Mktg sales week2_part1

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Week 2 Part 1

Transcript of Mktg sales week2_part1

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Week 2 – Part 1

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WHY SPEND $ ON ADVERTISING TO

FIX “BROKEN” BRANDS?

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MANAGING BRANDS THROUGH CRISIS

SUCCESSFULLY

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Apple has ALWAYS

said WHY it does

what it does.

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Building Strong Brands

Part IV

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What’s a “Brand?”

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Is it a LOGO?

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…a tagline?

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…a jingle?

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Is a Brand a PROMISE?

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Memorable

Invaluable

Unique

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• Avoid using JUST your family name

• Is your name appropriate (Ex. Pain Dental)

• Watch your intellectual capital, website domains, etc.

• Don’t use a name that’s so narrow that it prevents your future growth (Ex. Just Screws)

Brand Guidelines

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Why Brands Matter

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• Reduces the cost associated with searching for products internally (how much to think about them) and externally (how much to look for them)

• Define product/service qualities

• Present product/service characteristics

• Chance to “connect” with product maker

• Sign of “perceived” quality…PRESTIGE

• Help consumers organize their knowledge about a product to clarify their decision-making and thus adds value to firms.

Brands Matter to Consumers

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• Signal characteristics to consumers

• Reduce the risks for consumers in their purchase decisions:

– Functional risk: product doesn’t perform up to expectations

– Financial risk: Product’s not worth the price paid

– Physical risk: product poses a physical threat

– Social risk: Product results in embarrassment from others

– Psychological risk: Product affects mental well-being of the user

– Time risk: A product’s failure costs the consumer a chance of finding another acceptable product

Brands Matter to Organizations

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• Serve an identification purpose

• Legal protection such as intellectual property rights for certain brand attributes

• Investing in a brand helps endow a product with unique associations and meanings that help to differentiate it

>>>

Brands Matter to Organizations

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• Helps to organize a firm’s inventory and accounting

Brands Matter to Organizations

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• Powerful means of securing a competitive

advantage by LIVING with consumers their

whole lives…

Brands Matter to Organizations

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• Enables firms an opportunity to charge a PREMIUM for their products

• Brands represent enormously valuable pieces of legal property

Brands Matter to Organizations

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How Do You BRAND

Something?

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V.S.

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Think…Broadway

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Case Study

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Fired Judy Taymor Needed to completely

re-do the ending Michael Cohl producer

unwilling to be flexible Delay launch until ready Find supporters (U2) Get funding Take risks!

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WHERE DIDBRAND NAME

USAGE ORIGINATE?

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The SIX Elements Marketers Use toBuild Brands?

BrandToolkit

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• Memorability

• Meaningfulness

• Likability

• Transferability

• Adaptability

• Protectability

Criteria

Offensive

Defensive

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• Memorability: Building a high level of brand awareness (recall) is absolutely CRITICAL.

• Meaningfulness: Brand elements can reflect all sorts of meaning, either descriptive or persuasive.

– General information about the nature of the product category;

– Specific information about particular attributes & benefits of the brand.

• Likability: Do customers find the brand element aesthetically appealing? Is it likable visually…verbally…and other ways?

Offensive Criteria

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• Transferability: The extent to which the brand element adds to the brand equity of new products for the brand.

• Adaptability: The more flexible and adaptive the brand element is, the easier it is to update it to adopt to changes in consumer values, opinions, and preferences.

• Protectability: Can it be protected both legally and from competition?

Defensive Criteria

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• Critical choice as it captures the central theme or key associations of a product.

• Should be effectively captured into a consumer’s memory in SECONDS!

• Closely tied to the product in the hearts & minds of consumers.

• 140,000 words in the English language; 23,000 are recognized by the avg. American; 7,000 words make up the vocabulary of most TV shows & commercials.

What’s In a Brand NAME?

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• Should have a clear, understandable, and unambiguous pronunciation AND meaning.

• A brand name should be familiar and meaningful, so it can tap into the consumer’s knowledge structures.

• Must be unique, distinctive, different

What’s In a Brand NAME?

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What’s In a Brand NAME?

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• Descriptive: Describes the function literally.

• Suggestive: suggests the benefit or function.

• Compounds: Combines 2 or more unexpected words.

• Classical: Based on Latin, Greek, Sanskrit.

• Arbitrary: Real words with no obvious connection to the company.

• Fanciful: Words with no obvious meaning.

Types of Brand Names

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Simple & Easy to Pronounce

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Onomatopoeia

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• Define your objectives.

• Generate name options.

• Screen initial candidates.

• Study candidate names.

• Research final candidates.

• Select the final name.

• Market the product/service using its name.

Steps for Naming New Products

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Logos & Symbols

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Characters