growth of organized retailing, changing consumer
Introduction
Consumer loyalty is fast becoming a disappearing
phenomenon with an increasing demand for brand variety
- Rajeev Bakshi, MD, Cadbury India, August 31, 20001
In an increasingly borderless world, consumers are getting
exposed to both information and choice overloads, making
them increasingly confused about brands, products and
advertising. Today, India sees the launch of new products, new
brand extensions and new price points, all aimed at that elusive
thing called the consumers mind-space, almost every day. In
this context, it becomes imperative for the marketer to evaluate
brand loyalty and whither he stands in the brand continuum.
57
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
The reasons for variety seeking are many. Dan Herman says that
buying a new brand
can be psychologically instrumental because it
World around us
http://www.agencyfaqs.com/www1/media/opinion/
carat.html http://www.moderesearch.com/cmed.html
http://www.agencyfaqs.com/www1/media/opinion/
carat.html
http://www.responservice.com/archives/jan2003_issue1/
media/televisn.htm
58
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Archives
60
We use BTL activities only to complement the overall marketing programme or above-the-line mass communication. To
support product launches or new innovations,
to address niche audiences, or to reach out to
the customer who otherwise is non-reachable
by mass media are some of the roles for BTL activities. - Dilip
G Piramal, Chairman,, VIP Luggage - 9/27/2003
The confectionery market in India is witnessing tremendous
activity. Regular product launches, high
decibel media activity, consumer
promotions and trade promotions
make it one of the most hyperactive
categories in the Indian market. The
total market is estimated to be growing
at approximately 12% in the year 2003 over the year 2002. - A K
Dhingra, Director (Sales & Marketing), Perfetti India Ltd - 9/
20/2003.
50% of the confectionery market lies in rural areas, and the
market is growing at a rate many times
more than the urban market - Nilanjan
Sarkar, Brand Manager, Confectionery
Business, ITC - 9/10/2003
The Barista store is our brand. Our brand is also the customer
Basav has more than eleven years of
experience in marketing sales and
operations, and has been with Barista
since its formative months. Prior to
joining Barista, he was Manager,
Marketing at the corporate office of Oberoi. - Basav
Mukherjee, Head Marketing, Barista - 8/28/2003
If we look at the market then female segment is very important to us. An Indian woman will always
prefer modern scooters and scooterettes
for their use. Motorcycles, because of their
shape, are a problem for them and they
also do not like geared, old-fashioned
scooters. I think we would have a 40% share of these buyers Sulajja Firodia Motwani, Jt Managing Director, Kinetic Engineering - 8/18/2003
It is the technology advantage and not the lower rates
that is attracting more and more customers to Reliance
India Mobile - Kaushik Roy, Head of Marketing,
Reliance India Mobile #448686 - 8/2/2003
By continually introducing new products, expanding our
target base and with Amitabh Bachchan
endorsing our product, we are confident that
Parker will be a Rs 100 crore brand by next year. - D.K. Jain,
Chairman and President, Luxor Writing Instruments Pvt. Ltd. 7/18/2003
Jewellery is one of the last great
commodity frontiers in India; it has
remained so because this market is very
fragmented, very unorganized. Tanishq
has successfully taken on the challenge of transforming this
frontier into a reliable consumer space by bringing to it all the
61
BRAND MANAGMENT
virtues and benefits that branding offers. - Harish Bhatt, VP Retailing, Tanishq - 7/11/2003
BRAND MANAGMENT
Activity
Notes
62
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Brand relationship and its types.
b. How is it important to get Brand Loyalty by consumers.
In this chapter we have already discussed about various Terms
associated with brands and lot about Brand association, image
and Corporate branding. Now this background will surely help
us in understanding Brand relationship and Brand loyalty
better.
A Taxonomy of Brand Linkages: The Brand-relationshipInteraction (BRI) Matrix
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 10:
BRAND RELATIONSHIP
BRAND MANAGMENT
Learning Relationships
To strengthen their brands, marketers have no other choice but
to continuously improve their value propositions. The brands
that are first to move into Relationship Management will be
furthest along in their learning relationships with these best
customers, and will thus be in the best position to take and
keep the best customers.
Not only will these brands enjoy the halo effect benefit of
always being considered to have pioneered this level of service,
they will also always have a longer learning relationship with
their customers than their competitors. First mover advantages are the benefits that can accrue to a company for being the
first to make a competitive move.
The success of Brand Relationship Management is closely
related to the integration of a comprehensive Customer
Relationship Strategy, and the effective collection and utilization
of customer information to derive an understanding of
customer needs and expectations. In other words, it is critical to:
64
65
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
66
Notes
Conclusions
Brand Relationship Management (BRM) is not just a single idea
or process. Rather, it is a completely new approach to brand
management that extends the idea of revenue management
into the realm of customer centric revenue management and
across both product and customer life cycles. The world is
moving rapidly towards a more sophisticated approach to
customer relationship management, which must ultimately
change brand management.
The successful brands of the Third Millennium are working
hard to rethink their strategies and processes to enhance the
value of their relationships with their customers and, therefore,
become the brand of preference. These brands are striving to
develop brand loyalty by targeting customers who:
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 11:
BRAND EQUITY
Objectives
This lesson will enable students to understand
a. What is Brand Equity and how to acquire it over
competitors
b. Its Importance in Branding
BRAND MANAGMENT
Brand Equity
Brand Name
Industry
Coca-Cola
Microsoft
IBM
General Electric
Ford
Disney
Intel
McDonald's
AT&T
Marlboro
Beverages
Software
Computers
Diversified
Autos
Entertainment
Chips
Fast Food
Telecom
Tobacco
Brand Value
($US m)
83,845
56,654
43,781
33,502
33,197
32,275
30,021
26,231
24,181
21,048
Brand Value as
a % of Market
Capitalisation
59%
21%
28%
10%
58%
61%
21%
64%
24%
19%
10
Strong brand names simplify the decision process for lowcost and non-essential products.
BRAND MANAGMENT
Branding Promotions
I hope you will agree Brand Equity cannot be built without
pumping in promotion.
Developing a promotion as a brand can provide a powerful tool
for building additional brand awareness and positive
associations. An excellent method to achieve this is through
linking the promotion to the actual brand.
For example, consider a promotion to win a trip to Disney
World for a product with no link to Disney World or travel. The
contest participants will most likely forget except the actual
product associated with the prize.
Compare this with a companys Brand promotion that builds
directly on the associations of the product thus enhancing the
power of the brand. A promotion such as this affects nonparticipants as well as those involved, creating a platform to be
built on each year.
Furthermore, developing a tight link between the promotion
and the brand (or its primary associations) avoids the possibility
of promoting other brands. In effect, it is recommended to
brand a promotion so that it cannot be linked to another
brand.
Conclusion
We can conclude that building a brand takes time and money,
and maintaining it takes patience and discipline. Market
unfortunately, causes many executives to lose focus and
abandon forward-thinking stewardship in favor of short-term
profits. The evidence clearly shows,however, that brand
building is an investment rather than a cost, a necessity rather
than a luxury, and a priority shared by the most successful
corporations. So next time, when considering where to trim the
fat in order to meet short-term shareholder expectations,
remember that the bottom line is only as strong as the brand.
Source: Sandeep Hardikar
MMS I JBIMS http://www.indiainfoline.com/bisc/
brae.html
70
Research I
15 30
> 30
FMCG
Chocolates
Ice creams
Shampoos
Durables
--
Watches
Refrigerator
Consumer Research
A questionnaire was prepared for each of these product
categories which comprised 24 statements which captured the
consumers change of perception, on the various facets of a
brand because of promotions on a 6 point scale ranging from
completely agree to completely disagree. The promotions used
were essentially the ones that are the most prevalent in the
Indian FMCG as well as Durables industry today.
The sample size for Consumer Research was 750, spread across
the various product categories equally, that are 150 each. Factor
analysis was then performed on the data obtained for each
product category separately. The factors thus obtained represented the various facets of a brand. The factor scores were then
calculated to arrive at the direction of change in the consumers
perception on the various factors obtained.
Validation Research
Based on the results obtained from the first research, certain
hypotheses were formed, which described the way in which the
promotions affected the various facets of the brand. In order to
validate these results, we conducted another questionnaire71
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Findings
To study the effect of promotions on various brands we
initially studied the attributes any consumer looked for while
buying a product. An interesting observation that came up was
that promotion is ranked 5th in terms of attributes affecting
purchase decision way below price of the product, company
image, product attributes and even advertising. Few more
interesting observations that emerged were:
We also tried to understand the impact that frequent promotions have on consumers. The observations are
60% of the respondents liked a promotion launched by any
brand in a particular product category. However if the same
brand launched many promotions, the liking dropped to 17%.
Similarly, 84% consumers approved of a promotion launched
by their favorite brand in a particular product category while only
40% appreciated their favorite brand launching many promotions.
Thus we can conclude that
Repeated promotions make a consumer averse even to his
favorite brand.
A strong brand will not lose its position in the consumers
mind as much as a weak brand
The next logical step was to evaluate what exactly a consumer
wants from a promotion and what exactly are his preferences in
receiving some sort of incentive. The results obtained are the
following. The results revealed that monetary benefits and gifts
are the most important parameters when it comes to evaluating
a consumer promotion. The consumer ranks prizes and
continuous purchase rewards as the least important parameters
in evaluating a promotion.
As an illustration let us now focus our attention to 2 promotion tools namely Cross promotions and Continuity programs
and try to gain some insight into the consumers perceptions
brought about by these 2 promotions.
BRAND MANAGMENT
Ice Creams
In this graph the Zero on the Y-axis indicates that there is no
effect and changes whatsoever in the consumers perception due
to the promo. The positive side indicates that there is an
increase in that factor and the negative side indicates a decrease.
Hence we conclude that both types of promos tend to erode
one or the other aspect of brand equity though to a different
extent. Thus if the brand manager wants to have the least
losses in loyalty and perceived value at the same time, and also
increase association, he would be offering a continuity program.
The effects of other promotions were also analyzed along
similar lines and incorporated in our recommendations. In
order to generalize the findings arrived at for the Ice Creams
category, we validated the same with the brand Polo. Polo
the mint with a Hole is in the confectionery product category
and was chosen to check out if the findings obtained for ice
creams can be generalized for all FMCG brands targeted at the
age group 15-30. For this purpose the effects of the Bonus pack
offer on Polo was compared with the results obtained for the
Bonus pack offer in the Ice creams category. The chart shows
the changes in the perceptions about the brand along the factors
earlier defined and compares them with that of the product
category Ice Creams.
Both of them scored nearly the same on most of the factors
indicating that we can generalize the results obtained in the Ice
cream product category. The slight deviation occurring here
may be attributed to sampling error and the effects of the brand
name-Polo.
Similar results were obtained for the other product categories
selected as mentioned before.
73
BRAND MANAGMENT
Notes
74
Topics Covered
Branding Process and Brand Success through integrating
marketing resources, Brand Evolution, Value of brand to
Manufacturers, Distributors and Consumers, Brand Planning
and Brand potential
Objectives
Upon completion of this Lesson, you should be able to:
75
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 12:
BRAND MANAGEMENT PROCESS
BRAND MANAGMENT
Who are you? Think for a moment about who you are, and
how people perceive you as a person. You have a certain image
(a wild, crazy guy, perhaps, or a no-nonsense workaholic). Your
personality is your brand; people who know you count on you
to act in a certain way and to do certain things.
Just as you either know a person or you dont, either you know
a brand, or you dont. Everything you think you know about a
brand was created through your five senses, and you create what
you want people to know about your brand through those
same senses. People define themselves through their actions;
your company creates its brand reputation through its actions.
Those judgments are made about companies because of
behaviors or behavior patterns over time. You truly become
what you do or dont do. Customers who know you expect
certain behaviors from you, and that becomes your brand.
Others you dont do business with are unfamiliar with your
brand. They must learn about you. Therein lies the power of
your brand: The more people understand what to expect from
your business, the easier it is to do business.
Expectation of a behavior is really what branding is all about.
When you deliver what is expected, you contribute to building a
good brand; when you do not, you contribute to building a
bad brand. Brands can be good or bad, and they change all
the time.
76
A Promise is a Promise
Of course all of these promises are just that, promises. If the
companys products, services, and customer support didnt
support these promises, the initial surge of new customers
would quickly come to a screeching halt and the brand would
fade into obscurity along with the company.
Providing a Brand Proposition that is engaging, is easily
understood, and offers an emotionally positive solution to
needs and desires only serves to enhance the current customers
perception of the brand and will get new customers to look
your way. Following through with an excellent product/service
and customer support will put an indelible mark in the memory
of your existing customers; one that will create brand loyalty
through good and bad times; a sure sign of a brands strength.
Deliver the Unexpected
When developing a brand proposition, never let your brands
promise be one that is already expected; this is a sure way to
NOT stand out from your competitors. Advertising efforts that
utilize adjectives like good, or nice are sure to fail when
seeking to be both engaging and unique.
How many times while driving, have you seen restaurant or dry
cleaning signs, that announce good Chinese food, or good
dry cleaning service? The answer is probably more times than
you can count. These businesses are able to survive because they
are often the only game in town. But for businesses and
organizations that are competing for a larger market, this type
of advertising is sure way toward obscurity.
Remember, you must convey an engaging, unique, relevant, and
consistent message to your target audience. Consumers already
expect good service from you. This isnt an engaging message
nor is it unique. This message doesnt lead towards a strong
positive emotional relationship.
Winning Hearts and Minds
77
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
When you are driving a BMW and proudly turn the ignition
keys for the first time in the ultimate driving machine, you are
not only benefiting from a highly engineered car with excellent
performance, but also taking ownership of a symbol that
signifies the core values of exclusivity, performance, quality and
technical innovation. We are not just buying American Express
Travelers Cheques that are issued promptly and accepted worldwide, or the security of having our lost cards restored quickly.
We are also paying to feel we belong to an exclusive club of
successful and extraordinary people, leading exciting and
adventurous lives. Likewise a managing director outsourcing the
IT function of a company chooses Andersen Consulting not
just because of the large resources and the expertise offered. He
or she is also buying a name that stands for commitment to:
service excellence, global recognition and sustained credibility.
While we in the consumer, service and industrial markets have
bought solutions to our individual problems, we have also
paid a price premium for the added, values provided by buying
brands. In addition to satisfying our core purchase requirements, we have bought an augmented solution to our
problem, for which we perceive sufficient added value to
warrant paying a premium over other alternatives that might
have satisfied our buying needs.
2. Relevant
3. Sustainable
These three dimensions of all brands point the way for
marketers to create value inside any organization. Regardless of
its role and expectations, marketing will win respect when it is
recognized as a contributor of value that is unique (not
generated by any other area, department or function), relevant
(supporting results for the organization) and sustainable
(ongoing and lasting).
1. Unique Value
The unique value of marketing is its focus on customers. More
than any other function, marketing leads the way for the
organization to understand, attract and keep customers.
While by no means an exclusive domain, marketing is uniquely
absorbed with this external focus in holistic terms. Marketings
contribution to the organization is to lead the way in customer
focus by bringing the customer perspective inside the organization in ways that build customer equity, which, in turn, is no
less than the primary source of equity for the entire organization.
2. Relevant Value
While the external focus of marketing is unlike most other
management disciplines, this unique perspective will not be
valued until marketing can demonstrate its relevancy to the
organization as a generator of earnings in the short term (or
revenue increases for nonprofit organizations) and top-line
growth in the long term.
Nothing is more relevant to business than results in terms of
revenue and profit growth.
Also, marketing enhances its relevancy when it skillfully
communicates throughout the organization the positive
consequences of a customer-focused strategy.
3. Sustainable Value
The unique or relevant value of marketing is ultimately of no
consequence unless the value is sustainable. That is, only if
marketing can repeat over a long period of time its ability to
bring a customer perspective throughout the organization and
generate earnings in the short term and top-line growth in the
long term will the marketing brand win lasting respect.
Marketing must therefore be both a scout to watch for change
emerging on the horizon and a vanguard leading the way to
new opportunities.
In each of these three dimensions of the marketing brand,
marketers must effectively market their work to internal
customers. They must recognize that it is the equity that
marketing builds within the organization, rather than the equity
that marketing builds with customers, that often makes the
difference between gaining a seat at the strategy table on the one
hand and powerlessness and marginality on the other.
79
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Differentiation Way in which Co. is viewed as unique in the market, what makes
you different?
Relevance the level to which a brand is personally important to customers.
Esteem that characteristic of a product or service that measures how highly
customers regard it.
Knowledge customer's belief that there is an understanding of what the brand
stands for. This drives the purchase decision.
Differentiation Way in which Co. is viewed as unique in the market, what makes
you different?
Relevance the level to which a brand is personally important to customers.
Esteem
STEPS
KEY CONCEPTS
Mental maps
Competitive frame of reference
Points-of-parity and points-of-difference
Core brand values
Brand mantra
80
13
81
BRAND MANAGMENT
All the talk about creating a brand can seem somewhat ethereal
for many businesses. While its relatively easy to understand the
value of branding when it comes to a Coca-Cola or
NationsBank, its more difficult to grasp the possibilities when
its an insurance agency, a dry cleaner, a rivet manufacturer or an
alternative health clinic.
BRAND MANAGMENT
82
Notes
LESSON 13:
BRAND EVOLUTION
CHAPTER 3:
UNDERSTANDING
UNIT 4
THE BRANDING PROCESS
BRAND MANAGMENT
Objectives
Upon completion of this Lesson, you should be able to:
Branding Decision
Branding is interwoven with religion.Mankind built branded
environments, places to go and practice religion. The chants and
bells were to bring to prople into these places, which is very
much like advertising. The concepts and ideas have been there
forever, and as society developed , brands proliferated to
differentiate and generate business.
Historical Evolution of Brands
Historically, most products were unbranded. Producers sold
goods or commodities to fulfil our core basic needs like taste,
hunger or energy. These products did not have ny identification
mark on them. The first step towards branding a commodity is
to package it, e.g. rice, papad, salt. Water , for example used to be
sold as a commodity. Today most mineral waters are sold as
brands. The company enhances the value of the commodity
functionally. Branding started formally when craftsmen put
trademarks on their products to protect them against inferior
quality. Painters started signing their art works. Pharmaceutical
companies were the first to put brand names on their products.
Today hardly anything is unbranded. If you look at yourself
you will find everything you have worn or carried is of a
particular brand, yes, some are successful brands and some are
not.
Brands start off as products made out of certain ingredients.
Over a period of time, brands are built through marketing
activities and communications. They keep on acquiring attributes, core values and extended values.
Extended value
Having clarified the concept of the brand, it is worth appreciating how brands evolved. This historical review shows how
different types of brands evolved.
There were examples of brands being used in Greek and
Roman times. With a high level of illiteracy, shopkeepers hung
picture above their shops indicating the types of goods they
sold. Symbols were developed to provide an indication of the
retailers speciality and thus the brand logo as a shorthand device
signalling the brands capability was born. Use is still made of
this aspect of branding, as in the case, for example, of the
poised jaguar indicating the power developed by the Jaguar
brand.
In the Middle ages, craftsmen with specialist skills began to,
stamp their marks on their goods and trademarks. Distinguish
in between different suppliers became more common. In these
early days, branding gradually became a guarantee of the source
of this product and ultimately its use as a form of legal
protection against copying grew. Today, trademarks include
words (e.g. Duracell and Matchbox), symbols (e.g. the distinctive Shell logo) or a unique pack shape (e.g. the Coca-Cola
bottle), which have been registered an which purchasers
recognize as being unique to a particular brand.
The next landmark in the evolution of brands was associated
with the growth of cattle farming in the New World of North
America. Cattle owners wanted to make it clear to other
potentially interested parties which animals they owned. By
using a red-hot iron, with uniquely shaped end, they left a clear
imprint on the skin of each their animals. This process appears
to have been taken by many the basis for the meaning of the
term brand, defined by the Oxford English Dictionary as to
mark indelibly as proof of ownership, as sign of quality, or for
any other purpose. This view of the purpose 0 brands as being
identifying (differentiating) devices has remained with us until
today. What is surprising is that in an enlightened era, aware of
83
BRAND MANAGMENT
Retailers;
increasing demand.
84
An Eight-Category Typology
1
85
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Distinctiveness of brand
86
87
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
This idea wasnt new to me. I became familiar with this concept
and put it into play in the late 1980s while managing another
company. With a long-standing and excellent reputation in our
market, creating a line of Peaden brand equipment seemed like a
really good way to stand apart and be the sole beneficiary of our
marketing efforts.
For us, building a brand was a road less traveled. The process
would have been difficult, if not impossible, to execute without
assistance from Nordyne and Remsco, a locally-owned HVAC
wholesaler. With their help, we unveiled our Peaden Signature
Series systems in 1999.
From our experience, private labeling doesnt diminish the
manufacturer/dealer relationship; it strengthens it. To this day,
our relationship with Nordyne and Remsco is second to none,
and we have all benefited from this marketing concept, as have
our customers.
Taking this step was far from easy. There were some concerns
about reactions from existing and new customers, as well as our
staff. Fortunately, these concerns were either answered in short
order or never materialized into significant issues.
Essential to the launch of the Peaden Signature Series brand
was a concerted effort to do our homework before entering the
market.
We sent a dozen of our key staff members to St. Louis on
separate trips to inspect the Nordyne facilities and to ask all the
necessary questions. At the same time, we worked hard on our
label designs so that they were attention-getting, but not
obtrusive. As a result, we had more information at our
fingertips than we normally would with other national name
brands.
The preparation was a must because it was our name going on
the equipment. The due diligence allowed our staff to become
comfortable with the plan. Once this happened, everything that
followed became easier.
We coached our comfort consultants, service technicians, and
the entire staff. They needed to believe in the private label
concept and the products we were offering.
As far as our customers were concerned, we knew there would
be questions. We just didnt know what they would be.
However, we felt confident telling them, This is the product
that we have selected to carry our name and reputation.
Then, we waited for the feedback, both from our customers
living rooms and our office.
Confidence was crucial to the sale, but our reputation was the
key. Although there were a few awkward moments in the
beginning, they were easily overcome. When our customers
responded, Okay, thats good enough for me, we knew the
program would be successful.
A Value-Added Product
88
BRAND MANAGMENT
believe in your company and the products it offers, privatelabeling can be a perfect fit.
You might ask: Is that all it takes to build your company into a
brand? Honestly, we dont know. Were an HVAC contracting
firm. We took the advice that many sales experts freely share,
and put a totally different spin on it. However, we dont believe
that just putting your own name on anothers piece of equipment is all there is to branding. Its only part of the story.
Our drive for customer service excellence has been and remains a
top priority, as well as maintaining our well-known reputation.
We believe that branding our name only works if everyone in
the company believes in our ability to provide great products
backed by exceptional service and maintenance, and then works
hard to make certain that it happens.
Also key is our on-going marketing and advertising campaign.
It covers a wide spectrum and its all about us, our products,
and our services. Private labeling is more successful because of
our marketing efforts, and our marketing is more successful
because of our private labeling.
Our efforts, accomplishments, and mistakes have brought the
Peaden team closer together. The Peaden team is a tight unit
and includes not only Peaden employees, but also key personnel
from our distributor and manufacturer partners. Our partners
know everything about us inside and out, and theyve been
essential to our success.
While Peaden looks a lot different today than when we started
the private-labeling program, theres still much more to learn.
Dare to be different! Ask yourself: What name would you rather
be promoting today? Yours or another companys?
The most famous line from the movie, Field of Dreams, is
Build it, and they will come. This phrase, plus a good dose
of marketing, also applies to building your own HVAC brand.
Robert Wilkos is the business leader of Peaden Air Conditioning in Panama City, FL. Peaden is a member of ACCA,
Excellence Alliance and the Service Roundtable. Wilkos can be
reached by email at [email protected].
89
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 14:
VALUE OF BRANDS
Objectives
Upon completion of this Lesson, you should be able to:
90
91
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Brand Management
Issues in the battle of the brands: (1) how prices
are set? (2) turnover, and (3) gross margin.
Manufacturer brands: (1) prices are set to
maximize profit for the brand and are influenced
by competitive forces, (2) they have a higher
turnover than distributor brands. (Why??)
Distributor brands: (1) prices are set to maximize
profit for the store and (2) they have a higher gross
margin than manufacturer brands. (Why??)
What is a Brand?
Product = Commodity
A product is a produced item always
possessing these characteristics:
Tangibility
Attributes and Features
92
CONSUMERS
ID Product Source
Assignment of
responsibility to maker
Risk reducer
Search cost reducer
Promise, bond, or pact
w/make of product
Symbolic Device
Signal of Quality
BRAND MANAGMENT
Company is equal
to Brands
Brands dominate
the Company
(Clorox)
Kleenix (Kimberly-Clark)
Marlboro (Philip Morris)
MCA Records (Universal
Studios)
Notes
93
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 15:
BRAND PLANNING AND BRAND POTENTIAL
Objectives
The promotions budget is strongly biased towards belowthe-line promotional activity, supplemented only
occasionally with advertising.
Brand strategy development must involve all levels of marketing management and stands a better chance of success when all
the other relevant internal departments and external agencies are
actively involved. It must progress on the basis of all parties
being kept aware of progress.
British Airways exemplify the notion of brand development as
an integrating process, having used this to achieve a greater
customer focus. For example, the simple operation of taking a
few seats out of an aircraft can be done with confidence, as
engineering are consulted about safety implications, finance
work out the long-term revenue implication, scheduling explore
capacity implications and the cabin crew adjust their in-flight
service routines.
Marketing
environme
Brand
Potential
Competitor
Distributor
Consumer
Manufacture
Distributors
The brand strategy of the manufacturer cannot be formulated
without regard for the distributor. Both parties rely on each
other for their success and even in an era of increasing retailer
concentration, not withstanding all the trade press hype, there is
still a recognition amongst manufacturers and distributors that
long-term brand profitability evolves through mutual support.
Manufacturers need to identify retailers objectives and align
their brands with those retailers whose aims most closely match
their own. Furthermore, they should be aware of the strengths
and weaknesses of each distributor. .
Brand manufacturers who have not fully considered the
implications of distributors longer-term objectives and their
strategy to achieve them are deluding themselves about the
long-term viability of their own brands.
In the UK, there are numerous instances of growing retailer
power, with a few major operators controlling a significant
proportion of retail sales (e.g. groceries, jewellery, footwear). The
danger of increasing retailer power is that weaker brand
manufacturers acquiesce to demands for bigger discounts,
without fully appreciating that the long-term well-being of their
brands is being undermined. It is crucial for brand manufacturers to analyse regularly what proportion of their brand sales go
through each distributor and then for each individual distributor to assess how important a particular manufacturers brand is
to them. For example, Table 2.5 shows a hypothetical analysis
for a confectionery manufacturer.
95
BRAND MANAGMENT
Manufacturer
BRAND MANAGMENT
%
25
24
19
17
10
5
Hypothetical market
share of confectionery
brands through Tesco
------------------------------------Brand
%
Cadbury
35
Mars 30
Nestle
20
Other 15
100
100
Consumers
To consumer, buying is a process of problem solving. They
become aware of a problem ( e.g. not yet arranged summer
holidays), seek information ( e.g. go to travel agent and skim
brochures), evaluate the information and then make a decision (
e.g. select three possible holidays, then try to book one through
the travel agent). The extent of this buying process varies
according to purchasers characteristics, experience and the
products being bought. Nonetheless, clearly consumers have to
work to make a brand selection. The brand selection and brand
usage are not necessarily performed by the same person.
Therefore marketers need to identify all individuals and
96
Competitors
Brands are rarely chosen without being compared against
others. Although several brand owners benchmark themselves
against competition, it often appears that managers misjudge
their key managers should undertake interviews with current
and potential consumers to identity those brands that are
considered similar. Rather that collecting useless and misleading
data managers should undertake interviews with current and
potential consumers to identify those brands that are
considered similar. Once marketers have selected the critical
competitors, they need to assess the objectives and strategies of
these companies as well as fully understanding their brand
positioning and personalities. It is also essential not to be
restricted to a retrospective, defensive position, but to gather
enough information to anticipate competitive response and be
able to continuously update the strategy for brand protection.
Research has shown that return on investment is related to a
products share of the market. In other words, products with a
bigger market share yield better returns than those with a
smaller market share. Organizations with strong brands fare
better in gaining market share than those without strong
brands. Thus, firms who are brand leaders will become
particularly aggressive if they see their position being eroded by
in the US) team! Under the main Man U family brand they offer
financial planning services, electricity, life insurance, mortgages,
credit cards, bed linens, jewelry, ketchup(!), wallpaper,
lunchboxes, luggage, cell phones, boxer shorts, magazines, their
own TV channel...and all this from a football team.
Imagine the brand loyalty you must have from your fans in
order to make them think they would like to get their car loan
from you. Can you see yourself getting a mortgage from the
Yankees?
Exercises
1. List down the attributes and values of a Levis jeans. Write
down the four main reasons, in order of importance, why
do want to buy a Levis jeans?. Then show an advertisement
for this brand (or a catalogue page describing it) to one of
your buyers and ask them to tell you what are the four key
points they took from the message. Compare both the
findings. Does the brand correctly majoring upon relevant
buyer choice criteria? Give reasons.
2. Choose two brands and explain how well positioned is each
of these brands in relation to the five forces affecting brand
potential? (Outlined in the section The importance of
brand planning.)
Brand it Like Beckham
by Kristine Kirby Webster
June 10, 2003
There is a great movie now out in the US called Bend It Like
Beckham. If you havent seen it, I highly recommend it. It is
the story of a British girl named Jess who lives in London with
her traditional Indian family. Jess must choose between the
traditions of her family or her desire to become a soccer
sensation like her idol, David Beckham.
The movies title comes from Beckhams amazing ability to
bend the ball into the goal with just a simple kick, something
Jess aspires to do just as well.
No, I havent suddenly changed my column topic from
branding to movie reviews. But, it is amazing that an entire
movie has sprung up around the personality of one man,
David Beckham, and the team he plays for.
Mind, he is one of the worlds most recognized athletes, and
his team, Englands Manchester United (Man U) is the most
valuable sports franchise in the world-worth more than the NY
Yankees, the LA Lakers, the Dallas Cowboys, or any other team
you can conjure up. Their fan base is said to be over 53 million
worldwide.
But make no mistake, their star player-Beckham-and the team
itself is more than a sports club, it is a worldwide marketing
machine.
The Man U brand is a portfolio of staggering size and diversity,
especially when you consider it all springs from a football (soccer
So how did they do this? How did Man U, helped a great deal
in the last decade by the cult of Beckham, bring about such
brand success that pretty much every brand extension they have
come up with, and ones that are so unrelated to their core
offering, are snapped up by their supporters, and even successful? And most of their fans are outside the city they play for,
and even the country they are from.
The answer is by leveraging their brand personality, working
their fans sense of belonging and ownership in the club, and
then cashing in on their fans brand loyalty, and their need to
show they are part of Man U too, and the heritage that conveys.
Several years ago Pepsi teamed up with Man U to offer entrants
in Thailand a chance to attend a soccer camp in England. Pepsi
received almost 15 million entries, what they say was one of
their best responses ever. And the people who entered did so
because of the allure of Man U, not because of Pepsi. According to a recent article, when they played Real Madrid of Spain,
over half the United Kingdom had their TVs tuned to that
match.
Their fan allegiance is amazing, and growing by the moment.
And other marketers are more than willing to tie themselves to
Man U. Besides Pepsi, they have deals with Nike, Vodaphone,
Fuji, and Anheuser-Busch, just to name a few.
So what can we learn from Man U to help our brands?
As with any successful brand, Man U follows the basics, and
does it well. As Al Ries says in his book The 22 Immutable
Laws of Branding, the power of a brand lies in its ability to
influence purchase behavior. And brands that are powerful
result in powerful marketing, as demonstrated by Manchester
United.
Brands are chosen not only for rational reasons (usually the 4
Ps), but also for emotional ones. In fact, when it comes to
brands, emotional reasons usually drive a large portion of the
purchase decision. People want to be part of success, part of a
legacy, and part of a winner. They want people to identify with
them as such.
Therein lies the appeal to the consumer of having a Man U
credit card, or Man U sheets-the halo effect they perceive from
their association with a powerhouse like the team drives their
decision. It isnt rational, but emotional in bent.
The people who buy Man U products and services have
internalized the brand values that Man U stands for in the
marketplace at large. Their team loyalty drives them to want to
belong, and they show their loyalty by buying Man U products.
The team and brand loyalty Man U has realized makes a strong
case for branding for relationships and retention. The team is
worth roughly $1 billion, and they have operating profits that
97
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
are three times greater than the next wealthiest club in the
Premier League, according to a Deloitte & Touche annual report
on English teams. Without the long-term relationships Man U
has cultivated in its fan base, they wouldnt be anywhere near as
successful financially (they are a publicly held corporation), and
their brand wouldnt be anywhere near the behemoth it is
globally.
By being a Man U fan, and wearing their clothes, or using their
services, or buying any of their other products, consumers
show they belong to a tribe of sorts-and they are willing to
show this for more than just cheering during a 90-minute
match. They are willing to show their loyalty 24/7. That is a
powerful brand at work.
So, ask yourself, can your company learn to brand it like
Beckham? Really, can your brand afford not to?
Kristine Kirby Webster is Principal of The Canterbury Group,
a direct-marketing consultancy specializing in branding and
relationship marketing. She is also an Adjunct Professor of
Direct Marketing at Mercy College in NY. She can be reached at
[email protected].
Case Study
Brand Development by Identifying Brand Values
Introduction
The Cadbury brand name has been in existence since 1824 when
John Cadbury opened his first shop in Birmingham, England.
(Cadbury Ireland, as a subsidiary of) Cadbury Schweppes is the
fourth largest confectionery business in the world selling
chocolate, sugar and gum based products. Cadbury Ireland is
the number one confectionery company in Ireland. Today
Cadburys best tasting chocolate constitutes the main ingredient
of much of these products including everything from solid
blocks to chocolate filled bars and novelties. The Cadbury brand
is associated with best tasting chocolate. This case shows how
marketing managers at Cadbury are working to ensure this
association is continually developed through their new Choose
Cadbury marketing strategy. Key concepts of quality, taste and
emotion underpin the Cadbury brand. These core values help
to differentiate Cadbury from other brands and ensure its
competitive advantage.
98
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
100
Conclusion
The success of the Cadbury brand can be seen in how its image
is continually maintained over time. Identifying brand values,
and matching these to consumer lifestyles in specific market
segments can help develop a clear advertising message. In
previous advertising messages quality and taste were
emphasized. Cadbury is now building on this through its
Choose Cadbury strategy to underline the feeling a premium
brand can bring to its customers. The Cadbury brand has
proven itself to be a leader in a highly volatile and competitive
market because it has successfully established, nurtured and
developed its umbrella brand and growing portfolio of
products.
UNIT II
BRAND
LESSON 16: SECTORAL MANAGEMENT OF
UNIT
5
CHAPTER
4
BRANDS AND CONSUMER
BRAND SELECTION CRITERIA
BUYING PROCESS
OF CONSUMERS
Brand selection criteria of consumers, Brands and the
consumers buying process, Consumer need states, Brand
Marketing, Consumer perception of added values, Extent to
which consumers search for a brand information, Challenges to
branding, Issues associated with effective brand names and the
brand as risk reducer
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand
a. Consumer buying processes.
b. How consumers process information.
c.
Minor
Perceived
Extended
Problem
Solving
Tendency to
Limited Problem
Solving
Dissonance
Reduction
Limited
Problem
Solving
Brand
Differences
High Consumer
Involvement
Low Consumer
Involvement
BRAND MANAGMENT
Topics Covered
BRAND MANAGMENT
Problem Recognition
Information Search
Feedback
Evaluation of Alternatives
Purchase
Post-Purchase Evaluation
The search for information would start first in his own memory
and if he feels confident that he has sufficient information
already he will be able to evaluate the available brands. Often,
though, consumers do not feel sufficiently confident to rely on
memory alone(particularly for infrequently bought brands), so
they will begin to scan the external environment(e.g. visit shops,
become attentive to certain advertisements, talk to friends). As
they get more information, the highly involved consumer will
start to learn how to interpret the information in their
evaluation of competing brands.
Even so, consumers do not single-mindedly search for information about one particular purchase. It has been estimated that in
one day people are bombarded by over 1000 different marketing
messages-of which they are attentive to less than 2 percent.
Consumers perceptual processes protect them from information overload and helps them search and interpret new
information.
102
Dissonance Reduction
This type of brand buying behavior is seen when there is a high
level of consumer involvement with the purchase, but the
consumer perceives only minor differences between competing
brands. Such consumers may be confused by the lack of clear
brand differences. They would not have any firm beliefs about
the advantages of any particular brand, a choice will most
probably be made based on other reasons such as, for example,
a friends opinion or advice given by a shop assistant.
After he has purchased, he may feel unsure, particularly if he
receives information that seems to conflict with his reasons for
buying. He would experience mental discomfort, or what we call
as post-purchase dissonance and would attempt to reduce this
state of mental uncertainty. He would either try to ignore the
dissonant information or will seek those messages, which
confirm his prior beliefs.
In this type of brand decision, the consumer makes a choice
without firm brand beliefs, then changes his attitude after that
purchase-often on the basis of experience with the chosen
brand. Finally, learning occurs on a selective basis to support the
original brand choice by the consumer being attentive to
positive information and ignoring negative information.
Let us take an example to explain this kind of process. A
working woman wants to furnish her newly purchased flat.
Although she is very busy she wants to buy a beautiful carpet
where her guests would leisure around. When she starts
shopping for the carpet she gets overwhelmed by the flood of
information about carpet attributes she has never heard before.
Unable to fully evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of
the different carpets, she makes a rapid decision based on her
perceptions and reassuring herself with the explanations given
by the salesperson.
At her first dinner party one of the guests spills a drink on the
carpet, which she rapidly cleans up as recommended by the
salesperson. The next morning when she checks out the stain,
the carpet is spotless. As a consequence of this experience she
starts reading leaflets to understand the different types of
carpets
So we see that when the consumers are involved in a brand
purchase, but perceive little brand differentiation or lack the
Problem Recognition
Purchase Made
Brands ay or may not be
Evaluated Afterwards
103
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
104
Specifically planned
Generally planned
Substitute
Unplanned
105
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Notes
Example
Purchasing a Family Vacation
107
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 17:
CONSUMER SEARCH FOR BRAND INFORMATION
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Extent to which consumers search for a brand information
b. Challenge to Branding from perception
By now you must be having a clear idea of Brand selection
criteria of consumers, Brands and the consumers buying
process, Consumer need states, Brand Marketing, Consumer
perception of added values. We discussed these in detail in last
two lessons. Now in this lesson we will take up in detail the
following
Information Sources
Memory
Actively
Acquired
External
Passively
Acquired
In one of the early studies on consumers search for information, recent purchasers of sports shirts or major household
goods like T.V., fridges, washing machines, etc, were asked
about their pre-purchase information search. Only 5 percent of
electrical appliance buyers showed evidence of a very active
information search process, whilst a third claimed to seek
virtually no pre-purchase information. Just under half of
appliance purchasers visited only one store and only 35 percent
considered another attribute in addition to brand name and
price. Even less evidence of information search was found
amongst purchasers of sports shirts, the conclusion being that
many purchases were made in a state of ignorance, or at least of
indifference.
However, the apparent lack of deliberation does not indicate
irrational decision behavior. Some purchasers may have found it
difficult to evaluate all the features of a product and instead
relied upon a limited number of attributes that they felt more
comfortable with.
A further study of consumers buying cars and major household appliances again showed evidence of limited external
search. Less than a half of the purchasers interviewed (44
percent) used no more than one information source, 49 percent
experienced a deliberation time of less than two weeks and 49
percent visited only one retail outlet when making these major
brand purchases. Numerous other instances have been reported
of consumers undertaking limited external search for expensive
brand purchases in such product fields as financial services,
housing, furniture and clothing.
And not surprisingly, for low cost, low risk items like groceries,
external search activity is also restricted. There is no doubt that
due to the low level of involvement that these brands engender, far more reliance is placed on memory. For example, when
we go shopping for washing powders, we simplify purchasing
by considering only one or two brands and by using only three
to five brand attributes. Amongst consumers of breakfast
cereals, only 2 percent of the available information was used to
make a decision. When using in-store observations of grocery
shopprs, 25 percent made a purchase decision without any time
for deliberation and 56 percent spent less than 8 seconds
examinig and deciding which brand to buy.
109
BRAND MANAGMENT
Information is continually bombarding us and this information acquisition is a continuos process. As we all understand
that the search for information represents a cost(the time or
effort) and some of us do not consider the benefits outweigh
these costs. This happens particularly for low involvement
brands. In researches on consumer behavior, a lot of emphasis
has been placed on measuring the number of sources consumer
use, rather than considering the quality of each informational
source.
BRAND MANAGMENT
110
Large
Bright
Loud
Strong
Unfamiliar
Stand out from
Moving
Repeated
Small
Dull
Quiet
Weak
Familiar
Blend in with
Stationary
One-off
Perceptivity is based on :
Different colours
Depth of shelves
Activity
Many ads use hidden messages, most of them harmless. Can
you find the hidden message in this company logo?
advert. They are good reliable cars. Lets see if they drive the car
over very rough ground in this advert) and avoiding contradicting claims(I didnt realize this firm produces fax machines,
besides the PC I bought from them, in view of the problems I
had with my PC, I just dont want to know about their
products any more)
For example - students in class should focus on what the
teachers are saying and the overheads being presented.
Students walking by the classroom may focus on people in
the room, who is the teacher, etc., and not the same thing
the students in the class.
Perceptual Selectivity
The most important aspect of perceptual selectivity is attention.
Everything else we perceive will be based on how much and
what kind of attention we give to things around us.
Attention is the process by which the mind chooses from
among the various stimuli that strike the senses at any
given moment, allowing only some to enter into consciousness.
A Generalized Model of Attention
Two main information-processing compartments:
Automatic or pre-attentive processing- Unselective,
Unlimited in capacity, Acting in parallel on all incoming
information at once, Unconsciousv
Controlled or attentive processing- Selective, Limited in
capacity, Acts serially on a small portion of the available
information, Partly consciousv
Theories of Attention
Based on these components theories differ in their description
of:
1. The kind of processing that occurs pre-attentively (Stage 1).
2. How the selector determines what passes into the second
compartment.
3. The kind of processing that occurs post-attentively (Stage
2).
Marketers invest considerable money and effort communicating
with us, yet only a small fraction of the information is accepted
and processed by us. First of all, their brand communication
must overcome the barrier of what is known as Selective
Exposure.
If a new advertisement is being shown on television, even
though we are attentive to the programme during which the
advertisement appears, when the commercial breaks are on, we
may prefer to engage in some other activity rather than watching
the advertisements. We either start surfing other channels or get
up to have water, etc.
The second barrier is what is known as Selective Attention.
We may not feel inclined to do anything else while the television
commercials are on during our favourite programme and might
watch the advertisement for entertainment, taking an interest in
the creative aspects of the commercial. At this stage, selective
attention filters information from advertisements, so building
support for existing beliefs about the brand)Oh, its that Toyota
111
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Activity
How many of you have seen the movie, Kal Ho Na Ho? Those
of you who have seen tell me one thing that you liked best or
worst about it. Remember just one best or worst thing!
Now we see that our answers vary a lot, you may think why is it
so?
This variety of reporting (observing?) is commonly obtained
even though all the people are looking at the same scene. Why is
there such diversity in what people say (and see)? At least part
of the explanation is that people dont just soak up the
information that is in front of them. They look actively at the
scene and report what they sought out and, to some extent, the
sense that they were able to make of it.
Perceptual Organization
Perceptual organization allows us to decide between
competing brands on the basis of their similarities within
mental categories conceived earlier by us. We as consumers
group a large number of competing brands into a few
categories, since this reduces the complexity of interpretation.
For example, rather than evaluating each car in the car market,
we have mental categories such as Hyundai Santro as a small
family car, Tata Safari as a sports utility vehicle and so on. By
assessing which category the new brand is most similar to, we
can rapidly group brands and are able to draw inferences
without detailed search. If some of us place a brand such as
Nanzs own label washing powder into a category we have
previously identified as own label, then the brand will achieve
its meaning from its class it is assigned to by us. In this case,
even we have little experience of the newly categorized brand,
then we use this perceptual process to predict certain
characteristics of the new brand. For example, we may well
reason that stores own labels are inexpensive, thus this own
label should be inexpensive and should also be quite good.
However in order to be able to form effective mental categories
in which competing brands can be placed and which lead to
confidence in predicting brand performance, relevant product
experience is necessary. The novice to a new product field has
less weel-formed brand categories than more experienced users.
When new to a product field, the trialist has to view )based
upon perceptions) about some attributes indicative of brand
performance. This schema of key attributes forms the initial
basis for brand categorization, drives their search for information and influences brand selection. With experience, the schema
is modified, the search for information is redirected and brand
categorization is adjusted, eventually stabilizing over time with
increasing brand experience.
112
Notes
Activity
113
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 18:
ISSUES ASSOCIATED WITH EFFECTIVE BRAND NAMES
Objectives
The learning objective: Upon completion of this Lesson, you
should be able to:
Company
As
Brand name
Strong
Company
endorsement
Weak
company
endorsement
Individual
brand
name
Virgin Airlines
Says were new at this
Public wants airlines to be experienced, safe and
professional
Investors wont take us seriously
Religious people will be offended
Caterpillar
Tiny, creepy-crawly bug
Not macho enough - easy to squash
Why not bull or workhorse?
Destroys trees, crops, responsible for famine
Banana Republic
Derogatory cultural slur
Youll be picketed by people from small, hot countries
Yahoo!
Yahoo!! Its Mountain Dew!
Yoohoo! Its a chocolate drink in a can!
Nobody will take stock quotes and world news seriously
from a bunch of Yahoos
Oracle
Unscientific
Unreliable
Only foretold death and destruction
Only fools put their faith in an Oracle
Sounds like orifice people will make fun of us
The Gap
Means something is missing
The Generation Gap is a bad thing - we want to sell clothes
to all generations
In need of repair
Incomplete
Negative
Stingray
A slow, ugly, and dangerous fish slow, ugly and
dangerous are the last qualities we want to associate with
our fast, powerful, sexy sports car
The bottom feeding fish part isnt helping either
Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac
I dont want hillbilly residents of Dogpatch handling my
finances.
They dont sound serious, and this is about a very serious
matter.
115
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Marketing objective
Brand audit
Brand objective
Brand strategy alternatives
Brand name criteria specified
Brand name alternatives generated
Screen brand names and select name
What little has been published about the way firms select brand
names shows that few follow a systematic process. The scheme
developed in Figure builds on best current practice.
Let us now consider each of these steps in turn.
116
Marketing Objective
The marketer needs to be certain about the marketing objectives
that the brand must contribute towards. Clearly stated,
quantified targets must be available for each segment showing
the level of sales expected from each of the product groups
comprising the companys portfolio. The marketing objectives
will give an indication as to whether emphasis is being placed
on gaining sales from existing products to existing customers,
or whether new horizons are envisaged (e,g. through either
product extensions or new customer groups). By having clearly
defined marketing objectives, brand managers are then able to
consider how each of their brands needs to contribute to wards
satisfying the overall marketing objectives.
The Brand Audit
The internal and external forces that influence the brand need to
be identified, such as company resources, competitive intensity,
supplier power , threats from substitutes, buyer concentration,
economic conditions, and so on. This audit should help
identify a few of the criteria that the name must satisfy. For
example, if the brand audit showed that the firm has a superior
battery that consumers valued because of the batterys long life,
then one issue the name would have to satisfy would be its
reinforcement of the critical success factor barter long life.
Brand Objective
In the brand-planning document, clear statements about
individual brand objectives should be made, again helping
clarify the criteria that the brand name must satisfy. Statements
about anticipated levels of sales, through different distributors,
to specified customers, will help the marketer to identify criteria
for the name to meet. For example, if the primary market for a
new brand of rechargeable batteries is 10-14 year old boys who
are radio-controlled car racing enthusiasts, and if the secondary
market is fathers who help their sons, the primary targets need
may be for long inter-charge periods, whilst the secondary
market may be more concerned about purchase cost. The
primary need for the brand name would be to communicate
power delivery, with an undertone about cost.
Brand Strategy Alternatives
The marketer must be clear about what broad strategies are
envisaged for the brand in order to satisfy the brand objectives.
Issues here would include:
Manufacturers brand or distributors brand?
Specialist or niche brand?
Value-added or low-price positioning?
Again, these would clarify issues that the name must satisfy.
Brand Name Criteria Specified
The marketer should be able to list the criteria that the brand
name must satisfy. They might also wish to be learn from
other companies experiences w/hat appears to work best with
brand names.
Brand Name Alternatives Generated
With a clear brief about the challenges that the new brand name
must overcome, the marketer can now work with others to
stimulate idea, for possible brand names. It is unlikely that the
brand managers would work on this alone. Instead, other
Brainstorming
Group Discussions
Management Inspiration
Word Association
117
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
118
Social risk: the risk that the unfamiliar brand might not
meet the approval of a respected peer group.
Financial Risk
Performance Risk
Psychological Risk
Social Risk
Overall Risk
1=very low risk, 10=very high risk
Life Insurance
7.2
6.7
4.9
4.8
7.0
Suit
6.4
5.8
6.9
7.3
5.9
A name that works its way through the world on its own.
Emotional Connection
Poetry
BRAND MANAGMENT
Personality
Is it provocative, engaging?
Deep Well
The key is to step outside the box that the industry - any
industry - has drawn for itself, and to do it in a fresh way that
hits home with the audience. To accomplish this, it is necessary
to think about names in this fashion:
Virgin
Oracle
Tutorial
Exercise Questions
1. For each of the four Ps, have identify an exemple brand
whose strategy is different from and superior to that of its
competition. Discuss the role the particular strategy plays in
the brands success.
2. Survey consumers to identify product categories in which
they engage in brand switching and determine what
influences their behavior. Discuss the implications for
marketing strategy of those influencing factors.
3. Find a brand whose sole or primary distribution channel is
relationship marketing. Discuss the likely reasons for the
119
BRAND MANAGMENT
A Study
Developing an Effective Brand Name
DTC Perspectives Magazine Article
Abstract: By utilizing proven methods for nomenclature
development, one can change a process traditionally thought to
have no real guidelines into a more scientific process. The recent
emphasis on direct-to-consumer marketing in the pharmaceutical industry has made it necessary for pharmaceutical companies
to change the way they approach brand name development.
Body: When managing your business, the emphasis is on
owning your market. The first step towards this goal is to
establish brand equity and support a powerful brand image
through effective brand management. Each of the following
must be carefully considered before creating a brand name:
Nomenclature Strategy/Architecture Positioning
Creative Development
Trademark Clearance
InterNIC/Internet Clearance
Linguistic Appropriateness
Market Research
It is the successful combination of these elements that creates
a companys most valuable asset, its brand name. Following
are more details about each component that plays a role in
developing an effective brand.
Nomenclature Strategy/Architecture Positioning - Many
companies forget to consider this step in the process of creating
a brand which can lead to inappropriate results. This component involves identifying which brands compete in consumers
minds and how your brand can be positioned to maximize
preference. Using the results from this evaluation will help
shape the personality or image of your brand. The importance
of deciding on a personality or image cannot be stressed
enough. Once this has been established, the rest of the process
becomes much easier. You now know what kind of names you
want to create and you can better evaluate the quality of the
name candidates that are being created because you have a clear
vision of what the brand name should accomplish.
Creative Development - While some companies might prefer to
have an internal contest and ask employees submit some name
candidates for the new product that is being introduced, most
understand that there is a better and more systematic way to
approach creative development. Brand Institute, for example,
has developed a six-fold approach to creative name generation
that involves input from many different people some of which
are involved very closely to the project and some that are far
removed. It is important to have input from people that are
not too close to the project because they can bring a fresh
perspective to the creative process. This methodology includes
brainstorming techniques designed for evaluation of names
and concepts for creative refinement.
120
BRAND MANAGMENT
Notes
121
CHAPTER 5:
LESSON 19:
HOW CONSUMER BRANDS SATISFY
ADDED VALUES BEYOND
SOCIAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL NEEDS
FUNCTIONALISM
BRAND MANAGMENT
Objectives
Learning objective from this chapter is
a. The social and psychologi-cal roles played by brands.
b. Focus on consumer brands rather than organizational
brands,
As we all know that brands succeed because they represent more
than just utilitarian benefits. The physical constituents of the
product or service are augmented through creative marketing to
give added values that satisfy social and psychological needs.
Surrounding the intrinsic physical product with an aura, or
personality gives us far greater confidence in using well-known
brands. Evidence of this can be seen in one study which
investigated the role that branding played in drugs sold in retail
stores. People suffering from headaches were given an analgesic.
Some were given the drug in its generic form, lacking any
branding. The branded analgesic was more effective than the
generic analgesic and it was calculated that just over a quarter of
the pain relief was attributed to branding. What had happened
was that branding had added an image of serenity around the
pharmacological ingredients and in the consumers minds, had
made the medication more effective than the unbranded tablets.
It is interesting to know that images surrounding brands enable
us to form mental vision of what and who brands stand for.
Specific brands are selected when the images they convey match
the needs, values and lifestyles that we as consumers have. For
example, at a physical level, drinkers recognize Guinness as a
rich, creamy, dark, bitter drink. The advertising has surrounded
the stout with a personality, which is symbolic of nourishing
value and myths of power and energy. The brand represents
manliness, mature experience and wit. Consequently, when
drinkers are choosing between a glass of draught Guinness or
Murphys, they are subconsciously making an assessment of the
appropriateness of the personality of these two brands for the
situation in which they will consume it, be it amongst colleagues at lunch or amongst friends in the evening.
Now that we understand that brands are an integral part of our
society and each day we have endless encounters with brands.
Just think of the first hour after waking up and consider how
many brands you come a cross. From seeing the brands used,
people are able to understand each other better and help clarify
who they are.
Consider yourself as a working professional and imagine a
normal day in your life.
You brush your teeth with either colgate or pepsodent or closeup. Then you use either lux, cinthol, pears, sunsilk, clinic plus,
pantene, etc for having a bath. Then you use either Indian or
International deodrant or perfume. You dress up in a peter
England shirt and an allen solly trousers. To wear your titan or
timex or swatch or rado watch. Put on your red tape or
woodland or lakhani shoes.
122
On returning home, you put on your levi jeans and polo t-shirt.
Put on your nike or adidas shoes and move out with your
friends to either barista or pizza hut or mcdonalds. On
returning home you either watch bbc or espn or star news to get
hold on the happenings in the world.
So we realize that in a normal day a normal man come across a
series of brands ranging from all fields. A study by the advertising agency BBDO found that consumers are more likely to find
differences between competing brands where emotional appeals
are used, than between those predominantly relying on rational
appeals. Functional differences between brands are narrowing
due to technological advances, but the emotional differences are
more sustainable.
We must understand that having a functional advantage, such
as a particular car design, may be a competitive advantage today,
but over time it becomes dated. By contrast, when associating a
brand with particular values, such as being honest and dependable, these values have a greater chance of lasting as they are
more personally meaningful and thus help ensure the longevity
of the brand.
Particularly for conspicuously consumed brands, such as those
in the beer and car market, firms can succeed by positioning
their brands to satisfy consumers emotional needs. Consumers
assess the meanings of different brands and make a purchase
decision according to whether the brand will say the right sort
of things about them to their peer group and whether the
brand reflects back into themselves the right sort of personal
feeling. For example, a young man choosing between brands of
suits may well consider whether the brands reflect externally that
he is a trendsetter and reflect back into himself that he is
confident in his distinctiveness. In other words, there is a sort
of dialogue between consumers and brands.
In the main, consumers do not just base their choice on
rational grounds, such as perceptions of functional capabilities,
beliefs about value for money or availability. Instead, they
recognize that to make sense of the social circles they move in
and to add meaning to their own existence, they look at what
different brands symbolize. They question how well a particular
brand might fit in with their lifestyle, whether it helps them
express their personality and whether they like the brand and
would feel right using it.
Brands are part of the culture of a society and as the culture
changes so they need to be updated. For example, the Surf
brand has been portrayed in television advertisements by the
personality Lalitaji. She epitomized the home-centred housewife devoted solely to the well being of her family along with
intelligence of buying the right thing in the right budget. With
the changing role of women in society, the brand has1 had to
move with the times. Today the mother in Surf ads is an
independent, busy woman with a fulltime job as well as a
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
124
Basics
It may not be possible for most brands to become symbolic/
emotional brands without establishing themselves on the
functional platform. In most product categories (even in service
categories such as banks, hotels and travel services), consumers
seek benefits that can add value to their time, convenience or
performance. In apparels, easy maintenance adds to convenience; goggles protection of the eyes adds value to the
well-being of the consumer and his performance in various
activities.
There are some exceptions. Soft drinks, ice creams, perfumes,
cigarettes and chocolates are categories which convey sensual
gratification and hence they are sensory products. The difference
between functional and sensory product categories is that
consumers can have a tangible and realisable perception of
functional benefits but with regard to sensory experience, it
would be difficult to have a firm assessment of the sensory
experience. Given the nature of such experiences, an individual
may perceive them to be better or average depending on a
variety of sensory inputs which change from time to time interest levels, priority given to such an experience, mood
during consumption, and so on.
The basics of symbolic branding involve identifying the specific
category of service or product to find out how amenable the
category is to emotional branding. The magnitude and intensity
(or even the time frame involved) could be different for
different categories. Coke advertises with the words Sparkle on
your tongue (in the US context), emphasising the sensory
experience. Cadburys World, a well-known visitors centre in the
UK, emphasises sensory experience and even the Cadburys
moulded version advertised in India does that. In all these
examples, the focus is more on experience than emotion.
In contrast, Cadburys Temptations uses emotional appeal in its
TV commercial. Symbolism in this context is broad-based and
could be the feeling of belonging to a group, self-concept,
relationships and self-esteem. There are a number of brands of
perfumes and deodorants that are relationship-oriented appeals.
Functional Product
The next approach is towards those categories that are not
sensory in nature, namely utility-oriented categories. One
category is the typical FMCG category and the other category is
that of durables. There seems to be a proliferation of
emotional branding in FMCG categories. Chakra Tea, Close Up
toothpaste, Dettol antiseptic lotion, Johnson & Johnsons baby
powder and Saffola in the edible oil category are just some
examples. Most of them have also conveyed a functional
proposition in the seemingly emotional proposition protection
- Dettol, whiteness of the teeth in Close Up and taste (sensory
benefit) in Chakra Tea.
While it is interesting to observe this combination, there are
also a number of FMCG brands which have used strong
functional benefits and have achieved significant success as well.
These examples could include the garden freshness of Kanan
Devan, the germ-killing action of the relaunched Lifebuoy soap,
the natural ingredients of Hamam, the moisturiser of Dove
and the 12-hour protection of Colgate Total.
Culture-based emotion is another category which some brands
have used effectively. Here, an emotional belief is attached to a
cultural belief. Reliance Mobile shows an advertisement in which
the father gifts a mobile to his daughter who is married - an
emotion clearly tied to the cultural belief of marrying off the
daughter. Even today, Vicco Turmeric Vanishing Cream uses the
occasion of marriage in its advertisements. Godrejs Storwel
cupboard was one of the earliest brands to position itself as a
gift for the bride, with the advertisement having all the
trappings of a typical wedding. Mecca Cola, a fast selling cola in
Paris and the UK, draws upon the emotion strongly associated
with the cultural feeling that the cola has a religious anchoring.
125
BRAND MANAGMENT
emotional brand could also become a cult brand over time with
appropriate marketing mix elements.
BRAND MANAGMENT
126
Perception of others in
the situation
the situation requires products to express the situational selfimage, such as certain type of clothing, the consumer may
decide to buy new clothes. When shopping they will consider
the images of different clothes and select the brand which
comes closest to meeting the situational self-image they wish to
project at, for instance, the dinner party.
Finally, it needs to be realized that there is an interaction
between the symbolism of the brand being used and the
individuals self-concept. Not only does the consumers self
image influence the brands they select, but also the brands have
a symbolic value and this in turn influences the consumers selfimage.
A Sample Study
Making Products Psychologically Fulfilling
Consumers buy products to satisfy needs. These needs range
from basic physiological ones (e.g., need for food) to higher
psychological ones (e.g., acceptance by others, self-fulfillment). A
product may satisfy more than one need and at more than one
level. For example, an anti-bacterial soap may satisfy the basic
needs for cleanliness and safety (with its germ-killing qualities)
as well as a higher psychological need to feel like one is being a
good parent (i.e. because I am keeping germs away from my
children). This example also shows that satisfying a need may
involve a causal link: being able to feel like one is being a good
parent is dependent on having been able to provide a clean and
germ-free environment. Such multiple layers of interrelated
needs can be thought of as ladders. The lower rungs of such
ladders represent product benefits (e.g., cleans dirt, gets rid of
bacteria) and the upper rungs represent needs satisfied by the
product benefits, ascending from basic to higher psychological
needs (see figure 1).
Individuals repertoire of
self-images
Situational Self-Image
Scan of brand images for most
appropriate
Comparison of brand
image and situational self-
Brand choice
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
128
Well-spread-out Slowdown
The slowdown in demand growth has been under way for
some time now. But there are a couple of new facets to it.
One, it is no longer restricted to rural demand - growth rates
have also been flagging for companies which target only urban
and semi-urban consumers.
Two, it is not restricted to the supposedly mature categories
such as soaps and detergents. Over the past year, growth rates
have dwindled even for low-penetration categories, such as
toothpastes, shampoos and skin products, with some of these
actually shrinking in value.
Economic data show that there has been an actual decline in
consumer spending over the past four years. One key reason for
this is the sharp fall in rural purchasing power due to declining
commodity prices. This has had an impact on companies such
129
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Case Study
Thats Entertainment Do Games Really Add Brand
Value?
Games are now one of the most popular forms of online
entertainment. More and more websites now offer games as a
key piece of content. But do they really help build a relationship
with target audiences?
The FMCG market has particularly warmed to online gaming
delivered via their brand website. Companies like CocaCola
and Nestl have been using interactive games as a part of their
content for some time. Kelloggs have no fewer than 13 games
on their website (www.kelloggs.co.uk). Even brands that have
traditionally steered clear are slowly moving into the market
Mr Kipling, for example. Games are seen as a quick and easy
way of providing extra content. But they need to be cleverly
conceived and developed if they are to help enhance brand
differentiation and audience relationships. So who are brands
targeting with these games? Unsurprisingly, the largest concentration of games can be found in the brands and websites
targeted at kids. The logic is: Kids play online games and if we
offer one, then theyll keep coming back to our site and will
build an affinity with our brand. But its not that simple.
With younger children, parents may be concerned if they spend
too long onscreen. They want to help and supervise and games
need to be part of child and parent learning and experiencing
together. Older kids have greater independence. But here, the
reality is that online games must compete with offline consoles
that provide a gaming experience with both superior looks and
game play. And this is a highly discriminating consumer. Failure
to provide novelty and an exciting experience can actually
damage the brand.
For adults, online games are less of an attraction. They are often
too time pressured to play games or lack the opportunity lots
of people still browse the internet at work and it is concern
(rightly or wrongly) about inappropriate use that has been a
barrier to many companies giving employees open access to the
Internet.
130
Objectives
The learning objective: After reading this lesson you should be
able to
a. Understand the concept of Brand personality,
b. Brand Value and personality
c.
Company A
Company B
Sophisticated
Easy going
Arrogant
Modest
Efficient
Helpful
Self-centered
Caring
Distant
Approachable
Disinterested
Interested
131
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 20:
BRAND PERSONALITY
BRAND MANAGMENT
132
Activity
Check it for yourself. Look towards yourself top to bottom.
Note down what all brands you are wearing or are otherwise
your favourite. See from above discussion what relationship
you have with these brands.
Watch Out, We are World Class Customers Now
Tastes have been changing. We change with the changes in our
demographics and psychographics. We keep demanding goods
with higher and higher value as or careers progress and our
aspirations, disposable incomes and status grow. For many
years refrigerators and washing machines were available only in
one color-white. No longer. For many years telephones were
available only in one color-black. No longer. For many years
only men smoked and women wore earrings. No longer. Now
women cut their hair short and men sport ponytails and wear
earrings.
Not only this, there are several changes technology has brought.
Today you need not be strikingly rich, but you will still need the
feel for a mobile phone, a fax, a PC etc .if you value time and
believe that technology can improve your quality of life.
Look at the opportunities for branding and offerings matching
products and services and to build Brand and Brand extensions
around them.
Will The Indian Brands Survive?
A product is what a company makes. A brand is what a
consumer buys. A brand is a set of perceived values, which the
customer develops for a particular product. It is not the
133
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
product, but its source, its meaning and its direction which
defines its identity on time and space.
In the light of the above mentioned, during the post liberalization period, the Indian brands have not done too badly. Look
at Telco, Onida, Vicco, Dabur, Deys Medical etc. who have been
able hold their own against multinational brands in their own
ways. At the same time some of the MNC brands such as Ray
Ban, Kellogs, Sony had initially fallen victims either to Indian
customers equations of value for money or fake rivals or the
engrained consumers habits.
On the other hand, local brands have one common advantage their intuitive understanding of the local markets. Some of
their winning strategies are indigenous engine research and
development (Telco), leveraging ethnic connections (Dabur and
Vicco), capturing niches (Deys medical with Keo Karpin),
encashing on the large-scale consumption of commodity items
(Tata Tea, Tata Salt, etc.) Strategic alliances (Titan with Timex for
plastic watches), consistent promotion (Amul, Frooti, Rasna
etc.).
To understand whether a brand will survive, you have to go to
the core-beyond the great product and the core benefits, the
continuous improvements per changing needs of the consumers, the continuous additions of distinctiveness through
effective communication; the image of the company behind it
and not least of all the people behind running the company
and the brand.
Effective Branding is the continuous process of wrapping
distinctiveness and add values around products and services
that are highly appealing, themselves, to offer consumers
quality, delight and feelings of faith and confidence in meeting
their aspirations. Finally it is only the fittest brands that survive
isnt it? The secret lies in invigorating and rejuvenating to keep
the Brands in a fit condition. More than a century old Brands
like Coke, Levis etc. are still young and kicking. Arent they?
V.V Rama Shastry
Activity
Identify 5 Indian companies and 5 that of foreign origin in
FMCG sector. Collect data for their related brands. Comment
on how they have been able to maintain their brand in the
market for past 5 years.
134
135
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Relationship Segmentation
Research International routinely segments consumers by brand
relationship. In a first-phase research effort, fifty to a hundred
subjects are interviewed, usually by phone. A series of openended questions are asked, including word associations, brand
personalization, characteristics of liked and disliked brands, and
a dialogue section (based on what the brand would say if it
were a person).
The first analysis stage involves scanning the data and forming
hypotheses about the types of relationships that exist. In the
second stage, respondents are allocated to relationship categories
on the basis of the hypothesized relationship groupings. In the
process, the relationship typology is refined. The relationships
are then formalized into specifications, and coders classify the
respondents into those relationships. The groups are then
profiled. Often the relationship groupings correspond to like,
dislike, and neutral segments. The dislike group for credit
cards, for example, perceived the brand as being snobbish; the
like group, in contrast, felt that they were accepted by the
brand.
Case Study
The Brand That is India - I
Private and pubic sector employees debate if the
government system is truly inefficient or if ...
Meera Seth
Akhila Goel listened quietly to the voices raging around her arguing, accusing, defending. How often had she heard these
allegations before! But this time, it came from her old
batchmates; men and women who had spent four years
together on campus, albeit 20 years ago! This year at the alumni
meet, Akhila had become the centre of their attention, thanks
to her public sector officer status.
Sarkari madam, kuch karo. Make this government work! went
the refrain. Akhila, a senior officer in a government department,
saw that her friends from the private sector (PS) had started
some sort of a government bashing plan. A fresh outburst of
complaints followed. The government is inefficient, corrupt
and slothful. It works only if you know someone high up...,
someone said. That is when Akhila broke her silence.
How is your PS any different from the government sector (GS)
on efficiency, service or even corruption? Even the PSs customer
service works only if you know someone high up! Akhila said.
Even I have examples to prove my point. When my washing
machine broke down, we called the customer service seven
times. Nothing happened. Then my husband, who knew the
companys CMD, rang him up. A seven-person team promptly
came and replaced the machine. Now what do you say?
You compare a Whirlpool or an LG with the government. But
understand, the governments target market is 1 billion-strong;
it cannot pick and choose according to SEC classes! Naturally, it
will get far more complaints than an LG! Given its smaller size,
the PS should be able to redress each and every complaint.
Besides, your mantra of customer service didnt work despite
all your foreign tie-ups. So why compare the two?
More arguments followed. Rudra Aggarwal, a practicing
consultant, said: Inefficiency is rampant in the PS too. For
136
Questions
1. Comment on the Brand equity of the brand India
2. What do you think are the critical factors for this
positioning of brand India.
3. Give a plan to reposition brand India in terms of products
and services.
Notes
LESSON 21:
BRANDING TO MAKE TANGIBLE
THE INTANGIBLE
Services
The yellow and blue stripes in IKEA stores, for example, not
only allude to the Scandinavian tradition of the company but
also guide consumers through the different sections. The
design of the surroundings also plays a socialization function,
informing consumers about their expected behaviour, the roles
137
BRAND MANAGMENT
Objectives
CHAPTER 6:
SERVICE BRANDS
BRAND MANAGMENT
Empirical analysis has shown that not only are the actions of
employees fundamental to a high-quality delivery of the service,
but also that the morale of staff influence consumer satisfaction with a service brand. A study about a British bank revealed
that the branches with the lowest staff turnover and absenteeism were also those with the highest levels of profitability and
customer retention. A good example of the link between
satisfied staff and satisfied consumers is shown by Southwest
Airlines. In 1995, the employees of this airline paid $60 000 for
an advertisement in USA Today to thank Herb Kelleher, their
CEO, for the success of the company.
138
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
140
The end result is communications that give life to the positioning. The goal is to make the intangible tangible. Thus, in the
absence of a physical product, marketing communications
becomes the product. The branding of investment products is
not a magic bullet. In a field with over 8,000 players, it can be
difficult to fashion a distinctive identity for mutual fund
companies that have little to set them apart. But for a company
with a story to tell and real value to add, branding can be a
potent marketing tool ... one that, like product advertising, can
make effective use of both information and emotion.
Its just that, in this challenging industry, emotion can only
attract the customer. It takes information to close the sale.
Article
Brand Processes, Not People
You brand the process. You NEVER brand the person.
Branding people offends their humanity. Nobody wants to
become like the brands they purchase. What a loss of power.
Nobodys going to turn ME in to a robot. And yet there is
no escaping it. To have a strong brand in a service economy, you
need human beings to deliver.
How do you get that to happen? Lets take a step back before
we answer that.
What makes a brand strong in the first place? If you think
about it, a fundamentally paradoxical thing: the consistent
personality.
Personality is uniquely human. People have personalities.
Consistency is artificial. Only a machine can be the same all
the time.
Now read this:
Personality + Consistency = Great Brand
So you go into, lets say, the Nike store because you will
experience a certain personality. Every single time. But its also
nice to know that you can leave the store without any commitment. Leave Nike, go to Reebok. Nike doesnt care. Because
Nike Has Personality, But Its Not A Real Person.
And this is EXACTLY why you cant just brand people the
way you brand products. Because guess what? People do have
feelings. Once you have formed a relationship with a person,
the person does care if you leave. They get angry if youre rude.
They run away if you smell. So how does it make any sense to
try and turn a human customer service representative into a
computer hologram?
Branding techniques are geared toward humanizing products.
But you cant just transfer the same techniques to people. Just
because you can lend personality to a car, doesnt mean you can
freeze a human personality in time and space. Anyway, even if
you could, why would you want to? Just like I dont want to
become a robot, I dont want to buy things from a robot either.
Neither do you, I expect.
141
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Service Continuum
What is a brand anyway? They will ask. Who cares? I dont feel
like a Coca-Cola. And you say: Our brand is nothing more or
less than the way others perceive us. We have a brand already.
And then you tell them, or better yet SHOW THEM (use a
video) what others see when they look at the company. The
moment of truth.
How do we make it better? They will ask after that. And then
you say: Help us! Collaborate! Make the brand together!
You go on to explain that OUR efforts will:
Pure
tangible
good; no
service
Milk
Hybrid:
equal part
goods and
service
Major
service
with
minor
good
Computer
Meal at
& Warranty Restaurant
Hair
Styling
Tangible
goods with
some
services
Legal
Advice
Figure 12-1:
Elements in
a Service
Encounter
Pure
service;
no tangible
good
Marketing Strategies
Discuss
Some writers argue that service providers often miss
opportunities to increase customer satisfaction and loyalty
because they do not exert enough effort to tangibilize their
services. Pick three frequently purchased services and illustrate
how they are tangibilized and how they might be better
tangibilized
Figure 12-2:
Three Types of Marketing
in Service Industries
Summary
What is a service?
A product characterized by:
n Intangibility
n Inseparability
n Variability
n Perishability
n These are the characteristics that distinguish
142
BRAND MANAGMENT
Marketing Strategies
GAPS Model
People E m p loyees
n Service providers are boundary spanners
n
n
Information transfer
Representation
Discuss
The University of Wyoming provides services to various
publics.What consumer groups do Universities serve?
Using the Service Quality Model as your guide, discuss specific
examples of different service gaps for a particular type of
consumer.
Notes
People Employees
Production Line Approach
n Low cost, high volume
n Transaction, short term
n Routine, simple
n Predictable, few surprises
n Theory X managers,
Empowerment Approach
n Differentiation, customized,
personalized
n Relationship, long term
n Nonroutine, complex
n Unpredictable, many
surprises
n Theory Y managers,
employees with high growth
needs, high social needs,
and strong interpersonal
skills
People Customers
n Must understand perceived service quality
n Dimensions of service quality
n Reliability
n Responsiveness
n Acceptance
n Empathy
n Tangibles
n Often studied by:
n Gaps model
n Importance Performance Results
n Often managed through:
n Database marketing
n Reward and recognition programs
143
CHAPTER 7:
LESSON 22:
UNIT 6
RETAILER ISSUES IN BRANDING
RESPONSE OF WEAK AND STRONG
MANUFACTURERS
BRAND MANAGMENT
Objectives
Upon completion of this chapter, you should be able to
understand:
There are high price gaps in the market and retailers have the
resources to invest in high-quality own label development;
Variability in quality is low and distribution is welldeveloped; the credibility of a branded product is low
because of frequent and deep price promotions as opposed
to the increasing credibility of own labels;
c.
Weaker brand manufacturers, particularly those lacking a longterm planning horizon, were unable to find a convincing
argument to counter retailers demands for extra discounts.
They were worried about being de-listed and saw no other
alternative but to agree to disproportionately large discounts.
Many erroneously viewed this as part of their promotional
budget and failed to appreciate the implication of biasing their
promotion budget to the trade at the expense of consumers.
Retailers investment in own labels brought them up to the
standard of manufacturers brands. For example, a Lockwoods
subsidiary supplying own labels invested in new equipment,
which cut down the soaking and blanching of baked beans
from the traditional 20 hours to less than an hour, before most
of its major competitors. With increasing investment in own
labels and less support behind manufacturers brands, consumers began to perceive fewer differences between brands and own
labels, and choice began to be influenced more by availability,
price and point of sale displays. As retailers had more control
over these influencing factors, weaker brands lost market share
and their profitability fell.
Weak manufacturers brands were not generating sufficient
returns to fund either maintenance programmes or investments
in new products. At the next negotiating round with retailers, it
was made clear that their sales were deteriorating and again they
were forced to buy shelf space through even larger discounts. In
the vicious circle shown in the figure, they were soon on the
spiral of rapid decline.
144
S. Ramesh Kumar
Exploring the motivation behind a consumers purchase
decision can give marketers useful insights, says S. Ramesh
Kumar.
145
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
146
Akais approach
Brand Loyalty
Some consumers use the same retail outlet or purchase the
same brand of product on most occasions or on a regular basis.
147
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Utilise the store more than other stores or buy the brand
more frequently. This will be
This is not to say there is just one type of loyalty; loyalty may be
expressed for one Or more brands. If we assume that there are
five brands, or five properties of brands, that the consumer can
choose from - A, B, C, D and E - then we can further segment
the demand, based upon brand loyalty, as follows
1. Hard core loyals. These consumers buy one brand all the
time and demonstrate strong allegiance. They would
therefore on five occasions buy AAAAA, because they have
undivided loyalty to the brand.
2. Soft core loyals. These consumers will be loyal to two or
three brands. Thus a buying pattern of ABABA represents
a consumer whose loyalties are divided between two
competing brands.
3. Shifting loyals. This type of consumer shifts their loyalty
from one brand to another. The buying pattern AACCC
suggests a consumer whose loyalty has shifted from one
brand A to brand C.
4. Switchers. These consumers show no loyalty to anyone
brand. The pattern ABCDE suggests a switcher who is
prone to buy when there is deal being given (price offers,
sales, extra benefits). They may equally be a variety shopper
and wants something different each time they purchase.
Brand loyalty can be explained in a number of ways: habit;
maximisation of value over price; a cost may be involved in
switching brand; the availability of substitutes; perceived risk of
alternatives is high; past satisfaction with the brand; the
frequency of usage; influence of the media; the awareness of
the alternatives; and so on. For obvious reasons, the loyal
customer is of key importance to the retail industry, especially
those loyal customers who are high spenders or provide longterm patronage. Loyalty schemes are being introduced in an
attempt to retain customers over longer periods of time. Such
schemes are often based upon database programmes which
provide benefits such as for those with loyalty shopping cards
whose expenditure and frequency of purchase can be assessed.
The database can identify individuals birthdays, when a person
is 21 for example, or it can identify lapsed customers to whom a
special offer can be made. In addition, the information can be
used to understand the patterns of preference and demand at
different periods so as to convert soft core loyals and other
customers, into hard core loyals.
Positioning of A Brand
The positioning of a brand places it in its competitive context.
It may be determined on the basis of product usage, for
instance Muller yoghurt may be positioned as a substitute for
dairy cream or as a childs pudding, alongside ice cream.
148
149
BRAND MANAGMENT
place in the minds of the consumer and counteract the proclamations and cal1s for attention by the competitors.
BRAND MANAGMENT
17
4. What brands, sizes, etc. are available at this store. (In stores
with very large selections only a general description of
available products is necessary.)
5. What are the price ranges for this product in this store?
6. Optional Bonus Question:
Find a manager in the store or department and ask them:
a. How important is this product to this store (relative
volume sold)?
Miniwarehouse mall
Loosely planned centers that lease space to retailers
running retail stores out of warehouse bays
Nonanchored malls
Do not have traditional department store anchors;
instead combine off-price and category killer stores in a
power center format
18
Types of Locations
Free-standing structures
Position relative to competition
Customer access and parking
Retail Positioning
Identifying an unserved or underserved market
segment and serving it through a strategy that
distinguishes the retailer from others in the minds
of consumers in that segment
Neiman Marcus
Store Image
Atmospherics
The physical elements in a stores design that appeal to
consumers emotions and encourage buying
Interior layout, colors, furnishings, and lighting
Exterior storefront and entrance design, display
windows, and traffic congestion
19
150
BRAND MANAGMENT
Walgreens
20
Notes
151
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 23:
BRAND POSITIONING STRATEGIES
Topics Covered
Components of positioning, Consumer segmentation,
Perceptual mapping, Brand benefits and attributes, Advertising
and Branding, Repositioning, Role of agencies in Branding,
Differential Advantage and Positioning strategies, Brand
Architecture.
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Brand positioning: Its meaning and scope and importance
Position Or Perish!!!
Have you ever thought what makes Kelloggs different from
Maggi. The difference lies in positioning. Let us see how this
magical concept plays a major role in making any brand a success
or God forbid a failure!!!
Introuction
The famous 5 ps of marketing folklore (product, place, price,
promotion & packaging) were fine tools for implementing
packaged goods brand positionings - and the basic formula still
has its role in FMCG assignments. But today we are entering
the era of customer brands where company and brand are
one and the same. In this scenario the company culture &
values become a crucial factor in the solution: finding and
harnessing whats there already or setting out to create values
and practices which support and manifest the positioning.
152
In marketing the consumer is king - but the idea that consumers alone should
dictate brand positioning has always been
an over-simplification! Customer feedback via research is vital - but to this has to
be added analysis of the company
and its inherent capabilities, plus an sharp understanding of the competitors already
in the market - their strengths and
weak spots
Positioning key points:
It is a strategic, not a tactical, activity
It is aimed at developing a strategic, sustainable competitive advantage
It is concerned with managing perceptions
Brand image and reputation are the result of the positioning process
153
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
154
A Great Brand Knows Itself - Anyone who wants to build a great brand has
to first understand who they are. The starting point is identifying the unique
essence of the product, the company. Then that essence should be tested
against how the consuming public for that product or service perceives it, what
they like or dislike about the brand, and what they associate as the very core of
the brand concept.
Discussion Questions
1. Apply the categorization model to a product category other
than beverages. How do consumers make decisions
regarding whether or not to buy the product and how do
they arrive at their final brand decision? What are the
implications for brand equity management for the brands in
the category? How does it affect positioning for example?
The financial services category is another good category to
examine. Banks and brokerage firms offer consumers
similar services within their respective categories, but they
differ on many levels, including price, level of service,
comprehensiveness, special features, and incentives. It is
important for all financial services brands to provide trust,
dependability, and income generation as points-of-parity;
points-of-difference may be customer service, ease of use,
location, or Internet accessibility.
2. Pick a brand. Describe its breadth and depth of awareness.
Answers may vary.
3. Pick a category basically dominated by two main brands.
Evaluate the positioning of each brand. Who are their
target markets? What are their main points-of-parity and
points-of-difference? Have they defined their positioning
correctly? How might it be improved?
Some two-brand dominated categories include ready-todrink orange juice (Tropicana and Real), batteries (Eveready/
Energizer and Duracell), ketchup (Heinz and Kissan), and
light bulbs (Suryaand Philips).
4. Can you think of any other negatively correlated attributes
and benefits? Can you think of any other strategies to deal
with negatively correlated attributes and benefits?
Other negatively correlated attributes might include
advanced technology vs. ease of use; sophisticated vs.
generally available; elegance vs. utility; ease of maintainence
vs. complexity; stylish vs. common.
5. Think of one of your favorite brands. Can you come up
with a brand mantra to capture its positioning?
Answers may vary.
BRAND MANAGMENT
Brand Positioning
Brand Positioning
Brand Positioning
155
BRAND MANAGMENT
Notes
156
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Consumer segmentation: Its basis and importance for
positioning.
After studying Brand Positioning, Consumer segmentation is
the continuing link. You cannot do effective Positioning of
your brand without understanding Consumer segmentation.
Non users are people who dont use any product in the category
as they have some negative attitude about the category.
The Model
Having investigated the various consumer groups, it is apparent
that each of these segments reacts differently to different
consumer promotion techniques. Hence we now identify the
promotional tools that must be administered in each of these
categories.
AGE GROUP
<15
Current Loyal
15-30
>30
1. Reinforce behavior
a) Bonus
a)
Gifts
a) Continuity
Program
2. Increase usage
b) Contest
b)
Bonus
b) Coupons
Intense
Competitive
Loyal
Force Trials
Bonus
Gifts
Continuity Program
Value Seekers
Persuade to switch to
better valued brand
Bonus
Gifts
Continuity Program
Habit Buyers
Induce Trials
Contests
Bonus
Coupons
Value
Switchers
Contests
Sample
Contests
Occasional
Users
Continuity Program
Sample
Sample
Variety Seekers
Contests
Continuity
Program
Coupon
Price Buyer
Contests
Sample
Contests
Non-users
Contests
Continuity
Program
Coupon
157
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 24:
CONSUMER SEGMENTATION
BRAND MANAGMENT
Conclusion
Given the intense competition that characterizes todays markets
as well as media clutter, no brand can afford to ignore promos.
What is required today while designing promotions is a
Strategic focus. The promotion must be in sync with the other
elements of the marketing mix. If designed and implemented
properly promotions would become yet another weapon in the
Brand managers armory for Brand building.
Another point that must be understood is that we cannot see
Consumer promotions in complete isolation. Promotions
alone cannot be used for Brand building for any reasonable
length of time. Towards this end this paper helps one understand the ways in which the promotions affect the facets of the
brand. From the brand managers point of view this is not a
quick fix solution. The learning from this has to be applied
keeping in mind his own brands position in the life cycle and
its marketing strategy. He must first identify the areas where his
brand is lacking (say by carrying out a conjoint analysis on his
product and his brand and comparing the two), and then lay
out the objectives he wants to achieve from the promo. Once
the objectives are in place he can design the promo. One more
important aspect that comes out about promotions is that
most of the promotions lack innovation. This seems to be the
single most important reason for the success behind any
promo. Brand managers must come out of this paradigm and
dare to be innovative.
This model has been our endeavor towards developing a
relationship between consumer promotion and brand equity. it
has been an initiation of the journey of discovery for us. We
shall feel amply rewarded if this model is able to generate a
thought process in the corporates towards developing a synergy
between the consumer promotions and brand equity.
158
Target Audience
Goal as a marketer: spark the emotional response that creates
the brand relationship and leads to sales and brand leadership
Two steps to finding the audience and what sparks the right
response:
1. Market Segmentation-Process of narrowing down a
brands target audience to a bullseye that helps make
marketing efforts more efficient
2. Defining Insight-Just as important as finding the audience
is to find the little kernels of truth that identify your
most important audience targets and give you the means to
begin to communicate most effectively with them
Market Segmentation
Frederick Newell, The New Rules of Marketing: How to Use
One-to-One Relationship Marketing to Be the Leader in Your
Industry
Four major groups of segmentation variables:
1. Geographic
Region
County size
Urban/suburban
Climate
Seasons
Zip
2. Demographic
Age
Sex
Family size
Family life cycle
Income
Occupation
Education
Religion
Race
Nationality
3. Behavioral
Purchase occasion
Benefits sought
User status
Usage rate
Loyalty status
Readiness stage
Attitude toward product
Actual purchase
4. Psychographic
Lifestyle
Social class
Personality
Market Segmentation
In todays economic environment, limited marketing budgets
are the rule, not the exception. One way to maximize marketing
ROI is to make sure you are targeting the right customers, with
the right products and messages, at the right time. Since
technology markets are not homogenous, market segmentation
is an effective way to divide customers into groups based on
similar needs, attitudes, or behaviors.
Lets be practical: why waste precious marketing budget on
advertising, selling, and even developing for customer groups
that frankly are not likely to buy your products-if customer
groups that are likely to do so exist?
Before you dismiss the concept, ask yourself the following
question. When was the last time you re-visited your market
segmentation assumptions? If you segment solely by vertical
industry and company size, wed hazard a guess and say that it
has probably been at least three years-perhaps even more.
Market Segmentation
Methodology
Demographic
Needs
Attitudes
Company size
Industry-specific trends
Leading edgeness
Vertical industry
Brand loyalty
Brand preference
Technology requirements
Channel preferences
Purchase process
Outsourcing propensity
159
BRAND MANAGMENT
According to Newell
BRAND MANAGMENT
Segment A
Segment B
Segment C
Segment D
Leading edgeness
Low
Low
Mid
High
Low
High
Mid
High
Adoption of virtual
organizational structure
(potential demand driver)
None
Low
High
High
Low
Low
Mid
Mid
None
Low
Low
High
Under 500
employees
Mixed
Under 500
employees
Retail Publishing
2,500+ employees
500 to 2,500
employees
Insurance
Transportation
Professional
services
Healthcare
Manufacturing
Education
Government
Financial services
Findings
Results in Action
160
Segmentation models also lead to exciting marketing opportunities in these days of e-marketing. Different customer groups
can be targeted with different Web sites or personalization
techniques. Some companies even develop on-line communities
to support the different customer groups they target.
BRAND MANAGMENT
161
CHAPTER 8:
LESSON 25:
UNIT 7
COMPONENTS OF BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND ARCHITECTURE AND
BRAND PORTFOLIO
BRAND MANAGMENT
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Brand Architecture: Its meaning, scope and importance
b. Brand Portfolio: How big companies maintain it in the
market
Introduction
Did you know that FMCG giant Hindustan Lever Ltd (HLL)
owns 110 brands with 850 types of packing for its various
products? When you go in any ordinary kirana store or in a big
super market, 8 out of 10 products you select will be HLLs
products. An obvious question that will come in your mind,
How HLL has succeeded in building such strong brands? How
could they manage such diversed brands operating in different
market context? When HLL started operating in India, the
Prime importance was to create strong brands by developing
clear, insightful identities and brand building programs that
makes an impact on the consumers mind. Not only HLL but
virtually all firms have multiple brands and they manage them
as a team to work together and to help each other and to avoid
getting in each others way. Brand Architecture is the vehicle by
which the brand team functions as a unit to create synergy, clarity
and leverage. So if you think of each brand of a company as a
football player, Brand architecture assumes a coachs role by
placing each player at the right position and making them
function as a team rather than a collection of players. So lets
define Brand Architecture and understand the concept with
some examples.
Brand architecture is an organizing structure of brand
portfolio that specifies the brand roles and relationship
among the brands and different product market context.
It is mainly defined by the three major dimensions viz.
Portfolio roles, Product market context roles and the Portfolio
structure.
Brand portfolio: Brand architecture involves the management
of brand portfolio. Brand portfolio includes all the types of
brand viz. Brands and subbrands as well as co-brands with
other firms. for example. The brand portfolio of Hindustan
Lever Ltd. Consisting of 110 brands with 950 of different types
of packs, which are operating under different market context
like healthcare, personal care, breverages, etc. The decision
parameters are should one or more brands be added or deleted?
A brand portfolio can be strengthened by the addition of brand
keeping in view the portfolio perspective. Similarly brands can
be deleted by identifying the superfluous brands which are
contributing nothing to the brand portfolio. When Prudent
toothpaste was launched by Parle, it was not able to create
sufficient customer base in the oral care business so Parle had
dumped Prudent brand for its brand portfoilo management.
162
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Augmented Product
Beliefs &
Core
Values
Very meaningful in
differentiating our Brand but
very difficult to deliver
consistently to our
consumers
Expected Product
Benefits
Generic Product
CORE BENEFIT
Types of Brands
Features &
Attributes
Types of Brands
Generic product: item characterized
by plain label, with no advertising and
no brand name
Manufacturers brand: brand name
owned by a manufacturer or other
producer (Dr. Pepper or IBC Root Beer)
Types of Brands
Private brands: brand name placed on
products marketed by wholesalers and
retailers (Sams Choice beverage (WalMart) or ACE brand tools)
PRODUCT IDENTIFICATION
Brand name: part of a brand consisting of
words or letters that form a means to
identify and distinguish a firms offering
Brand mark: symbol or pictorial design
that identifies a product
Generic name: branded name that has
become a generically descriptive term for a
class of products (e.g., nylon, aspirin,
kerosene, and zipper)
PRODUCT IDENTIFICATION
Trade mark: brand to which the owner
legally claims exclusive access
Trademark protection confers the exclusive
right to user brand name, trade mark, and
any slogan or product name abbreviation
Case Study
The Coca-Cola Brand and Sponsorship
If Coca-Cola were the name of a person, how would you
describe that person? How does that person make you feel?
Consumers often prefer products that have a strong, positive
image. An important ingredient of this image will be the
associations that are evoked in the mind of the consumer. The
brand personality is what people think and feel, consciously
and subconsciously, about a company identity or product and is
described the same way as you would a person.
It is necessary to create the right image i.e. one that closely
matches consumers feelings and expectations of what the
product should be like. Marketing managers try to build on
associations between products and other aspects of life.
Sponsorship is one way of building these brand associations.
Sponsorship involves providing financial support, creative
input, media support, and experience to an important event or
activity organised by another party. In return, the company
receives a public opportunity to be seen to support and be
associated with an event, activity or person. Sponsorship is a
crucial part of a public relations strategy because it is possible to
reach a target audience with a specific message.
Brand Positioning
Coca-Colas brand personality reflects the positioning of its
brand. The process of positioning a brand or product is a
complex managerial task and must be done over time using all
the elements of the marketing mix. Positioning is in the mind
of the consumer and can be described as how the product is
considered by that consumer. When researching the positioning
of a product, consumers are often asked how they would
describe that product if it were a person. The purpose of this is
to develop a character statement. This can ensure that
consumers have a clear view of the brand values that make up
the brand personality, just like the values and beliefs that make
up a person. Many people see Coca-Cola as a part of their daily
life. This affinity between the brand and the consumer leads to a
high degree of loyalty and makes the purchasing decision easier.
Brand positioning guides what will be communicated in the
companys advertising, while the character statement guides
how a message should be delivered or put across.
Sponsorship and the Marketing Mix
The Marketing Mix is the name placed on the 4Ps of
marketing: Product, Place, Price, and Promotion. It is this
fourth element, Promotion, which is focused on in this case
study. This involves communicating the benefits of a product
to increase sales and ultimately profits. There are four main
methods of promoting the benefits of a brand.
Advertising
Personal Selling
Public Relations & Sponsorship (PR)
Sales Promotion
The combination of these four methods constitutes the
Promotion Mix. Public Relations is about communicating
with the media to create good publicity for a firm or its
products. The media then communicate these activities to the
public.
Public Relations
165
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
International Sponsorship
Coca-Colas powerful brand personality has become a vehicle
for promotion in its own right, sponsoring many events both
on a global and local level. The company has long been
associated with global events such as The Olympic Games, The
FIFA World Cup, Rugby World Cup and Special Olympics.
Coke has also been linked to world fairs and national exhibitions since 1905. With the Olympics blossoming in popularity
and complexity, increased
attention has
been turned to
serving the
growing
crowds and to
supplying the
needs of the
athletes and organising committees. In many countries where
Olympic associations lack full government sponsorship local
bottlers of Coca-Cola donate funds to aid potential Olympians as the partnership of Coca-Cola and the Olympics
continues to grow.
Coca-Cola was the official sponsor of the Olympics 2000
Games held in Sydney maintaining an unbroken presence at the
games since 1928. The company has already contracted to
sponsor both the Summer and Winter Games through to 2008.
Coca-Cola will be the official global sponsor of the Special
Olympics to be held in Ireland in 2003 (this is the first time the
games will be hosted outside the US). As the Olympic
Movements longest-standing corporate partner, Coca-Cola has
aided the evolution of games together with more than 190
National Olympic Committees assisting thousands of athletes
in their training.
Football
Coca-Cola also sets out to support football at every level of the
sport. On a global basis Coca-Cola has been a sponsor of the
World Cup since the 1978 tournament in Argentina through to
France in 1998
and into the new
millennium. In
Europe, CocaCola is involved
166
Rugby
Coca-Cola has also become the long-term sports sponsor of
the Rugby World Cup. The Company has been a sponsor since
1995. This is the first time for a sponsor to commit to more
than one Rugby World Cup. The Company wants to
communicate that Coca-Cola is the refreshment that stimulates
and revitalises rugby fans, and enhances the group experience
and enjoyment of watching the game.
Football
As football is about fun, excitement, passion, pride and shared
enjoyment Coca-Cola tries to match this feeling within its
brand. The company supports local football because it matches
its customers interests. This market driven approach involves
listening to what people say and giving them what they need
and want.
Coca-Cola is also the official soft drink sponsor of GAA
providing strong support for the International Rules football
series. The Association President Joe McDonagh stressed the
importance of this sponsorship as it ensured a successful series.
Locally Coca-Cola supports and is present at all the national
hurling and football games. The brand is also present at GAA
schools level matches i.e. Leinster Secondary Schools Hurling
and Football Championships, Feile na nGeal, Feile Peile and
under 14 Hurling and Football.
Form and Fusion Design Awards
Life experiences are created for customers around interests. By
getting involved in the daily experiences and by being aware of
what is relevant in the lives of local target markets, such as
music and fashion, Coca-Cola can build on these brand
associations. The Coca-Cola Form
and Fusion Design Awards is a
cutting edge, visually exciting and
highly educational competition
developed for students in transition
or senior year in secondary schools
in Ireland.
Students are encouraged to work in
groups, using their own skills and
imagination, to design and create
Conclusion
It is necessary to create the right brand image that closely
matches consumers life experiences and feelings. Sponsorship
is one way of building these associations. Through events such
as Coca-Colas Form and Fusion Design Awards and sporting
events a brand manager can ensure that its product image is
made relevant to the target audience.
Sourcehttp://www.business2000.ie/
Notes
167
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 26:
PERCEPTUAL MAPPING
Objectives
The learning objective: after this lecture you should be able to
understand:
a. Perceptual Mapping: Its techniques and importance to
Branding
Perceptual Mapping
When marketers and advertising professionals began to display
their interest in the perceptions of target consumer segments,
the next natural step was to measure those perceptions. This
constituted an open invitation to mathematical psychologists to
move in which they did. Today, you cannot play the positioning
game without perceptual mapping.
What perceptual mapping does is to represent consumer
perceptions-in (usually) two-dimensional space so that the
manager can readily see where his own brand is positioned in
the mind of his prospect and in relation to other brands. The
concept of the consumers perceptual space forms the theoretical
basis of positioning. It is this concept, which distinguishes
positioning and sets it apart as a major contribution to
marketing theory and practice. Perceptual mapping helps to
make this concept operational.
Perceptual mapping is a graphics technique used by marketers
that attempts to visually display the perceptions of customers
or potential customers. Typically the position of a product,
product line, brand, or company is displayed relative to their
competition.
We can say that Perceptual maps can have any number of
dimensions but the most common is two dimensions. Any
more is a challenge to draw and confusing to interpret.
Product or perceptual mapping refers to methods to analyze
and understand consumer perceptions of products. The
products can be almost any identifiable object, including
consumer products (toothpaste, cars, over-the-counter drugs),
Web sites, industrial products (computers, tools), institutions
(corporations, hospitals, magazine publishers), activities
(vacation spots, movies) or people (entertainers, political
candidates).
Product mapping produces a picture or map of a market. The
map shows how products are perceived on specific features or
attributes such as reputation, price, quality etc.
Product maps show which products compete in the consumers
mind and suggests how a product can be positioned to
maximize preference and sales.
168
felt Porsche was the sportiest and classiest of the cars in the
study (top right corner). They felt Plymouth was most practical
and conservative (bottom left corner).
Cars that are positioned close to each other are seen as similar
on the relevant dimensions by the consumer. For example
consumers see Buick, Chrysler, and Oldsmobile as similar. They
are close competitors and form a competitive grouping. A
company considering the introduction of a new model will
look for an area on the map free from competitors. Some
perceptual maps use different size circles to indicate the sales
volume or market share of the various competing products.
Displaying consumers perceptions of related products is only
half the story. Many perceptual maps also display consumers
ideal points. These points reflect ideal combinations of the two
dimensions as seen by a consumer.
A company considering introducing a new product will look for
areas with a high density of ideal points. They will also look for
areas without competitive rivals. This is best done by placing
both the ideal points and the competing products on the same
map.
Some maps plot ideal vectors in stead of ideal points. The map
below, displays various aspirin products as seen on the dimensions of effectiveness and gentleness. It also shows two ideal
vectors. The slope of the ideal vector indicates the prefered ratio
of the two dimensions by those consumers within that
segment. This study indicates there is one segment that is more
concerned with effectiveness than harshness, and another
segment that is more interested in gentleness than strength.
169
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
An Example:
Using a Perceptual Map for Competitor Analysis
A touch of class / a car to be proud to own
Conservative
looking /
appeals to
older people
170
BMW
Chrysler
Buick
Oldsmobile
Ford
Dodge
Perceptual mapping techniques identify the underlying dimensions that differentiate consumer perceptions of products and
the posit ions of existing products on the dimensions
Consumers are asked to rate a set of brands along given
attributes or benefits or they may be asked merely to judge, by
pairs, how similar or dissimilar the brands are.
Porsche
Lincoln
Cadillac
Mercedes
Pontiac
Chevrolet
Nissan
Toyota
Fun to drive
/ sporty look
/ appeals to
younger
people
Plymouth
VW
& Parsons/Marketing
Practical / Dalrymple
affordable
/ good gas mileage
Attribute Methods
Input the data into a statistical program and run the factor
analysis procedure. The computer will yield a set of
underlying attributes (or factors).
171
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
172
Strategy Decisions
The strategy decisions, which follow such preference mapping,
are the following:
a. When we know the ideal point or preferred position of
our target segment, as revealed through such mapping, we
can judge whether the perceived position of our brand
needs to be brought closer to that ideal point. This may
involve some change in its advertising to create a revised
perception of the brand more in line with that ideal point.
It may also involve some corresponding changes in the
physical features of the brand. (The easiest to change is the
pack design.)
b. On the other hand, we may decide to change the preferred
position or ideal point of our target segment and bring that
ideal point closer to the perceived position of our brand.
This is admittedly more difficult. In the lower-priced
transistor radio category it was found, at one time, that
consumers preferred models, which offered high volume of
sound. The marketer in question decided to change the
preference of this target segment or degree of importance
attached to the two benefits by that group or segment of
consumers.
This can be portrayed on a map, which also indicates the
characteristics of each cluster or segment. The illustration is
portrayed in figure 2-11.
Summary
Positioning has come a long way from the late sixties when it
first caught the attention of practitioners and academics. The
concept itself has become somewhat better understood and
more widely accepted for its theoretical as well as practical value.
Positioning has four components.
The first component is the product class or product category in
which the brand is to operate. To give a specific name to such a
category is not always easy since the boundaries are fluid, e.g. a
moisturizing lotion may decide to position itself in the cold
cream market. .
173
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Case Study
The Strategy Leap of Miller Lite
No discussion of positioning is complete without a reference to
Miller Lite beer, hailed as the most successful new beer
introduced in the United States since 1900. The following
account is based on a videocassette produced by the Centre for
Advertising Services of the Interpublic Group in the USA.
Miller Lite was not the first light beer in the USA. Two earlier
attempts to introduce a light beer had been made. In 1968,
Gablinger was introduced as a diet beer but failed. In 1970
Meister Brau Lite was introduced as a diet beer and met the
same fate.
When Miller decided to launch a light beer they first analyzed,
with the help of the Interpublic Groups Research organization,
why the other light beers had failed. The ads of those brands
seemed to be aimed at women and some, in fact, showed a slim
woman drinking the beer.
Mr Van Bortel of the Interpublic Group found a very significant fact. Despite the sissy looking advertising, Gablinger light
beer had high initial trial among real beer drinks, the 30% who
consumed 80% of the beer. For any beer to succeed it had to
appeal to the heavy user; that was the only way to attain enough
volumes to win shelf space and earn profit.
The heavy beer drinker was not a weight watcher, he was not
interested in the low-calorie appeal-so why did he try Gablinger
in such large numbers? What was he looking for?
174
Notes
Objectives
Upon completion of this Lesson, you should be able to
understand:
a. The benefits of branding
b. Strategic relevance of branding.
c.
175
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 27:
BRAND BENEFITS AND ATTRIBUTES
BRAND MANAGMENT
The more loyal the customer base and stronger the brand,
the more likely customers forgive the company in the event
of a mistake (bad byway experience such as high incidents
of road construction during their travels)
A Brand
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Is a living memory
6.
176
BRAND MANAGMENT
mental patent. This is nothing other than the just reward for
innovation, making an effort, and taking risks. A snapshot of a
given market will often show similar products. A dynamic
vision, however reveals given market will often show similar
products. A dynamic vision, however, reveals who has
innovated and pulled the competition along in the wake of its
success.
BRAND
Brand Relationship
Brand Image
Brand Associations
Brand Looks
Brand Symbol
PRODUCT
a. Brand Name
b. Brand Associations
c.
Brand Attitude
177
BRAND MANAGMENT
USP
Psychological
benefits
Combination of rational
and psychological
benefits
Positioning on Attributes
Most brands make use of attribute positioning in some way or
the other. It may be worthwhile to analyse under what
situations marketers may benefit by positioning brands on
attributes. In order to have clarity in the discussion, rational
benefits could be initially considered. In a number of categories
(toothpastes, tea, softdrinks, television, refrigerators and cars to
name a few), consumers get used to a single benefit during the
introductory stage of the product life cycle (there are only a few
178
Attribute
Rational
Benefits
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Among a businesss primary market, developing a strong, threedimensional brand achieves positive differentiation from
competitors in a marketplace, where product differentiation can
often be minimal. Competitive advantage can be gained from
adjusting the dimensions of the brand for a range of distinct
client segments at different times, enabling clients to choose a
brand they believe suits their needs.
Brands consist of a number of different facets, some of which
are more important to communicate than others, because the
former help differentiate the brand and attract the target
audience. In order of importance from the top, these are:
Brand essence
Brand values
Brand personality
Service attributes
180
Objectives
Upon completion of this Lesson, you should be able to:
a. Understand the importance of advertising in branding.
b. Explain how advertising works.Creating brands through
advertising, branding Vs small business advertisements
We shall today understand the importance of advertising in
branding and analyze whether advertisement is actually a means
to brand success. Think about a brand you like the most. If
Allen solly shirts is what you fancy wearing it for occasions then
think for a while whether you would still go for the shirt if
there was no advertisement of it? Do then associate yourself
with that man with an aura of success all over him? No !
Advertising is an investment in growth, generating opportunities, positioning a brand and reaching thousands of potential
181
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 28:
ADVERTISING AND BRANDING
BRAND MANAGMENT
182
Awareness (have
heard of Co.)
Image (Luxury, alljet overseas service)
Preference (Would
seriously consider
for next trip)
Before as
campaign
38%
After 6 months
46%
After 12
months
52%
9%
17%
24%
13%
15%
21%
183
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Learning Outcomes
In situations where purchase decisions of a consumer is a
multi-stage one when he or she first begins with broad
categories and then chooses narrower categories until finally
a product is chosen, then a decision tree is a useful tool to
analyze the process. Such an approach is common in buying
durable goods.
If decision of all parties can be observed and if all the
previous decisions can be recalled, then the use of backward
induction allows us to determine the choices at each node.
The decision tree can be generalized to situations where
decisions at alternate nodes
are made by different players and where there the choices may be
deliberately random.
185
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
186
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 29:
SUCCESSFUL REPOSITIONING
Objectives
Upon completion of this Lesson, you should be able to:
This lesson requires you to use all the knowledge you have
gathered in brand positioning. We shall learn about how can we
successfully reposition our brands. Repositioning is a strategy
wherein you create a slightly different image of your brand not
going away too far from the brands core values.
Overview
Many marketers are rethinking their brands positioning because
competitive pressures, new channels, and changing customer
needs have eroded their brands positions of strength.
However, increased marketing expenditures to reposition
brands often fail to produce any improvements in either overall
image or market share. Our experience has shown that
companies should focus on achievable rather than aspirational
positioning, and that three steps can help ensure success:
1. Ensure relevance to a customers frame of reference.
Be fully aware of the brands frame of reference so that
a repositioning strategy will resonate with customers.
Look at a combination of customers attitudes and the
situations in which the brand is used to obtain the most
powerful customer insights.
2. Secure the customers permission for the positioning.
Recognize that permission amounts to a reasonable and
logical extension of the brand in the customers eyes.
Leverage a brands unique emotional benets to carry
customers from their current brand perception to the
intended one.
3. Deliver on the brands new promise.
Identify the pathway of performance signals that will
convince customers of the new brand positioning.
Develop product/service programs to ensure consistent
performance on these signals.
Track and assess performance against customer signals
prior to launching the new positioning.
Adopt an interim positioning to establish brand
credibility and performance.
An array of factors is requiring marketers today to rethink their
brand positioning. Changing customer needs are often eroding
the brands established position. At the same time, increasing
competitive pressures created by new entrants and product
innovations, and the proliferation of new channels and
187
BRAND MANAGMENT
188
Intangibles
Technology brand
pathway example
Humanizing technology
Personality signals
Service signals
Product Signals
189
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Positioning A Primer
Positioning is the art of creating a distinct image for a product
in the minds of the customers. A simple example would
suffice. The first thing that comes to ones mind when somebody says ATM is Automated Teller Machine. This is the
product. But the customers question would be What does
ATM mean to me? The answer is Any-Time-Money. That
makes sense to him or her because it means instant cash. The
concept neatly rolls up the benefit of ready cash and puts it in
the mind of the customer. Thus Automated Teller Machine
(ATM) is the product, Any-Time-Money (ATM) is the
positioning.
Repositioning is changing the positioning of a brand. A
particular positioning statement may not work with a brand.
For instance, Dettol toilet soap was positioned as a beauty soap
initially. This was not in line with its core values. Dettol, the
parent brand (anti-septic liquid) was known for its ability to heal
cuts . The extensions beauty positioning was not in tune
with the parents germ-kill positioning. The soap, therefore,
had to be repositioned as a germ-kill soap (bath for grimy
occassions) and it fared extremely, well after repositioning.
Here, the soap had to be repositioned for image mismatch.
There are several other reasons for repositioning. Often falling
or stagnant sales is responsible for repositioning exercises.
After examining the repositioning of several brands from the
Indian market, the following 9 types of repositioning have
been identified. These are:
Increasing relevance to the consumer
Increasing occasions for use
Search for a viable position
Making the brand serious
Falling sales
Bringing in new customers
Making the brand contemporary
Differentiate from other brands
Changed market conditions.
It is not always that these nine categories are mutually exclusive.
Often one reason leads to the other and a brand is repositioned
sometimes for a multiplicity of reasons. Illustrations of the
above types of repositioning are listed below.
Visa Card
Visa Card had to change its positioning to make itself relevant
to customers under changed circumstances. Initially it asked the
customer to pay the way the world does (1981). This is to
give its card an aura of global reach. But as more and more cards
were launched on the same theme, to put itself in a different
league, it positioned itself as the worlds most preferred card
(1993). To highlight the services it provided, it shifted to the
platform of Visa Power (1995). This focus on explaining the
range of services available with the card continues till date
(Visa Power, go get it). .
Pay of Way
The World Does
(1981)
Worlds Most
Preferred Card
( 1993)
Cadburys Bournvita
Bournvita is a case of how a brand changes its positioning in
keeping with the changing needs of customers. Initially, the
emphasis was on its good taste (taste additive to milk). Then
as the customers became more demanding, the pitch was
modified to include the nutritive aspect as well (extra nutrition,
extra taste). Later, to make itself more attractive it claimed to
give sharpness of mind (nutrition, mental stimulation).
Taste Additive to Milk
190
VISA
Power
(1995)
Happiest Time of
the Day ( Anytime)
Monaco
Monaco biscuits were initially positioned as the perfect salted
biscuits. To increase the occasions for use, it pitched itself as
Excellent plain, terrific with toppings. What was essentially a
plain, salted biscuit turned itself into a biscuit that can be
consumed as it is or with toppings, thereby increasing its
occasions for use.
Perfect
Salted
Dettol Liquid
Dettol-the antiseptic liquid is basically used to prevent cuts and
gashes from developing sepsis. To increase the occasions for its
use, it shows several other avenues. These are i) for the shaving
mug ii) for washing babies clothes iii) for use during illness for
washing and swabbing. These uses are listed on the Dettol
bottle itself.
Odomos
Odomos cream was one of the first mosquito repellants in the
market. It was essentially pitched as an indoor mosquito
remedy. For sometime it was very popular. Later, as mosquito
mats entered the market, creams became less popular as they
were seen as sticky. One way of combating the mats was to fight
them outdoors. Since outdoor locations normally have no
power supply, cream was positioned for indoor as well as
outdoor use. This broadened the competitive space besides
increasing the occasions for use.
Vicks Vaporub
Vicks Vaporub was initially and childs cold rub. Later in an
attempt to increase uses as well as users, it was positioned as an
adult cold rub for anytime during the
Childs Cold
Rub at Night
Milkfoods Yoghurt
was initially positioned as anytime snack. This did not seem
to have worked. So the pitch was changed to It is not just
curd. This could be hinting at both the fun value and the
nutritive value of Yoghurt. Eventually, this positioning also did
not work. Positioning it as mishti-doi (sweet curd) for the
East and North Eastern parts of India would have possibly
given it a better opportunity for success.
Togetherness Bar
191
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Saffola
Saffola was positioned as the edible oil good for heart. To
make the positioning more serious, the pitch Heart is not safe
without Saffola was adopted. This put Saffola in a different
league as compared to the other oils making it the most healthconscious brand in the market. In fact, Saffola stands out in a
category cluttered with me-too brands.
Fallinc Sales
Ambassador
The Ambassador was positioned as the rugged road master.
This positioning was in line with product perceptions because
Ambassador is seen as a tougher vehicle than Maruti. However,
Maruti proved to be sleeker, more fuel efficient and initially even
cheaper. Thus the positioning was changed to a member of
the family. In other words, falling sales forced Ambassador to
move from a rational pitch to an emotional pitch. (Even this
positioning was later changed by Ambassador. But none of the
positioning changes helped it because the product itself was
seen as dated.)
Red Label
BrookeBonds Red Label is a typical example of how falling
sales can precipitate repositioning. Red Label is an age-old brand
with a franchise of its own. How ever, over a period of time it
might have lost some of its relevance. Its traditional
positioning was that Red Label was one of its kind (piyo-tojano-drink it and you will know the difference). When this
was seen as dated, a new positioning statement involving
patriotism was configured (Desh-ka-pyaala-Indias tea). This
did not bring the expected volumes. Then the strength pitch
was tried (100% strong). Finally, the current positioning is
something that invites the old generation as well as the new
generation to consume Red Label ( jiyo-mere-Iaal - long live
my son, there is a pun on the word laal which means son as
well as red ). Several attempts of repositioning had to be made
because of falling sales.
Piyo to Jano
Desh ka Pyaala
100% Strong
Jiyo Mere Laal
Babies
Deodorant
Soap
Soap for
Macho Men
Freshness
Dabur Chyawanprash
Dabur Chyawanprash basically had the positioning of being
good for health and digestion. To make the brand more
attractive to the consumer, the nutritional element was added to
its positioning.
Keo Karpin Hair Oil
Keo Karpin was positioned as a hair oil that assisted styling
the hair. It was hence endorsed by celebrities But in the recent
years, hair oil came to be seen as some thing that makes the hair
sticky. To make it more a acceptable in the changed
circumstances, Keo Karpin was repositioned as the non-sticky
hair oil.
Onida TV
Onida was the first indigenous premium TV brand in India. Its
unique advertising gave it a special status among well-to-do
consumers. The hugely successful devil campaign proclaimed
Neighbours Envy, Owners Pride. In the mid-nineties,
however, there was tough competition unleashed by MNC
brands like Sony, Samsung and LG. Thus the positioning had
to be made contemporary. It was then changed to Worlds
Envy, Indias Pride to signal that Onida was as good as the
foreign brands.
Milkmaid
A classic illustration of repositioning is Nestles Milkmaid. It
started as a whitener for tea and coffee. Again like Horlicks,
when the milk scarcity eased, it changed its positioning to
topping for cakes and puddings and use in dessert recipes2.
Maker of the
Tastiest Milk
Adult
Candy
All Mint,
No Hole
Milk Additive
Use in Dessert
Recipes
To sum up, repositioning is done with the intention of
attracting customers back into the fold. A study of the above
types of repositioning reveal that it is more often done to
increase either the users or the number of uses. A limitation of
the list of above illustrations, of course, is that it contains few
durables or services. However, it has a fairly representative list
of consumer softs. Thus, if we consider the FMCG .category in
India, most repositioning exercises seem to be broadening the
position rather than altering it. As mentioned earlier, some of
these repositioning statements have been changed again. But
that does not detract from their merit as illustrations.
Nutrition
Illustrated Weekly
Illustrated Weekly was a leading family magazine targeting the
households in the 70s. This position was taken over in the
eighties by India Today. Thus, Weekly predominantly became a
193
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 30:
DIFFERENTIAL ADVANTAGE AND POSITIONING
Objectives
Upon completion of this Lesson, you should be able to
explain:
a. What is differentiation ?
b. What role differential advantage plays in branding?
c.
Lowest prices
Biggest selection
Best overall total experience
Most convenient, easiest
Quick service
Full-service
Newest, hottest, with it, in
Status
Badge value
Best overall value
(www.customfitonline.com)
Start by identifying the Tangible Differences between your Brand and the
competition; i.e., the conscious, rational benefits you can focus on. For
example:
Service (Nordstrom);
Price (Costco);
Selection (Toys R Us);
Performance (Nike);
Contemporary home fashion (IKEA);
Great Price (Payless Shoes).
194
Answering the following questions, try to identify the differential advantage of between two brands of your choice.
1. Why do you buy brand A rather than buying brand B?
2. What makes A different from B?
3. How is A better than our B?
4. What strengths do A have that we can effectively capitalize
on?
What is Branding?
The general description of branding as delivering all the
promises and perceptions that the organization wants its
constituents to hold is widely accepted among those who teach
and practice the art and science. Yet, as all-encompassing as that
definition is, it is inadequate, overly subjective, and, importantly,
is a difficult sell when dealing with business executives
bearing finance, manufacturing, research or engineering
backgrounds. It may communicate effectively to the marketing
or sales-trained executive, but is too soft for technically or
scientifically trained executives, and too immeasurable for
financial executives.
A New Definition of Branding
In isolating the true function of branding, a more directed,
measurable, and sellable definition emerges: Branding is
identifying or creating, and then exploiting, sustainable
competitive advantage.
Every word of that new definition is instrumental to the
concept as a whole. Likewise, the entire phrase is the singular
foundation of business success. It explains what branding
does, but it also clarifies the result of branding. Its a process
that executives from any business background can conceptualize
and embrace.
Sustainable Competitive Advantage is the
Foundation of a Viable Brand
Ask business executives to define their companys sustainable
competitive advantage, and often youll hear our employees,
our products, or our technology, among the most frequent
of the myriad of possible answers. In reality, none are prima
fascia sustainable competitive advantages (advantages for the
sake of brevity). Advantage falls into only two categories,
something that you own that is a barrier to competition, or
something that you do very well that effectively bars
competitors.
For the first category of advantage, something that you own
(exclusively, such as a patent or an unreasonably duplicatable
process), the task is more of an advertising/public relations/
sales process, rather than branding. This is so by definition, as it
already is a sustainable competitive advantage.
When Branding Becomes the strategic Advantage
Drawing from strategy analysis work by Harvard Management
Professor Michael Porter, branding becomes the advantage
when it identifies and exploits operational excellence, customer
intimacy or product leadership in the experiential lens of the
consumer. Each category has general requirements that are
required of a strong brand and overlap between groupings, but
the brand differentiators are categorically based.
The brand advantage differentiators for operational excellence
are product and service attributes, such as price, time, quality
and selection. The result of successful exploitation of this
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
http://www.spark.auckland.ac.nz
196
Positioning Strategy
Positioning strategy is used by a company to distinguish its
products from those of its
competitors in order to give it a competitive advantage within a
market. Positioning is more than merely advertising and
promotion but involves the management of the whole
marketing mix. Essentially, the mix must be managed in a way
that is internally coherent and sustainable over the long-term.
Selecting a product position involves three basic steps :
Undertake a marketing audit to analyze the position
opportunities relative to the Companys strengths.
Evaluate the position possibilities and select the most
appropriate:
Use the marketing mix to develop and communicate a
position
Repositioning
Markets are dynamic and what was once an appropriate position
for a company may eventually cease to be so. A companys
environmental monitoring should identify any factors that may
call for a repositioning. Repositioning could become necessary
for a number of reasons, e.g. false assumptions a bout the
market; an over-estimation of the companys advantages; and a
desire to trade up to a new market position.
Any attempt at repositioning must ensure that it doesnt
alienate a large and profitable group of core customers.
197
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Conclusion
198
Assignment
Many organizations do not fully appreciate the importance of
the fourth P
199
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
200
BRAND MANAGMENT
Quality-Based Differentiation
201
UNIT III
VLEADERSHIP IN BRAND
LESSON :31
UNIT 89
CHAPTER
BRAND AS STRATEGIC DEVICES
HOW TO ACHIEVE LEADERSHIP
BRAND MANAGMENT
Topics Covered
Diverse ways of positioning and sustaining brands against
competitors, Cost-driven and Value added Brands, Brands as
competitive advantage, Characteristics of winning brands,
Adding value through customer participationTrademark
registration, Legal Perspectives in Branding, Brand evaluation,
Online Branding and Business to Business branding.
Objectives
After the completion of the lesson, you should be able to:
a. Understand Strategic relevance of brands
b. Use brands as a strategic devices
Overview
Firms have a variety of options available to them with respect
to branding strategy, which refers to the nature and number of
common and distinctive branding elements that can be applied
to the products and services sold. Branding strategy is
important as a means of enabling consumers to understand
and connect with the brand, since it can help consumers
organize a companys products and services in their minds. This
chapter introduces the concepts of the brand-product matrix
and the brand hierarchy, two tools that can help a company
make decisions regarding branding strategy.
The brand-product matrix is a graphical representation of all the
products sold by a firm. Each row of the matrix is labeled with
a brand name, while each column represents a product. Thus,
the rows of the matrix correspond to brand lines (all the
products sold under a particular brand name) while the
columns correspond to product lines, a.k.a. brand portfolios,
(all the brands marketed in particular product categories). A
firms branding strategy can be characterized according to its
breadth, which refers to the number and nature of products
that bear the same brand name, and its depth, which refers to
the number and nature of brands in the same product category.
Marketers can use the brand-product matrix to determine
whether and where to make connections across products and
brands.
A brand hierarchy visually illustrates the possible relationships
that can be formed among the firms products through the
selection of common and distinctive brand elements. The levels
of the hierarchy might include the corporate or company brand
at the top, followed by a family brand used in more than one
product category, an individual brand that typically is restricted
to one product category, and a modifier that designates a specific
item or model. Because a companys marketing activity may
result in different types of associations becoming linked to the
brand names at various levels of the hierarchy, each name has
the potential to impact the equity of brands at levels above and
below it.
202
Discussion Questions
1. Pick a company. As completely as possible, characterize its
brand portfolio and brand hierarchy. How would you
improve the companys branding strategies?
Answers will vary.
2. Do you think the Nestle corporate image campaign
described in the chapter was successful? Why or why not?
What do you see as key success factors for a corporate image
campaign?
Nestles revenues, profits, and stock price have risen steadily
since the advent of its corporate image campaign. The
question for students will be to determine to what extent
this success is due to the campaign versus other businessrelated factors.
3. Contrast the branding strategies and brand portfolios of
market leaders in two different industries. For example,
contrast the approach by Anheuser Busch and its Budweiser
brand with that of Kellogg in the ready-to eat cereal
category.
Anheuser-Busch employs its umbrella brand in corporate
image advertisements, but its individual beverage brands
retain their own identity distinct from the umbrella brand;
however, Anheuser-Busch does reinforce the link between
many of its individual brands and the umbrella in
advertising and packaging. Kelloggs pursues an
endorsement strategy with its brands, keeping a more
obvious link between its cereals and the parent brand.
4. What are some of the product strategies and
communication strategies that General Motors could use to
Perspective
Brand Manager Status
Conceptual Model
Focus
Product market scope
Brand Structures
Number of brands
Country Scope
Brand managers
communication role
Communication Focus
Driver of Strategy
203
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Under the new model, the brand managers focus expands from
a single brand to a product category. The goal is to make the
brands within a category or business unit work together to
provide the most collective impact and the strongest synergies.
Thus, printer brands at Hp, cereal brands at General Mills, or
hair care brands at P&G need to be managed as a team to
maximize operational efficiency and marketing effectiveness.
Category or business unit brand management can improve
profitability and strategic health by addressing some cross-brand
issues. What brand identities and positions will result in the
most coherent and least redundant brand system? Is there a
broader vision driven by consumer and- channel needs that can
provide a breakthrough opportunity? Are there sourcing and
logistical opportunities within the set of brands involved in the
category? How can R&D successes be best used across the
brands in the category?
Global Perspective
brand strategy thus needs to be based on a powerful, disciplined segmentation strategy, as well as an in-depth knowledge
of customer motivations. Competitor analysis is another key
because the brand identity needs to have points of differentiation that are sustainable over time. Finally, the brand identity, as
already noted, needs to reflect the business strategy and the
firms willingness to invest in the programs needed for the
brand to live up to its promise to customers
The first task in branding: defining just what the brand infuses
into the product or service. Branding, however, is not based on
what goes on, but what goes in. the result is an augmented
product or service which must be indicated in one way or the
other if it is to be noticed by potential buyers, and if the
company is to reap the fruits of its efforts before it is copied by
others.
A Brand has an Enduring Value
205
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
What lets you down? What are you not good at? What do
your competitors do better?
3. Setting Objectives
Draw up your objectives carefully, because your entire marketing
strategy will be structured around them, and ensure that they are
measurable so that you can evaluate their success.
Short-term objective can be staging posts on the way towards
fulfilling long-term goals. Analyse your situation and then ask:
What if we do nothing? Will products become out of date?
Will your competitors grow more powerful? Spend time asking
what if ? to help you realize the effects of not keeping up
with customer needs and competitor activities. It can serve to
spur action.
If you have devised a set of objectives around which to build
your marketing strategy, seek agreement for them across the
organisation. Marketing is a discipline that cuts through many
departmental boundaries. Marketing activity will have a knockon effect in various parts of the operation so, for it to be
effective, you will need the support of colleagues. Ensure they
understand the need for these objectives and the impact they
may have on their work.
4. Plan Action
Investigate constraints, such as time and money, and then create
a timetable of activity to give you a working marketing plan.
The activities on your marketing timetable should be manageable and workable. The costs of not undertaking certain
marketing activities, both in missed opportunities and the effect
on your reputation, should be taken into consideration.
Look at your marketing ideas and work out the costs of each.
Remember that marketing involves meeting customer need at a
profit. To be justified, marketing activity should have a positive
impact on the balance sheet. Examine not only the costs but
5. Implementing Strategy
Some organisations invest considerable effort in developing a
strategy but enthusiasm and energy wane when it comes to
implementation. Ensure that your marketing strategy is put
into the action, not let to gather dust on a shelf. Assign each
task or activity due for implementation within the next 12
months to a named person.
6. Review Strategy
The world is not static. Things within your organisation or
within your market are likely to change over the time. If they do,
you might need to redefine your objectives. Review your
objectives six-monthly or annually to check that you are till on
track.
Answering the following questions will help you evaluate the
success of your marketing strategy:
Have profits increased since the strategy was implemented?
Have we seen an increase in our customer base?
Have we attracted a greater number of orders, or larger
individual orders?
Has the number of product/service enquiries risen?
Has awareness of our organisation and its products or
services increased?
207
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Polaris Case
Brand Strategy
Polaris partners with companies, consultants and advertising
agencies to more effectively support brand strategy in each phase
of development. Consumers, businesses, and the market
appreciate and reward brand strategy leaders that project quality,
competence, value, and reliability. Now, more than ever, strong
branding strategies are the key to a companys successful
marketing plans.
Branding Strategies Provide Footholds to Successful
Competition.
An Article
Brand is the Best Growth Strategy
Making coffee the other day, it occurred to me that too many
New Zealand companies were playing the role of the beans.
They were being ground down to dust in a desperate search to
extract the last drop of value.
This leads me to believe that the expectations of shareholders
and markets have a lot to answer for. Right now, too many of
them are hindering our public companies. And thats because
everybody it seems, is working in the short term. This quarter.
The next six months. And theyre pressurising senior decision
makers to constantly deliver to that timeframe.
The easiest and most visible way to do that of course is to
focus on efficiency and cut costs. If youre only as good as your
last quarter, then every decision has a three month imperative.
Problem : thats not a sustainable solution and it doesnt grow
value. Efficiency-hunting contributes to a better, leaner, fasterto-market organisation. It adds to the bottom line because it
subtracts cost. But to fund it, companies are only playing the
short game and milking their cash cows dry.
The intriguing thing about this approach is that companies get
to look busy. They appear to be doing things. Shareholders
feel like things are happening. Its good stuff to read about over
the morning newspaper and a latte. But this approach doesnt
create value so it cant grow the business.
Sure, KPIs will be hit, bonuses will be paid and dividends will
go out in the post. All thanks to being more lean and efficient.
But longer term, these measures dont differentiate any
208
Notes
209
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 32:
BRAND EVALUATION AND PLANNING
Upon completion of the lesson, you should be able to
understand the following:
1. Issues related to brand planning.
2. Brand dimensions
3. Managing brand over their life cycles
4. Commercial evaluation of Brand Equity
5. Calculation of brand equity
210
Functional
Psychological
BRAND MANAGMENT
211
BRAND MANAGMENT
in the model of brand choice shown in Figure. When consumers choose between brands, they rationally consider practical
issues about brands functional capabilities. At the same time,
they evaluate different brands personalities, forming a view
about them which fits the image they wish to be associated
with. As many writers have noted, consumers are not just
functionally orientated; their behaviour is affected by their
interpretation of brand symbolism. When two competing
brands are perceived as being equally similar in terms of their
physical capabilities, the brand that comes closest to matching
and enhancing the consumers self concept will be chosen.
Rational Overt
Reasoning
Emotional Covert
Reasoning
Functionalism
Symbolism
Brand Selection
212
Pricing;
Promotions;
213
BRAND MANAGMENT
There are several benefits from being first to launch a new brand
in a new sector. Brands which are pioneers have the opportunity
to gain greater understanding of the technology by moving up
the learning curve faster than competitors. When competitors
launch me-too versions, the innovative leader should be
thinking about launching next generation technology. Being
first with a new brand that proves successful also presents
opportunities to reduce costs due to economies of scale and the
experience effect.
BRAND MANAGMENT
When the brand is recycled the marketer needs to find new use
for the brand, either through the functional dimension, or the
representational dimension. A good example of functional
brand recycling is the Boeing 727 aircraft. In the late 1960s, rising
oil prices made this) aircraft less attractive to airline companies
and sales fell. Boeing refused to let this brand die and redesigned the 727, making it moral economical on fuel. Sales of the
brand recovered between 1971 and 1979with this functional
improvement. Guinness is a classic example of how a brand
was repositioned to capitalize on demographic change, with
marketing activity focusing on representational. Spearheaded by
a novel promotional campaign, Guinness was sure Successfully
repositioned in the 1980s away from an ageing consumer group
to younger drinkers.
Should the firm feel there is little scope for functional or
representational brand changes, it still needs to manage its
brands in the decline stage. If the firm is committed to frequent
new brand launches, it does not want distributors rejecting new
brands because part of the firms portfolio is selling too slowly.
A decision needs to be taken about whether the brand should
be quickly withdrawn, for example by cutting prices, or whether
it should be allowed to die, gradually enabling the firm to reap
higher profits through cutting marketing support.
214
Brand Evaluation
Growing Brand Equity
The previous chapters we have considered how resources can
best be employed to develop and sustain powerful brands.
Once managers have been successful in using these resources
for branding purposes, they will need to monitor the health of
their brand. In order to be able to sustain their brands
strengths they reequip method of regularly monitoring
performance. Managers are particularly interested in measuring
the equity that has been built up by their brand. Delving deeper
into this issue of measuring brand unity reveals that it is a
multi-dimensional concept.
215
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
216
Brand Strength
Leadership
Price premium
Loyalty
Market share
and
distribution
Brand Value
Brand Strength
As a consequence of its attributes, the strength of the brand can
be gauged. Another set of measures needs to be used to assess
brand strength.
bought brands?
If someone were thinking of buying this product, which
brand would you recommend?
Managers should be aware that the responses to these questions
may reflect past behavior rather than intended future behavior
and that the favorableness of replies may be more a reflection
of brand size than loyalty.
Another method of measuring loyalty is provided by the
concept of Share of Category Requirement (SCR). The SCR
for, Ski yogurts volume expressed as a share of all yogurt
bought by consumers who purchase Ski yogurt during a
defined period, such as a year. An alternative is to define loyalty
by considering consumers purchasing patterns over time and
estimating the probability of their buying the brand on the next
purchasing occasion. However, this analysis should also include
data on price
217
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
The value of the brand also differs according to whose perspective is considered. From a firms point of view, a brands value
is derived from the incremental cash flow resulting from
associating the brand with a product. For example, in a
television factory once jointly owned by Hitachi and General
Electric, Hitachi was able to sell the same product as GE but
labeled Hitachi with a 50 premium, and at twice the volume. A
brand brings three competitive advantages to the firm: it
provides a platform from which to launch new products and
licenses; it builds resilience in times of crisis as seen by the quick
sales recovery following the incident when Tylenol was tampered with; and it creates a barrier to entry, for instance,
formidable barriers are present through names such as Nike,
Rolls-Royce and Chanel. From a traders perspective, the value
of a brand lies in its ability to attract consumers into their
stores. From a consumers point of view, the brand has value
since it distinguishes the offering, reduces their perceptions of
risk and reduces their effort in making a choice.
To manufacturers, retailers and consumers brands have value
and therefore it IS night that some attempt be made to quantify
this. While one might argue whether Marlboros 1996 valuation
of $44.6 bn is precisely correct, the issue really is that this is a
different role from its existing one. For example, Unlived paid
70 m for Boursin just to gain shelf-space for its expansion
plans for other parts of its brand portfolio.
Some have proposed valuing brands on the basis of various
consumer-related factors, such as recognition, esteem and
awareness. These are all important elements of brands and high
scores on these are indicative of strong brands. However, it is
very difficult to derive a relationship from an amalgam of these
factors to arrive at an objective valuation. For example, most
consumers are aware that Rolls-Royce is a famous brand, but
what value should be placed on it? Worst of all, however, is the
fact that there are many famous brands, such as Co-op, with
very little value attached to them.
Yet another way of valuing a brand is to assess its future
earnings discounted to present-day values. The problem,
however, with this method is that it assumes buoyant historical
earnings levels, even though a brand may be being milked by
its owners. One of the most widely accepted ways of assessing
the brand value is provided by Interbred (Birkin 1994). In order
to determine brand value, a company must calculate the benefits
of future ownership, i.e. current and future cash flows of the
brand, and discount them to take inflation and risk into
account. The Interbrand approach is based on the assumption
that the discount rate is given by a brand multiple, representative of the brand strength. For example, a high multiple
characterizes a brand in which the firm is confident of a
continuing stream of future earnings and consequently
represents low risk for the company. This also translates into a
low discount rate.
The Interbrand method is similar to deriving a companys
market value through its price I earnings (P IE) ratio. This
provides a link between the share capital and the companys net
profits and thus the brand multiple can be applied to a single
brand within the company to calculate its value. Just as the P/E
ratio equals the market value of the company divided by its
after-tax profit, likewise the brand multiple equals the value of
the brand divided by the profit generated by this brand, i.e.
P/E = Market value of equity/Profit
Brand Multiple = Brand Equity/Brand Profit
To calculate the brand value, we multiply the brand profit by the
brand multiple:
Brand profit x Brand multiple = Brand equity
When calculating the brand profit several issues need to be
considered. A historical statement of the brands profit is first
required since as a good approximation tomorrows profits are
likely to be similar to todays, provided there is no change in
brand strategy. The brand profit should be the post-tax profit
after deducting central overhead costs. There may be instances
where the same production line is used for both the
manufacturers brand and several own labels. Where this is the
case, any profits arising from shared own label production need
to be subtracted.
The next stage in arriving at a realistic assessment of the brands
profit is to deduct the earning that do not relate to brand
strength. For example, a firm may market two brands of bread.
One competes through major grocery stores against other
219
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Strength factor
Leadership
Stability
Market
Internationally
. Trend
Support
Protection
Total Score
Maximum Score
25
15
10
25
10
10
5
100
220
UNIT IV
CURRENT ISSUES
LESSON 33:
UNIT 9
CHAPTER 10:
PROTECTING BRANDS THROUGH
CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN BRANDING
TRADEMARKS
Objectives
a. How to protect brands through trademark registration and
its importance
b. Challenges to Brands
221
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
222
turer. In IBMs case, there was little danger of the brands equity
being diluted.
A balance also needs to be struck between the distinctiveness of
the name and the extent to which it describes the goods that the
brand name stands for. The more it describes the goods, the
more difficult it is to register it. Paper Mate is a good example
of a company getting; the balance right between the brand
names communicability and its suitability for registration. Late
in the 1970s it launched an erasable ballpoint pen in Europe,
branded Replay. This was felt not to be able so descriptive of
the product, and it was protectable.
Once the trademark has been successfully registered, it should
be used as soon as possible and implemented with care. If
sufficient attention is not paid to promotional details, there is a
danger of the brand name lapsing into a non-protectable
generic term, In its ad. advertising copy, the Otis Elevator
Company did not insert the line, Escalator is a registered
trademark of the Otis Elevator Company did not insert the line
Escalator is a registered trademark of the Otis elevator Company and in a subsequent court case the registration of its
Escalator trademark was cancelled.
To ensure that the brand name is not being infringed, some
firms employ their staff to monitor retail activities. For
example, Coca-Cola employees visit outlets that do not stock
Coca-Cola and, without identifying themselves, ask for a CocaCola. If they are served a drink, which is clearly not Coca-Cola
without any comment, a sample is sent for chemical analysis,
and if it is not the actual brand, the outlet is asked to refrain
from this action. Failure to comply results in legal action. .
An alternative way of policing the brand is to use private
investigators, such as Carratu International. Particularly when
there is evidence of a very sophisticated channel being used by
counterfeiters, as was the case with Caterpillar parts, this is a very
effective way if blocking imitators. Some firms are now so
concerned about brand infringements, that detectives and legal
costs are a significant expenditure. For example, 0.5 per cent of
Givenchys turnover is spent on this.
Some firms are trying to make the copying of their brands
much harder. Glaxo started printing holograms on its packets
of Zantac drugs to deter copiers, but it is only a matter of time
before counterfeiters become more sophisticated. In some
markets, such as car parts, it is much more difficult to apply an
inexpensive security device.
While the Internet offers new opportunities for brands it can
also create legal problems. The geographical and jurisdictional
boundaries that limited the legal concept of trademarks do not
apply to the global communication system of the Internet,
facilitating communication among millions of independent
users. These users rely entirely on their unique Internet name,
i.e. their domain name, for registration and identification.
Currently a user can choose any domain name, provided it has
not yet been registered, almost regardless of the fact that this
might be an existing brand name. A check is done to ensure
that the domain name is unique but no check is done as to
whether the user is entitled to use the same. For example.
Harrods sued opportunists who had registered the domain :
harrods com to profit from this famous brand. Fortunately
223
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
224
225
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
On-line Shopping
Current research predicts that at least 20 per cent of all trade
transactions will be on-line by 2006. On-line shopping is
different from traditional mail order because:
1. Brands are available all the time and from all over the world;
2. information and interactions are in real-time;
3. consumers can choose between brands which meet their
criteria, as a result of selecting information which is in a
much more convenient format for them, rather than the
standard catalogue format.
This poses threats to brands, since some components of added
value, such as the agent or the retail outlet, which originally
added value by matching consumers with suppliers, may well be
eliminated. The brands values will be exposed more explicitly.
However, brand will still have a key role, regardless of how
much on-line shopping will grow. In any kind of remote
purchasing they can offer customer a guarantee of quality and
service and will act as a powerful way of facilitating choice in a
world of ever-increasing data.
Brand Advertising on the Internet
Marketers face new challenges as they attempt to leverage the
opportunities offered by the Internet. The web encompasses a
new sale channel as well as a new form of advertising and
allows new forms of customer relationship and sponsorship.
Many brand owners believe in the advertising opportunities
available on the Internet.
Why should consumers want to access the advertising messages
on
on the Web and why should they access the Web in the
first place? Using the Web is different from watching television
or reading a newpaper people use it in the same way as they
decide to go places or visit a new town. These touristsconsumers choose to stay, shop, look around or entertain
themselves according to how they feel or how much time they
have. As such in WebTown commercial on-line shops need to
offer distinctive advantages, such as a wider produnct range or
more entertainment than traditional competitors, if they want
to become popular sightseeing sites.
Retailers Names as Brands
An examination of advertisers in 1995 reveals that Procter &
Gamble was the top advertiser, with over 100 m media
support for its numerous brands, all of which have different
brand names. By contrast sainsbury, though the twelfth biggest
advertiser, promoted its name with just over 40 m. The
challenge many brands face, particularly when not strongly
associated with their parent corporation, is that while they
receive advertising support, this does not match the significance
sums major retailers spend developing a clear proposition their
stores and their own brands. With over three-quarters of
packaged grocery sales going through multiple retailers, the
challenge to manufacturers from powerful retailers own brands
is indeed daunting. Furthermore, retailers such as Boots, Laura
Ashley, Marks& Spencer and Sainsbury have a particularly
innovative policy of developing new products under their own
names.
226
However, if you have not yet begun use of your brand and
a potential conflict arises, you have to ask yourself how
difficult or damaging it really would be to pick a new brand
given that you have not yet invested a significant amount of
time and money in developing the brand.
Introduction
It does not matter how big or small you are. These self-help
practices can be utilized by anyone from a sole proprietor with a
single brand to large corporations with a portfolio of brands.
By following these practices, you will save much time, money,
and frustration in developing your wine brands.
Protecting any given brand often boils down to the following:
you can either spend a couple thousand dollars early in the
227
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
228
229
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
COLAs
230
Conclusion
Conflicts over brands can be expensive, time consuming and
distracting. They can also be minimized or even avoided much
of the time by making use of the self-help practices discussed
above.
David E. Stoll is an attorney at Farella Braun + Martel and is
active in the firms Wine Industry practice, where he represents
wineries and vineyard owners. Mr. Stoll works with wine clients
Trademark Infringement
Sounds alike
- Sasson vs. Sason vs. Sassoon
- Squirt vs. Quirst
- Lexis vs. Lexus (1989)
Duplicates a competitors
overall marketing strategy
Trademark
Trademark or
or Generic
Generic Name?
Name?
A trademark is considered a generic name
231
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 34:
LEGAL PERSPECTIVES IN BRANDING
Objectives
Consider numbers as part of the name (3D, A-1, 4star)...also number-related words/symbols such as prime,
pi, square, plus... includes ranking (1st), greek alpha,etc.,
...bi, tri, quad...degrees (360 or 32F)...roman numerals
Single letter names: mostly associated with single words. AOne, Double-D, Factor-X, AAA... Combine with number
(A-1, 4-F)...
Use the first part of two-part proper names (ie: Mc, Mac,
O, Van, von, D, Di, De, Del, Bel, San, La, L) and hook
them up with positive last names like McNuggets, OCedar,
MacFrugal. Incorporate suffixes and prefixes into names
that are derived from common, pronounceable
abbreviations: Innov-inc Ban-co Didd-ibid
Rig-etal
Fica-fast
Fifo-sist
232
Brand Vision
When selecting a new brand for yourself, the key word is vision.
What is your vision for the brand? Flagship brand or subsidiary
category? Wide product range or specific? Local, national,
regional or global? And what is the brand anyway - is it a word?
Is it a shape? Is it a colour, a smell, a sound, a picture or a
combination of one or more of these things? Will you use it
always in one particular version or in many variations?
The more clearly that you communicate your future vision for
the brand to your legal advisors, the better job we can do for
you in answering that first key question - can you use it?
The marketplace and the Trade Marks Register are full of other
peoples attempts to obtain exclusivity in all kinds of brands
and aspects of brands. Because of this, one job that has to be
done as part of the brand creation and definition process is
searching - seeing what else is protected and making sure youre
not too close to it. Because the definition of exclusivity
embraces not only identical marks but similar marks and not
just the same goods and services but similar ones and because a
mark can be registered or at least applied for and yet not be on
the market, searching of official records is crucial - and for those
of you looking beyond these shores, international searching will
be crucial. Incidentally, one useful spin-off of searching the
Trade Marks Register will be to give you a handle on what your
competitors are doing, or perhaps planning.
Protecting Your Brand Investment
If youve done all your checking and youre as confident as you
can be that youre not going to be sued the first week your
product hits the market, the next question has to be:
Can you put yourself in a position to protect that investment
that youre going to put into the brand? Or, what can you do to
stop your competitors from ripping off the look, the sound,
the smell, the colour, the theme or the language of your
branding strategy.
Broadly speaking, you get rights in your brand, that is, the
power to use the law to stop someone else from getting too
close to it, in two main ways.
One is by using it to such an extent that you can convince a
court that the bad guy will cause significant confusion, especially
amongst consumers.
Two, by registration under the Trade Marks Act 1953. The
common theme though is that if you hang your hat on a brand
which is too commonplace, too descriptive, too much like other
brands already in the market, a court is much less likely to listen
to an argument from your business that someone else should
be stopped from using the same kind of words, picture or
package.
Much marketing effort goes into identifying branding strategies
which will engage your potential customers on an emotional
level, gain their sense of identity with the product, gain their
loyalty and so on. But all that will be wasted if the brand
233
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
features that you have hung all that engagement on, do not
stand out from the crowd. If your brand is not sufficiently
distinctive in a trade mark sense, you cant prevent everyone
else going along for the ride.
So my message on legal aspects of creating and defining a new
brand are really issues which should concern any marketer. Can
you use it? Can you stop other people from using it? It pays to
check and get advice before that big launch.
234
BRAND MANAGMENT
235
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 35:
ONLINE BRANDING
Objectives
On completion of this lesson you should know:
a. What is online Branding
b. Increasing importance and acceptability of Online branding
Branding should be a key aspect of every business Web site,
according to IBM Global Services Innovation Center senior
manager Anthony Farah, who will speak at the IBM e-fair 2002
this month in Malaysia.
Successful online branding means drawing in customers
through value-added features, such as recipes on an online
grocery site, Farah says. Instead of just listing grocery items, the
site could allow customers to order all the items necessary on
the recipe once they print it out. The aim is convenience,
bolstering brand equity, and earning customer loyalty. Farah also
stresses the need for a consolidated branding strategy that
crosses all media channels. A transportation company whose
message is speed of delivery should not have a pokey Web site,
for example.
Have a single brand guardian who reviews all channels against
a corporate brand strategy. Ensure these channels and their
associated technologies can deliver your brand strategy, he says.
Businesses should focus on their Web site design and implementation, and ensure able to meet every visitors needs,
whether it be accessing specific product information, learning
about the company, or processing a transaction. Once users
interaction with your site is quick, effective, and satisfying, they
will be able to appreciate brand messages being presented,
Farah noted. A common mistake is to separate traditional
marketing departments from the design and execution of a
Web site, or to focus on visual appeal, rather than ensuring fluid
transactions and Web functions.
236
The creation of branding products is one of the most important recent advances in the online advertising industry. More and
more, it seems successful publishers package their products in
ways that are compelling to brand advertisers. Here are some
approaches that seem to be working.
237
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Case Study
Lipton - Stirring Summer Sales
Campaign Overview
Lipton approached AOL to help extend the advertising season
and reach of its iced tea campaign in top markets during its offseason, on a limited budget of under $250K. The AOL
solution included an online banner ad and sweepstakes
campaign, which ran exclusively on AOL with no additional
advertising online or offline. The campaigns effectiveness was
tested by three degrees of online advertising weight in top
markets. Conducted by Digital Marketing Services (DMS) via
survey, the results were then measured against each other:
1. No online advertising
2. Light online advertising
3. Heavy online advertising
238
Campaign Results
AOL maximized Liptons limited budget, extended Liptons
selling season in major markets, and drove key advertising
metrics in the off-season:
Purchase intent increased nine percent in heavy online
advertising markets, while decreasing one percent in no
online advertising markets
Aided Lipton online recall increased 81 percent in heavy
online advertising markets, while only nine percent in no
online advertising markets
Unaided brand association increased 207 percent in heavy
online advertising markets, while decreasing 61 percent in
no online advertising markets
Campaign Methodology
The three surveys were conducted by DMS in the following
markets:
1. No online advertising Cincinnati, Cleveland, Houston,
and North New Jersey
2. Light online advertising Denver, Phoenix, Pittsburgh, and
Washington, D.C.
3. Heavy online advertising Boston, Detroit, Indianapolis,
and San Diego
Based on Media Metrix numbers, DMS conducted the surveys
among a sample similar in gender and age composition to that
of the AOL member base: 1,000 adults 18+ with 473 males
and 527 females.
Keys to Success
J. Walter Thompson maximized the impact of the campaign by
successfully extending the look and feel of the offline creative
online. Additionally, a targeted media plan followed Liptons
offline summer campaign on AOL Local to increase reach.
BRAND MANAGMENT
Market Overview
Background
Clickthrough rates are seen by many advertisers as
the key success metric for online campaigns
Analysis
New tools overcome online ad buying hurdles.
A new metric -- impact points -- will allow
marketers to compare cross-media branding
effectiveness.
Action
Use online frequency controls with third-party ad
servers.
239
BRAND MANAGMENT
428%
change in
in Brand
Awareness
between
those
unexposed
(control)
and the
target
audience
who were
exposed to
the ads
It Worked!
Campaign Details
20%
18%
16%
19%
14%
12%
10%
8%
6%
4%
2%
0%
11%
4%
Control
240
Exposed*
Control*
indicate a
difference?
Yes
Yes
No
BRAND MANAGMENT
AdIndex Methodology
AdIndex uses a control-exposed methodology that measures the
branding value of online ad campaigns as they run across a site
or set of sites. The two groups below are simultaneously
sampled and their responses compared.
Do the results
Brand Awareness by
Demographic
26%
5%
5%
Women 18-49
HHI 75+
3%
66%
19%
429%
4%
High lift
amongst
affluent
young to
middle aged
men
428%
Exposed
11%
All Respondents
4%
10
Control
175%
15
20
25
30
*Statistically significant difference between control and exposed group at a 90% confidence level
241
BRAND MANAGMENT
Message Association by
Demographics
59%
24%
15%
20%
18%
17%
33%
22%
16%
Exposed
Control
20%
All Respondents
10
15
Message
Association
resonated
well
amongst the
targeted
audience
20
34%
15%
Conclusions
Brand Awareness
Message Association
25
175%
34%
*Statistically significant difference between control and exposed group at a 90% confidence level
95% Lift*
14%
72% Lift*
12%
10%
14%
10%
8%
6%
4%
4%
2%
0%
Control
Exposed 1-3x
Exposed 3x+
*Statistically significant difference between control and exposed group at a 90% confidence level
242
Exposing
consumers
to the ads
three times
or more
optimised
the impact
of the
brand
Conclusions
Among the primary target audience of professionals aged
18-49, Brand Awareness lift was 428%
Among affluent men in this group, the lift in Brand
Awareness is an impressive 429%*
Outside the target, Brand Awareness increased 140%* and
Message Association 65%* among women aged 18-49
earning less than 40,000. This suggests that the product
advertised had broader appeal
*Statistically significant difference between control and exposed group at a 90% confidence level
BRAND MANAGMENT
Contacts
Conclusions
Simon Andrews
eBrands@DLKW
+44 207 438 4176
[email protected]
Bob Ivins
Dynamic Logic (Europe)
+44 208 433 6626
[email protected]
CASE STUDY
E-Commerce in Action
Introduction
The adoption of the Internet can be beneficial for businesses
that are ready to invest. However, many companies have failed
to adapt to this new
opportunity and have
suffered as a result. Others
have risen to the challenge of
harnessing the Internet to
achieve business objectives
and have prospered. One
such company is Amway
UK, who, since 1999, has
fully exploited the potential
of the Internet by creating an e-commerce presence. It has seen
over 30% of sales move from off-line to on-line ordering over
the past two years.
243
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Under these criteria it is clear that the adoption of an ecommerce strategy would be beneficial to Amway.
The only concern for Amway in implementing an e-commerce
strategy was to enhance the relationship it had fostered with its
Independent Business Owners. This was the key to Amways
success. Therefore during implementation, Amway had to focus
on the customers total experience, including the personalised
nature of the service.
Budget
This outlined the amount of money that could be spent on the
website. It also included procedures to ensure the website did
not end up costing more than expected. Budgets are often
planned on an annual basis or, as in this case, on a project basis.
Schedule
This determined when the work of building the website could
begin and when it should end. It also highlighted who was
responsible for doing the work during each phase of the
project. Scheduling is most common in the manufacturing
industry, though the same techniques are now used in many
other areas
245
BRAND MANAGMENT
Conclusion
The advent of a new technology will always present a challenge
to business. Success depends on an enterprises ability to turn
this technological challenge into an opportunity for growth.
Many enterprises could not rise to the challenge of the Internet
and became casualties of the dot.com era. The success of
Amway in turning the Internet challenge into an e-commerce
opportunity was due to its extensive research, marketing and
planning.
At this stage, with the research and planning complete, the site
design was handed over to the web-designers, who were
commissioned to encode the site and run rigorous testing to
ensure its stability.
246
Objectives
On completion of this lesson you should know:
a. What is B 2 B Branding
b. How it works and its importance
Business to business branding is for when you offer services or
products to other businesses. The branding part comes in with
the same role as it does in regular product or business branding.
The idea is for you to get other businesses to think of your
company first, before they turn to anyone else.
In a sense, this is easier, because your target market will
probably be somewhat smaller. But thats not always the case.
Of course, it really depends on your product or service.
Business To Business Branding - Ideal For Your Business
When Done Correctly
To make sure youre able to have business-to-business branding
that is as effective as possible, you may want to consider
branding consultants. Its the job of a branding consultant to
get to know your company and your product and/or service
well, in order to determine how to best help you. From there,
they can help you create solid business to business branding.
The important thing is that you do concern yourself with it.
You dont want to sit around and just wait for your advertising
to take effect. You have to get out there and make sure your
customers know you are the best place to go for your product.
Business Branding
Business branding is just part of the entire branding process,
but an important one, nonetheless. Branding in general is when
you get your customers to connect your product with your
company instead of any other company that might also
produce your product. But what if you have many products?
What then?
Thats where business branding comes in. If youve got many
products, like say, Amazon.com does, you need to concentrate
on creating an identity for your business over all. This isnt
always a more difficult task than simply product branding. But
it can be depending on your product.
Focus Areas
This study sought to examine five key areas of business-tobusiness branding.
1. Brand architecture-how best-practice organizations
balance and manage corporate,
divisional, and product brands and leverage brand equities
across the organization
2. Cobranding-how business-to-business organizations
build brand value through
initiatives such as ingredient branding, licensing, composite
branding, and sponsorships
3. Development of the brand-value proposition or brand
promise-how business-to-business firms use tools and
processes to distill the brand to its essential values and
articulate a memorable and compelling brand promise to
external and internal audiences
4. Integrated brand communication-how leading
practitioners plan, budget, and execute brand
communication programs across the full spectrum of
247
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 36:
BUSINESS TO BUSINESS BRANDING
BRAND MANAGMENT
Overview of B 2B Branding
Business-to-business organizations face a variety of challenges
that distinguish their marketing activities from those of their
consumer counterparts. They often face long buy-in periods and
complex buying processes in which purchasing decisions are
ostensibly made using only rational, objective criteria. Furthermore, rapidly changing technology means that products may be
obsolete within a few weeks or months of leaving the factory
floor. Perhaps most daunting of all, some firms have a
traditional managerial mind-set focused on products, production, and distribution rather than creating perceptual value in
the minds of customers.
In spite of the unique nature of commercial and industrial
marketing, brands are built in the business-to-business arena in
much the same way as they are established in the consumer
marketplace. Branding is about establishing trust and creditability. Strong business-to-business brands create an intellectual and
emotional bond with customers, prospects, end users, channel
partners, employees, and other stakeholders. And strong
business-to-business brands are clearly delineated from their
competitors. The best-practice partners detailed in this report
have established unique and distinctive presences in their
respective markets. In most cases, these brands have
successfully extended their reach from the bricks-and-mortar
world to the Internet. Partner firms are far more likely than
sponsors to report they have a clearly differentiated brand
identity, report much higher levels of immediate recall, and
believe they have achieved higher rates of customer retention
than have their competitors. Furthermore, most are able to
command a premium price for their products and services.
Brand Architecture
Traditionally, business-to-business organizations have highly
product-focused, with less focus on brand identity. In such
organizations, marketing activity is often spread across a wide,
disparate line of products and services, with little forethought
given to creating a unifying or enduring identity in the minds of
customers. As was mentioned earlier, in recent years a number
of leading business-to-business marketers have begun to
reconsider the importance of branding in commercial and
industrial markets.
At the same time, they have recognized the critical link that
must be maintained between the firms branding strategy and
its overall business strategies. Frequently this has led to
redefining the relationship among corporate, divisional, and
product level brands (brand architecture). Such changes have
important implications for the roles and responsibilities of
those who are tasked with brand identity management.
Additionally, brand architecture policies and standards must be
developed in a way that fosters the firms future growth, its
248
Cobranding
Business-to-business marketers increasingly are joining with
other organizations to leverage the value of their brands. This
might be done through joint marketing alliances, market
development partnerships, or cobranding relationships. This
section examines practices in the latter category by focusing on
four primary types of cobranding relationships: licensing,
ingredient branding, composite branding, and sponsorships.
Best-practice organizations have pursued cobranding
relationships of all types more aggressively and successfully
than have the sponsor firms.
Two key findings related to cobranding programsare1. Strong business-to-business brands leverage their strength
through cobranding relationships.
2. Cobranding relationships must be carefully developed and
managed to ensure consistent and appropriate portrayal of
the brand.
Development of Brand-Value Proposition or Brand
Promise
In the 1998 study Brand Building & Communication: Power
Strategies for the 21st Century, one of the most important
characteristics that differentiated best-practice organizations
from sponsors was the extent to which the partners had
articulated a clear, concise, and compelling statement of the
brands essential value proposition or promise. The goal of the
current study is to examine how business-to-business
organizations successfully create industrial, commercial, or
technology brands. What processes are used? What research is
conducted? Who is involved? And what outside resources
provide guidance or assistance? Partner organizations invest
significant resources in understanding the brand from the
standpoint of its many customer segments, as well as from the
perspective of employees, channel customers, and even the
financial community.
Two major key findings are used as the basis for understanding
how organizations determine and express the heart of the
brand.
1. The brand promise is not a catchy slogan or tag line. It
must be grounded in customer needs and linked to value
delivery.
2. Powerful brands create an enduring and compelling aura of
leadership, authority, and uniqueness.
249
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Notes
BRAND MANAGMENT
LESSON 37:
LIVE INDUSTRY PROJECTS
Objectives
This assignment is based on the basics of Brand Management.
As you must have studied this as a chapter in Marketing course,
based on that knowledge background we will discuss following
cases in groups of 4-5 students each. With this exercise you will
realize how well you know branding.
Methodology
Here are given summary of cases of 4 popular brands. You are
required to collect detail of
each from industry or from
Internet. Go through the
questions given below the
case summary and answer the
same following the
guidelines.
(CASE I ) MTV Building Brand Resonance
Summary
MTV was established in 1981 as a maverick pioneer in the
burgeoning cable television industry. Over the next 20 years,
MTV moved from the fringe of television culture in America to
the core of pop culture in countries all over the world. The key
to MTVs success in each market was its ability to connect with
the young consumer. As young consumers grew older, the
challenge for MTV was to establish connections with new
groups of young consumers. This led to a constant cycle of
reinvention. With a few exceptions, at each crossroads MTV was
able to find the right mix of music and culture to capture the
viewership of successive generations of young people, both
domestically and internationally. This case examines the key
decisions and factors that enabled MTV to accomplish its rise as
a global media network from its humble origins. The following
questions will be useful as a guide for class discussion:
1. Describe the current sources of MTVs brand equity. How
have they changed over time?
2. Discuss the role of the Internet in MTVs programming.
How should MTV best integrate the Internet into its
brand?
3. How have MTVs sister networks affected the parent
channels brand equity? What changes, if any, would you
make in the positioning of the sister networks
in order to create more sources of equity for MTV?
Objectives
1. To analyze the components and key issues of building a
media entertainment brand
2. To examine the value of awareness-building advertising
3. To overview establishing points-of-parity and points-ofdifference
Guidelines
The MTV case, as the title indicates, details the process by which
MTV built brand resonance with consumers. The brand
includes a lot of historical detail that you may or may not be
familiar with. The case also addresses many contemporary issues
that may not be familiar to you. Yet, most you would have
heard of and watched MTV and will therefore be able to
participate in the discussion. This is a good case to use in the
beginning of the term, since it reinforces many of the points
about building brand equity from Chapter 1 and Chapter 2.
The case begins by recounting the early history of MTV. At the
time of its launch, the concept of music videos was relatively
novel and certainly the idea of an all-music video channel had
not be seriously considered by many television executives. You
can list the elements of the brand, including the music videos,
the VJs, the logo, the studio from which broadcasts were
taped, and so forth. According to company employees, the
name itself was selected for lack of better alternatives, but the
visual look of the channel, from the videos themselves to the
VJ loft to the moon landing logo, were carefully designed
and/or selected to reflect the core values and key associations of
the channel. You can enumerate these values and associations,
which include music, youth culture, subverting established
culture, fun, no rules, no parents, creativity, excitement, and so
forth. A mental map is a fruitful way to capture this input.
Further you can identify how each element of the MTV brand
reinforced these values and associations.
MTVs decision to make the channel the star over the individual
artists was key. It enabled the channel to reinvent itself numerous times over the next 20 years without sacrificing equity built
up in artists or genres. While MTV did have strong associations
with certain genres such as 80s pop, 90s gansta rap and grunge
that hurt the image of the brand when these genres fell out
of favor, the channel was able to capitalize on the next trend.
This is analogous to pursuing a corporate brand strategy over a
product branding strategy. You can discuss the advantages and
drawbacks of a corporate brand.. The videos and the stars MTV
broadcast can be thought of entities that provided secondary
associations for the channel to leverage in order to build brand
equity. You can consider what associations this channel content
provided and what contributions to equity it made.
MTVs initial marketing program was an integral part of its
success nationally. You can search whether MTV needed to
concentrate on image or awareness in the early stages of brand
building. So the marketing strategy was designed to elicit
customer demands from the cable companies that they carry
MTV. Your discussion can evaluate the strategy of using
251
BRAND MANAGMENT
252
Key Lessons
MTV used an innovative idea combined with brand
management to build a strong brand
Building awareness is the vital first step in the customerbased brand equity model
MTV designed its brand to be more powerful than the stars
featured in the content
MTV found new ways to build brand resonance, including
long-form programming and interactive viewing
MTV used constant reinvention and changed the tastes of
its viewers to establish long-term brand resonance
(CASE II) Nike: Building a Global Brand
Summary
This case concerns the development
of Nikes international marketing
program. Although Nike met with
great success in thwarting Reeboks
competitive thrust in the U.S.,
overseas markets posed many
challenges. The case concentrates on the European and Asian
markets and provides some historical marketing perspectives.
The issue faced by Nike is how to best build global brand
equity. The case focuses on some key marketing decisions in
1992 and 1993. Group discussion can revolve around the
following sets of questions that you should answer and
submit:
1. What is the brand image and sources of equity for the Nike
brand? How transferable are these associations?
2. How might Nikes effort to become a global corporation
affect its sources of brand equity and brand image in the
U.S., Europe, and Asia?
3. Are sponsorships and endorsements vital to Nikes
business? For instance, what effect would Nike becoming
an official sponsor for the Olympics have on the companys
relationship with consumers?
4. Why did Nike become a target for critics of globalization?
Do you think Nikes response to allegations of unfair
global labor practices was appropriate and/or effective?
Objectives
1. To examine issues in global branding
2. To demonstrate the value of integrated marketing
3. To consider how to manage a strong brand
4. To explore PR issues for established brands
Guidelines
Nike is a brand with which each one of you will have no doubt
having experiences and opinions. The value to the case
discussion is that you can still learn some valuable lessons
about Nike and their marketing expertise. A good place to start
The Nike brand image should be easier for you to elicit. Key
brand associations were created to performance, high tech,
top athletes (e.g., Michael Jordan), and sports. You should
find out how consistent, cohesive, and reinforcing this brand
image was (and still is). It is important to know how this brand
image was created to provide a point of reference for the
discussion about Europe and other areas of international
expansion. Basically, the brand was built from the ground up
in a grass roots effort. It is worthwhile to note the duality of
the brand image and how this characterizes strong brands. Nike
has strong product performance associations (remind students
what an innovation air technology was) as well as user and
usage imagery. Nikes advertising in general, and the Just Do
It campaign in particular, can be analyzed some in terms of its
contribution to brand equity. The power of the slogan a three
word summary of the self-empowerment that the brand
represents can be emphasized.
Key Lessons
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Summary
This case concerns the marketing program for Beiersdorf s
flagship Nivea brand. The case addresses the issue of how to
manage the brand image for a brand associated with different
products. How can Nivea continue to add new customers to
their brand franchise without harming their brand equity?
Further, how can Nivea maintain its brand equity in its core skin
crme product while also leveraging that equity into new
product categories? A number of issues are raised concerning
the coordination of a branding and communication program
across existing and new products. Class discussion can revolve
around the following sets of questions that students should
consider before class:
1. What is the brand image and sources of equity for the
Nivea brand? Does it vary across product classes? How
would you evaluate or rate Niveas brand extension strategy?
How would you characterize the brand hierarchy?
2. What is the role of the Nivea Crme advertising? Should it
be changed?
3. What would you do now? Provide recommendations to
Nivea concerning next steps in their marketing program.
Objectives
1. To examine issues in managing a brand hierarchy and brand
portfolio
2. To review possible roles of brands and communication
strategies for a brand hierarchy and brand portfolio
3. To consider how to best manage a mature brand over time
4. To analyze brand extension strategies for appropriateness
5. To demonstrate proper communication strategies with a
brand extension
Guidelines
This case is the one with which you may be the quite familiar.
Nevertheless, it can be an excellent means to examine brand
extensions and brand hierarchies. A good way to begin the case
is to know what is the brand image of Nivea crme, the flagship
product, in Europe, e.g., if you were to stop someone in the
streets of Paris, London, or Hamburg and asked what came to
mind when they thought of Nivea, what would they say?
Nivea crme has a rich brand image, so students typically are able
to elicit a number of different brand associations, such as:
Care
Protection
Mildness/Gentleness
Reliable/Trustworthy
Natural/Pure/Basic/Simple/Honest
Family/Shared Experiences/Maternal
Multi-Purpose
Classic/Heritage/Timeless
Good Value/Quality
254
Blue/White
POD
Crme
All-Purpose Application
Mildness/Gentleness
Body
Texture/Application
Mildness/Gentleness
Soft
Pleasurable usage/Texture
Visage
Beauty
Vital
Beauty/Anti-aging
Scientific/Gentleness
Baby
Safety/Caring/Mildness
Heritage
Sun
Protection/Safety
Beach/Fun
Mildness/Gentleness
Mildness/Gentleness
Bath Care
Convenience/
Cleansing
Mildness/Gentleness
Deodorant
Efficacy
Mildness/Gentleness
Beaut
Beauty/Color
Mildness/Gentleness
Hair CareCleansing/
Mildness/Gentleness/ Appearance/Hold
Key Lessons
1. Strong brands have rich, cohesive brand images and wellentrenched brand values
2. An effective brand hierarchy creates relevance, differentiation
and the proper awareness and image at each level
3. Properly extending a brand can broaden its meaning &
scope
4. Creating a strong family or power brand involves
choosing categories that fit and developing consistent,
well-positioned marketing programs
5. Sub-brands can create unique identities and enhance the
image of the parent brand
6. The role of flagship brands must be carefully managed to
balance deposits and withdrawals
Yahoo!: Managing an Internet Brand
Summary
The Yahoo! case details the rise of one of the Internet
economys most visible brands. The case focuses on managing
255
BRAND MANAGMENT
BRAND MANAGMENT
Objectives
1. To examine the selection of brand elements and creation of
a marketing program
2. To analyze the decisions and factors involved in starting an
Internet brand
3. To observe the branding issues facing technology
companies
4. To review new marketing techniques, particularly Internet
advertising
5. To analyze the process of developing new products and
new markets
6. To examine the issues of global branding
Guidelines
Yahoo! should be a very familiar brand to everyone in the class,
and most students should have first-hand experience with the
brand. You should certainly be encouraged, as with most cases,
to go on-line and check out the brand before the class session to
increase their familiarity if need be. With this level of familiarity,
it should be easy to construct a mental map of the Yahoo!
brand at the beginning of class and use this to start your
discussion. An obvious place to start its with the origins of the
brand, which can be used to illustrate selecting brand elements
and devising marketing strategy. In vintage dot-com style,
Yahoo! was conceived by graduate students and started from a
trailer. These roots informed the fun and user-friendly image
that lay at the core of the brand. The name Yahoo! is an
acronym standing for Yet Another Hierarchical Officious
Oracle, which is a tongue-in-cheek definition of the search
engine in technology jargon. The name was meant to convey the
fun and excitement of using the Internet, without any
complicated technological associations that would dissuade the
casual consumer.
Yahoo!s advertising was also designed to make technology
novices, termed near surfers because they considered getting
on the Internet but hadnt yet, feel comfortable using the
256
Notes
Key Lessons
257
BRAND MANAGMENT