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PLANNING BRAND IDENTITY

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to better identify and use their opportunities. Tom Hrivn k, Marketing Consultant ... never be associated with anything which would embarrass him/her or the society? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PLANNING BRAND IDENTITY


1
PLANNING BRAND IDENTITY
  • New approaches to an old problem

2
Who Am I?
  • Brand Therapist
  • Brand steering
  • Dialogical, iterative and participatory process
  • Not data-based, but rather data-informed
  • Narrative marketing because brands are verbs

3
My Message Today
  • Traditional (i.e. 40 old) approaches to brand
    building and brand management might not be up to
    the task of delivering the same value as they
    once did
  • We should be aware of alternative frameworks of
    planning and steering our brands which are more
    fit for todays ever dynamically changing
    marketing landscape

4
Battered Brands
  • In a human life-time starting from now
  • probably more than 2/3 of the worlds top brands
    will be gone
  • Brands suffer from the ER marketing
    practices, corporate cynicism, private labels and
    the under-the-radar consumer

5
Winning Brands
  • Brands that thrive have something in common
  • Pioneering spirit
  • Simplicity
  • Clarity
  • Participation of stakeholders
  • Great leadership
  • Great value

6
Vestiges of Old Marketing
  • Features Benefits
  • Quantitative data analysis rules
  • Doing the same thing all over again expecting
    different results
  • Stealing off market share instead of finding new
    markets
  • 30 TV commercial

7
Hallmarks of New Marketing
  • Prosumer
  • Brand narrative
  • Disruption
  • Lovemark

8
Prosumer
  • Consumers are turned to prosumers (proactive
    consumers) by
  • Over-choice
  • The Internet
  • The way to study prosumers is not through a
    two-way mirror but through rich participatory
    ethnographies

9
Brand Narrative
  • In the post-scarcity society few of us seek to
    accommodate basic physiological needs by means of
    consumption
  • Consumption is as much a tool of constructing
    individual and social meaning as religion, career
    paths, and other means of fulfilling the life
    strategy

10
Brand Narrative (contd.)
  • The new approach maintains that for a brand to be
    competitive (in long term) it needs to be a part
    of a relevant story which involves the consumer
    on a much deeper level.
  • Brand thus becomes not only the vehicle for
    transfer of functional and emotional benefits but
    rather an agent in provisioning of meaning
    (consumer benefits being part of that meaning).

11
Brand Narrative (contd.)
  • A way of looking at brands with the aid of
    ancient narratives or hero-types which all
    cultures have shared through ages
  • These narratives (stories) help us in orientation
    in our world (as, in fact, they have been helpful
    in doing so to many generations before us),
    provide meaning and direction and are the core of
    our dreams.
  • Understanding and leveraging a brands
    archetypal potential helps considerably in
    transforming a trade-mark into a Lovemark.

12
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13
Disrupt the Marketplace
  • Create your own market space by understanding and
    then disrupting the conventional rules of the
    marketplace

14
Creating a Lovemark
15
Six truths about (and for) Love
  • Human beings need Love. Without it they die
  • Love means more than liking a lot
  • Love is about responding, about delicate,
    intuitive sensing
  • It is about who and what we love. (Love is
    directional)
  • Love takes time
  • Love cannot be commanded or demanded

16
Two dimensions of any LOVEMARK
17
Elements of a LOVEMARK
18
Respect
  • Performance (How well does a brand perform
    against its brand promise?)
  • Commitment (To what extent is the respondent
    committed to the brand?)
  • Social responsibility (To what extent does the
    respondent believe the brand will never be
    associated with anything which would embarrass
    him/her or the society?)
  • Value (Is the perceived value of the brand worth
    its price?)

No respect, no love
19
How to build respect a checklist
  • Perform, perform, perform / Pursue innovation /
    Commit to toal commitment / Make it easy / Dont
    hide / Jealously guard your reputation / Get in
    the lead and stay there / Tell the truth /
    Nurture integrity / Accept responsibility / Never
    pull back on service / Deliver great design /
    Dont underestimate value / Deserve trust /
    Never, ever fail the reliability test

20
Love


21
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22
The Business Logic Behind a L.
4th degree of strategic knowledge (Loyalty
beyond reason LOVEMARKS)
3rd degree of strategic knowledge(I know the
brand for sth. good for me)
Market share
2nd degree of strategic knowledge(I know the
brand for sth. good)
1st degree of strategic knowledge (I know the
brand for sth.)
Awareness (I know the brand exists)
Strategic knowledge
23
Thank you for your attention
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