Title: Brand
1Brand Product Decisions
Vicki Enteen
2The Product
- Companies today who operate on a global scale
must develop product and brand policies and
strategies that are sensitive to market needs,
competition, and company objectives and resources.
3The Product
- A product is a good, service, or idea with both
tangible and intangible attributes that
collectively create value for a buyer or user. - Tangible assets physical features such as
weight, dimensions,
materials, etc., that translate
into benefits.
4The Product
- Intangible product attributes status associated
with product ownership, manufacturers service
commitment, brand reputation and/or mystique.
5Product Classification
- Consumer vs. industrial products
- Buyer orientation the amount of effort expended
by customer, level of risks of purchase, buyer
involvement in purchase includes convenience,
preference, shopping experience, type of goods. - Product life span durable, non-durable,
disposable
6The Product
- Effective global marketing often means finding a
balance between the payoff from extensively
adapting products and brands to local market
preferences and the benefits that come from
concentrating company resources on relatively
standardized global products and brands.
7The Brand
- A brand is a promise by a particular company
about a particular product, helping consumers
better organize their shopping experiences, to
differentiate one companys offering from others. - Brand image perceptions about a brand through
brand associations held by consumers. - Brand equity the total value that accrues to a
product as a result of the companys cumulative
investments in marketing the brand.
8Local Products Brands
- A local product or brand is one that has achieved
success in a single national market. - Sometimes a global company creates local products
and brands
to cater to the needs
and preferences of
particular country
markets.
9Local Products Brands
- Entrenched local products and brands can
represent significant competition to global
companies entering new country markets. - Growing national pride can result in social
backlash which favors local products and
brands. They can cut prices and use patriotic
advertising themes.
10International Products Brands
- Globalization is putting pressure on companies to
develop global products and to leverage brand
equity on a worldwide basis. - A true global product is offered in all world
regions, including countries at every stage of
development.
11International Products Brands
- A global brand has the same name and often a
similar image and positioning throughout the
world. - Brands have become a lingua franca a common
language for consumers around the world. - Brands marketed globally
are often endowed with an
aura of excellence as well
as a set of obligations.
12- A multinational has operations in different
countries. A global company views the world as a
single country. We know Argentina and France are
different, but we treat them the same. We sell
them the same products, we use the same
production methods, we have the same corporate
policies. We even use the same advertising in
a different language of course. - Alfred Zeien, former CEO Gillette
13Global Brand Characteristics
- Quality Signal provide world-class quality,
differentiation of product offerings, and often
sold at premium prices. - Global Myth symbolize cultural ideals. Uses
Global Consumer Culture Positioning (GCCP) to
communicate brands global identity and link it
to aspirations. - Social Responsibility Customers evaluate
companies and brands in terms of how they address
social problems and how they do business.
14Tiered Branding
- Also known as combination branding.
- A corporate name is combined with a product brand
name. (Ex. Sony Walkman) - Leverages a companys reputation while developing
a distinctive brand identity for a line of
products.
15Co-Branding
- Co-branding is a variation on combination
branding in which 2 or more different companies
or product brands are featured prominently on
product packaging or in advertising. - Can result in customer loyalty, and allow
companies to achieve synergy. - BUT can also confuse customers and dilute brand
equity if products are not complementary.
16Product/Brand Matrix
- PRODUCT
- Local Global
- local product/ global product/
- local brand local brand
- BRAND
- Global Global
- local product/ global product/
- global brand global brand
-
17Global Branding
- To be considered a global brand, it has to
generate at least 1/3 of sales outside the home
country. - Developing a global brand is not always an
appropriate goal. The move must fit well with
the company its markets, expected economies of
scale must be realistic, and management must have
expertise in building a global brand team.
18Global Brand Leadership
- Using strong organizational structures,
processes, and cultures to allocate
brand-building resources globally, to create
global synergies, and to developo a global brand
strategy that coordinates and leverages country
brand strategies.
19Global Brand Leadership
- Guidelines for success
- Create a compelling value proposition for
customers in every market entered. - Before taking a brand across borders, think about
all elements of brand identity and select names,
marks and symbols that have the potential for
globalization. - Develop company-wide communications to share
leverage knowledge and information about
marketing programs in different countries.
20Global Brand Leadership
- Develop a consistent planning process across
markets products. - Assign specific responsibility for managing
branding issues to ensure that local brand
managers accept global best practices. - Execute brand-building strategies that leverage
global strengths and respond to relevant local
differences.
21Leading Global Brand Coke
- Coca-Cola is the quintessential global product
and brand. - Relies on similar positioning and marketing in
all countries global image of fun, good times,
and enjoyment. - Product varies to suit local tastes, prices vary
to suit local competition, channels of
distribution may differ. - Not exact uniformity, but essentially the same
product and brand promise.
22Maslows Needs Hierarchy
- Useful framework for understanding how and why
local products and brands can be extended beyond
home-country borders. - As an individual fulfills needs at each level, he
or she progresses to higher levels. - Higher stages include external and internal
esteem (social needs) and self-actualization
(personal needs).
23Maslows Needs Hierarchy
- In some of the emerging countries, particularly
in Asia, social needs are part of affiliation
needs (being part of a group and conforming)
which are important in Asia. - At the top of the pyramid,
- Status, Admiration, and
- Affiliation.
24Upscale Products
- Many products, especially upscale ones, do not
have to be adapted to specific countries because
consumers want the same products particularly
those that convey status. - Conspicuous consumption.
- Some luxury companies now doing 50 of their
business in Asian countries.
25Country of Origin as Brand Element
- Country-of-origin effect based on perceptions and
attitudes towards that country. Part of brand
image and contributes to brand equity. - Can be either positive or negative.
26Packaging as Brand Element
- Must conform to local laws.
- Must communicate to help consumer make purchase
decisions. - Engage the senses, make emotional connections,
enhance brand experience.
27Packaging as Brand Element
- Provide information and sales encouragement in
todays self-service retail environments. - Attract attention, support product positioning,
persuade customers to buy. - Ingredient labeling, use and care instructions,
health warnings, multi-lingual, etc.
28Extend, Adapt, Create
- Extension strategy offering a virtually
identical product to markets outside the home
country. - Adaptation strategy changing elements of
design, - function, or
- packaging in
- response to needs
- or conditions in
- particular country
- markets.
29Extend, Adapt, Create
- Product invention entails developing entirely
new products from scratch with world market in
mind. - Often required because of government regulations
on technical and health/safety standards.
30Extend, Adapt, Create
- Extension strategy used by companies that believe
that all markets are alike (ethno-centric) - Adaptation strategy used by companies that
believe that all markets are different.
(polycentric) - Adaptation/extension strategy used by companies
that take advantage of similarities. (geocentric)
31Extend, Adapt, Create
- Communications strategies can use the same as
in home country (extension) or adaptation (modify
for country markets).
32Extend, Adapt, Create
- Product and communications adaptation for
Malaysian market
33Product Innovation
- For markets in which there is a need but not the
same purchasing power, companies can create
products at a much lower price point. - For companies from lower-income countries, there
may be a need to bring products up to world-class
standards.
34Product Innovation
- Creating new products for specific markets
low-fat yogurt for US market, cosmetic colors for
Asian women
35Product Innovation
- Product transformation when a product that has
been introduced into new country markets serves
a different function or is used differently than
originally intended.
36New Products in Global Marketing
- Need to create new products that offer superior
value worldwide. Continuous development and
introduction of new products are key to survival
and growth. - An existing product that is not new to a company
may be new to a particular market.
37New Products in Global Marketing
- Discontinuous innovation entirely new
invention, creating new markets new consumption
patterns, a real break with the past.
38New Products in Global Marketing
- Dynamically continous innovation share certain
features with earlier generations of products but
incorporate new features that offer added value.
39New Products in Global Marketing
- Continuous innovation new and improved versions
of existing products and require minimal
adaptation of existing consumption patterns.
40New Products in Global Marketing
- A large factor in the move toward development of
global products is reducing cost of RD. The
goal is to create a single platform or core
product design element or component that can be
quickly and cheaply adapted to country markets.
41New Products in Global Marketing
- Tap all relevant. sources for product ideas.
- Screen these ideas to identify which should be
developed further. - Analyze various product options.
- Ensure the organization commits resources and
develops product on a worldwide basis.
42New Products in Global Marketing
- How big is the market for this product at various
prices? How much potential? - What are likely competitive moves?
- Can this be marketed through our existing
structure? Changes needed? Costs? - Can it be sourced at a profitable level?
- Does it fit into our strategic development plans?
Consistent with overall goals?
43New Products in Global Marketing
- Need for adequate testing of product, brand name
and elements, etc., to ensure success.
44Questions for Discussion
- Give examples of companies introducing new
products within the categories of discontinuous,
dynamically continuous, and continuous
innovation. - What are some examples of various
extension/adaptation strategies? - How can buyer attitudes about product
country-of-origin affect marketing strategy?
Give examples.