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Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
Lesson
4
BRAND
MANIFESTATIONS/ FUNDAMENTALS
The
discussion on brand fundamentals
continues from the previous
lecture.
Brand
Characteristics
Brand
characteristics fundamentally relate
with the value brands offer
their customers and
create
for their companies. Value
being at the heart of
brands' characteristics necessitates
that
brands
be managed accurately.
The
level of accuracy in brand management is
reflected by the power brands
have. A higher
level
of power undoubtedly mirrors a
higher level of accurate brand
management.
Value
and power are not a guarantee
that brands will not be attacked.
Competition will attack
your
brand by trying to dislodge it or
snatch market share from
it. The battle will never
stop.
The
question arises, "how to
bring in accuracy into brand
management in a way that
brand's
characteristics
get enhanced under competitive challenges
and threats"? Competitive
pressures
threaten
brands' success and even
existence.
Given
all that, brands become so
very essential to the survival and
success of business
firms
that
we need to understand them in
all their complexities, so
that we can manage
them
correctly.
A
very strong argument put
forward by world renowned
consultants, McKinsey is
that
companies
need to win the right to
brand their products. This
simply means that branding
is just
not
about wrapping your product
into a nice package and
selling that in the hope
that you have
turned
the product into a brand,
which is not going to face
any pitfalls and rather is
going to be
profitable
and powerful, straightaway NO! To
have the right
characteristics, brands have to
be
subjected to a certain criteria,
the consultants have
concluded.
The
consultants claim that in
order to win the right to
brand, a company has to meet
the
following
vital criteria.1
·
The
brand must offer
a
superior value
proposition
·
The
brand must deliver
the
superior value
·
The
brand must maintain
a
relationship with its
customers.
If
a brand meets the above
criteria in all senses, then
it can be defined as the one having
the
right
characteristics. The criteria to
create and maintain brands are so
well-meaning that any
company
operating outside of them
does not have the
right to do branding.
This
can be further elaborated as
follows:
·
Brand
management is a strategic process and
involves complete company
effort beyond
the
functional boundaries of the
marketing department. And,
therefore, offering value
is
a
function and commitment of the
whole company.
·
The
company must have all
its resources at work to
deliver superior value,
which must
be
defined in consumer terms.
Exactly how the company
delivers value varies
from
company
to company. It could be superior
technology, lower cost,
strength in
distribution,
history of the brand, and
creative advertising. Anything
defined in
consumer
terms will automatically translate
into something valuable for
the company as
well.
·
The
brand must have a continuing
relationship with the
customers, and the brand
must
adapt
to changes in response to fierce
competition yet meaning the
same to its loyal
customers.
16
Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
Brand
value at the core of brand
characteristics
o
Brand
characteristics offer us an opportunity
to explain what brand value
means to
consumers
and how a brand creates that
value. Bear in mind that
brand value is at
the
center of brand's
characteristics.
o
The
consumers must feel that
they are getting full value
for the money spent
in
terms
of quality. The value has to
be more than the generic
product. Right
branding
adds
value to the product.
Reconsider the definition of
brand management.
o
They
must feel that the purchase
of a certain brand has
optimized their decision
of
buying
the best brand in the
category. It is a subjective value,
but nonetheless
should
be
created.
o
They
must get confirmation of the
self-image that they present to
others.
o
They
must get satisfaction out of
the attractiveness of the
brand.
o
They
must get satisfaction from
the responsible social behavior of
the brand in
terms
of ecology and other ethical
issues.
·
A
brand also creates value for
the company.
·
A
strong brand works in the
same way for the
company as for the
consumers. It assures
the
following:
o
Good
future sales
o
Good
future earnings
o
Good
future cash flows
o
Source of
good future demand and lasting
attractiveness
o
Strong
entry barrier to
competition
o
Carries
its value into other
markets - local as well as
international
o
Carries
its value into other
business categories i.e.,
new product areas and,
hence,
offers
economies of scale in advertising,
promotions, and other
marketing-mix
variables
Layers/levels
of brands
Brands
are offered in lines, mixes,
stretches, and extensions. Behind every
form of a brand are
strategic
considerations. Such considerations
form brand architecture,
which is a topic of
detailed
discussions in lectures on brand
extension and brand architecture
(lectures 21 28).
It
owes to strategic considerations that
brand managers decide
whether a brand should form
a
product
line as a stand-alone brand, a
company-name brand, designer-name brand,
or an
extension/stretch
of an existing brand name.
The
decision to name a brand into
any one of the above-mentioned
classifications has one
fundamental
common to all the
relationship between a product and a
brand. An understanding
into
developing that product-brand
relationship leads you to
build up the right
branding
strategies.
This implies you will then
be able to define different layers of
brands (lectures 21
28).
Commitment
of top management (Brand owners'
commitment)
We
are clear how brands create
value for the consumer and
the company. We must also
look
into
how a brand generates its
own value to be able to create
value for its two
beneficiaries,
namely
the consumer and the
company.
Actually,
a brand does not generate
its own value; it is the
commitment and quality of
brand
management
that builds up value of a
brand over the years.
Companies
that believe in continuously
maintaining value of their brands and
adding further
value
to them are the ones
that view brand management as
strategic objective and never
lose
sight
of that goal.
17
Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
The
concept can be explained graphically
with
The
Value Interface
the
help of a value interface. If
you come to
think
of it there are brands on the
international
market
as well as our local one
that have been
around
since the early last century
the
Brand
Creates
Brand
Creates
examples
are from the beverage, tea,
smoking,
Value
for
Value
for
and
other industries. You can create a
list of
Company
Consumer
your
own.
Such
brands have their longevity
owing not to
accidents.
They owe that to commitment
of their
managements
that have been investing
into
Management
manufacturing
and marketing areas:
Commitment
·
In
manufacturing for the purpose
of
-
Creates
innovations
and adapting to changing
Figure
8
Brand
Value
consumer
tastes, maintenance
and
improvement
of quality and
·
In
marketing from the
distribution and advertising viewpoints.
The whole exercise is
expensive!
That
above explains:
·
Why
companies invest into brands and manage
them prudently over years and
years?
·
Why
acquiring companies are willing to
pay a high price for
established brands that are
leaders
in their own right?
·
Why is
it tempting to buy brands than to
build them from
scratch?
The
answers to all the questions
converge on one point create
value for the consumer and
the
company,
which is possible only if management is
totally committed.
Summary
Lectures 3 and 4
Understanding
brand fundamentals is important to
develop an understanding into
the strategic
process
of brand asset management.
Fundamentals manifest themselves in
four different forms
dimensions, characteristics, layers, and
commitment of management.
The
concept of brand identity and image
are central to the
dimensions of brands and lays
the
very
foundation of what we want to
create and how we want that
creation imagined at
the
consumer's
end.
We
can also say that if brands have
consistent dimensions and strong
characteristics, then
they
offer
superior consumer value.
Value to consumers get translated
into value to
company.
What
really constitutes superior
consumer value is a deep
understanding of the
consumer.
Managers
must put themselves into
the shoes of consumers
/customers and think how the
latter
think
and react to different brands and branding
decisions.
The
whole company has to work as
a monolithic whole when it
comes to supporting the
right
branding
decisions. The company must
remain committed to good quality.
Quality here means
the
quality as perceived by
consumers.
The
company must also provide
differentiation. The whole
point is to create customers.
And,
nothing
would work more effectively
than having a point of
difference as compared with
competition.
The
company must support the
brands through investment into
production processes,
research
and
development, continuous innovation,
advertising, and human resource
development. No
brand
can survive for long without
the active support and total
commitment of the
management.
18
Brand
Management (MKT624)
VU
Bibliography
1.
Geoffrey Randall: "Branding A
Practical Guide to Planning
your Strategy"; Kogan
Page
(2)
Suggested
readings
1.
Geoffrey Randall: "Branding A
Practical Guide to Planning
your Strategy"; Kogan
Page
(chapters
1 and 2)
2.
Jean-Noel
Kapferer: "Strategic Brand
Management"; Kogan Page
(chapter 1)
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