Title: Brand Positioning and Values
1Brand Positioning and Values
2Where we have been
- We understand
- Brand equity and the psychology behind it
- A function of awareness, strength, favorability,
and uniqueness of the nodes and links in memory - BE is created in a progressive fashion
- Establish proper Brand Identity
- Create Brand meaning
- Elicit positive Brand responses
- Forge strong Brand relationship
3Identifying and establishing Brand Positioning
- The Integrated Brand Model
- Six elements that define a brand
- Unified
- Leverage each other
- Brand Drivers a function of Organization Drivers
- These six elements serve as a roadmap to our
Brand Equity model - At every step, we can figure out what to do from
our Brand and Organization Drivers
4Brand Positioning
- Brand Positioning
- Brand positioning is all about identifying the
optimal location in our customers minds for our
Brand and our competitors - Proper positioning makes it easier to facilitate
understanding of our Brand - Taken to its logical conclusion, you might think
of the Principle as an indicator of a brands
position
5First Steps
- The first step is to identify and establish Brand
positioning and brand values (Keller) - Positioning is the foundation for creating and
fostering the desired knowledge and perceptions
of your customers - remember our 3 types of associations in memory?
- We can really only manage one (positive), can
respond to a second (negative), and have no
control over the third (idiosyncratic)
6Proper Positioning
- Proper positioning
- Clarifies what the Brand is all about
- How it is both unique and similar to competitive
brands - Why customers should purchase and use the Brand
7Example Pepsi One
- Millions in RD for ingredient Ace-K (artificial
sweetener) - 37,000 hours to design the can
- 100 Million Marketing budget
- Original Target Market
- 20-30 yo Males who did not like taste of diet
colas
8Pepsi One Brand Conveyors Then and now
- Full flavored, healthy alternative to regular
cola - Only one has it all
- True cola taste, one calorie
- Tastes like regular cola
- Celeb Tom Green
- Breakthru Sweetener
- Too good to be one calorie, but it is
- Celeb Kim Katrell
- Better for 20-30 yos?
9In order to Position a Brand
- you must decide
- Who the Target Consumer is
- Who your main competitors are
- How the Brand is similar to your competitors
- How the Brand is different from your competitors
- Where do you get this information?
- Your BRAND INVENTORY!!
10Target Market Segmentation
- A market segment should have similar knowledge
structures and brand knowledge - Similar knowledge structures might mean similar
perceptions and beliefs about your Brand - There are 2 ways to segment
- Descriptive characteristics of the individuals
in the market - Behavioral grouped by how individuals in the
market perceive or use the product
11Toothpaste Segmentation
- Four main segments
- Sensory segment
- Flavor and product appearance
- Sociables
- Brightness of teeth
- Worriers
- Decay Prevention
- Independent
- Low Price
Flavor, Brightness
3 stripes, one for each of the 3 main segments
Decay Prevention
12Target Market Segmentation
- Which works better? Behavioral
- Easier to match perceptions (right/wrong) or
beliefs (right/wrong) with strategy
(reinforce/change). - Many times, behavior and descriptive go hand in
hand - Demographics may be basis of targeting, but tend
to represent some underlying behavioral reason - In some cases, demographics may mask underlying
differences
13Advantages of demographic segmentation
- Demographic segmentation is well known, easier to
buy media on that basis - However, with the emergence of non-traditional
media, this advantage is getting smaller - Web ads can target by demographics traditionally
difficult to access - AA, Asian Americans, College students
14Criteria for a Segment
- Identifiability
- Can the segment be easily identified?
- Size
- It is big enough to bother?
- Accessibility
- Are distribution outlets and media available to
us to reach the segment? - Responsiveness
- How favorably will the segment respond to a
tailored marketing program? (this one is tough to
quantify)
15Segmentation Example
- Mobils 5 types of gasoline buyers
- Price Drivers
- Not brand loyal, driven by price, has been focus
for years - Road Warriors
- Upper income, MAMen, 25-50k/year, buy food and
services with credit card (Premium gas) - True Blues
- Brand loyal, Mid income, pay with cash
- Generation F3
- Fuel, food, fast half under 25 yo, in and out
quickly - Homebodies
- Soccer moms using whatever is on their route
16The Competition
- Market Segments define competitors
- They are targeting the same segments?
- Dont be too narrow in your definition of
competitors - Consider Sprite
- Product Type (non-cola soft drinks)
- Product Category (all soft drinks)
- Product Class (all beverages)
17Baskin-Robbins Competitive analysis
- Original Tagline
- 31 Flavors
- 100 M facelift in late 1990s
- Expanded from Ice cream
- Frozen coffee drinks
- Fruit Smoothies
- Perceived competitors
- Starbucks
- Jamba Juice
- TCBY
- (and still Dairy Queen)
18Part 3 POP and POD
- POD (Point of Difference)
- Strong, favorable, unique brand associations
- May be any kind of attribute or benefit
- Two types of PODs
- Attribute Based
- Functional, performance related differences
- Image Based
- Affective, experiential, brand image related
differences
19Part 3 POP and POD
- POP (Point of Parity)
- Associations that are shared with other brands
- Two types
- Category attributes that are required to include
your product as a member of that category - Competitive POP that negate your competitors
PODs - POPs can be good enough, but PODs should be
superior
20Similar concepts
- Unique Selling Proposition (USP Reeves and
Bates) - Advertisers should give a compelling reason to
buy a product that competitors could not match - What component of the IBM reflects this?
- Sustainable Competitive Advantage (SCA)
- The advantage of delivering superior value in the
marketplace for a prolonged period of time - Further, SCAs can result from any component of
the firm - Similar to notion that Principle exists in every
part of the firm
21POP AND POD BMW over the years
1991
1985
1975
1971
- Affluence, exclusivity
- Fun to drive
- Affluence, exclusivity
- Fun to drive
- International
- Desirability
22Managerial Issues
- How do I begin to position my Brand?
- Communicate category membership
- This is the frame of reference, where customers
can activate what they know about the category
and apply it to your POPs and PODs - How?
- Communicate category benefits
- Compare your product to exemplars
- Rely on product descriptor
23Sneaky psychology sidebar - Exemplars
- Memory is modeled in a hierarchical was as well
- Exemplars can be real or amalgamated (prototypes)
- Generated from experiences and exposures from the
environment - Exemplar example (heh)
- DRAW A PICTURE OF A CHAIR (THE FIRST THING THAT
COMES TO MIND - Compare your picture to your other team members
- Is it the same or different
24Ways to convey category membership (cont)
Comparison to Exemplars
- Thus, two strategies
- Created exemplar (not a real product)
- Real exemplar (coke when talking about cola-based
carbonated beverages) - NOTE Keller defines exemplars as
- Well known, noteworthy brands in a category
- Pepsi One example (after repositioning)
25Nuts and Bolts
- How do I decide on my PODs and POPs?
- POPs
- Analysis of category
- What attributes do all of my competitors have? I
probably need to have those, or my competitors
automatically have a POD - POPs get you included in category
- PODs are more difficult
- Dont use PODs that are product centric (dominate
competition) but customer centric (uniquely
address need of customer)
26Managerial issues
- Criteria for POD
- Desirability
- Must be Relevant
- Must be Distinctive
- Must be Believable
- Deliverability
- Feasibility
- Communicability
- Sustainability
27Establish POP and POD in marketplace
- Difficulty Many attributes that make up POP and
PODs are negatively opposed - Low price vs. High quality
- Tastes Great vs. Less filling
- Separate the attributes
- Leverage equity in another entity
- Redefine the relationship
28Defining Values and Principle
- You already know how to do this
- Your values and principle are part of your Org
and Brand drivers!!! - Keller calls principle Brand Mantra
- Your Values, Principle, and position all are
related - NOTE Keller says that associations are values,
but we have a stricter definition of associations
from the IBM
29Principles a la Keller What makes a good
Principle?
- Three components
- Emotional component (Comfortable)
- Descriptive modifier (Casual)
- Brand function (clothing)
- Other Examples
- Nike Authentic, Athletic Performance
- Fun Family Entertainment