SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Presented by : Rabia Arif
Harram Aneeqa
Branding
Susan Fournier and Lara Lee
Getting Brand Communities Right
Background
 In 1983, Harley-Davidson faced extinction
 Twenty-five years later, the company boasted a
top-50 global brand valued at $7.8 billion.
 Reason was Harley’s commitment to building a
Brand Community
A group of ardent
consumers
organized around
the lifestyle,
activities, and
ethos of the
brand.
 Inspired by Harley’s results,
marketers in industries are
busy trying to build
communities around their
own brands
 But very few understand
how these communities
really work
 Writer of this article has
identified seven commonly
held myths about
maximizing value for a firm
Myth #1 : A brand community is a marketing
strategy
 The Reality: A brand community is a business
strategy
 Companies isolate their community-building efforts
within the marketing function. That is a mistake
 Brand community to yield maximum benefit, it
must be framed as a high-level strategy supporting
business wide goals
Reformulated the
competitive strategy Retooled every
aspect
Strategic
repositioning
Radical organizational
redesign
Close to
customer
strategy
Harley
Owners
Group
Myth #2 : A brand community exists to serve the
business.
 The Reality : A brand community exists to serve
the people in it.
 A community-based brand builds loyalty not by
driving sales transactions but by helping people
meet their needs
 People participate in communities for a wide
variety of reasons :
To find emotional support and
encouragement
To explore ways to contribute to the
greater good
To cultivate interests and skills
Outdoorselten.net
• Hiking and camping
enthusiasts could
exchange information
about their shared
lifestyle
• Where is a good place
to hike with children?
• Which shoes are best
for rocky terrain?
• Eventually, the
community created its
own Outdoorselten
brand of tents and
backpacks.
Myth #3 : Build the brand, and the community will follow.
 The Reality : Engineer the community, and the
brand will be strong.
 Three basic forms of community affiliation: pools,
webs, and hubs
 Effective community strategies combine all three
in a mutually reinforcing system.
Pools
 Members of pools are united by shared goals or
values
 Identify and consistently communicate a clear set
of values that emotionally connect consumers
with the brand
 Unfortunately, pools deliver only limited
community benefits—people share a set of
abstract beliefs but build few interpersonal
relationships
Webs
 Strong one-to-one connections (think social
networking sites or the Cancer Survivors
Network)
 Most stable form of community because the
people in them are bound by many and varied
relationships
Hubs
 Members of hubs are united by their admiration of
an individual (think Deepak Chopra or Hannah
Montana)
 Hub is a strong albeit unstable form of community
that often breaks apart once the central figure is
no longer present
 Hubs can help communities acquire new
members who hold similar values
 Hubs can also be used to create or strengthen a
brand pool
Myth #4 : Brand communities should be love-fests for faithful brand
advocates.
 The Reality: Smart companies embrace the conflicts
that make communities thrive.
 Most companies prefer to avoid conflict. But
communities are inherently political, and conflict is the
norm.
 Community is all about rivalries and lines drawn in the
sand.
 Apple enthusiasts hate Microsoft and Dell. Dunkin’
Donuts coffee drinkers shun Starbucks
Dove “Campaign for Real
Beauty”
 The campaign brought
“real women” together
worldwide to stand up
against industry-
imposed beauty ideals.
 Older women, large
women, skinny women,
and less-than-pretty
women united
 Dove identified a latent
“out” group and claimed
it for its brand.
Myth #5 : Opinion leaders build strong communities.
 The Reality : Communities are strongest when
everyone plays a role.
 Focusing on opinion leaders may be sage advice
for buzz campaigns, it is a misguided approach to
community building
Myth #6 : Online social networks are the key to a community
strategy.
 The Reality : Online networks are just one tool, not a
community strategy.
 Online social networks can serve valuable community
functions
 Yet even a well-crafted networking site has limitations
 Physical spaces play important roles in fostering
community connections
 According to Mark Rosenbaum of Northern Illinois
University, communities that are developed in third
places like gyms and coffee shops often provide
social and emotional support equal to or stronger than
family ties—a benefit that delivers price premiums of
up to 20%.
L’OREAL
Myth #7 : Successful brand communities are tightly managed and
controlled.
 The Reality : Of and by the people, communities
defy managerial control.
 Community managers tend to put corporate
interests over those of their customers.
 Brand communities are not corporate assets, so
control is an illusion.
 Effective brand stewards participate as
community cocreators—nurturing and facilitating
communities by creating the conditions in which
they can thrive.
 Vans, the famed maker of skateboarding shoes,
has proved adept at building community through
support rather than control.
 Recognized its fan base of customers as the
owners of its brand.
 Its self-appointed role was to stay close enough
to the fans.
 Warped Tour innovations
A Sampling of Community
Scripts
 Suggests a set of behaviors that are appropriate for a
particular situation.
 Companies can design brand communities by establishing
and reinforcing a base script and then layering on new
scripts over time.
 VANS-
 The Tribe-A group with deep interpersonal connections built through
shared experiences, rituals, and traditions.
 The Fort-An exclusive place for insiders to be safe and feel protected.
 The Sewing Circle-A gathering at which people with common
interests share experiences, provide support, and socialize.
 The Patio-A semiprivate place that facilitates in-depth, meaningful
connections.
 The Bar-A public space that grants reliable although shallow
connections.
 The Tour Group-A way to participate in new experiences while
staying inside a comfort zone.
 The Performance Space-A place where members can be sure of
finding an audience for their talents.
 The Barn Raising-An effective way to accomplish tasks while
socializing.
CONCLUSION
 Executing community requires an organization-
wide commitment and a willingness to work
across functional boundaries.
 Reexamine everything from company values to
organizational design
 Community is a potent strategy if it is approached
with the right mind-set and skills.
 Through commitment, engagement, and support,
companies can cultivate brand communities that
deliver powerful returns.

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Getting brand-communities-right

  • 1. Presented by : Rabia Arif Harram Aneeqa Branding
  • 2. Susan Fournier and Lara Lee Getting Brand Communities Right
  • 3. Background  In 1983, Harley-Davidson faced extinction  Twenty-five years later, the company boasted a top-50 global brand valued at $7.8 billion.  Reason was Harley’s commitment to building a Brand Community A group of ardent consumers organized around the lifestyle, activities, and ethos of the brand.
  • 4.  Inspired by Harley’s results, marketers in industries are busy trying to build communities around their own brands  But very few understand how these communities really work  Writer of this article has identified seven commonly held myths about maximizing value for a firm
  • 5. Myth #1 : A brand community is a marketing strategy  The Reality: A brand community is a business strategy  Companies isolate their community-building efforts within the marketing function. That is a mistake  Brand community to yield maximum benefit, it must be framed as a high-level strategy supporting business wide goals
  • 6. Reformulated the competitive strategy Retooled every aspect Strategic repositioning Radical organizational redesign Close to customer strategy Harley Owners Group
  • 7. Myth #2 : A brand community exists to serve the business.  The Reality : A brand community exists to serve the people in it.  A community-based brand builds loyalty not by driving sales transactions but by helping people meet their needs  People participate in communities for a wide variety of reasons : To find emotional support and encouragement To explore ways to contribute to the greater good To cultivate interests and skills
  • 8. Outdoorselten.net • Hiking and camping enthusiasts could exchange information about their shared lifestyle • Where is a good place to hike with children? • Which shoes are best for rocky terrain? • Eventually, the community created its own Outdoorselten brand of tents and backpacks.
  • 9. Myth #3 : Build the brand, and the community will follow.  The Reality : Engineer the community, and the brand will be strong.  Three basic forms of community affiliation: pools, webs, and hubs  Effective community strategies combine all three in a mutually reinforcing system.
  • 10. Pools  Members of pools are united by shared goals or values  Identify and consistently communicate a clear set of values that emotionally connect consumers with the brand  Unfortunately, pools deliver only limited community benefits—people share a set of abstract beliefs but build few interpersonal relationships
  • 11. Webs  Strong one-to-one connections (think social networking sites or the Cancer Survivors Network)  Most stable form of community because the people in them are bound by many and varied relationships
  • 12. Hubs  Members of hubs are united by their admiration of an individual (think Deepak Chopra or Hannah Montana)  Hub is a strong albeit unstable form of community that often breaks apart once the central figure is no longer present  Hubs can help communities acquire new members who hold similar values  Hubs can also be used to create or strengthen a brand pool
  • 13. Myth #4 : Brand communities should be love-fests for faithful brand advocates.  The Reality: Smart companies embrace the conflicts that make communities thrive.  Most companies prefer to avoid conflict. But communities are inherently political, and conflict is the norm.  Community is all about rivalries and lines drawn in the sand.  Apple enthusiasts hate Microsoft and Dell. Dunkin’ Donuts coffee drinkers shun Starbucks
  • 14. Dove “Campaign for Real Beauty”  The campaign brought “real women” together worldwide to stand up against industry- imposed beauty ideals.  Older women, large women, skinny women, and less-than-pretty women united  Dove identified a latent “out” group and claimed it for its brand.
  • 15. Myth #5 : Opinion leaders build strong communities.  The Reality : Communities are strongest when everyone plays a role.  Focusing on opinion leaders may be sage advice for buzz campaigns, it is a misguided approach to community building
  • 16. Myth #6 : Online social networks are the key to a community strategy.  The Reality : Online networks are just one tool, not a community strategy.  Online social networks can serve valuable community functions  Yet even a well-crafted networking site has limitations  Physical spaces play important roles in fostering community connections  According to Mark Rosenbaum of Northern Illinois University, communities that are developed in third places like gyms and coffee shops often provide social and emotional support equal to or stronger than family ties—a benefit that delivers price premiums of up to 20%.
  • 18. Myth #7 : Successful brand communities are tightly managed and controlled.  The Reality : Of and by the people, communities defy managerial control.  Community managers tend to put corporate interests over those of their customers.  Brand communities are not corporate assets, so control is an illusion.  Effective brand stewards participate as community cocreators—nurturing and facilitating communities by creating the conditions in which they can thrive.
  • 19.  Vans, the famed maker of skateboarding shoes, has proved adept at building community through support rather than control.  Recognized its fan base of customers as the owners of its brand.  Its self-appointed role was to stay close enough to the fans.  Warped Tour innovations
  • 20. A Sampling of Community Scripts  Suggests a set of behaviors that are appropriate for a particular situation.  Companies can design brand communities by establishing and reinforcing a base script and then layering on new scripts over time.  VANS-  The Tribe-A group with deep interpersonal connections built through shared experiences, rituals, and traditions.  The Fort-An exclusive place for insiders to be safe and feel protected.  The Sewing Circle-A gathering at which people with common interests share experiences, provide support, and socialize.  The Patio-A semiprivate place that facilitates in-depth, meaningful connections.  The Bar-A public space that grants reliable although shallow connections.  The Tour Group-A way to participate in new experiences while staying inside a comfort zone.  The Performance Space-A place where members can be sure of finding an audience for their talents.  The Barn Raising-An effective way to accomplish tasks while socializing.
  • 21. CONCLUSION  Executing community requires an organization- wide commitment and a willingness to work across functional boundaries.  Reexamine everything from company values to organizational design  Community is a potent strategy if it is approached with the right mind-set and skills.  Through commitment, engagement, and support, companies can cultivate brand communities that deliver powerful returns.

Editor's Notes

  1. But relinquishing control does not mean abdicating responsibility.