Upload
ikinnoveer
View
199
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
1
Building brands & innovative brand communication
Peter Janssen
CV speaker
• Graduated at Vlerick in 1984
• Almost 30 years of experience in Marketing,
Sales and Communication– At multinationals as Henkel, Borden and Schwarzkopf, but also
mediacenters as Full Page or retailers such as Value Retail (Maasmechelen Village)
– In various functions: Marketing, Account Management, Trade Marketing, Action Marketing and Category Management
– As well in B2C as in B2B– Being active in B, BNL and in G
• Between 2004 - 2009 at Vlerick: Vlerick Brand Management Centre (clients/partners e.g. AB Inbev, Beiersdorf, Opel, Nationale Loterij, ...)
• Since June 2009: Owner of LivingBrand – Branding Engineer
CV speaker
• Lecturing activities in Belgium and abroad
• Students
• In-company trainings
What is a brand?
Questions for you:
1. What is a brand to you?
2. What makes one brand stronger than the other?
3. What is the role of innovations?
5
6
My mental picture of
What is a brand?
The brand is an individual’s total experienceof a product, a service or an organisation
Offices space
Organisation
Previously Andersen Consulting
Advertising
Customer meetings Reports and documentation
Recruiting
Sponsorship
What makes brands so successful?
8
Brands offer quality and trust
9
Brands offer convenience
10
Brands offer innovative solutions
11
Brands offer status
A brand = Value to consumers/customers
Tangible (concrete) functions of a product
– Speed of delivery: DHL
– Fast food: Mc Donalds
Intangible (psychological and social) functions
– Safety: Volvo
– Puma: fashion & sports’ lifestyle
13
8 functions of a brand (Kapferer)
Brand
Recognition
User friendly
Guarantee
Optimization
Personalization
Durability
Hedonistic
Ethical
MECHANICAL
RISK REDUCTIONHEDONISTIC
Source: J.N. Kapferer
14
A brand = Value to brand owner
Financial advantages
• Higher sales, margins, … + economics of branding
• Value for the future
Strategic advantages
• Vs. competition: entry barriers
• Vs. the trade/retailers: need for traffic builders
• Vs. the labour market: magnet in the war for talent
Management advantages
• Extension strategy
• Endorsement strategy
• Global branding
1
5
2015: new range…
1
7
10 basic positioning strategies
Product/service features
Design/style
Experiental stimulation
Values/personality
User image
Price
Saliency
Channel choice
Customer service
Customer intimacy
Think about…
1. What is your (brand) positioning?
2. Are recent innovations in your company/organizationsupporting your positioning?
What is happening today?
New brand reality
Consumers are Trading Down• People are buying cheaper
• Discounters Aldi and Lidl have increased their market share in the last 12 months
• Successful expansion of “discount fast fashion” (Primark, …)
• Price awareness and comparison is further growing (comparison websites)
Rival retailers are moving quickly
Colruyt CruStandaard Online 1/10Opening in november 2014
Companies are unsecure
Low trust indexes…
“Duitse investeerdersvertrouwen op laagste peil in bijna vier jaar”(Standaard online 14 okt 2014)
Consumers postpone large expenditures
People are more prudent:
• All time-high bank savings in Belgium!
• All inclusive holidays are growing each year
• On the other hand people tend to shop more?!?As well offline as online
COMPENSATION
BIPOLARISATION
MOMENT CONSUMER
More consumers are buying more on-lineOut-of-town shopping centres are bearing the consequences of the consumer slowdown and e-commerce
E-commerce in Belgium:
– 75% of online population makes online purchases
– 330.000 new customers in 2013 buying online for the first time
– Average spent of 161 Euro/month– 28% of all Belgians are buying
monthly– 33% is a replacement for buying
offline– Very high satisfaction: only 1% will
certainly NOT buy again– Price and convenience remain
main drivers for e-commerce
‘Make-do and mend’ attitude &Reclycing and upcycling
Consumers rewarding themselves –Compensation…
Consumers also feel that there are some things
that they should be able to buy that are
non-essential - wine , chocolate, champagne…
Even such items as a holiday are seen as a necessity
So people are still looking for compensation,
for fun and experience
Experience marketing…
Example: Globetrotter (G)
Brand equity
32
Products come and go; brands are everlastingA brand is differentiating itself through permanently showing its distinctive character (identity)
Assignment
How could you stretch your brand? What are complementary products or services you couldalso offer?
Think about:
- Amazon… offering banking services
- Ikea… selling decoration books and
magazines
34
Important consequences of the concept Brand Equity
1. Involvement of top management
2. End of fragmentation
3. Focus on innovations
4. More vision & identity (in stead of image)
5. Full exploitation of the brand capital
35
Involvement of top management
Higher involvement of the board of directors– “We cannot leave the brand in the hands of the marketing
people.” (Y. Barbieux – CEO Nestlé France)
Brands are “lived” throughout the wholeorganisation (top-down and bottom-up)
Organizations are adapted to meet these new requirements
– Corporate communication– New structure of marketing organizations
⇨ NEW INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT
Led by example
Corporate branding
Involvement of … consumers & end users
37
► End of fragmentation
The management of brands does cost a lot of money and energy; therefore you have to make choices
– Banque de Paris & des Pays-Bas becomes Paribas
Focus on the core brands of the company– Cfr. Unilever: from 1.600 to 400 brands– Gervais-Danone becomes Danone with
Gervais as a kind of serie-brand– Barco: focusing on B2B
More products under one brand name (umbrella brands)
⇨ NEED TO CAPITALIZE ON CORE BUSINESS & CORE BRANDS
The LEGO story
• Launch in 1934
• Line extensions withLego kids’ fashion,…
• Crisis
• Back to basics: toys
• Experience marketing (store, staff, movie, …)
39
► Focus on innovations
To survive even strong brands do needinnovations and a continuous “update” torespond to changing consumer needs
– Translated into clear objectives: x % of the annual turnover
– To stay “young”: this is even more influenced by innovationsthan by advertising
Innovations need to be managed by the director of the brand portfolio who can decideabout which brand will be the “endorser” of thisnew product
⇨ INNOVATIONS ARE THE BOOSTERS OF A BRAND
New brand positioning and identity…
New products…
43
► More vision and identity needed
Currently brand management and marketing are strongly influenced by brand image-research (=external)
Pure brand management starts from the identity of the brand: brand concept & territory
A lot of companies are in the meanwhileformulating their Brand Charter
⇨ IDENTITY IS THE DRIVER. NOT IMAGE
44
► Full exploitation of the
brand capital
Brand extensions– Examples:
• Dove (Personal Care): “caring, with ¼ hydrating cream”
• Bic (stands for cheap, easy-to-use, relax) enters othercategories: disposable razor blades and lighters. However Bic failed in the perfume category (othervalues!)
New categories and new regions...
⇨ KNOW THE HEART OF THE BRAND
Growing your brand by means of…
Product development
– Line extensions
– Brand extensions
– Product acquisitions
Market development
– New channels & outlets
– New geographies
Growing your brand by more levels in your brand mantra
1 Key POD
2-3 Key POD’s
Higher orderPromise
Stage in BLC
Example:
From 1 POD to 3 POD’s
In the past:
– ….
Today:
– Degreasing power (‘miracle against fat’)
– Brilliant shine (‘your glasses shine’)
– Economically (‘one drop is enough’)
48
Co-branding
Partnerships
Expanding brand usage
Expanding brand usage
Innovative brand communication
What the hell are we talkingabout?
- Well integrated marketing communication- 360° approach- One-on-one communication- Combination of offline and online- Use of communities…- … and Co-creation- Buzz tracking & passive measurement- Experience marketing- Importance of touchpoints- Internal communication & internal branding- Make use of your sales staff & personnel- Creativity… creativity… creativity- …
What is your experience withinnovative marketing communication?
Something you are proud of?
Or something your competitor
has been doing and you regret it(not doing it yourself)?
360° approach
Lidl going for fresh(ness)
Folder
Website
Image building via PR:Lidl promoting health (en vers)…
59
Combining online and offlineNL: Coolblue
60
Strategy: Combining ‘pure player’ and ‘physical store’… Shops where you can order, pick up and go for advice (or reparation)
Your offer: Long tail assortment?
Companies/retailers can expand their assortment in the physical stores by offering an online assortment
Example: Delhaize is selling online 1.150 wines, although the assortment in the shop is limited to 600 wines
Communities
Online communities (consumerinsights)
Advantages:
• Direct access to your consumers/customers
• Generating instant feedback & insights
• Motivation!
• Brand experience…
• WIN-WIN for all parties involved
HOW TO SCORE WITH ONLINE COMMUNITIES AND
MOBILE
What did we do?
65
65 MOTIVATED COMMUNITY MEMBERS - 3 WEEKS
40 DUTCH
SPEAKING
25 FRENCH
SPEAKING
20 WOME
N
45 MEN
FORUM
Fora topic themes 9
Fora questions 28
N° of posts +- 1200
CHALLENGES
Challenges 3
N° of posted challenge ideas
115
Reaction posts to challenges 43
POLLS
N° of polls 14
Average participation rate 65%
The Community is a rich source of information
66
HIGH ACTIVITY RATES
Co-creation
Buzz tracking (conversations) & passive measurement
Conversations…
De geboorte van Kai Mook
* BOONDOGGLE (25 juni 2010). Boondoggle wint Gouden en 2 Zilveren Leeuwen op het reclamefestival van Cannes. Geraadpleegd op 6 juli 2011, op http://press.boondoggle.eu/boondoggle-wint-gouden-en---zilveren-leeuwen-voor-kai-mook-op-het-reclamefestival-van-cannes
Story telling
Cisco = networking equipment. ‘How can you possibly humanise a B2B brand whose central focus is highly technical products?
So, how does Cisco constantly and consistently create quality content?
Cisco not only looks to its knowledgeable, authoritative staff for content but also taps up journalists from a variety of sectors. We’re all aware of the power of using journalists to create content and Cisco does this so well. Writers from the Wall Street Journal, BusinessWeek, Forbes, New York Times as well as freelance writers and University lecturers have all had a hand in building Cisco’s Newsroom to be an engaging, inspiring platform.
Experience marketing
Wienerberger showroom
Importance of touch points
• CRM (good and up-to-date database)
• Reception & welcome of clients
• Proposals & price offers
• Importance of showroom and POS
• Follow-up of proposals
• Sales transactions
• After-sales
• Cross selling & upselling
New touch points
Staff = your first brand ambassadors
Internal branding
Be MORE creative
Get out of your comfort zone BUT comfort your customers
• Good communication starts with a good briefing and target’ setting
• Synergies in a well integrated communication mix– Reinforcement of your brand positioning
• Are you daring enough?– Free publicity (Public Relations)
– Social media
– Website & SEO
– Cross-selling
– Co-branding
– Use your brand ambassadors… let your customers do the job for you
78
Creativity… creativity…
En factureer 100 Euro voor de tijddie u daarvoor uittrekt…
Dare to do things differently…
Thanks for your attention…
… and good luck with all your future branding activities & marketing communication!
Peter JanssenE-mail: [email protected]: 0473 91 67 76
81