Brand
Brand
Brand
V I D H YA P I L L A I
HOW MUCH WILL YOU PAY FOR
THESE…
• A rock picked up from the street
A ROCK FROM THE GREAT WALL OF
CHINA
• Proper branding can result in higher sales of not only one product,
but on other products associated with that brand.
• For example, if a customer loves Pillsbury atta and trust the brand,
he or she is more likely to try other products offered by the
company such as chocolate chip cookies.
ACTIVITY : BEST GLOBAL BRANDS
IDENTIFY THE COUNTRY OF ORIGIN ?
The main ones are brand names, logo, tagline, slogans, shapes,
graphics, color, jingles, etc.
WHY BRAND ELEMENTS?
• Easily Recognized
• Easily Recalled
– Meaningful
• Descriptive
• Persuasive
– Likable
are “brand
building”
MEMORABLE
• How easily is the brand element
recalled and recognized?
Short brand names.
Eg: LG
hp
Apple
MEMORABILITY
• Flexible
• Update-able
– Protectable
• Legally
• Competitively
TRANSFERABILITY
• The brand element should be able to:
– Reach various product categories
Selecting a brand name for a new product is certainly an art and a science.
Brand names come in many different forms.
• They may be descriptive of the product function (Sleep Inn),
• be evocative of a certain feature (Quicken Loans),
• be completely made up (Verizon),
• or reflect the founder (Dyson)
• Brand Awareness. Brand names that are simple and easy to pronounce or spell, familiar
and meaningful, and different, distinctive, and unusual can obviously improve brand
awareness.
• Simplicity and Ease of Pronunciation and Spelling. Simplicity reduces the effort
consumers have to make to comprehend and process the brand name. Short names often
facilitate recall because they are easy to encode and store in memory. Coca-Cola is also “Coke
• Brands with difficult-to-pronounce names have an uphill battle because the firm has
to devote so much of its initial marketing effort to teaching consumers how to pronounce
the name.
• Familiarity and Meaningfulness
• Brand Associations
• ColorStay lipsticks
• Head & Shoulders shampoo
• Close-Up toothpaste
• DieHard auto batteries
• Mop & Glo floor wax
• Facebook social network
• Dropbox cloud storage
NAMING PROCEDURES
• . A number of different procedures or systems have been suggested for naming new products.
Most marketers adopt a procedure something along the following lines
• Define objectives
• Generate names-Any potential sources of names are valid: company management and
employees; existing or potential customers
• Screen initial -Names that have unintentional double meaning • Names that are
unpronounceable, already in use, or too close to an existing name • Names that have obvious
legal complications • Names that represent an obvious contradiction of the positioning
• Study names. Collect more extensive information about each of the final 5 to 10 names.
Before spending large amounts of money on consumer research, it is usually advisable to do an
extensive international legal search
• Research the final name. Next, conduct consumer research to confirm management
expectations about the memorability and meaningfulness of the remaining names.
• Select the final name
LOGO
WORDMARK
• Twitter
• Hp
• Apple
• Target
ABSTRACT
• Pepsi
• Nike
MASCOT EMBLEM
• Characters represent a special type of brand symbol—one that takes on human or real-life
characteristics.
• Brand characters typically are introduced through advertising and can play a central role in ad
campaigns and package designs.
• Some are animated characters like the Pillsbury Doughboy, Peter Pan peanut butter
• Because they are often colorful and rich in imagery, brand characters tend to be attention-
getting and quite useful for creating brand awareness.
• Brand characters can help brands break through marketplace clutter as well as help
communicate a key product benefit
• Characters often must be updated over time so that their image and personality remain relevant
to the target market. Japan’s famous Hello Kitty character, which became a multibillion-dollar
product and license powerhouse, was able to maintain its appeal and revive its brand image
through a broad set of licensing agreements ranging from paper towels to airplanes, and
through a marketing strategy that is focused on niche markets
SLOGANS
• Slogans are short phrases that communicate descriptive or persuasive information about the
brand.
• They often appear in advertising but can play an important role in packaging and in other
aspects of the marketing program.
• When Snickers advertised, “Hungry? Grab a Snickers,” the slogan also appeared on the candy
bar wrapper itself
• _______________________ Have It Your Way
• ._______________________ Just Do It
• ._______________________ Don’t Leave Home Without It
• ._______________________ Because I’m Worth It
• ._______________________ When You Care Enough to Send the Very Best
• Burger King
• Nike
• American express
• Loreal
• Hallmark
JINGLES
• Jingles are musical messages written around the brand. Typically composed by professional
songwriters, they often have enough catchy hooks and choruses to become almost permanently
registered in the minds of listeners—sometimes whether they want them to or not!
• During the first half of the twentieth century, when broadcast advertising was confined
primarily to the radio, jingles were important branding devices
PACKAGING
• Packaging is the activity of designing and producing containers or wrappers for a product. Like
other brand elements, packages have a long history. Early humans used leaves and animal skin
to cover and carry food and water. Glass containers first appeared in Egypt
BRAND
BRAND STRATEGY
STRATEGY
Line Extension
Existing brand names extended to new forms, sizes, and
flavors of an existing product category.
Product Category
New Existing
Brand Name
Multi
New New brands
Brands
Market
Penetration
Surf Excel Quick
Existing product category
Wash Detergent
Powder and existing brand name
Usually results in Line
extensions
Surf Excel
Quick Wash Surf Excel Blue
Detergent Detergent Powder
Powder
• Nike Soccer
• Nike basket ball
• Nike sunglasses
• Nike golf equipments
Why Brand Extensions
• COSTS: Creating and building new brands takes time and money. Extension is cheaper
• CLUTTER: New products with new names take longer to cut through the ad clutter in
the media.
• SHELF-SPACE: Retailers are less reluctant to stock brands they are familiar with.
• Contd….
WHY BRAND EXTENSIONS?
Product Category
New Existing
Brand Name
Multi
New New brands
Brands
MULTIBRANDS…
BRAND
BRAND STRATEGY
STRATEGY
New Brands
New brand names in new product categories
Product Category
New Existing
Brand Name
Brand
Identity
Brand
Awareness
Brand Brand Brand Equity
Personality Communication
Brand
Image
Positioning
BRAND IDENTITY
• Brand identity is the way the company wants to project
itself to the customers.
• An organization communicates its identity to the
consumers through its branding and marketing
strategies.
• Brand identity includes following elements - Brand vision,
brand culture, positioning, personality, relationships, and
presentations.
• Eg- pills bury chose the doughboy to convince
mothers to try ready made dough
• MRF chose the muscle men to signify the
strength
• Tata named its first small car indica to
establish the identity of a completely Indian
car
• Nike- just do it…. It encourages us to let
loose:
• Brand identity is the aggregation of what all you (i.e. an
organization) do. It is an organizations mission, personality,
promise to the consumers and competitive advantages.
• It includes the thinking, feelings and expectations of the target
market/consumers.
• It is a means of identifying and distinguishing an organization from
another.
“HUMARA BAJAJ”- POSSESSION OF
THE WHOLE FAMILY
• The forty year old hexagonal shaped logo was changed to a fresher
abstract B. It represents style, technology, speed and transparency.
• Its blue color represents Bajaj’s strength and stability.
• While logotype is all Capital BAJAJ, whose looks represents
perfection and precision engineering,
• the slogan ‘Distinctly ahead’ projects its philosophy of being
‘distinct from others’
NEW LOGO OF BAJAJ
BANK OF
BARODA
• New logo is a unique representation of a universal symbol.
• It comprises dual ‘B’ letterforms that hold the rays of the rising
sun.
• They call this the Baroda Sun
• The sun is an excellent representation of what the bank stands for.
• It is the single most powerful source of light and energy – its far
reaching rays dispel darkness to illuminate everything they touch.
• The single-colour, compelling vermillion palette has been carefully
chosen, for its distinctiveness as it stands for hope and energy.
CASE DISCUSSION
Brand Personality Framework
Brand
Personality
Axe
Marlboro
Levi’s
• How long a brand has been on the market can affect its
personality
• Some examples…
– Apple’s bitten apple
– Nike’s swoosh
– MetLife’s Peanuts character
BRAND POSITIONING
• Lifestyle Positioning
• By positioning itself as a lifestyle brand, a brand tries to sell an
image and identity rather than the product. The main focus is to
associate the brand with a lifestyle and focus is more on the
aspirational value than the product value. Cigarette, Alcohol, and
Tabacco companies are often seen to use lifestyle positioning while
marketing their products.
• The Problem Solver
• Most of the brands focus on positioning their products as a one stop solution
for a specific problem. They pinpoint the pain areas and the challenges the
consumers face in their communication and other marketing strategies and
mend it into promoting their product.
• Eg- Tide
• Parent Brand
• This positioning strategy aims at establishing a brand promise and a reputation
of the parent brand. All the products and sub-brands under the parent brand
seem to comply to the established promise.
• Eg- Maggie
• Product Specific
• Some brands which caters to different market segments, use product specific positioning
strategies where they position their different products differently than others. This is usually
seen in the automobile industry.
• Eg- volvo
• Feature Specific
• When the competition is huge and the products are similar, companies usually position their
products by focusing more on specific features like price, quality, or other micro features
depending on the product sold. This type of positioning strategy is usually seen in mobile
industry.
BRAND COMMUNICATION
• Most common means of brand communication is advertising.
• Hoardings, displays, signs, posters radio, print etc….
(1) Advertising
Brand recall- airtel jingle, vodafone
Providing information- new scheme dominos pizza (30 minutes) Birtannia
khoa, world cup jao”
• Emotional connection between product and customer- Fevicol ad
always use humour to convey the message to their customers.
• LIC earlier used fear of death and insecurity as a factor to convince
the customer to get insurance
• Snack purchase is an impulse driven and hunger driven exercise. Hence it is important to have
a top of the mind recall among the customers. Kurkure invested a lot on its brand
communication.
• For the chai time achievers award the families were asked to develop their own recipe using
kurkure. The winner families were promised a group photography on one million kurkure
packets and chai time achievers award
BRAND EQUITY