Home Inbox Archives Write for Us
* Strategic Issues
* E-Business Issues
* Strategic Brand Management
* Agency-Related Matters
* Forum
* Case Study
* Perspectives
* Review
* Foreword
* Lets Talk
Advertise with us
Why SM?
Advertising rates

  Magazines
    Gen.Mgmt.Review
Investor's Guide
Brand Equity
Corporate Dossier
   
  ET Live Quotes
Type the name of the company to get the latest BSE/NSE stock quote
   
  ET Headlines
  Stocks
  Forex
  World
 


Reader's Articles
___________________________________________
Branding
Yusuf Dohadwala, Mumbai
yusuf_dohadwala@yahoo.com

Brand is the proprietary visual, emotional, rational, and cultural image that you associate with a company or a product. When you think Nike, you might think of Michael Jordan or "Just Do It." When you think IBM, you might think "Big Blue." The fact that you remember the brand name and have positive associations with that brand makes your product selection easier and enhances the value and satisfaction you get from the product.

Before going any further, however, we should set the record straight on what a brand is, and is not. Only then can you go about the process of branding your company and your products. First, your brand is not just your logo, tagline, packaging or the "look and feel" of your ads and your website, these are all graphical parts of your brand identity and are often narrowly, and incorrectly, referred to as "branding." Here is a much broader definition shared by many in the brand management community:
Your brand resides within the hearts (feelings) and minds (intellect) of your customers and prospects. It is the sum total of their (product, company and competitive) experiences and perceptions, some of which you can influence, and some you cannot.

Successful brand managers recognize that they must understand the needs and wants of customers and prospects. They strive to convey that they meet these needs and wants in a differentiating way that is motivating to prospects. They accomplish this by initiating integrated strategies throughout the company at every point of public contact -- marketing communications, customer support and sales.
The value of a brand is not something that one can easily change. Although it is not a part of the marketing mix, but an effect of it, the subject has nevertheless been included as branding plays an essential role in the communication process, denoting the identity of the product or service.

While branding can almost make or break a product, it has to be looked at in proportion to its role. The customer buys a product, not a brand. The physical purchasing action is caused by a decision to acquire a product; the brand is there to serve as a means of identifying the manufacturer. The values of the brand will reflect on the product, but one must not forget that it is the product that is bought.

The brand imagery can reinforce product values and often does so quite significantly and turn people into customers as well as enhance product satisfaction. The customers' objective, however is to buy a product and the quality experience of that product is what will persuade them to make or not make a second purchase. The product reflects on the brand as much as the brand reflects on the product.

The expression that 'the customer buys a brand' is not only logically wrong, but also conceptually wrong and can lead marketers to believe that product quality is less important, assuming that creating the right kind of imagery will overcome potential deficits in tangible product values.



 
Back to top
What do You want to say on
Rural Marketing

Should stockbrokers be barred from sharing client-specific information with third parties?
Vote
Are you
satisfied with Strategic Marketing
(you can make difference)
Times Group Sites-The Times Of India  | The Economic Times | ET Invest | ETintelligence | Femina  | Filmfare  |  Navbharat Times |  Times Classifieds  |  Property Times  |  Education Times |  Maharashtra Times | Responservice  | Indianadsabroad  | Jobs & Careers  | Times Multimedia