|
|||||
Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
Lesson
16
BRAND
BASED CUSTOMER MODEL
We
continue with our discussion
on comparisons with competition to asses
our brand and
develop
a customer oriented
model.
Question
3
This
question (opportunities for
growth and expansion) demands
clarity of the following
two
factors:
·
What
are customers' beliefs about
the segment and the
category?
·
What
unmet needs are there,
which can be addressed?
Since
we are attempting to learn
how to come up with a brand-based
customer model, the
focus
of
this question remains
customers' perspective and not
company's own. You have to make
an
effort
to unearth how customers
feel about benefits and
values that must be offered
by brands
within
the category.
As
an example, a telephone company (a
private sector company) may
find out from
customers
that
they (customers) will like to
have telephone and internet
facility through the same
line
without
disturbance of one by the
other.
Another
example could be that of an
internet service provider
(ISP) to start offering
wireless
internet
services to fulfill customers' need
for a trouble- and frequency-distortion
free
connection
only after having been in
contact with its
customers.
The
key to understanding customers'
perspective is to stay in contact
with them, either
through
structured
research or informal contact. A
Japanese company follows as a
regular practice
their
senior
managers' contact with
Japanese families through pre-arranged
appointments. The
executives
talk with the families to
find out their comments on
the needs that still
remain unmet
or
the ones that have
sprung up merely due to circumstantial
evolution1. They seize
the
opportunity
and give a solution to customers.
They know that they
cannot stay the course
too
long.
Competition will jump in and occupy
the slot that very
naturally could have been
theirs.
The
clarity on the two factors
is a prerequisite to understanding to
what extent are
there
opportunities
to expand? An in-depth analysis will lead to
some blank areas in terms
of
customers'
beliefs. Even if the company
managers are sensitive to
fulfill unmet needs owing
to
their
knowledge of the market,
knowing customers' point of
view will only
strengthen
managers'
strategic thoughts and planned
moves.
Summary
brand-based customer model, lecture
14 through here
A
brand-based customer model is all
about creating, maintaining, and
leveraging your brand
by
keeping
the focus on customers. We
have to stay close to the
customer and make the
customer
the
basis of all branding
decisions.
Seek
customers' perspective of competitors'
products as well and have
formal and informal
ways
and means to assess your
brand as it stands in the
competitive setup. In other
words,
understand
your brand vis-ŕ-vis
competition to make realistic decisions
about sustaining your
brand.
Keep you brand current and
contemporary through innovations and
maintain the
pinnacle
of the brand value
pyramid.
Understand
the category from customers'
point of view and identify
all those needs that are
still
unmet.
That will give you leads
into expanding and growing
your business. If you go
slowly,
then
competition will not waste a moment to
take over.
65
Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
POSITIONING
An
understanding of the category and
the roles played by
competition (all brands)
leads us to
develop
the positioning for our
brand. Positioning is very
central to having the right
strategies
at
work to achieve our brand
management and overall business
goals.
Positioning
is an approach to communication that
solves communication problem
by
highlighting
very special features of your
brand. It is important to understand why
and how it
started?
Product
era
It
started in the middle of the
last century, in fifties.
Back then, it was the
product era. New
technologies
were emerging and subsequent innovations
led to emergence of a host of
new
products
and their variations. Advertisers and
advertising agents thought it
prudent to talk about
the
differentiated features of their
products in a fairly straightforward
manner. Consumers saw
the
difference and advertising made
its mark. This was the
time of unique selling
proposition -
USP.
Talking about the USP is not
discarded even today.
However, the objective here is
to
have
the historical perspective
right.
With
technology reaching a high
level across so many
categories and boundaries, level
of
innovations
decreased while communication
remained at its peak. The
net result was that
everyone
was talking about almost the
same thing because there
were a lot of
"me-too"
products
and that marked the end of an
era "the product
era1"
Image
Era
Advertising
experts thought of changing
the strategy to revitalize
advertising and that
marked
the
beginning of an era known as
"the image era". The general
thinking was talk of the
image
and
the consumer would pay
attention. If the product
era was killed by me-too
products, the
image
era was killed by me-too
companies2.
As
and when industry and markets graduated
from one era to another, the
level and magnitude
of
communication increased exponentially.
Communicating was the norm and
thought of
something
that would do the trick
for marketers. Resultantly,
the problem all marketers
faced
was
of over-communication.
It
is interesting to note that
the two advertising
executives who propounded
the very concept of
positioning
back in the 1970s for the
first time called that
era over-communicated. The
question
that
arose so many years ago, and is
still valid, is, "how to
communicate and get heard in the
overly
communicated society".
The
Positioning Era
The
two authors of the concept
believe that to be successful
you have to touch base
with
reality3.
The only reality that
counts is what is already in
the mind of the prospect.
Creativity
for
the sake of creating
something new does not
help. And, therefore, image
building through
advertising
meant to create something
that does not already
exist in consumer's mind
doesn't
help.
Creating something of that
sort is very difficult, if
not outright impossible, the
authors
believe.
In
other words, the thrust of
the concept of positioning is to do
something effectively with
what
already
exists in prospect's mind and
then capitalize on it.
Therefore, the basic approach
of
positioning
is not to create something
new, but to manipulate what
is already there in the
mind
and
to retie the connections
that already exist, claim
the authors4.
As
a defense mechanism against
over-communication, the mind
rejects a lot of information
and
accepts
only the one that matches
with the prior knowledge, or
that complements the
prior
knowledge.
The only defense mechanism
is that a person has an oversimplified
mind.
Marketing
people therefore should ignore
the sending side and do
something with the
receiving
66
Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
side
the prospect's mind. You
concentrate on the prospect's perceptions
and simplify the
process.
Positioning
therefore is not something
that you do to the product.
It is something you do to
the
prospect's
mind. You position the
product in the mind of the
prospect.
How
positioning works
Experience
has it that positioning
works best when you
emphasize on things that are
not. If you
introduce
chewing gum for health
conscious people, you position it as
"sugar-free", meaning it
is
not sugar.
The
first car was advertised as the
"horseless" carriage. It had no horse and hence it
was
different.
That positioned the new
invention against the transportation of
the time. You
highlight
the differentiated feature by
talking of something that is
not there, but at the
same
time
is in the mind of the prospect.
This is a good example of manipulating
something that
already
exists in prospect's
mind.
Things
-that
are not -can be
found in areas other than
the basic product itself.
This implies that
to
effectively position a product in
prospects' mind, you do not
always have to talk about
the
product
itself.
If
you introduce a low-price
item in response to a genuine
need, you can position it
from price
point
of view and talk of the
product as a low-price item,
meaning it is not a high-price
item.
Improving
distribution with the help
of a new product can go a long
way in positioning it as
the
one
that has hassle-free
distribution.
An
important factor
The
most important thing is that
you have to be the first one
to get into the consumer's
mind
with
the position that you
want occupied5.
The
market research that we
carry out as part of customer-based
model help companies
identify
the
areas of growth and expansion and
therefore identification of the
genuine unmet needs.
You
must
take the lead, start talking
of the unmet need(s), and be the
first one to get into the
minds
of
the prospects.
Bibliography:
1.
Geoffery
Randall: "Branding A Practical
Guide to Planning Your
Strategy";
Kogan
Page (53)
2.
Al
Ries and Jack trout: "Positioning:
The Battle for Your
Mind"; McGraw Hill
(23)
3.
Al
Ries and Jack trout: "Positioning:
The Battle for Your
Mind"; McGraw Hill
(24)
4.
Al
Ries and Jack trout: "Positioning:
The Battle for Your
Mind"; McGraw Hill
(24)
5.
Al
Ries and Jack trout: "Positioning:
The Battle for Your
Mind"; McGraw Hill
(24)
Suggested
readings:
1.
Scot
M. Davis: "Brand Asset
Management Driving Profitable
Growth through
Your
Brands"; Jossey-Bass, A Wiley
Imprint (91-105)
2.
Al
Ries and Jack trout: "Positioning:
The Battle for Your
Mind"; McGraw Hill
(5
27)
67
Table of Contents:
|
|||||