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Marketers are faced with
Market Exit strategies when
they reach the Decline
stage. There are two ways
marketers can address this.
Brand Strategy A plan for
the systematic development
of a brand to enable it to
meet its agreed objectives.
The strategy should be
rooted in the brand's vision
and driven by the principles
of differentiation and
sustained consumer appeal.
Brand Strategy
A plan that employs a unique
set of design tools - logo,
palette, typefaces, formats,
images, and language -
created for an organization
and applied to all its
communication tools: annual
report, letterhead, business
cards, packaging,
multiband strategy
In this strategy, the
company has more than one
brand of product, competing
with each other, in a given
market.
Multi brand strategy: In
which one company markets a
number of similar and
competing products each with
its own unrelated brand
name. Particularly
applicable to FMCG products,
eg. detergents.
com, inspired by the
carrier's new best friend:
brand strategy.
pubname
Aircraft Interiors
International
datelineOctober 2006
headline
Drive a Brand Like a Rental?
It Won't Last
typeARTICLE summary ...
Focusing on your Target
Audience - Brand Strategy
Course
Target Marketing Definition
- Market Segmentation
Create a Target Market
Profile
Marketing Strategy - Sell To
Your Target Market .
Multibrand Strategy the use
of more than one brand
within a product category in
order to counteract brand
switching and to increase
shelf space opportunities.
With the commoditization of
products and services, there
is compelling need for
Strategic Branding.
Strategic branding provides
the single-minded focus to
make the tactics of branding
work best—from breakthrough
advertising to great graphic
design. In this workshop you
will learn how to use
Strategic Branding to create
a meaningful, differentiated
approach for your brand,
including practical tools
and methods you can use back
at your office.
Your brand has the potential
to be a powerful source of
sustained competitive
advantage. But changing
consumer needs, emerging
technologies and competition
are making it more difficult
than ever to create a brand
that is meaningfully
differentiated in the mind
of the consumer. And
undifferentiated brands are
proven to underperform
financially. But
differentiation is not the
only thing that matters.
Once you determine the
source of differentiation
then you have to deliver.
Strong brand platforms walk
the talk by delivering their
point of difference through
all facets of the brand
experience. Using cases,
exercises and best
practices, you will learn
how to create a meaningful,
differentiated brand as well
as how to fully deliver a
brand experience capable of
driving revenue and profit
growth.
YOU WILL LEARN HOW TO:
* Uncover “White Space”
opportunities—unmet needs
overlooked by the
competition
* Develop the right
proposition that fits your
brand and your company
* Create meaningful
differentiation for new ways
to grow your brand
* Evaluate specific
marketing tools to deliver
real brand value
* Develop features,
tactics and other support
that delivers on the Brand
experience
WHO SHOULD ATTEND?
Anyone involved in
developing the strategic
direction of a
product/service or company
brand: CMO, vice president,
senior managers responsible
for strategic brand
development. Marketing
services executives in
advertising, graphic design
and digital media would
benefit from this program.
ABOUT THE INSTRUCTOR:
P2M InfoTech which
specializes in strategic
brand innovation consulting
to Fortune 1000 companies in
North America and globally.
EMP has developed strategic
brand solutions for B to C
and B to B companies in
variety of categories
ranging from consumer
products, financial,
telecom, entertainment and
pharmaceuticals.
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.
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.
Brand Commitment the degree
to which a customer is
committed to a given brand
in that they are likely to
re-purchase/re-use in the
future. The level of
commitment indicates the
degree to which a brand's
customer franchise is
protected from competitors.
Brand Earnings the share of
a brand-owning business's
cash flow that can be
attributed to the brand
alone.
Brand Equity The sum of all
distinguishing qualities of
a brand, drawn from all
relevant stakeholders, those
results in personal
commitment to and demand for
the brand; these
differentiating thoughts and
feelings make the brand
valued and valuable.
Brand Equity Protection Is
the implementation of
strategies to reduce risk
and liability from the
effects attributable to
counterfeiting, diversion,
tampering and theft so that
the differentiating thoughts
and feelings about the brand
are maintained and remain
valued and valuable.
Brand Essence The brand's
promise expressed in the
simplest, most single-minded
terms. For example, Volvo =
safety; AA = Fourth
Emergency Service. The most
powerful brand essences are
rooted in a fundamental
customer need.
Brand Experience the means
by which a brand is created
in the mind of a
stakeholder. Some
experiences are controlled
such as retail environments,
advertising,
products/services, websites,
etc. Some are uncontrolled
like journalistic comment
and word of mouth. Strong
brands arise from consistent
experiences which combine to
form a clear, differentiated
overall brand experience.
Brand Extension Leveraging
the values of the brand to
take the brand into new
markets/sectors.
Brand Harmonization ensuring
that all products in a
particular brand range have
a consistent name, visual
identity and, ideally,
positioning across a number
of geographic or
product/service markets.
Brand Identity The outward
expression of the brand,
including its name and
visual appearance. The
brand's identity is its
fundamental means of
consumer recognition and
symbolizes the brand's
differentiation from
competitors.
Brand Image the customer's
net "out-take" from the
brand. For users this is
based on practical
experience of the product or
service concerned (informed
impressions) and how well
this meets expectations; for
non-users it is based almost
entirely upon uninformed
impressions, attitudes and
beliefs.
Brand licensing the leasing
by a brand owner of the use
of a brand to another
company. Usually a licensing
fee or royalty rate will be
agreed for the use of the
brand.
Brand Management Practically
this involves managing the
tangible and intangible
aspects of the brand. For
product brands the tangibles
are the product itself, the
packaging, the price, etc.
For service brands (see
Service Brands), the
tangibles are to do with the
customer experience - the
retail environment,
interface with salespeople,
overall satisfaction, etc.
For product, service and
corporate brands, the
intangibles are the same and
refer to the emotional
connections derived as a
result of experience,
identity, communication and
people. Intangibles are
therefore managed via the
manipulation of identity,
communication and people
skills.
Brand Mission See Brand
Platform.
Brand Parity A measure of
how similar, or different,
different brands in the same
category are perceived to
be. Brand parity varies
widely from one category to
another. It is high for
petrol, for example: about
80% of respondents (BBDO
survey) see no real
difference between brands.
By contrast, brand parity
for cars is low: only about
25% of respondents say that
one make is much the same as
another.
Brand Personality The
attribution of human
personality traits
(seriousness, warmth,
imagination, etc.) to a
brand as a way to achieve
differentiation. Usually
done through long-term
above-the-line advertising
and appropriate packaging
and graphics. These traits
inform brand behavior
through both prepared
communication/packaging,
etc., and through the people
who represent the brand -
its employees.
Brand Platform the Brand
Platform consists of the
following elements:
* Brand Vision the
brand's guiding insight into
its world.
* Brand Mission How the
brand will act on its
insight.
* Brand Values The code
by which the brand lives.
The brand values act as a
benchmark to measure
behaviors and performance.
* Brand Personality The
brand's personality traits
(See also definition for
Brand Personality).
* Brand Tone of Voice
How the brand speaks to its
audiences.
Brand positioning the
distinctive position that a
brand adopts in its
competitive environment to
ensure that individuals in
its target market can tell
the brand apart from others.
Positioning involves the
careful manipulation of
every element of the
marketing mix.
Brand Strategy a plan for
the systematic development
of a brand to enable it to
meet its agreed objectives.
The strategy should be
rooted in the brand's vision
and driven by the principles
of differentiation and
sustained consumer appeal.
The brand strategy should
influence the total
operation of a business to
ensure consistent brand
behaviors and brand
experiences.
Brand Tone of Voice See
Brand Platform.
Brand Valuation The process
of identifying and measuring
the economic benefit - brand
value - that derives from
brand ownership.
Brand Values The code by
which the brand lives. The
brand values act as a
benchmark to measure
behaviors and performance.
Brand Vision See Brand
Platform.
Branding Selecting and
blending tangible and
intangible attributes to
differentiate the product,
service or corporation in an
attractive, meaningful and
compelling way.
Co-branding The use of two
or more brand names in
support of a new product,
service or venture.
Consumer Product Goods
(consumer goods) or services
(consumer services)
purchased for private use or
for other members of the
household.
Core Competencies Relates to
a company's particular areas
of skill and competence that
best contribute to its
ability to compete.
Corporate Identity At a
minimum, is used to refer to
the visual identity of a
corporation (its logo,
signage, etc.), but usually
taken to mean an
organization's presentation
to its stakeholders and the
means by which it
differentiates itself from
other organizations.
Counterfeiting when an
organization or individual
produces a product that
looks like a branded product
and is packaged and
presented in a manner to
deceive the purchaser.
Country of Origin The
country from which a given
product comes. Customers'
attitudes to a product and
their willingness to buy it
tend to be heavily
influenced by what they
associate with the place
where it was designed and
manufactured.
Customer Characteristics All
distinguishing, distinctive,
typical or peculiar
characteristics and
circumstances or customers
that can be used in market
segmentation to tell one
group of customers from
another.
Customer Relationship
Management (CRM) Tracking
customer behavior for the
purpose of developing
marketing and
relationship-building
processes that bond the
consumer to the brand.
Developing software or
systems to provide
one-to-one customer service
and personal contact between
the company and the
customer.
Customer Service The way in
which the brand meets its
customers' needs via its
various different channels
(for example, over the
telephone or Internet in the
case of remote banking, or
in person in the case of
retail or
entertainment).
Demographics The description
of outward traits that
characterize a group of
people, such as age, sex,
nationality, marital status,
education, occupation or
income. Decisions on market
segmentation are often based
on demographic data.
Differential Product
Advantage A feature of a
product that is valuable to
customers and is not found
in other products of the
same category.
Differentiation Creation or
demonstration of unique
characteristics in a
company's products or brands
compared to those of its
competitors.
Differentiator Any tangible
or intangible characteristic
that can be used to
distinguish a product or a
company from other products
and companies.
Diversion When genuine
product is sold to a buyer
in one market/channel and
then resold by the same
buyer into another
market/channel, without the
consent or authority of the
brand owner, to take
advantage of a price
arbitrage situation.
Definition also applies to
parallel trade, gray market
or gray market
activities.
Endorsed brand (See Brand
Architecture.) Generally a
product or service brand
name that is supported by a
masterbrand - either
dominantly.
FMCG Fast moving consumer
goods. An expression used to
describe frequently
purchased consumer items,
such as foods, cleaning
products and toiletries.
Focus Group A qualitative
research technique in which
a group of about eight
people is invited to a
neutral venue to discuss a
given subject, for example
hand-held power tools. The
principle is the same as an
in-depth interview, except
that group dynamics help to
make the discussion livelier
and more wide-ranging.
Qualitative groups enable
the researcher to probe
deeper into specific areas
of interest (for example,
the nature of commitment to
a brand). The result adds
richer texture to the
understanding of broader
data (for example,
quantitative), which may
paint general trends or
observations. Also known as
a group discussion.
Freestanding Brand (See
Brand Architecture.) A brand
name and identity used for a
single product or service in
a portfolio, which is
unrelated to the names and
identities of other products
in the company's portfolio.
Functionality What a product
does for the buyer and user;
the utility it offers the
user; what he or she can do
with it.
Goods A product consisting
predominantly of tangible
values. Almost all goods,
however, have intangible
values to a greater or
lesser extent.
Group Discussion See Focus
Group.
High Technology (high tech)
A term with vague and
far-reaching meaning. This
covers electronics, data
technology,
telecommunications, medical
technology and
bio-chemistry. In order to
be classed as a high tech
company, one definition is
that at least 35 percent of
staff should have a
technical qualification, and
at least 15 percent of sales
should be used for R&D.
Another definition states
that the company must employ
twice as many scientists and
engineers and invest twice
as much in R&D as the
average of all manufacturing
companies in the country.
Intangibles "Intangible" -
incapable of being touched.
(1) Intangible assets -
trademarks, copyrights,
patents, design rights,
proprietary expertise,
databases, etc. (2)
Intangible brand attributes
- brand names, logos,
graphics, colors, shapes and
smells.
Launch The initial marketing
of a new product in a
particular market. The way
in which the launch is
carried out greatly affects
the product's profitability
throughout its lifecycle.
Market Leader A company that
has achieved a dominant
position - either in scale
or influence - within its
field. This leading position
often comes about because
the company was the first to
market a certain type of
product and, with the
protection of a patent, has
managed to consolidate its
position before direct
competition was possible.
Alternatively, a company may
overtake a previous market
leader through greater
efficiency and skilful
positioning.
Market Position A measure of
the position of a company or
product on a market. Defined
as market share multiplied
by share of mind.
Market Segment A group of
customers who (a) share the
same needs and values, (b)
can be expected to respond
in much the same way to a
company's offering, and (c)
command enough purchasing
power to be of strategic
importance to the company.
Market Share A company's
share of total sales of a
given category of product on
a given market. Can be
expressed either in terms of
volume (how many units sold)
or value (the worth of units
sold).
Mass Marketing Simultaneous
standardized marketing to a
very large target market
through mass media. Other
names for this are market
aggregation and
undifferentiated marketing.
Masterbrand A brand name
that dominates all products
or services in a range or
across a business. Sometimes
used with sub-brands,
sometimes used with alpha or
numeric signifiers.
Monolithic Brand A single
brand name that is used to "masterbrand"
all products or services in
a range. Individual products
are nearly always identified
by alpha or numeric
signifiers.
Multibrand Strategy
/Multiple Branding Marketing
of two or more mutually
competing products under
different brand names by the
same company. The motive may
be that the company wishes
to create internal
competition to promote
efficiency, or to
differentiate its offering
to different market
segments, or to get maximum
mileage out of established
brands that it has acquired.
When a company has achieved
a dominant market share,
multibrand strategy may be
its only option for
increasing sales still
further without sacrificing
profitability.
Names There are three basic
categories of brand (or
corporate) name:
* Descriptive name A
name which describes the
product or service for which
it is intended, e.g.,
TALKING PAGES.
* Associative name A
name which alludes to an
aspect or benefit of the
product or service, often by
means of an original or
striking image or idea,
e.g., VISA.
* Freestanding name A
name which has no link to
the product or service but
which might have meaning of
its own.
The following are also
helpful:
* Abstract name A name
which is entirely invented
and has no meaning of its
own. Abstract names are a
sub-set of freestanding
names because they also have
no link to the product of
service.
* Coined name Any name
which is in some way
invented. Coined names can
be descriptive.
Niche Marketing adapted to
the needs, wishes and
expectations of small,
precisely defined groups of
individuals. A form of
market segmentation, but
aimed at very small
segments. Niche marketing
characteristically uses
selective media.
OEM market OEM stands for
Original Equipment
Manufacturers. The OEM
market consists of companies
that use another company's
product as a component in
their own production. A
manufacturer of ball
bearings, for example, sells
both to OEM customers who
build the bearings into
machines, and to end users
who need the bearings as
spare parts for machines
that they have bought from
the OEMs. Most manufacturing
companies thus have an OEM
market and a replacement
market. The latter is
usually called the MRO
market or aftermarket.
Offering What a company
offers for sale to
customers. An offering
includes the product and its
design, features, quality,
packaging, distribution,
etc., together with
associated services such as
financing, warranties and
installation. The name and
brand of the product are
also part of the
offering.
Packaging Design The design
of the pack format and
graphics for a product
brand.
Parent Brand A brand that
acts as an endorsement to
one or more sub-brands
within a range.
Passing Off The name given
to a legal action brought to
protect the "reputation" of
a particular
trademark/brand/get up. In
essence, the action is
designed to prevent others
from trading on the
reputation/goodwill of an
existing trademark/brand/get
up. The action is only
available in those countries
that recognize unregistered
trademark rights. In some
countries, it is called
"unfair competition action."
Perceptual Mapping Graphic
Analysis and presentation of
where actual and potential
customers place a product or
supplier in relation to
other products and
suppliers. Most perceptual
maps show only two
dimensions at a time, for
example price on one axis
and quality on the other.
There also are methods of
graphically analyzing and
presenting measurement data
in three or more dimensions.
Positioning Statement A
written description of the
position that a company
wishes itself, its product
or its brand to occupy in
the minds of a defined
target audience.
Power Branding A strategy in
which every product in a
company's range has its own
brand name which functions
independently, unsupported
by either the company's
corporate brand or its other
product brands. Power
branding is a
resource-intensive strategy,
since each brand must be
commercially promoted and
legally protected. This
strategy is used mainly by
manufacturers of consumer
goods. Lever's and Procter &
Gamble's detergents are good
examples of power brands.
Product Brand A brand which
is synonymous with a
particular product offering,
for example, Cheerios.
Rebrand When a brand owner
revisits the brand with the
purpose of updating or
revising based on internal
or external circumstances.
Rebranding is often
necessary after an M&A or if
the brand has outgrown its
identity/marketplace.
Relative Market Share Your
own company's market share
compared to those of your
competitors. A large share
confers advantages of scale
in product development,
manufacturing and marketing.
It also puts you in a
stronger position in the
minds of customers, which
has a positive influence on
pricing.
Relaunch Reintroducing a
product into a specific
market. The term implies
that the company has
previously marketed the
product but stopped
marketing it. A relaunched
product has usually
undergone one or more
changes. It may, for
example, be technically
modified, rebranded,
distributed through
different channels or
repositioned.
Repositioning Communications
activities to give an
existing product a new
position in customers' minds
and so expanding or
otherwise altering its
potential market. Many
potentially valuable
products lead an obscure
existence because they were
launched or positioned in an
inadequate manner. It is
almost always possible to
enhance the value of such
products by repositioning
them.
Rollout The process by which
a company introduces a new
product or service to
different geographical
markets or consumer
segments.
Selective Media Media that,
unlike mass media, reach
only small and identifiable
groups of people, for
example, members of a
particular profession or
industry or other groups
defined by geographic,
demographic or psychographic
data (otherwise known as
targeted media).
Service Brand A product
consisting predominantly of
intangible values. "A
service is something that
you can buy and sell, but
not drop on your foot" (The
Economist). In this sense, a
service is something that
you do for somebody, or a
promise that you make to
them.
Share of Mind There are many
definitions of share of
mind. At its most precise,
share of mind measures how
often consumers think about
a particular brand as a
percentage of all the times
they think about all the
brands in its category. More
loosely, share of mind can
be defined simply as
positive perceptions of the
brand obtained by market
research. Whereas market
share measures the width of
a company's market position,
share of mind can be said to
measure its depth.
Share of Voice The media
spending of a particular
brand when compared to
others in its category.
Sub-brand A product or
service brand that had its
own name and visual identity
to differentiate it from the
parent brand.
Tangibles "Tangible" -
capable of being touched.
(1) Tangible assets -
manufacturing plant, bricks
and mortar, cash,
investments, etc. (2)
Tangible brand attributes -
the product and its
packaging. (3) Tangible
brand values - useful
qualities of the brand known
to exist through experience
and knowledge.
Target Market The market
segment or group of
customers that a company has
decided to serve, and at
which it consequently aims
its marketing activities.
Top-of-Mind What is present
in the uppermost level of
consciousness; the
manufacturer or brand that
people in market surveys
name first when asked to
list products in a specific
category. Top-of-mind is the
highest degree of share of
mind. To attain that
position, a company normally
needs to have a large share
of voice in its category.
Trademark "Any sign capable
of being represented
graphically which is capable
of distinguishing goods or
services of one undertaking
from those of another
undertaking"
Trademark Infringement A
trademark registration is
infringed by the
unauthorized use of the
registered trademark, or of
one that is confusingly
similar to it, on the
registered goods or
services, or in certain
circumstances on similar or
dissimilar goods and
services.
Trendsetter Someone or thing
that breaks a traditional
mold or routine and gains a
following because of it. an
example of trendsetting in
design as now office
supplies come in the
familiar colors and
translucent packaging.
User Segmentation Division
of potential customers into
market segments according to
how and for what purpose
they use a product. Do they
use it for cleaning their
teeth or for making cakes
(baking powder)? For oiling
their hair or for frying
food?. As a decongestant
chest rub or as an
aphrodisiac?
Visual Identity What a brand
looks like - including,
among other things, its
logo, typography, packaging
and literature systems.
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