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Building
Indian IT brands?
Marketing Manager Oracles
NAIO Business Unit
Kingshuk Hazra
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Branding
is identifying or creating, and then exploiting,
sustainable competitive advantage. - Ron Gossen
& Alisha Gresham in Brand Papers
The three key rules
of marketing are brand recognition, brand recognition,
brand recognition. - unknown
Any damn fool can put on a deal, but it takes genius,
faith and perseverance to create a brand.
- David Ogilvy
Intel actually branded the inside of a computer.
They took the most abstract thing you can imagine
and figured out a way to make people identify with
it. - Justine Meaux, a research scientist
for the BrightHouse Institute
It is said that managing a brand is like being the
chauffeur of an expensive limousine. Its expensive
and you dont own it, so youd better
be careful not to do anything that could damage
it. You need to have a clear idea of where you want
to take it, and how to get there. Dont make
any sudden turns, or your passengers might get sick
or fall out; but dont drive so slowly that
they get bored and opt for faster transportation.
As Indian IT companies rapidly unfurl
their flags across the six (or is it seven?) continents
of the world, the biggest challenge they are facing
is how to drive growth at a healthy pace while keeping
the distance from the ever-expanding competition,
without slipping off while building a sustainable
business model. Their challenge is not very different
from that of the automobile chauffer!
Is there a real need for
Branding?
If you are an avid Kotler fan, here
is a pop quiz for you. Which of the four statements
you most agree with?
- a) Branding is a subset of business strategy
- b) Business strategy a subset of branding
- c) Business strategy cannot be separated from
branding
- d) Business strategy is the same as branding
If you ticked a, b or
d, you are wrong! The answer is c. Let me explain.
For a services company, branding is more than the
high performance expectation set by the marketers.
It constitutes everything from the consumers
experience to the business itself.
Again, emotional relevance by
service and experience levels is difficult but not
impossible to replicate. If you were a client, how
would you differentiate between two IT Services
companies with the same SEI CMM & PCMM certifications
with similarly qualified engineers providing IT
Helpdesk support, who delivered the same kind of
work?
The answer lies in business strategy execution.
The sum of how a company manages its external environment,
its processes, its HR, its marketing - all taken
together - ultimately decides the performance expected
from your brand, especially in the post-Internet
world.
So we have a contradiction - branding is an element
of business strategy and in turn business strategy
is an element of branding! To simplify things and
find an answer to the pop quiz, lets simply
say, Branding is inseparable from business
strategy and is essential
for survival!
Perfect competition requires
heavy-duty branding
The Indian
IT services firms find themselves in a market with
lots of players offering services that are substitutes
- and at a high quality but low price. This is quite
like a state of competitive equilibrium that economists
call perfect competition. In this market:
- There are a few barriers to entry - more than
50+ SEI CMM Level 5 Indian IT Services companies
feeding from a skilled, mathematically inclined
and English-speaking labour pool.
- Prices determined by supply and demand - sky-high
rates in the supposedly mission-critical Y2K spending
binge days, have fallen over the last few years.
- Complete information is available
- thanks to the industry bodies, analyst firms,
and the Internet.
You need branding to counter
misconceptions
The Indian IT Services firms are perceived
in a particular way in the marketplace, not all
of which is complementary and not all of which is
undeserved. The players are perceived as mass
market techies arbitraging labour rates rather
than smart business problem solvers who use
technology smartly.
What defines an Information
Technology brand?
Branding your IT company would include
a way of interacting with whoever touches whatever
part of your business: from your letterhead and
logo to how employees answer the phone to what goes
in your campus pre-placement talk, to
when you got the SEI CMM Level 5, to
your onsite techies table manners. Branding
is the integration of everything about your company
to create consistency for all your stakeholders
- customers and prospects, vendors, employees and
potential hires, suppliers, competitors, analysts
and government bodies.
The Current state of Indian
IT Brands
If you take out the low price
@ good quality tag, what else do we honestly
offer?
The first flush of growth in the IT Services industry
happened due to the body-shopping boom. Y2K, Internet
revolution, and BPO followed one after the other
keeping cumulative growth rates at a heady 50 per
cent year after year. This meant that the players
needed to be good only in sales and delivery and
had little need for marketing or brand building.
There have been various
reasons why the most successful Indian IT companies
- the IT Services - had no need to brand themselves:
- Because Global Delivery brought in huge savings,
the focus was on pricing led differentiation.
This meant that being located offshore was enough
to sustain the players.
- Return on innovation investments require long
gestation periods. Most Indian firms were looking
at quick returns - within a quarter, half a year,
a year.
- The firms had their hearts and souls set to
on sales and delivery; marketing happened to be
incidental.
- The marketing function - if it existed - reported
to Sales. And sales will not focus on esoteric
concepts like brand-building when
the going is good and the dollars are brought
in by the shovelful.
Now that has changed. This is because the global
model of services delivery has gained momentum across
customers, and if you have enough customers, you
will have enough vendors with every developing country
keen to replicate the India model.
Horizontal Competence
without focus leads to commoditisation
To take
the maximum of the upside, the IT Services players
targeted all industries and all basic building-block
IT services without the scale of an IBM or an EDS
to deep dive into an industry. They neither had
industry-specific solutions nor deep stacks of technology
services. As more players entered, their offerings
became commoditised.
Al Ries believes that Indian IT Services companies
lack focus. The key-branding concept, he says, is
to be a specialist, as power lies in dominance:
50 per cent of one market was better than 10 per
cent in all markets.
Fallout of de-risking
- not innovating!
There is nothing wrong with de-risking
per se. Having predictable revenue streams and not
missing revenue forecasts quarter after quarter
are the stuff out of which legendary companies are
made. But if de-risking is not limited to corporate
finance but extends through the corporate boardroom
into every sphere of operations - into the lifeblood
of the company, we have a problem.
Companies which focus on de-risking as the be-all
and end-all of corporate strategy tend to look at
the future as a straight line extending from the
past, hoping that yesterdays tried and tested
solutions would somehow solve tomorrows business
problems. The proportion of R&D budget-to-revenue
for them is much lower than their international
peers. And - you guessed it right - more than 98
per cent of the Indian IT companies fall in this
category.
How to build the Indian
IT Brands?
Rule #1: Know where branding will
not work
- Focusing on brand could lead to the kiss of
death for a start-up firm trying to create repeat
business in a crowded marketplace. Example: The
dot-com meltdown showed that heavy investment
in branding rung the death-knell of so many branding
is everything companies.
- Customers are buying what a technology service/product
will do, not the marketing. For small players,
getting referrals from your customers could be
far more important than spending scare resources
on brand building.
- Why do you want to do branding? Is it because
everybody is doing it - or because you want to
differentiate yourself from the competition? The
sharper the differentiations, the better off you
are.
Once youve made sure that branding will
work for you, go ahead, and read the rest of the
rules.
Rule #2: Know where branding
is essential
Remember the perfectly competitive
markets we discussed earlier?
Players in this market need to stand out. You need
some strong differentiator and talk about that.
Prime candidates for IT
brands that require strong branding:
- Your services are very similar in features,
benefits and price to the competitions
- The way your various departments describe your
company sounds like the apocryphal six blind men
describing an elephant.
Possible way to create
differentiation:
- Doing something in technology that is too narrow
that others cannot do E.g. lets say IP work
in mobile technology for CRM.
- Limiting to one or two verticals E.g. Kale
Consultants, in spite of being one of the earliest
players in the financial services industry, decided
to focus only on the Travel and Transportation
industries, where they were stronger.
And to add to that differentiation,
dont forget to talk about it
Rule #3: Its a peoples
business - period!
Get the best, retain them, and get them to
live the brand!
Imagine you are the CEO of a mid-sized Indian IT
firm. What would make the best and brightest of
the worlds, with multiple job offers, want to join
you? No, its not your global MNC tag; its
definitely not your salary package; not even the
foreign postings you promise them. Its the
projects you give them, the opportunities to learn
and apply, stretch-challenges you set for them,
and how they can boast about the challenges they
faced and overcome, the adrenalin rush they got
on the job.
Cont
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