Title: BM401
1BM401
- Session 11
- Branding Strategies
2CLASS OBJECTIVES
- Define what a brand is
- Describe brand meaning
- Discuss brand equity
- Detail brand issues within the product decision
area - Develop branding strategy for your new product
3OVERVIEW
- Meaning of brand has evolved over time often
used to be used interchangeably with advertising
now there is a more all-embracing meaning
it encompasses all people and all facets of the
firm - Sellers promise to consistently deliver a
specific set of features, benefits services - Branding major product issue
- Significant long term investment (expensive)
- Brands must be managed create, maintain,
protect enhance
4WHAT IS A BRAND?
- A brand is a name, term, sign, symbol or design
or a combination of them, intended to identify
the goods or services of one seller or group of
sellers to differentiate them from those of
competitors (American Marketing Association)
5BRAND MEANING
- Brand can have up to 6 levels of meaning
- Attributes what comes to mind when you think of
Mercedes? Well-engineered, well built, high
prestige, durable, high resale value, etc - Benefits functional (safety) and/or emotional
(feel important) - Values reflect producers values Mercedes
stands for high performance, safety, prestige
seek buyers who seek these values
6BRAND MEANING
- Brand can have up to 6 levels of meaning
- Culture Mercedes represents German culture
organised, efficient, high quality - Personality brand can project a personality
would Mercedes be a no-nonsense boss. Brand may
take the personality of a well-known person
(sport star) - User brand suggests the type of person we
expect to see buying/using the product. Mercedes
driver 55yo executive or 20yo clerk?
7BRAND MEANING CONSEQUENCES
- Brand is therefore complex symbol
- Marketers must decide which level(s) to anchor
the brands identity - One mistake is only to promote the attributes
- Customers are more interested in the benefits
- Competitors can copy the attributes
- Attributes can age
- Even promoting benefits can be risky
- Competitors can outperform on the benefit
8BRAND MEANING CONSEQUENCES
- Most enduring meanings tend to be
- Values
- Culture
- Personality
- Phil Kotler wrote It would be a mistake for
Mercedes to market an inexpensive car bearing the
name Mercedes. This would dilute the value and
personality that Mercedes has built up over the
years (Mktg Mgt 8ed p445)
They define the brands essence
9BRAND EQUITY - AAKER
10BRAND EQUITY
- Brands vary in the amount of power and value they
have in the marketplace - The best have
- Acceptability
- Preference
- Loyalty
- Powerful brand has high brand equity
- Brand is an asset important element in many
company takeovers
11BRAND EQUITY
- Move to place financial value on a brand
- Controversial issue
- Should it be done
- How to do it
- Some say that the value of a brand is already
imbedded in a companys share price ie
investors recognise the value of a firms
brand(s) and price the share accordingly
12BRAND EQUITY
- High brand equity provides competitive advantage
- Reduced marketing costs
- More trade leverage
- Charge higher price (not discount)
- Launch other product more easily
- Barrier to competitors
- Manage brands not to damage brand equity
- Fundamental asset underlying brand equity is
customer equity focus should be to extend loyal
customer lifetime value
Stop marketing activities that chase ST profits
13BRAND EQUITY
- Aakers five levels of customer attitude
- The customer will change brands, especially
forprice reasons. No brand loyalty - Customer is satisfied. No reason to change brands
- Customer is satisfied and would incur cost by
changing brand - Customer values the brand and sees it as a friend
- Customer is devoted to the brand
14THE PRODUCT THE PRODUCT MIX
- Building brand Identity - brand bonding
- Brands are not built by advertising but by the
brand experience - Everyone in the company lives the brand
- Three ways to carry on internal branding
-employees must - Understand
- Desire, and
- Deliver on the brand promise
Customer focused
15THE PRODUCT THE PRODUCT MIX
- Building Brands in the new economy
- Heidi and Don Schultz urge companies to
- Clarify the corporations basic values and build
the corporate brand - Use brand managers to carry out the tactical work
- Develop a more comprehensive brand-building plan
Reinforces what was said before
16THE PRODUCT THE PRODUCT MIX
- Heidi and Don Schultz urge companies to
- Define the brands basic essence to be delivered
wherever it is sold - Use the brand-value proposition as the key driver
of the companys strategy, operations, services,
and product development - Measure their brand-building effectiveness, not
by the old measures of awareness, recognition,
and recall, but by a more comprehensive set of
measures including customer-perceived value,
customer satisfaction, customer share of wallet,
customer retention customer advocacy
Global challenges
All embracing concept
Key word - CUSTOMER
17An Overview of Branding Decisions
THE PRODUCT THE PRODUCT MIX
18TO BRAND OR NOT
- Today brands are a strong force in the
marketplace - Even items like salt, nuts bolts and oranges
have brand identification - No brand generics are challenging for shelf
space consumer patronage - Generally these are lower quality products
- Major brands fighting back by introducing a new
brand or lowering the price of existing
19TO BRAND OR NOT
- Branding gives the seller several advantages
- Brand name makes it easier for the seller to
process orders and track down problems - Sellers brand name and trademark provide legal
protection of unique product features - Branding gives the seller the opportunity to
attract a loyal and profitable set of customers - Branding helps the seller segment markets
- Strong brands help build corporate image, making
it easier to launch new brands and gain
acceptance by distributors and consumers
20BRAND-SPONSOR DECISIONS
- Manufacturer brand
- Distributor brand (retailer, store,
private-label) - Licensed brand name
- Slotting fee retailer charges manufacturer a
fee to put product on the shelf - Brand ladder consumer rank brands
- Brand parity they are equivalent
- Consumers spend more wisely, more sensitive to
price, quality, value
21BRAND-NAME DECISION
- Four available strategies
- Individual names
- Blanket family names
- Separate family names for all products
- Corporate name combined with individual product
names
22BRAND-NAME DECISION
- Individual names General Mills has Bisquick,
Gold Medal, Betty Crocker Nature Valley - Advantage is that firm does not tie its
reputation to the products success - Blanket family names Heinz GE
- Advantage is via lower costs to establish the
product retailers willing to take product,
consumers more likely to trial product, etc
23BRAND-NAME DECISION
- Separate family names for all products Sears
uses Kenmore for appliances, Craftsman for tools
and Homart for home installations - Adopted when products are noticeably different or
there is a distinct quality difference even
though in the same product category - Corporate name combined with individual product
names Kelloggs Cornflakes, Rice Bubbles etc - Corporate name legitimises individual name
individualises
24BRAND NAME RESEARCH
- Association tests what images come to mind?
- Learning tests how easily pronounced?
- Memory how well remembered?
- Preference tests which names preferred?
25BRAND NAME QUALITIES
- It should
- Suggest something about the products benefits
- Suggest the product or service category
- Suggest concrete, high imagery qualities
- Be distinctive
Mustang, Kodak, Exxon
26BRAND NAME QUALITIES
- It should
- be easy to spell, pronounce, recognize, and
remember - not carry poor meanings in other countries and
languages
AXA - pronounced same way globally
Nova means doesnt work in Spanish
Can a brand do all at once?
27BRAND STRATEGY DECISIONS
- Brand Extensions are any effort to use a
successful brand name to launch new product in a
new category - Advantages
- Instant recognition
- Earlier consumer acceptance
- Saves advertising costs
Honda cars, motorcycles, mowers, snowmobiles,
etc
28BRAND STRATEGY DECISIONS
- Brand extension risks
- New product fails and image problems ripples over
to established brand - Brand name may be inappropriate eg Shell Sauce,
Drano Milk - Over extend dilute the brand strength
consumers no longer associate the brand with a
specific product
29BRAND EXTENSIONS
30BRAND STRATEGY DECISIONS
- Multibranding offers a way to establish different
features and appeal to different buying motives - Motive attempt to lock up shelf space
- Risks
- Each only obtains very small market share
struggle to be profitable - Cannibalise existing products
31BRAND STRATEGY DECISIONS
- New Brands are created when entering a new
product category - Line Extensions occur when a company introduces
additional items in a given product category - Considered most frequent new product activity
- Yoghurt innovative (non-fat), me-too (copying a
competitor) or filling in (new package size)
New flavours, colours, added ingredients, new
package sizes
32BRAND STRATEGY DECISIONS
- Line extensions involve risks
- Brand loses specific meaning eg 20 years ago a
Coke was a Coke was a Coke no we have - Classic
- Diet
- Caffeine free
- Can, bottle, plastic bottle
- Vanilla or lemon twist
- Do not gain sufficient sales
- Cannibalise existing products
33BRAND STRATEGY DECISIONS
- Brand repositioning might require changing both a
product and its image - Why - consumer tastes change and new competitors
enter the market with more relevant product
attributes/features/benefits - Major considerations
- Costs for changing product quality, packaging,
updating advertising messages, etc - Revenue will the new segment(s) be of
sufficient size to warrant the repositioning
Could involve new market segment(s)
34THE PRODUCT THE PRODUCT MIX
- Co-branding (Dual branding)
- Ingredient co-branding
- Same-company co-branding
- Joint venture co-branding
- Multisponsor co-branding
Gives market entry to firm that does not have
quality brand and/or sufficient customer base but
comes with risks the dominant partner could
replace the other partner, who owns the
customer?
35EXERCISE
- Form same groups as before
- Required
- Name your product
- Describe your branding/advertising strategy
- What level of meaning are you adopting?
- Could the brand be extended to other products in
the category?