Understanding Brand, Brand Image and Brand Hierarchy: Presented by
Understanding Brand, Brand Image and Brand Hierarchy: Presented by
Understanding Brand, Brand Image and Brand Hierarchy: Presented by
Company C
Company A
Product / services
Company B Consumer
Company C
Product Packaging
Websites
logo
Company
Product A
Product B
Advertisements
A brand is a promise. A promise to achieve certain results, deliver a
certain experience, or act in a certain way. A promise that is conveyed
by everything people see, hear, touch, taste or smell about your
business.
9.McDonald's
• McDonalds sums this up nicely in the following
quote emphasizing the importance of brands:
• “…it is not factories that make profits, but
relationships with customers, and it is company
and brand names which secure those
relationships”
1. Coca-Cola
• “If Coca-Cola were to lose all of its
production-related assets in a disaster, the
company would survive. By contrast, if all
consumers were to have a sudden lapse of
memory and forget everything related to
Coca-Cola the company would go out of
business.”
• Coca-Cola
Brand as an Asset
• “If Coca Cola lost everything except for
‘the formula’ and its brand name , it could
walk into any bank in the world and get
$100 billion loan to start from the scratch”
Fortune Magazine
From Products to Brands
BRANDED CONSUMERISATION
SPECTRUM
FUNCTIONS OF BRANDS
Awareness
Risk Reducer
Provides Information
Provide Symbolic Consumption
CHARACTERISTIC OF
BRANDS
GENERIC
EXPECTED
AUGMENTED
POTENTIAL
Module 1 - Stage 2
Attributes
Positioning Statement
Positioning Statement
Communication Difference
Repositioning
• Repositioning occurs when a brand
tries to change its market position to
reflect a change in consumer’s tastes.
This is often required when a brand
has become tired, perhaps because its
original market has matured or has
gone into decline.
Communications
• Communications also play a key role in building a
successful brand. We suggested that brand
positioning is essentially about customer perceptions
– with the objective to build a clearly defined
position in the minds of the target audience.
• All elements of the promotional mix need to be used
to develop and sustain customer perceptions.
Initially, the challenge is to build awareness, then to
develop the brand personality and reinforce the
perception.
First-mover advantage
• Business strategists often talk about first-
mover advantage. In terms of brand
development, by “first-mover” they mean
that it is possible for the first successful
brand in a market to create a clear
positioning in the minds of target
customers before the competition enters
the market. There is plenty of evidence to
support this.
Long-term perspective
• The need to invest in the brand over the
long-term is essential. Building customer
awareness, communicating the brand’s
message and creating customer loyalty
takes time. This means that management
must “invest” in a brand, perhaps at the
expense of short-term profitability.
Internal Marketing
• Finally, management should ensure that the brand is
marketed “internally” as well as externally. By this we
mean that the whole business should understand the brand
values and positioning. This is particularly important in
service businesses where a critical part of the brand value is
the type and quality of service that a customer receives.
• Think of the brands that you value in the restaurant, hotel
and retail sectors. It is likely that your favorite brands invest
heavily in staff training so that the face-to-face contact that
you have with the brand helps secure your loyalty.
An Effective Brand Name
● Is easy to pronounce
● Is easy to recognize and remember
● Is short, distinctive, and unique
● Has a positive connotation
● Reinforces the product image
● Is legally protectable
Branding Policies
• First question is whether to brand or not to brand.
Homogenous products are difficult to brand. Branding
policies are:
• Individual Branding: Naming each product differently
P&G, facilitates market segmentation and no overlap.
• Overall Family Branding: All products are branded with the
same name, or part of a name, IE Nokia, promotion of one
item also promotes other items.
• Brand Extension Branding: Use one of its existing brand
names as part of a brand for an improved or new product,
usually in the same product category.
75% new products are brand extensions!!
Brand image
Brand Image
Colgate