SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 29
1.1
CHAPTER 1:
BRANDS & BRAND MANAGEMENT
Bushra Ahmed
Women University Multan Campus
Learning Objectives
1. Define “brand,” state how brand differs from a product, and
explain what brand equity is.
2. Summarize why brands are important.
3. Explain how branding applies to virtually everything.
4. Describe the main branding challenges and opportunities.
5. Identify the steps in the strategic brand management process.
1.2
1.3
What is a brand?
 For the American Marketing Association (AMA), a brand is a
“name, term, sign, symbol, or design, or a combination of them,
intended to identify the goods and services of one seller or group
of sellers and to differentiate them from those of competition.”
 These different components of a brand that identify and
differentiate it are brand elements.
1.4
What is a brand?
 Many practicing managers refer to a brand as more than that—
as something that has actually created a certain amount of
awareness, reputation, prominence, and so on in the marketplace.
 We can make a distinction between the AMA definition of a
“brand” with a small b and the industry’s concept of a “Brand”
with a capital b.
1.5
1.6
Brands vs. Products
 A product is anything we can offer to a market for
attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might
satisfy a need or want.
 A product may be a physical good, a service, a retail
outlet, a person, an organization, a place, or even an
idea.
1.7
Five Levels of Meaning for a Product
1.8
Five Levels of Meaning for a Product
 The core benefit level is the fundamental need or want that
consumers satisfy by consuming the product or service.
 The generic product level is a basic version of the product containing
only those attributes or characteristics absolutely necessary for its
functioning but with no distinguishing features. This is basically a
stripped-down, no-frills version of the product that adequately
performs the product function.
 The expected product level is a set of attributes or characteristics that
buyers normally expect and agree to when they purchase a
product.
 The augmented product level includes additional product attributes,
benefits, or related services that distinguish the product from
competitors.
 The potential product level includes all the augmentations and
transformations that a product might ultimately undergo in the
future.
 1. Core Product
This is the basic product and the focus is on the purpose for which the product is intended. For example, a warm
coat will protect
you from the cold and the rain.
 2. Generic Product
This represents all the qualities of the product. For a warm coat this is about fit, material, rain repellent ability,
high-quality
fasteners, etc.
 3. Expected Product
This is about all aspects the consumer expects to get when they purchase a product. That coat should be really
warm and protect
from the weather and the wind and be comfortable when riding a bicycle.
 4. Augmented Product
This refers to all additional factors which sets the product apart from that of the competition. And this
particularly involves brand
identity and image. Is that warm coat in style, its colour trendy and made by a well-known fashion brand? But
also factors like
service, warranty and good value for money play a major role in this.
 5. Potential Product
This is about augmentations and transformations that the product may undergo in the future. For example, a
warm coat that is made
of a fabric that is as thin as paper and therefore light as a feather that allows rain to automatically slide down.
 Competition
The competition between businesses focuses mainly on the distinctiveness of the Augmented Product according
to Philip Kotler.
It is about the perception a consumer experiences when purchasing a product and it is not so much about value.
1.9
1.10
1.11
 A brand is therefore more than a product, as it
can have dimensions that differentiate it in some
way from other products designed to satisfy the
same need.
1.12
 Some brands create competitive advantages with
product performance; other brands create
competitive advantages through non-product-
related means.
1.13
Why do brands matter?
 What functions do brands perform that make
them so valuable to marketers?
1.14
Importance of Brands to Consumers
 Identification of the source of the product
 Assignment of responsibility to product maker
 Risk reducer
 Search cost reducer
 Promise, bond, or pact with product maker
 Symbolic device
 Signal of quality
1.15
1.16
Reducing the Risks in Product Decisions
 Consumers may perceive many different types of risks in buying
and consuming a product:
 Functional risk—The product does not perform up to
expectations.
 Physical risk—The product poses a threat to the physical well-
being or health of the user or others.
 Financial risk—The product is not worth the price paid.
 Social risk—The product results in embarrassment from others.
 Psychological risk—The product affects the mental well-being of
the user.
 Time risk—The failure of the product results in an opportunity
cost of finding another satisfactory product.
1.17
Importance of Brands to Firms
 To firms, brands represent enormously valuable
pieces of legal property, capable of influencing
consumer behavior, being bought and sold, and
providing the security of sustained future
revenues.
1.18
Importance of Brands to Firms
 Identification to simplify handling or tracing
 Legally protecting unique features
 Signal of quality level
 Endowing products with unique associations
 Source of competitive advantage
 Source of financial returns
1.19
Can everything be branded?
 Ultimately a brand is something that resides in
the minds of consumers.
 The key to branding is that consumers perceive
differences among brands in a product category.
 Even commodities can be branded:
 Coffee (Maxwell House), bath soap (Ivory), flour
(Gold Medal), beer (Budweiser), salt (Morton),
oatmeal (Quaker), pickles (Vlasic), bananas
(Chiquita), chickens (Perdue), pineapples (Dole), and
even water (Perrier)
1.20
An Example of Branding a Commodity
 De Beers Group added the phrase “A Diamond
Is Forever”
1.21
What is branded?
 Physical goods
 Services
 Retailers and distributors
 Online products and services
 People and organizations
 Sports, arts, and entertainment
 Geographic locations
 Ideas and causes
1.22
Source of Brands Strength
 “The real causes of enduring market leadership
are vision and will. Enduring market leaders have a
revolutionary and inspiring vision of the mass
market, and they exhibit an indomitable will to
realize that vision. They persist under adversity,
innovate relentlessly, commit financial resources,
and leverage assets to realize their vision.”
Gerald J. Tellis and Peter N. Golder, “First to Market, First to
Fail? Real Causes of Enduring Market Leadership,” MIT Sloan
Management Review, 1 January 1996
1.23
Importance of Brand Management
 The bottom line is that any brand—no matter
how strong at one point in time—is vulnerable,
and susceptible to poor brand management.
What are the strongest brands?
1.25
Top Ten Global Brands
Brand Brand Value
2017 ($Billion)
Industry
1. Apple
2. Google
3. Microsoft
4. Facebook
5. Coca-Cola
6. Amazon
7. Disney
8. Toyota
9. McDonald’s
10. Samsung
170
101.8
87
73.6
54.6
54.1
43.9
41.1
40.3
38.2
Technology
Technology
Technology
Technology
Beverages
Technology
Leisure
Automotive
Restaurants
Technology
1.26
Branding Challenges and Opportunities
 Savvy customers
 Brand proliferation
 Media fragmentation
 Increased competition
 Increased costs
 Greater accountability
1.27
The Brand Equity Concept
 No common viewpoint on how it should be
conceptualized and measured
 It stresses the importance of brand role in
marketing strategies.
 Brand equity is defined in terms of the marketing
effects uniquely attributable to the brand.
 Brand equity relates to the fact that different outcomes result
in the marketing of a product or service because of its brand
name, as compared to if the same product or service did not
have that name.
1.28
Strategic Brand Management
 It involves the design and implementation of
marketing programs and activities to build,
measure, and manage brand equity.
 The Strategic Brand Management Process is defined as
involving four main steps:
1. Identifying and establishing brand positioning and values
2. Planning and implementing brand marketing programs
3. Measuring and interpreting brand performance
4. Growing and sustaining brand equity
1.29
Strategic Brand Management Process
Mental maps
Competitive frame of reference
Points-of-parity and points-of-difference
Core brand values
Brand mantra
Mixing and matching of brand elements
Integrating brand marketing activities
Leveraging of secondary associations
Brand value chain
Brand audits
Brand tracking
Brand equity management system
Brand-product matrix
Brand portfolios and hierarchies
Brand expansion strategies
Brand reinforcement and revitalization
Key Concepts
Steps
Grow and sustain
brand equity
Identify and establish
brand positioning and values
Plan and implement
brand marketing programs
Measure and interpret
brand performance

More Related Content

Similar to Chapter_1 brand mgt.ppt

Brandinfg of cadbury final year
Brandinfg of cadbury final year Brandinfg of cadbury final year
Brandinfg of cadbury final year Rupal Trivedi
 
Introduction brand management
Introduction brand managementIntroduction brand management
Introduction brand managementKushal Kaushik
 
83663910 keller-sbm3-01
83663910 keller-sbm3-0183663910 keller-sbm3-01
83663910 keller-sbm3-01kaushalraj17
 
BM 4.3 Product
BM 4.3 ProductBM 4.3 Product
BM 4.3 ProductMr. D. .
 
Ec10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing concepts
Ec10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing conceptsEc10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing concepts
Ec10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing conceptsWILLSON FILIPATALI
 
Power point notes
Power point notesPower point notes
Power point notesbarnhste
 
Product Policy & Brand Management
Product Policy & Brand Management   Product Policy & Brand Management
Product Policy & Brand Management Arun Khedwal
 
A brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brands
A brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brandsA brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brands
A brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brands114iiminternship
 
PM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdf
PM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdfPM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdf
PM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdfYaredAdeme1
 
strategic-brand-management
strategic-brand-managementstrategic-brand-management
strategic-brand-managementJeetendra Pathak
 
Brand Equity Presentation
Brand Equity PresentationBrand Equity Presentation
Brand Equity Presentationvijaydh
 

Similar to Chapter_1 brand mgt.ppt (20)

Brandinfg of cadbury final year
Brandinfg of cadbury final year Brandinfg of cadbury final year
Brandinfg of cadbury final year
 
Brand unit 1
Brand unit 1Brand unit 1
Brand unit 1
 
Introduction brand management
Introduction brand managementIntroduction brand management
Introduction brand management
 
Keller sbm3 01
Keller sbm3 01Keller sbm3 01
Keller sbm3 01
 
83663910 keller-sbm3-01
83663910 keller-sbm3-0183663910 keller-sbm3-01
83663910 keller-sbm3-01
 
Keller sbm3 01
Keller sbm3 01Keller sbm3 01
Keller sbm3 01
 
BM 4.3 Product
BM 4.3 ProductBM 4.3 Product
BM 4.3 Product
 
Ec10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing concepts
Ec10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing conceptsEc10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing concepts
Ec10 learning track 6.1 basic marketing concepts
 
Power point notes
Power point notesPower point notes
Power point notes
 
5965822.ppt
5965822.ppt5965822.ppt
5965822.ppt
 
Product Policy & Brand Management
Product Policy & Brand Management   Product Policy & Brand Management
Product Policy & Brand Management
 
A brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brands
A brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brandsA brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brands
A brand is forever! A framework for revitalizing declining and dead brands
 
PM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdf
PM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdfPM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdf
PM 2 Chapter 1 The Product Mix for Students.pdf
 
A brand is forever
A brand is foreverA brand is forever
A brand is forever
 
A brand is forever!
A brand is forever! A brand is forever!
A brand is forever!
 
Brand equity.docx
Brand equity.docxBrand equity.docx
Brand equity.docx
 
Final faraz brand
Final faraz brandFinal faraz brand
Final faraz brand
 
Mktng skc
Mktng skcMktng skc
Mktng skc
 
strategic-brand-management
strategic-brand-managementstrategic-brand-management
strategic-brand-management
 
Brand Equity Presentation
Brand Equity PresentationBrand Equity Presentation
Brand Equity Presentation
 

Recently uploaded

dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learningdusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learningMarc Dusseiller Dusjagr
 
PANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptx
PANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptxPANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptx
PANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptxakanksha16arora
 
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptxTowards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptxJisc
 
Tatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf arts
Tatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf artsTatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf arts
Tatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf artsNbelano25
 
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsOn National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsMebane Rash
 
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdfFICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdfPondicherry University
 
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024Elizabeth Walsh
 
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptxExploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptxPooja Bhuva
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxEsquimalt MFRC
 
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptxWellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptxJisc
 
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17Celine George
 
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)Jisc
 
21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptx
21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptx21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptx
21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptxJoelynRubio1
 
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding  Accommodations and ModificationsUnderstanding  Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding Accommodations and ModificationsMJDuyan
 
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17Celine George
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdfNirmal Dwivedi
 
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17Celine George
 

Recently uploaded (20)

dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learningdusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
dusjagr & nano talk on open tools for agriculture research and learning
 
PANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptx
PANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptxPANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptx
PANDITA RAMABAI- Indian political thought GENDER.pptx
 
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptxTowards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
Towards a code of practice for AI in AT.pptx
 
Tatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf arts
Tatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf artsTatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf arts
Tatlong Kwento ni Lola basyang-1.pdf arts
 
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsOn National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
 
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdfFICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
FICTIONAL SALESMAN/SALESMAN SNSW 2024.pdf
 
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
FSB Advising Checklist - Orientation 2024
 
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptxExploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
 
VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA! .
VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA!                    .VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA!                    .
VAMOS CUIDAR DO NOSSO PLANETA! .
 
OS-operating systems- ch05 (CPU Scheduling) ...
OS-operating systems- ch05 (CPU Scheduling) ...OS-operating systems- ch05 (CPU Scheduling) ...
OS-operating systems- ch05 (CPU Scheduling) ...
 
Our Environment Class 10 Science Notes pdf
Our Environment Class 10 Science Notes pdfOur Environment Class 10 Science Notes pdf
Our Environment Class 10 Science Notes pdf
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
 
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptxWellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
 
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
How to Manage Call for Tendor in Odoo 17
 
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
 
21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptx
21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptx21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptx
21st_Century_Skills_Framework_Final_Presentation_2.pptx
 
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding  Accommodations and ModificationsUnderstanding  Accommodations and Modifications
Understanding Accommodations and Modifications
 
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Unit 7 DATA INTERPRETATION.pdf
 
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
 

Chapter_1 brand mgt.ppt

  • 1. 1.1 CHAPTER 1: BRANDS & BRAND MANAGEMENT Bushra Ahmed Women University Multan Campus
  • 2. Learning Objectives 1. Define “brand,” state how brand differs from a product, and explain what brand equity is. 2. Summarize why brands are important. 3. Explain how branding applies to virtually everything. 4. Describe the main branding challenges and opportunities. 5. Identify the steps in the strategic brand management process. 1.2
  • 3. 1.3 What is a brand?  For the American Marketing Association (AMA), a brand is a “name, term, sign, symbol, or design, or a combination of them, intended to identify the goods and services of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate them from those of competition.”  These different components of a brand that identify and differentiate it are brand elements.
  • 4. 1.4 What is a brand?  Many practicing managers refer to a brand as more than that— as something that has actually created a certain amount of awareness, reputation, prominence, and so on in the marketplace.  We can make a distinction between the AMA definition of a “brand” with a small b and the industry’s concept of a “Brand” with a capital b.
  • 5. 1.5
  • 6. 1.6 Brands vs. Products  A product is anything we can offer to a market for attention, acquisition, use, or consumption that might satisfy a need or want.  A product may be a physical good, a service, a retail outlet, a person, an organization, a place, or even an idea.
  • 7. 1.7 Five Levels of Meaning for a Product
  • 8. 1.8 Five Levels of Meaning for a Product  The core benefit level is the fundamental need or want that consumers satisfy by consuming the product or service.  The generic product level is a basic version of the product containing only those attributes or characteristics absolutely necessary for its functioning but with no distinguishing features. This is basically a stripped-down, no-frills version of the product that adequately performs the product function.  The expected product level is a set of attributes or characteristics that buyers normally expect and agree to when they purchase a product.  The augmented product level includes additional product attributes, benefits, or related services that distinguish the product from competitors.  The potential product level includes all the augmentations and transformations that a product might ultimately undergo in the future.
  • 9.  1. Core Product This is the basic product and the focus is on the purpose for which the product is intended. For example, a warm coat will protect you from the cold and the rain.  2. Generic Product This represents all the qualities of the product. For a warm coat this is about fit, material, rain repellent ability, high-quality fasteners, etc.  3. Expected Product This is about all aspects the consumer expects to get when they purchase a product. That coat should be really warm and protect from the weather and the wind and be comfortable when riding a bicycle.  4. Augmented Product This refers to all additional factors which sets the product apart from that of the competition. And this particularly involves brand identity and image. Is that warm coat in style, its colour trendy and made by a well-known fashion brand? But also factors like service, warranty and good value for money play a major role in this.  5. Potential Product This is about augmentations and transformations that the product may undergo in the future. For example, a warm coat that is made of a fabric that is as thin as paper and therefore light as a feather that allows rain to automatically slide down.  Competition The competition between businesses focuses mainly on the distinctiveness of the Augmented Product according to Philip Kotler. It is about the perception a consumer experiences when purchasing a product and it is not so much about value. 1.9
  • 10. 1.10
  • 11. 1.11  A brand is therefore more than a product, as it can have dimensions that differentiate it in some way from other products designed to satisfy the same need.
  • 12. 1.12  Some brands create competitive advantages with product performance; other brands create competitive advantages through non-product- related means.
  • 13. 1.13 Why do brands matter?  What functions do brands perform that make them so valuable to marketers?
  • 14. 1.14 Importance of Brands to Consumers  Identification of the source of the product  Assignment of responsibility to product maker  Risk reducer  Search cost reducer  Promise, bond, or pact with product maker  Symbolic device  Signal of quality
  • 15. 1.15
  • 16. 1.16 Reducing the Risks in Product Decisions  Consumers may perceive many different types of risks in buying and consuming a product:  Functional risk—The product does not perform up to expectations.  Physical risk—The product poses a threat to the physical well- being or health of the user or others.  Financial risk—The product is not worth the price paid.  Social risk—The product results in embarrassment from others.  Psychological risk—The product affects the mental well-being of the user.  Time risk—The failure of the product results in an opportunity cost of finding another satisfactory product.
  • 17. 1.17 Importance of Brands to Firms  To firms, brands represent enormously valuable pieces of legal property, capable of influencing consumer behavior, being bought and sold, and providing the security of sustained future revenues.
  • 18. 1.18 Importance of Brands to Firms  Identification to simplify handling or tracing  Legally protecting unique features  Signal of quality level  Endowing products with unique associations  Source of competitive advantage  Source of financial returns
  • 19. 1.19 Can everything be branded?  Ultimately a brand is something that resides in the minds of consumers.  The key to branding is that consumers perceive differences among brands in a product category.  Even commodities can be branded:  Coffee (Maxwell House), bath soap (Ivory), flour (Gold Medal), beer (Budweiser), salt (Morton), oatmeal (Quaker), pickles (Vlasic), bananas (Chiquita), chickens (Perdue), pineapples (Dole), and even water (Perrier)
  • 20. 1.20 An Example of Branding a Commodity  De Beers Group added the phrase “A Diamond Is Forever”
  • 21. 1.21 What is branded?  Physical goods  Services  Retailers and distributors  Online products and services  People and organizations  Sports, arts, and entertainment  Geographic locations  Ideas and causes
  • 22. 1.22 Source of Brands Strength  “The real causes of enduring market leadership are vision and will. Enduring market leaders have a revolutionary and inspiring vision of the mass market, and they exhibit an indomitable will to realize that vision. They persist under adversity, innovate relentlessly, commit financial resources, and leverage assets to realize their vision.” Gerald J. Tellis and Peter N. Golder, “First to Market, First to Fail? Real Causes of Enduring Market Leadership,” MIT Sloan Management Review, 1 January 1996
  • 23. 1.23 Importance of Brand Management  The bottom line is that any brand—no matter how strong at one point in time—is vulnerable, and susceptible to poor brand management.
  • 24. What are the strongest brands?
  • 25. 1.25 Top Ten Global Brands Brand Brand Value 2017 ($Billion) Industry 1. Apple 2. Google 3. Microsoft 4. Facebook 5. Coca-Cola 6. Amazon 7. Disney 8. Toyota 9. McDonald’s 10. Samsung 170 101.8 87 73.6 54.6 54.1 43.9 41.1 40.3 38.2 Technology Technology Technology Technology Beverages Technology Leisure Automotive Restaurants Technology
  • 26. 1.26 Branding Challenges and Opportunities  Savvy customers  Brand proliferation  Media fragmentation  Increased competition  Increased costs  Greater accountability
  • 27. 1.27 The Brand Equity Concept  No common viewpoint on how it should be conceptualized and measured  It stresses the importance of brand role in marketing strategies.  Brand equity is defined in terms of the marketing effects uniquely attributable to the brand.  Brand equity relates to the fact that different outcomes result in the marketing of a product or service because of its brand name, as compared to if the same product or service did not have that name.
  • 28. 1.28 Strategic Brand Management  It involves the design and implementation of marketing programs and activities to build, measure, and manage brand equity.  The Strategic Brand Management Process is defined as involving four main steps: 1. Identifying and establishing brand positioning and values 2. Planning and implementing brand marketing programs 3. Measuring and interpreting brand performance 4. Growing and sustaining brand equity
  • 29. 1.29 Strategic Brand Management Process Mental maps Competitive frame of reference Points-of-parity and points-of-difference Core brand values Brand mantra Mixing and matching of brand elements Integrating brand marketing activities Leveraging of secondary associations Brand value chain Brand audits Brand tracking Brand equity management system Brand-product matrix Brand portfolios and hierarchies Brand expansion strategies Brand reinforcement and revitalization Key Concepts Steps Grow and sustain brand equity Identify and establish brand positioning and values Plan and implement brand marketing programs Measure and interpret brand performance

Editor's Notes

  1. 1
  2. 1
  3. 1
  4. 1
  5. 1
  6. 1
  7. 1
  8. 17
  9. 1