Solving the 12 Toughest Branding Problems(第1页)
Editor's Introduction:The majority of upstart-brands, even the solid, dependable ones, toil along, achieving less-than-expected results. The problem They are plagued with a variety of difficulties, ranging from profitability issues to concerns about extending a brand into new product categories. By recognizing and learning to resolve these trouble spots, organizations can extract the greatest value from their brands.
The brand increasingly is becoming the key source of differentiation that guides customer purchase choice. It is the focal point around which an organization defines how it will uniquely deliver value to the customer for a profit - effectively embodying the "heart and soul" of that organization. The brands promise is delivered through its products, services, and consumer communication - the total customer relationship and experience. If the brand is well conceived and consistently delivered through all business processes and customer contacts, the organization will grow and prosper.
Not too long ago, marketers at consumer product companies seemed to be the only ones interested in talking about brand management and branding. But, these days, all kinds of organizations are recognizing the importance of branding.
Why has this marketing discipline become so popular In an age of increasing product commoditization and choice, the brand is an easy way for people to break through the clutter. It helps them simplify certain choices in their lives. And brands are increasingly fulfilling peoples' needs for affiliation and identification - needs that traditional institutions are struggling to meet as well as they used to.
If brand management is new to you or your organization, you most likely need a quick but comprehensive overview of the key barriers to successful brand building. Awareness of the problems and pitfalls brands can encounter is an important step in maintaining a strong, healthy brand.
1. Focusing on short-term profitability at the expense of long-term revenue growth. This problem is driven by the organization's reward systems. If brand managers and general managers are compensated and promoted on delivering quarterly or annual financial results without a focus on longer-term business growth, this is sure to occur. This problem is most acute in publicly held companies that are pressured to deliver quarterly financial results. The solution is to create a balanced scorecard that integrates growth objectives into common and individual performance measures.
2. Limiting the brand to one channel of distribution or aligning the brand too closely with a declining channel of trade. Have you heard much about Tupperware lately Although that brand was one of the pioneers of the network marketing approach, it hasn't extended its distribution much beyond that. In contrast, Rubbermaid-branded products are available in many popular distribution channels.
The lesson: Don't ever become too dependent on one channel of trade. Always look for the best new opportunities for distributing your products or services.
3. Reducing or eliminating brand advertising. When it is time to "tighten the organizational belt," advertising is always a likely source of savings. The budget is usually big enough to contribute significantly to cost savings, and it is often difficult to tell advertising's return on investment. Finally, even if there is an ill effect, the brand won't immediately suffer from an equity withdrawal (or so goes the all-too-common logic).
However, recent studies have shown a positive correlation between advertising spending and revenues, earnings, market share, and stock price. Tod Johnson of the NPD Group indicates that a decline in brand loyalty has two causes. One is erratic advertising or advertising that does not keep pace with the competition. The other is "cannibalization" caused by brand extensions.
Set specific objectives for your advertising and tack results against those objectives. Copy test all of your ads to make sure they are effective. And, finally, constantly and vigilantly sell the importance of advertising to key internal decision makers.
4. Applying branding decisions at the end of the product development process ("Now, what will we name this") versus treating brand management as the key driver of all of your enterprise's activities. You are probably working for a manufacturing company that really doesn't understand brand management and marketing. They design, manufacture, and sell products and services. They don't market brands, or if they do, they leave that function to the advertising or communications department or to the advertising agency.
A brand is a source of a promise to the consumer. Everything a company does should support that promise. Start with the target consumer and the brand design (essence, promise, personality, and positioning) and then decide what the products and services will be. (This may be an organization design and staffing competency issue.)
5. Confusing brand management with product management. Brand management and product management are not the same. Brands, if well managed, should have a much longer life than individual products and even product categories.
Brand management is much more holistic than product management, encompassing all of the marketing elements and many of an organization's other functions. Consumers do not develop relationships with products nor are they loyal to products. Brands and what they stand for establish the emotional connection with consumers. As Jim Speros of Ernst & Young put it, "Products are manufactured in factories… brands are created in the mind of the consumer."
6. Defining your brand too narrowly, especially as a product category (for instance, "greeting cards" versus "caring shared"). One of the key advantages of a strong brand is its ability to be extended into new product and service categories. It is a growth engine for your organization. It helps you transcend specific product categories and formats that may become obsolete.
Define your brand's essence and promise in terms of what key benefits your brand delivers to consumers (independent of the specific product or service). Then continue to find new ways to deliver against that essence and promise. General Electric (GE) successfully broadened its frame of reference by moving from "General Electric: Better living through electricity" to "GE: We bring good things to life." (GE just adopted a new slogan: "Imagination at work.")
7. Failure to extend the brand into new product categories when the core category is in decline. "It is our core category. It is our cash cow. We must focus all of our resources on preserving it." Sound familiar
It is one thing to prematurely walk away from your core category. It is yet another to myopically focus all of your organizational resources on a flat or declining category in the misguided hope that you may be able to revive it, especially if you are not trying to radically redefine or re-engineer it. Try and try again, but also know when it is time to "quit" (that is, when it is time to do no more than maintain and "milk" the core category and reinvest the profits in new, more promising ventures.) Often, realistic financial projections are the best wake-up call in these situations.
8. Frequently changing and positioning and message. New brand managers and marketing executives often feel as though they need to make a name for themselves to continue the climb up the corporate ladder. Don't succumb to the temptation of doing this by changing the advertising campaign or the brand slogan, especially if the current ones are working well or haven't been in place long enough to assess their effectiveness.
Consistent communication over time is what builds a brand. After all, Hallmark has used its "When You Care Enough to Send the Very Best" slogan since 1944; the Marlboro Man has been Marlboro's icon since 1955; and Absolut Vodka has featured its bottle's shape in consumer communication since 1978. If you do make changes, make them gradually in an integrated fashion based on sound consumer research.
9. Creating brands or sub-brands for internal or trade reasons, rather than to address distinct consumer needs. There is nothing more inefficient or wasteful than creating a new brand or sub-brand for a purpose other than meeting a different consumer need. Brands and sub-brands should exist to address different consumers and consumer-need segments. It is expensive to launch a new brand (and very expensive to maintain multiple brands that meet similar consumer needs; it also adds unnecessary complexity to your organization). Worst of all, it dilutes the position of your original brand. This problem often results from egos and organization structure.
People head up divisions or business units that deliver specific products or services. They create a name and identity to put on business cards and to rally their employees around, whether the products or services are similar to products or services other divisions create or not. (This has resulted in the following printer lines for Hewlett-Packard: DeskJet, OfficeJet, OfficeJet Pro, LaserJet, DesignJet, DeskWriter, and PhotoSmart. It is unlikely that consumers understand many of these distinctions. They are likely to think of them all as Hewlett-Packard printers.)
Sometimes, companies create separate brands or sub-brands for trade reasons - for instance, to offer something different to specialty stores versus mass channels of distribution. (Hallmark created the "Expressions from Hallmark" brand to offer mass channel stores while specialty stores continued to carry the Hallmark brand. These two brands don't meet different consumer needs and I'm not sure consumers perceive differences between the two.) This problem can also result from mergers and acquisitions in which the brands are neither rationalized nor strategically managed after the enterprises are combined.
10. Overexposing the brand to the point that it becomes tiresome. Occasionally, a brand can become so ubiquitous through aggressive marketing and distribution that it seems to be everywhere. While brand awareness soars, the brand loses any uniqueness or mystique that it once had. The brand seems to no longer make a unique品牌命名公司 statement about the individual who uses it. It becomes common. People tire of it.
This is particularly true if the brand is mostly hype, logo, and identity, with no strong underlying idea or compelling point of difference. Nike has struggled with this. Its abundant success has also been its downfall: While Nike does stand for something, the brand's overexposure made it too common.
The lesson here: Focus more on the core consumer and maintaining relevant product/service differentiation and less on brand and logo ubiquity.
11. Not delivering against the communicated brand promise. This is a symptom of viewing brand management as a communications exercise. For example, United Airlines' advertising campaign, "United Airlines Rising" backfired on them. While they were trying to communicate that their service was rising to meet consumers' expectations, their flight attendants were involved in a labor dispute, and threatening CHAOS ("Creating Havoc Around Our System"). Their customer relations department was so unresponsive to complaints that it prompted a disgruntled customer to create the Web site, www.untied.com, featuring United Airlines passenger complaints.
The communicated promise must be delivered in product, service, and the total customer experience. Internal brand strategy education and communication may be necessary to ensure all employees are helping the brand deliver its promise. Tying employee compensation to delivery against the brand promise also will help ensure the promise is delivered.
12. Not applying the latest product and service innovations to your flagship brand because it is getting too old and stodgy (a self-fulfilling prophecy). It is a tragedy to walk away from a brand into which you may have invested millions of dollars, over time. It is better to reposition, revitalize, and extend an aging brand than to ignore it. You should carefully monitor consumer opinion to ensure the brand is perceived as relevant and vital. Also, track the brand's consumers to make sure they are not a shrinking or aging group. Often, new sub-brands can make the parent brand more relevant to new consumer segments.
Brand management aligns organizations with value-adding activities. It keeps organizations focused on meeting real human needs in compelling new ways. And, at its best, the brand defines how the organization best meets its customers' needs in unique and compelling ways. It serves as the organization's unifying principle and rallying cry, infuses the organization with a set of values and a personality, and holds an organization's employees to a consistent set of behaviors.
The brand stands for something. It establishes trust and a certain level of assurance and creates expectations that must be fulfilled. The brand can bring an organization to life in a very real way.
In the end, brand management is all about meeting people's physical, emotional, spiritual, intellectual, and other needs in unique ways. It is the application of free enterprise to the timely and timeless needs of mankind.
Excerpted from the book, "Brand Aid: An Easy Reference Guide To Solving Your Toughest Branding Problems and Strengthening Your Market Position" by Brad VanAuken. Copyright(c)2003 by Brad VanAuken. Published by AMACOM, a division of the American Management Association, International, New York, NY. All rights reserved.
Copies of the English-language edition are available through McGraw-Hill Education (Asia), Singapore.
Brad VanAuken is the founder and president of BrandForward, Inc., a consulting firm specializing in brand building, Internet branding, brand positioning, brand equity measurement, and brand extension strategy, among others.
豪禾品牌资讯
brand information
- vi设计
- logo设计
- 海报设计
- 导视系统
- 包装设计
- 企业宣传片
- 公关策划
- 网站设计
- 动漫主题资源
- 品牌策划
- 产品营销
- 互动行销
- 创意设计
- si空间
- 餐饮品牌
- 品牌命名
- 品牌定位
- 品牌诊断
- 品牌建设
- 品牌百科
- 设计前沿
- 时尚热点
- 豪禾动态
- B2B品牌战略
相关案例
Related cases
潍坊餐饮品牌全案策划|烧烤品牌全案设计|老字号烧烤店-山东谭氏烧烤品牌全案策划
- 2021/10/23隐形眼镜品牌全案策划,品牌战略表现,超级符号,超级话语,话语体系规划设计...
- 2021/10/20教育品牌全案策划-北京金峰练字品牌形象设计升级策划上海...
- 2021/10/20餐饮品牌品牌升级:掘金连锁餐饮行业策划,品牌设计战略伊秀日本料理...
- 2021/10/13连锁餐饮行业品牌营销策划-连锁餐饮企业品牌设计-熊觅花样好食社区店...
- 2021/09/09儿童教育培训品牌策划-品牌全案策划设计_教育品牌策划全案升级...
- 2021/08/03亢敏君功能性食品品牌策划营销快消品牌全案策划升级-超级符号-话语体系构建!...
- 2021/07/22嘻嘻未来绘教育品牌策划设计,打造体验式儿童场景教育新标杆...
- 2021/07/05嫥妍美容仪器品牌定位包装全案策划 美容棒化妆品行业品牌全案设计...
- 2021/06/04高端男装品牌全案策划|梵一集polo衫 T恤衫男装战略定位品牌落地...
博亚体育app下载官网相关的文章
Related articles
上海品牌建设策略公司--以品牌开拓市场
- 2020/10/18企业文化建设分哪几个阶段?做企业文化策划的公司...
- 2020/10/18企业文化建设内容主要包括...
- 2020/10/02企业文化策划-企业文化背后的故事...
- 2020/10/02企业文化整合的原则-如何进行企业文化策划:重任、企业愿景和价值观念...
- 2020/09/30企业文化策划原则-企业文化策划的几大要素...
- 2020/08/19智慧城市战略定位规划正在实施进行...
- 2019/12/19商业品牌建设有利于国家经济发展...
- 2019/07/17战略规划咨询帮助品牌找准自身使命...
- 2019/06/28公司发展战略方针有哪些?如何确定公司发展战略?...
品牌咨询
细分市场行业标识
打造全新的品牌视觉形象
最新案例推荐
Related cases
最新资讯推荐
related information
上海品牌全案策划营销是否会比较重要?
- 2022/02/12高端化妆护肤品包装设计品牌定位方面的特点...
- 2022/02/12生鲜超市品牌全案提升商家实力...
- 2022/02/11上海品牌包装设计要了解到哪些问题?...
- 2022/02/11上海品牌VI设计怎么收取费用...
- 2022/02/07上海企业logo设计应该要达到哪些要求?...
- 2022/02/07上海品牌VI设计为什么是不能忽视的问题...
- 2022/02/06上海保健品广告策划公司|保健食品广告设计|保健食品营销策划公司...
- 2022/02/06滋补品策划设计公司|保健品策划设计公司|食品包装logo创意设计...
- 2022/02/06上海企业宣传片拍摄服务-上海宣传片拍摄的公司...
墨尔本咖啡店Operator 25 Cafe品牌设计
- 2016/12/05上海vi设计可以让你的企业知名度大增...
- 2018/02/08成功上市的品牌要不要进行年度品牌规划...
- 2017/03/19日本柿木下艺术画廊VI设计...
- 2018/06/09品牌整合设计教材提升技能水平...
- 2016/11/26Ekoawal品牌设计...
- 2018/11/13VI视觉识别系统设计的应用要素有哪些?...
- 2017/04/0110套优秀的VI设计欣赏...
- 2017/05/01AfterPlus2在线教育门户网站VI设计...
- 2016/01/13产品画册设计排版技巧...
口罩LOGO、VI品牌包装设计&医用儿童口罩设计
- 2016/10/08云南白药:“常规”由我定(第1页)...
- 2017/11/30在做酒业si设计之前,需要做好哪些准备...
- 2018/03/28护肤品包装设计|上海艾欣产品包装设计...
- 2015/12/29如何做出专业的宣传广告设计...
- 2015/09/25logo设计价钱与哪些因素有关...
- 2015/09/22怎样进行品牌VI设计更合理...
- 2015/01/16品牌logo设计如何做品牌形象营销...
- 2020/11/20长沙广告设计针对推荐给消费者的内容方面一直做得很好...
- 2019/07/08酒标志设计要表达的意义与价值是什么...