Marketing Strategy
Chapter 5 (Brands)
Marketing Principle #3
All Competitors React Managing
Brand-based Sustainable Competitive
Advantage
© Robert Palmatier 1
Agenda
Introduction
Brand Strategies
Brand Positioning
Brand Architecture
Brand Extensions
Managing Brand-Based SCA
Three Steps to Building Brand Equity
Integrated Marketing Communications
Research Approaches to Understanding and Measuring Brand Equity
Surveys: Brand Audits
Takeaways
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Brand Basics
The American Marketing Association defines brands as a “name, term, design,
symbol, or any other feature that identifies one seller's good or service as distinct
from those of other sellers”
Usually managers characterize a brand by describing all of the brand elements used
to identify it, including its name (e.g., Apple), symbol (e.g., silhouette of an apple
with a bite removed), package design (e.g., sleek white box), and any other features
that serve to differentiate that brand’s offering from competitors’
A firm’s brand equity often represents a substantial portion of its overall value
Ranking of the 10 Most Valuable Global Brands
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Brands Are One of the Most Critical
(Intangible) Assets a Firm Owns
“If this company were to split up I would give you the property, plant,
and equipment and I would take the brands and the trademarks and I
would fare better then you” -John Stuart, 20 year CEO of Quaker Oats
Provides a long-term sustainable competitive advantage (SCA) that is
very difficult to copy: How to displace Coke Cola, Apple, Google, IBM,
McDonalds
Both brands and relationships lead to enduring customer loyalty
Price premium
Last look
Positive attributions
Cross selling and retention
Higher CLV
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Brands as SCA
Customers’ awareness of, knowledge about, and behaviors in response
to a brand generate the firm’s brand equity, one of the three major
components of the customer equity stack, along with offering and
relationship equities
Brand equity is the set of assets and liabilities linked to a brand, its
name, and its symbol, which add to or subtract from the value provided
by the firm’s offering and relationships
Brand equity “lies in the mind of the customer,” which means that it is
difficult for competitors to copy it, adding to the sustainability of brand-
based barriers
This also makes it hard for firms to adapt or change their brand identity
Understanding the brand-building process, as it takes place among
consumers, can provide insights into many different brand-building
strategies that firms might adopt, including which ones are most
effective and why each strategy works best in any particular situation
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Associative Network Memory Model of Brand
Equity
This leading psychological model describes how brands work
The associative network memory model argues that the human mind is a
network of nodes and connecting links
The key characteristics of a brand, which influence its brand equity, are
captured as nodes and linkages
Brand awareness or familiarity, which reflects the customer’s ability to
identify a brand, is indicated by the size or strength of the node for that
memory
Brand image, or customers’ perceptions and associations with the brand, are
represented by the links of the brand name node to other informational nodes
in the model
In the network memory model, brand strategy involves first building
awareness to provide an anchor point, then building linkages to positive,
unique memory nodes to establish an identity that matches target
customers’ needs in a cost-efficient manner
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Associative Network Memory Model of Brand
Equity
Words in blue
represent Sophisticated
marketing
strategies Ultimate
designed to driving
build memory
machine
networks
James
Bond
Advertising Movie
placement
Ladies’
man
Grandpa’s Athletic
car
BMW Product
design Line thickness
reflects tie
strength between
nodes
Yuppie
Node size Product
reflects ease of attributes
recall German
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Brand Differences Operate at a Subconscious
Level
Colt 45
Pabst Guinness
Guinness Pabst
Coors
Budweiser
Colt 45
Miller Lite Coors
Miller Lite
Budweiser
A. Taste perceptions of six beer B. Taste perceptions of six beer
brands when the drinker brands when the drinker does
knows what he is drinking NOT know what he is drinking
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Benefits from Brand Equity
Brands can change customers’ actual experiences; they can change the taste of
food or drink, the excitement of driving a car, the comfort felt in a coffee shop, and
the visual appeal of diamond jewelry
Benefits from strong brands are associated with three general areas:
1. Sales growth – sales benefit from strong brands, because brands make it easier to
acquire new customers, who perceive less risk, higher quality, and better performance
of a brand with strong equity
2. Profit enhancement – the benefits that drive sales growth also can enhance a firm’s
profitability by reducing costs or allowing the firm to charge higher prices for its
products
3. Loyalty effects – a strong brand makes customers more loyal, which often provides the
largest barrier to competitive entry
True loyalty
Spurious loyalty
Latent loyalty
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True Loyalty Matrix
True loyalty: when both
Behavioral Loyalty (repeat purchases) attitudinal and behavioral
loyalty are high; positive
Attitudinal Loyalty (strong positive
High Low
feelings and actions
True Loyalty Latent Loyalty
High
high levels of both
attitudinal and
positive attitudes but
does not buy the
Spurious loyalty: customers
buy but have ambivalent or
feelings)
behavioral loyalty firm’s products
negative feelings; at the first
convenient opportunity they
Spurious Loyalty
buys products but
No Loyalty
no positive will switch
Low feelings and no
has ambivalent or
negative feelings purchases
Latent loyalty: customers
express positive attitudes but
fail to actually buy a firm’s
products. Often due to a lack
of local purchase access or
prices beyond their means
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Example: SAB (South Africa)
South African Breweries (SAB) was named the “Most Admired Company
in South Africa” by Ask Afrika, a South African market research company
SAB uses brand loyalty to prevent competitive entry
While many international brewers have attempted to gain a slice of SAB’s
over 90% market share, SAB’s brand strength is a very difficult barrier to
overcome
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Agenda
Introduction
Brand Strategies
Brand Positioning
Brand Architecture
Brand Extensions
Managing Brand-Based SCA
Three Steps to Building Brand Equity
Integrated Marketing Communications
Research Approaches to Understanding and Measuring Brand Equity
Surveys: Brand Audits
Takeaways
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Brand Positioning
Brand positioning reflects how and where the firm hopes to appear in
customers’ mind
The BOR Equity Grid provides the objectives, relative advantages (over
competitors), and sources of sustainability (how it wins over time) that
are required to use brands as SCA
But other design elements also are required to develop a brand strategy,
including:
Brand objectives
Brand awareness
Brand relative advantage
Brand sustainability
Brand image
Brand identity
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Brand Architecture
Brand architecture defines both the rationale and the structure among
the firm, its products, and its brand/product extensions—in essence,
how the brand is used at different levels in the organization
One extreme is a house of brand architecture, such that the firm
focuses on branding each major product with its own unique set of brand
elements
Other extreme is a branded house architecture, where a firm uses a
single set of brand elements for all of its products
Overall, firms should shift toward a house of brands approach if they
need a separate brand for each entity (divisions, categories, products) to
avoid a problematic association or channel conflict across entities
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Brand Architecture Spectrum
Many Independent Single Master
Brands Brand
House of Brands Endorsed Brands Sub-brands Branded House
Many individual brands are Sub-brands have a closer link
linked to an endorsing brand to the parent brand than do Single master brand used for
Many independent brands
to produce a supportive endorsed brands but behave all products
foundation similarly
P&G’s Tide, Cheer, All, Ariel, Courtyard by Marriott; Polo Sony Walkman; Nestle Kit GE’s airplane engines,
and Purex by Ralph Lauren Kat appliances, and financing
Despite this presentation of brand architecture as two extremes on a spectrum, in reality, firms
often use intermediate or hybrid brand structures, such as endorsed brands and sub-branding
Marriott Hotels uses an endorsed brand strategy for the Courtyard Marriott chain. It suggests
the approval and imprimatur of the Marriott brand but also makes it clear to customers that
Courtyard hotels stand on their own and offer something different from typical Marriott hotels
Sony uses a sub-branding strategy when it assigns major product categories, such as PCs, the
Viao brand name. Branding a laptop as a Sony Viao means that it enjoys spillover benefits from
Sony (awareness and linkages) but also differentiates the Viao name so that it can establish
linkages unique to PCs
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Example: Honda (Japan)
Honda launched Acura to target the luxury automotive market
Needed to give the cars a new, distinct brand identity to match
customers’ desires for status and exclusivity, rather than the economy
and reliability linked to the Honda brand
Similarly, Proctor and Gamble (P&G) maintains a full set of brand
identities for all its products
In some grocery stores, P&G laundry detergents take up more than half
of the shelf space for the category with Tide, Cheer, and All
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Example: General Electric (US)
GE uses a branded house architecture
When GE launches a new product, it immediately enjoys the positive
associations of the GE master brand
Product launch and brand building costs decrease, accelerates product
diffusion throughout the marketplace
Each new GE product starts with high overall brand awareness and
meaningful linkages to the high-quality manufacturer of electrical
products, which lowers consumers’ perceptions of product adoption risk
However, these linkages must be credible. If GE were to launch a new line
of perfume, many of its brand linkages would be inconsistent with the
desired attributes for this new product, thus undermining the perfume’s
own brand image
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Agenda
Introduction
Brand Strategies
Brand Positioning
Brand Architecture
Brand Extensions
Managing Brand-Based SCA
Three Steps to Building Brand Equity
Integrated Marketing Communications
Research Approaches to Understanding and Measuring Brand Equity
Surveys: Brand Audits
Takeaways
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Three Steps to Building Brand Equity
Brand Building Activities Key Objectives
1st Provide an anchor point for linking
Build a high level of brand awareness
Step meaning to the brand in later steps
2nd Link the brand name to its points of Define the brand’s relative
Step parity and difference advantage(s)
Build a deep emotional connection or
3rd Generate powerful, long-lasting
“relationship” between brand and
Step barriers to competitors (i.e., SCA)
targeted customers
1. Building a high level of brand awareness among the firm’s targeted customers, which then
provides an anchor point for linking the easily recallable brand name to the elements that define
its meaning and image
2. Linking the brand name to the brand’s points of parity and difference, which helps define the
brand’s relative advantage – this step defines how the brand will be positioned against its
competition
3. Building a deep emotional connection or “relationship” between the brand and targeted
customers – moving beyond functional differentiation implies a true, emotional connection which
is the essence of building a powerful, long-lasting brand image
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Integrated Marketing Communications
Integrated marketing communications (IMC) refers to the process of designing
and delivering marketing messages to customers while ensuring that they are
relevant and consistent over time and channels
To execute the three brand building steps and effectively implement the firm’s
brand strategy, a firm typically uses multiple marketing communication formats,
each of which has different strengths and weaknesses that define when each will
be most effective, as well as the optimal combination of different formats
Some of the most commonly used marketing communication formats are:
Advertising
Sales promotion
Public relations (PR)
Events and experiential marketing
Direct and interactive marketing
Word-of-mouth (WOM)
Personal selling
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Persuasion Process when Using IMC
Using brands as an SCA is often most effective in large consumer markets, such as
those for soft drinks, beer, fashion, or automobiles
When making allocation decisions across different marketing communication formats,
in the pursuit of key brand-building objectives, it also can be helpful to understand
how customers process information and are persuaded to change their behavior
The varied models can be broken down into six steps that customers must pass
through to be persuaded by the different communication formats:
1. The customer must be exposed to the communication message, whether that means
hearing or seeing it.
2. The message needs to capture customers’ attention, so that they receive it.
3. The customer must understand the desired marketing message.
4. The customer needs to develop favorable attitudes toward the message.
5. The customer must generate intentions to act, in accordance with the information in
the communication message.
6. The person then must actually behave in the desired way.
This six-step process sometimes is simplified as the “think feel act” model, which
aligns well with the process for building brand equity
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Example: Turkish Airlines (Turkey)
Turkish Airlines has been investing in sponsorship agreements and
advertisements in order to expand its brand visibility and global reach
Its advertisement titled “Kobe vs. Messi: The Selfie Shootout” has been
viewed more than 100 million times on YouTube, and was named the
advertisement of the decade in 2013
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Research Approaches for Understanding and
Measuring Brand Equity
To track the effectiveness or returns on marketing expenditures that seek
to build brand equity over time, as well as understand the state of the
brand following changes in strategy or competitive disruptions in the
marketplace, a firm needs to measure its brand equity
Different approaches, methods, and metrics for measuring a brand’s
health are available, depending on the manager’s objectives
A brand audit evaluates the brand’s health to understand its strengths
and weaknesses, such that it provides a foundation for designing and
implementing a new brand strategy
With an exploratory qualitative analysis, the less structured method can
use smaller samples
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DAT 5.1 Survey Design: A Brand Audit Example
Description When to Use It
Surveys are used to gather customer feed- back • To understand how customers think or feel about an entity or topic (e.g., brand,
about a firm, experience, or brand, by asking new product).
customers to respond to a series of questions. • Best to use when such feelings or thoughts are not observable in other types of
data.
Designing a Survey
Experiments can establish the causal impact of marketing actions (e.g., new ad campaign), but they often cannot answer “why” or “how” questions: Why did
customers respond so positively to that ad campaign? What makes them love a brand so much that they pay more just to buy it? How do customers make up
their minds about whether to buy a certain brand? In such cases, surveys offer a clear advantage. They directly elicit responses from customers (or potential
customers), and thus they provide deep, qualitative and quantitative feedback to the brand about its standing in the marketplace. To conduct a good survey,
the firm must take into account four crucial factors:
1. The objectives for conducting the survey must be clear. A firm should have a specific, written statement of how the survey findings will relate back to the
firm’s marketing program. Some objectives might include gauging responsiveness to a firm’s advertising efforts (to help it tweak its advertising copy),
obtaining feedback on service staff (to improve service quality), or comparing the preferences of customers who use or don’t use the firm’s products (to
understand the target population).
2. The firm must be careful to sample customers appropriately for any survey. Appropriateness involves obtaining a credible quantity (i.e., number of
responses) but also credible quality, such that the firm receives relevant feedback according to the criteria used to separate those who are included in
the survey from those who are not. If a firm is conducting a survey to obtain feedback about its service staff, for example, it needs to make the survey
available to customers who recently used its service, because they are the ones most likely to recall the service experience accurately.
3. Surveys should contain penetrating, precise questions. Designing questionnaires is one of the most important parts of the survey design. All questions
must measure the property they are supposed to measure, and they must mean the same thing to everyone. Furthermore, survey designers need to
avoid the pitfall of asking loaded questions, which will cause a response bias. Thus, writing survey questions is an iterative process.
4. The firm should conduct the survey and store the data in a structured format, following a consistent process for organizing and analyzing survey data.
The process should be defined well before it ever receives the first responses. Then the survey responses should be analyzed qualitatively (open-ended
questions) or quantitatively (scale-type questions), often with the assistance of analytical software.
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DAT 5.1 Survey Design: A Brand Audit Example (cont.)
Brand Audit Example
Brand A is one of 16 luxury cars available in India. To understand how it is perceived by customers, and improve its brand appeal, the owners of
the brand conducted a nationwide, online survey of customers. An excerpt from the survey is presented below.
Survey
You are cordially invited to provide your valued opinion in a short survey about luxury cars. We will ask you a few questions
about various brands of luxury cars, and this survey should take you about eight minutes to complete. Thank you very much
for your time and support.
Brand Image Brand Sensuality
Think of Brand A, and please answer these questions. For each Brand A’s design is really well done.
question, a score of 1 is regarded as “strongly disagree” and 5 Brand A sells incredible cars.
is regarded as “strongly agree.” Brand A’s products are designed to please.
Brand Mystery Brand Intimacy
Brand A awakens good memories for me. I feel happy when I use Brand A’s products.
Brand A is part of my life. I feel satisfied with Brand A.
Brand A captures the times. I will stay with Brand A.
Results
The survey was answered by 1,000 customers. The results reflect the brand’s image (comprised of mystery, sensuality, and
intimacy). According to the questionnaire responses, Brand A scored very well on brand mystery and brand intimacy, with
mean scores in the range of 4.2 to 4.9 on the 5-point scale. But customers did not like the brand’s design (M = 3.8) and did
not believe that the brand sold incredible products (M = 3.3). Thus, the brand sensuality measures were significantly lower.
Using these survey results, the firm launched an immediate redesign of its car to address this brand weakness and planned a
new advertising campaign to launch the new product.
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DAT 5.1 Survey Design: A Brand Audit Example (cont.)
Brand Audit Example (cont.)
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Agenda
Introduction
Brand Strategies
Brand Positioning
Brand Architecture
Brand Extensions
Managing Brand-Based SCA
Three Steps to Building Brand Equity
Integrated Marketing Communications
Research Approaches to Understanding and Measuring Brand Equity
Surveys: Brand Audits
Takeaways
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Takeaways
Investments in building a firm’s brand awareness and image in customers’ minds
represent a strong barrier to competitive attacks and often provide the initial
market-based SCA for a firm.
The associative network memory model argues that the mind is a network of
nodes and connecting links. The key characteristics of a brand that influence
brand equity can be captured as nodes and linkages.
Brands change how people think, often below a conscious level. Perceptions of
brands even can change customers’ actual experiences (e.g., making beer taste
better).
Benefits from strong brand equity include sales, profit enhancement, and loyalty
effects.
Key branding elements include the brand objective, brand awareness, brand
relative advantage, brand sustainability, brand image, and brand identity.
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Takeaways
Brand architecture defines the rationale and structure that link the firm, its products,
and its product and/or brand extensions. It defines how the brand is used at different
levels across the organization. Noting the range of brand architecture structures
available, firms must make strategic decisions, based on their branding strategy.
Brand extensions can leverage existing brands as line or category extensions.
The three steps to building brand equity are: building a high level of brand
awareness, linking the brand name to the brand’s points of parity and difference, and
building a deep emotional connection or “relationship” between the brand and
targeted customers.
Integrated marketing communication (IMC) is a process for sharing relevant,
consistent marketing messages with consumers, across a variety of formats, including
advertising, sales promotion, public relations, events and experiential marketing,
direct and interactive marketing, word of mouth, and personal selling.
To understand and measure brand equity, firms use qualitative and quantitative
assessments of their brand’s health, which helps them identify areas for
improvement.
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Readings
Perspectives on Brand Equity (overall review of brand equity,
brand management, and brand measurement)
Measuring Brand Health to Improve Top-Line Growth
(brand measurement and review of advertising behavioral
models)
Marketing Strategy Book: Chapter 5
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