Brand Positioning
Brand Positioning
Brand Positioning
www.eiilmuniversity.ac.in
Credits: 4
SYLLABUS
General Introduction
Brand Positioning; Consumers Perceptual Space; Positioning; Perceptual Mapping; Positioning: Rooted in
Product Features; The Pursuit of Differential Advantage; Category Related Positioning;
Various Facets of Brand Positioning
Symbols by Which We Live and Buy: Positioning with Non Functional Values; Brand Personality; Advertising:
Introduction and Significance; Brand Building Advertising; Brand Tracking.
Brand Equity and Franchising Objectives
Rules and Risks of Brand Extension; Brand Equity; Franchising; Brand Mapping and Extension; Reading
Minds: Research Techniques for Brand Positioning; New Product Opportunities.
Suggested Readings:
1. Brand Positioning: Strategies for Competitive Advantage, Subroto Sengupta, Tata McGraw Hill
2. Positioning: The Battle for Your Mind, Ries, Tata McGraw-Hill.
3. Brand Positioning, Martin Christopher, Butterworth-heinemann.
BRAND POSITIONING
CONTENT
Lesson No.
Topic
Page No.
General Introduction
Lesson 1
Brand Positioning
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Perceptual Mapping:
Lesson 5
12
Lesson 6
16
Lesson 7
What Am I?
18
Lesson 8
For Whom Am I?
26
Lesson 9
Why Me?
Various Facets of Brand Positioning
28
Lesson 10
30
Lesson 11
Brand Personality
33
Lesson 12
36
Lesson 13
37
39
Lesson 15
Brand Extension
45
Lesson 16
49
Lesson 17
51
Case Studies
iii
53
UNIT 1
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
LESSON 1
BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND POSITIONING
What is positioning
Every brand has to have a strategic platform. One half of that
platform is created by carefully formulating a distinct brand
personality, which makes the identity of the brand unique. The
other half of the strategic brand platform is positioning.
Positioning is critical to brand building because it is responsible
for projecting the brand identity and creating the perception and
image of the brand in peoples minds. In other words,
positioning is the process of offering the brand to the consumer. It is positioning that makes the brand appear to be
different and better than all competing brands. The key points
to note about positioning are:
it is a strategic, not a tactical, activity
it is aimed at developing a strategic, sustainable competitive
advantage
it is concerned with managing perceptions
brand image and reputation are the result of the positioning
process
Positioning carving out a market niche for your firm. This may
be accomplished by searching out unique marketing advantages,
seeking new market segments that competitors are not cultivating, or developing new approaches to old problems. Your
positioning should be based on a real (e.g., lower cost, superior
quality) or intangible (e.g., company reputation) competitive
advantage.
Product positioning is an important strategy for achieving
differential advantage. Positioning reflects the place a product
occupies in a market or segment. A successful position has
characteristics that are both differentiating and important to
consumers.
Every product has some sort of position whether intended
or not. Positions are based upon consumer perceptions, which
may or may not reflect reality. A position is effectively built by
communicating a consistent message to consumers about the
product and where it fits into the market through advertising, brand name, and packaging
Positioning is inextricably linked with market segmentation.
You cant define a good position until you have divided the
market into unique segments and selected your target segments.
What does the space look like what are the most
important dimensions in the category?
What are the other products in that space and where are they?
What are the gaps, unfilled positions or holes in the
category?
BRAND POSITIONING
Brand positioning
It is the added value or augmented elements that determine a
brands positioning in the market place.
Positioning can be defined as follows:
Positioning is how a product appears in relation to other
products in the market
Its components: The Brand Positioning Component Involves
Identifying Perceptions That Your Brand Should Own In The
Minds Of Its Target Market.
The process recommended for developing a compelling brand
positioning involves establishing consensus on key brand
attributes with internal client stakeholders in a workshop
setting. In the workshop, exercises incorporating a variety of
sensory elements are utilized to stimulate discussion and
ultimately identify critical brand attributes. Results from the
workshop will drive the brand through all points of contact
with key stakeholders.
Product features:
BRAND POSITIONING
customer needs, competitive opportunities, corporate objectives, and your firms financial, technical & marketing resources.
Positioning carving out a market niche for your firm. This
may be accomplished by searching out unique marketing
advantages, seeking new market segments that competitors are
not cultivating, or developing new approaches to old problems.
Your positioning should be based on a real (e.g., lower cost,
superior quality) or intangible (e.g., company reputation)
competitive advantage.
Notes
LESSON 2
CONSUMERS PERCEPTUAL SPACE
BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND POSITIONING
4
2 it a different place in their
substitute for milk, have now given
frame of reference.
See the pictures given of positioning of milk maid.
Multiple definition:
Positioning is a comparatively new marketing concept, unlike
consumer seg-mentation, for instance, which is an old friend
and clearly stands for the same idea to most of the people.
There are always these criteria of segmentation :
Demographic
5
BRAND POSITIONING
Usage volume
Loyalty patterns
Social class
Life style
Attitudes
Interests and opinions
Personality characteristic
the product class: Which other brands must our brand contend
with in order to lodge itself in the target
consumers perceptual space? In other words, what is the
structure of the market or set of substitutes amongst which
our brand is to be positioned?
Ex:1
BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 3
POSITIONING: OF WHAT STUFF IS IT MADE?
BRAND POSITIONING
Fixed Deposit for those investors who prize security along with
a moderate return. You position an Un-fixed Deposit for
similar investors but who, in addition, would prefer easyliquidity for their deposits without undue loss of return
If you wanted to broaden the market for Bank Fixed Deposits
by appealing also to those investors who favour high returns
and are willing to shoulder risks, your only hope is to position
Bank Fixed Deposits in terms of a portfolio of investments
in which high-return and high-risk investments are balanced
with moderate-return, no-risk investments, plus tax benefits.
In fact, either management judgement or research can lead to
defining yet another segment of investors as those who want
the best of both the worlds-a high return with low or managed risk. Un Trusts Masters hare was positioned for just
such a segment, followed by Canara Banks Canshares and
State Banks Magnum share: What, you may wish to debate, is
the difference in the positioning. these three brands of
investment? What is the distance between them as perceived
by investors?
Ex: 1
Dior caters to the women segment with a touch of feminism
In contrast to Chanel for example, Dior established a romantic
and very feminine look, which emphasised luxury rather than
comfort. Galliano, as Diors successor, creates an equally
feminine style, blending todays freedom of expression with the
reminiscence of past opulence.
Ex:2
Maternity wear market
2 Consumer segmentation:
BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 4
PERCEPTUAL MAPPING
When marketers and advertising professionals began to display
their interest in the perceptions of target consumer segments,
the next natural step was to measure those perceptions. This
constituted an open invitation to mathematical psychologists to
move in-which they did! Today, one cannot play the positioning
game without perceptual mapping.
What perceptual mapping does is to represent consumer
percep-tions-in (usually) two-dimensional space so that the
manager can readily see where his own brand is positioned in
the mind of his prospect and in relation to other brands. The
concept of the consumers perceptual space forms the theoretical
basis of positioning. It is this concept which distinguishes
positioning and sets it apart as a major contribution to
marketing theory and practice. Perceptual mapping helps to
make this concept operational.
Although the judgements of managers, sales staff or the trade
may be used to plot brand positions in the consumers
perceptual space, it is not advisable to substitute them for
consumer judgements, which can only be obtained through
field research.
Consumers are asked to rate a set of brands along given
attributes or benefits or they may be asked merely to judge, by
pairs, how similar or dissimilar the brands are.
The former technique is used for Factor Analysis and the latter
technique is used in Multidimensional Scaling (MDS). Both
concep-tually and operationally, these two techniques are well
suited for marketing managements use in perceptual mapping.
Developed by mathematical psychologists, the MDS technique
provides a repre-sentation of consumers perceptions of brands
as points in a geometric space whose axes (attributes/dimensions) can be described as frames of reference along which
brands are compared by consumers.
Perceptual mapping techniques identify the underlying dimensions that differentiate consumer perceptions of products and
the posi-tions of existing products on the dimensions.
Analytically, the primary positioning tools are called perceptual
maps. Perceptual maps, which can be derived using market
research methodologies such as semantic and multi-dimensional scaling, are based - as the name implies - on customers
perceptions of the benefits that brands deliver. The maps are
visual representations of competitive brands (or products)
plotted along dimensions that capture the most important
attributes in the purchase process. The maps reveal brands
positions relative to each other, and relative to customers ideal
points.
For example, the illustrative perceptual map below plots
brands (the letters in squares) along 2-dimensions: price and
quality.
BRAND POSITIONING
Note also that the horizontal axis (in the east direction) is most
closely associated with attributes premium, dining out, and
special occasions. In the west direction, the horizontal axis is
most closely associated with the attributes on a budget and
good value. Thus, the horizontal axis (the west to east
direction) indicates an underlying dimension of budgetpremium, along which customers seem to characterize their
perceptions of the differences between these beers. This map
captures some of the significant factors defining the competitive
structure of the beer market.
We can draw several other conclusions from this map:
Ex: 2
Preference mapping:
The brand manager for Margo bath soap has a defined consumer segment in mind: a consumer in the middle-income
group, who values a bath soap for the good things it does for
his skin, much more than its cosmetic properties or fagrance.
Such a consumer is also thought to value traditional herbal
ingredients which have proven goodness like Neem. brings out
the essential character of Margo as seen by this consumer Pretty ugly? Pretty good.
The brand manager can judge if his marketing efforts have
brought the perceived position of Margo closer to the preferred
or ideal position of his target segment. In this case, what
actions should he consider? How would you evaluate his
positioning strategy for Margo as seen in the new campaign he
has released, presenting it to the consumer as the skin-friendly
soap and the face-lift he has given to his product with rounded
edges and a brighter green wrapper.
We can see how valuable as an action guideline such an exercise
can be. This is the first purpose of preference mapping -to
measure the gap, if any, between the position of the brand as
actually perceived and the preferred or ideal position of its target
segment.
Looking for Holes
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BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 5
POSITIONING IS ROOTED IN PRODUCT FEATURES
BRAND POSITIONING
This is the type of real-life question that will confront the brand
manager, when he considers the relationship between his
brands physical features and the position he would like it to
occupy.
At this point let us deliberately recapitulate our observations on
how brand positions are formed.
Sizing up a brand:
BRAND POSITIONING
13
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14
In the softdrink category, Pepsi fits this mold more than Coke.
Especially on a weekend evening, it might be enjoyable to have a
friend who has these personality characteristics.
Accomplished, influential, competent (Competence).
BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 6
THE PURSUIT OF DIFFERENTIAL ADVANTAGE
BRAND POSITIONING
We see this most often with durables when a tried and trusted
corporate identity or source-which has become a household
name for some products like Philips for radios and lamps-is
used to imply the competitive superiority of newer products
bearing that name: Philips Mixies; Philips Electric Irons; Philips
Refrigerators.
This can be such a strong positioning element that companies
who market each brand under a different name, e.g. Hindustan
Lever (Surf, Sunlight and Wheel detergent powders; Lifebuoy,
Pears, Lux, Rexona, ,Mril bath soaps) nevertheless introduce the
corporate credential as a byline:
A quality product of Hindustan Lever The Tata Oil Mills
Company Ltd (TOMCO) endorses its brands (e.g. Hamam, Jai,
OK, Revel, 501) with the words, A TATA Product. So does
the Godrej Company.
Positioning by brand endorsement
Powder.it seemed logical to give the next entry-a detergent barthe same brand name. The third entry of this company-a toilet
soap also bears the same brand name. The popular toilet soap
market in India is very competitive with strongly entrenched
brands like Lux, Rexona, Hamam. Nirma bath soap enters this
market with a credible, competitive answer to the consumers
query, Who are you? Do I know you? C Merle Crawford
refers to this positioning strategy as parentage.
Parentage...because of where it comes from, who makes it, who
sells it, who performs it, etc. The three ways of parentage
positioning are brand (Cadillac or Citizen printer), company (the
Data General/One or Kodak diskette), and person.
Some of the practical questions that arise are: How much of
parentage? How much of offspring? When Vazir Sultan
Company, owners of the Charminar brand of cigarettes,
decided to diversify and launch new cigarettes they had to find
answers to this difficult question. Charminar at one time was
considered among the world brands in terms of its sales
volume. At that time it was by far the largest selling brand in
India. The brand was priced at the lower end of the market, but
its smokers cut across various strata.
With new brands on the drawing board, the Company had to
decide whether the well-known Charminar name should be
used to position its new entrants. If so, with what degree of
emphasis? It should be noted that Vazir Sultan, tne Company,
was relatively unknown. it was often referred to as the
Charminar Company. Hence parentage was embodied in the
name Charminar.
The first major new brand from the Charminar stable was a
filter called Charminar Gold. The company had a two-fold
objective. First, it wanted to establish a distinct identity for
Gold with its promise of smoothness and satisfaction- only
Gold has both. Second, it wished to give the new brand a
good start with the trade and consumers alike by referring to its
origins. The pack designs of the mother brand, Charminar and
of Charminar Gold) and the press ad for the new brand show
how this dual purpose was tackled. Note the varying emphasis
on Charminar and Gold. You will find a completely different
emphasis in another filter brand of this company: Charminar
Filter . A major landmark for this company was the decision to
enter the upper reaches of the cigarette market in India with a
Virginia type king-sized filter. If you are too young to remember, your older friends will recall that the vastly popular
Charminar was affectionately nick-named Charms by many of
its up-market loyalists.
In 1981 a spectacularly successful king-sized Virginia filter
cigarette entered the market with the brand name of Charms,
clothed in a handsome denim-like packet and bearing a
tantalizing message:
Charms is the spirit of freedom;
Charms is the way you are. .
BRAND POSITIONING
17
LESSON 7
WHAT AM I?
BRAND POSITIONING
18
2.Benefit-related positioning
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BRAND POSITIONING
Maltova
Taste
Emotional benefits
Decay prevention
Gum care and other therapeutic
Decay prevention and tartar control
Close Up
Colgate, Close-Up, Forhans Regular
Colgate
Colgate, Colgate Fluorigard, Binaca Fluoride, Signal
Forhans Regular, Promise, Neem
Grest
As you can see, Colgate, the market leader by far, is positioned
across a broad band of benefits. Others are positioned by more
specific benefits.
A new differentiated positioning opportunity can be sought by
offering a unique combination of benefits. This was the
thinking behind Forhans Freshmint which offered the gumcare benefit of Forhans plus the minty taste associated with
Colgate.
The introduction of Crest in the above table is pure speculation at this time (1989) on the part of the author. But since
Procter & Gamble are now formally in India, one may well
expect this gifted brand to surface here.
Features or benefits:
20
Bournvita
Fresh breath
Brand
Boost
Nutramul
Look at the ads for these brands reproduced here and judge
how they have differentiated themselves through benefit-related
position-ing (Exhibits6,7,8,9).
Benefit Position
For this lets take the example of a hypothetical chocolate maltbased beverage and let us christen it brown-vita. At least four
strong positions can be created around the basic formulation or
physical characteristics of the product. For the sake of our
example, the same brand name throughout this example but
each of these positions positions can be filled by a distinct
brand commanding its own loyal segment. Thus, our brand,
Brown-Vita, can be positioned in the health beverage category as
a chocolate-based drink which has a lot of good taste.
The health drink thats full of Taste
Or we can position Brown-Vita as the energy drink emphasizing its carbohydrate contents. The health drink packed with
Energy Or Brown-Vita can be positioned for its natural
goodness. We would make much of its ingredients-malt, milk,
cocoa-and stress the absence of artificial ingredients. It would
be: The health drink full of Natural Goodness And finally, we
might highlight the non-fattening properties of Brown-Vita as
well as its proteins and vitamins to promise the benefit of low
calories plus nourishment value: The health drink high in
Nourishment and low in Calories There are four major brands
belonging to this category of cocoa and malt-based health
beverages which are presently marketed in India:
When we talk of benefit-related positioning, we must remember that a brand is a composite entity and the position which
the consumer gives it in her mind represents her perception of
the brand in terms, of its tangible or functional benefits and
also its non-functional or emotional benefits.
How do we handle the concept of emotional or non-functional
benefit in the practical task of creating a distinct and persuasive
position for the brand?
Although the concept is now well accepted by marketing and
advertis-ing practitioners, applying the concept to create a
persuasive difference between functionally similar brands is a
more complex task.
3. Positioning by usage occasion and time of use Positioning by
usage occasion or application is another strong if-ferentiating
BRAND POSITIONING
21
BRAND POSITIONING
10
11
22
As you see, usage occasion and time of use, or when to use, are
often combined.
The reason for abandoning the Goodnight Cup position is not
known. Can it be that this position was not given a proper trial?
In these days of stress, tension, high pressures of work and
competition, this represents in our view a potentially valuable
usage position for a product with suitable features. At this
moment it remains a vacant position in the branded beverage
market in India. .
An exceptionally single-minded usage positioning strategy,
linked also to the time of use, is the positioning of Vicks
VapoRub to be applied for a childs cold, at night. Many have
tried to breach this position and failed. Vicks VapoRub has
made this usage position virtually unassailable.
Burnol antiseptic ointment is for burns and strongly entrenched
for that usage. Dettol antiseptic is for nicks and cuts, insect bites
and other minor infections. Each of these brands has sat on its
usage position for decades without any serious challenger. If
you have found a good usage position for your brand, sit on it,
make it your domain.
Interestingly, Dettol soap, relaunched in 1984, has made
headway in the crowded premium toilet soap market by
adopting a strategy of creating and dominating a specific usage
occasion. This is the occasion when you feel particularly sticky or
dirty or grimy and would respond to the idea of a 100% bath
(see Exhibit12).
12
This makes Dettol more like a soap for a middle of the
morning bath after a gruelling visit to the bazaar or the after-
Performance positioning
This could be a legitimate and strong positioning, but more
than any of the other alternatives, this position would hurt
Union Carbide more than its competitors. It would have
implied the inferiority of the Eveready Standard range (Red,
Blue and White) which comprised 45% of the total battery
market.
BRAND POSITIONING
work bath at the end of a long hard day. (No doubt, many
consumers also use it at the start of the day.) This is a courageous decision-having the boldness to dominate a specific usage
position rather than peck ineffectively at a broad usage market A high quality soap for a bath- or aim for an extremely narrow
usage, the antiseptic bath soap.
With this positioning, Dettol soap has climbed from 1.7%
market share before its relaunch in 1984 to 3.7% share in 1988.
This compares with 4.5% market share of a well-established,
long-time brand like Pears. A selective usage position may turn
out to be quite profitable after all, if it attracts an adequate
number of consumers and you dominate the position.
BRAND POSITIONING
When shaving.
For babys nappies.
(How-to-use instructions are given for each application.)
The instructions on the label, if thoughtfully drawn up, thus
give a general indication of the potential of the brand to
broaden its usage. In retrospect, one can speculate whether ICIs
Savlon antiseptic liquid would have had an easier passage if it
had opted for a flanking positioning strategy instead of taking
Dettol head-on.
In the laboratory, Savlon was proved more effective against
germs than Dettol. This was one of the reasons why Savlon
commanded a good share of the institutional market like
hospitals. Drawing inspira-tion from this, Savlon was advertised to the household market in India, in direct confrontation
with powerful Dettol, with the message:
The other antiseptic (meaning Dettol) kills only the gram-positive
germs. Savlon kills both gram-positive and gram-negative
germs.
It is not surprising that the brand did not make much headway
with the housewife who usually makes the buying decision for
such a product.
Suppose, on the other hand, Savlon liquid was positioned as
the antiseptic to be used like a shampoo against dandruff.
Savlons parentage-ICI-would have given it competitive
credibility for such usage. The dandruff sufferer may have
proved more receptive than the housewife to the semi-clinical
message of Savlons efficiency against multiple germs.
Other product features may have aided this usage position.
Savlon does not sting. It lathers well. It does not discolour (as
Dettol does) when mixed with water. It does not have Dettols
obtrusive smell. If it succeeded in this usage, savalon antiseptic
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BRAND POSITIONING
25
LESSON 8
FOR WHOM AM I?
BRAND POSITIONING
13
We have looked at strategies for positioning brands in terms of
corporate identity .or as extensions of familiar brand names
(Who am I?), and also positioning them according to the
brands capabilities and benefits (What am I?). We will now
turn to the third aspect, viz. positioning the brand by target
segment (For whom am I?).
In this section, we will look at the target segment decision as
another means of giving our brand a distinct position and
identity.
A segment is made up of consumers with more or less similar
needs and expectations from a product and who have some
important similar characteristics. Their responses to product and
brand offerings are also likely to be similar. The factors which
bind such consumers together into a market segment are:
(a) Demographic: Age, income, sex, occupation, education and
sometimes, geographic location,and/or
(b) Behavioural : For instance in terms of usage volume: heavy,
medium, light users, and/or
( c) Benefits or satisfactions desired: We have already studied
this factor, viz.segmentation by benefits sought, and/or
(d) Psychographic: Personality, life style, social class.
As with other aspects of a brands capabilities, the brand
manager has flexibility in determining the target segment for
which he will position his brand. His obvious choice will be
that segment for which his brand seems to be just right and will
be better preferred to any competing brand. Through the
process of becoming strongly identified with that segment, his
brand will acquire a distinct identity. Let us look at some
examples.
Demographic Fit
Farex, the easy-to-digest cereal food was initially positioned for
in-fa.nts and also geriatrics and this was reflected in the pack
design at that time. Later, in 1967-68, the brand was very
specifically reposi-tioned as the weaning food for infants from
the age of 3 months to one year. This was reflected in the new
pack design (Exhibit13).
26
Behavioural fit
27
BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 9
WHY ME?
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28
15
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16
Notes
Strategy is holistic
In practice, the step-by-step positioning decisions should end
up by presenting a whole picture of the brand. The consumer
should be able to. comprehend it as a complete entity.
She should be able to perceive the type of product it is: Is it
meant to be a snack or a fast-to-cook mini meal (Category)?
For what usage is it most suitable-as an antiseptic for burns or
nicks and cuts (Usage)?
What is the particular benefit which distinguishes it from
alterna-tives? Is it a cold cream plus moisturiser in one (Benefit)?
Is it a good value-for-money product or a top quality premium
offering?What is its rung on the price-quality ladder?
She should be able to identify with it as a product meant for
her. Having formed her perception or impression of the brand
as a whole, including any unique features and how it compares
with alternatives, she should be able to give it a place or
position in her mental map of products. She should be able to
decide whether to put it on her shopping list.
In his search for differentiation, the brand manager would
probably find that the unique perception of his brand can be
created through a particular combination of the positioning
factors that we have dis-cussed.
Thus, Vicks VapoRub was distinguished from its major
competitor, Amrutanjan, through a combination of usage,
target, benefit and time of use positioning. In Chapter 6 we will
discuss in some detail Vicks VapoRub and three other cases
which illustrate this holistic ap-proach to brand positioning.
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LESSON 10
SYMBOLS BY WHICH WE LIVE AND
BUY
BRAND POSITIONING
UNIT 2
VARIOUS FACETS OF BRAND
POSITIONING
Ex:2
BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND POSITIONING
32
Notes
33
BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 11
BRAND PERSONALITY
BRAND POSITIONING
our respondents says the study report, more often than not
preferred to refer to Mr. Gold Caf as a gentleman, rather than
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BRAND POSITIONING
35
LESSON 12
A FRESH LOOK AT ADVERTISING OBJECTIVES
BRAND POSITIONING
Significance of advertising
Today advertising has taken a quantum leap beyond just
salesmanship of products in print. It is the art of persuasion
of human minds through a whole range of communication
media. The bottom line of advertising is to sell by creating
positive impressions about a product, service or a concept.
Advertising today ranges from the basics like selling salt to the
most abstract like selling polio vaccination.
Advertising must position the brand
Till the term salesmanship in print was coined, advertising was
seen as information dissemination. The manufacturer and the
advertising agent communicated the facts about a product and
the consumer rushed out and bought the product. Simple.
.Salesmanship added a whole new dimension to the advertising process. Ads could now sell. Ads needed to use all the fine
persuasive skills of a salesman to sell. The art of persuasion in
advertising was unleashed and advertising has never been the
same again.What is the role of advertising in the context of
positioning? A landmark definition of advertising was
developed for the Association of National Advertisers of the
USA by Russel H Colley. It brought a greater degree of clarity to
management thinking on advertising decisions. It em-phasized
that advertising pulls a consumer towards purchasing action
through changes in his or her knowledge and attitude responses. It laid the foundation for a practical and widely used
model: DAGMAR or Defining Advertising Goals for Measured Advertising Results.
Colleys definition is:Advertising is mass, paid communication,
the ultimate purpose of which is to impart information,
develop attitude and induce action beneficial to the advertisergenerally the sale of a product or service.This is a
comprehensive definition. You cannot fault it.But we could
attempt another definition that is more operational, that
specifically takes into account a competitive marketplace, and
that recognizes the increasing difficulty of creating distinct brand
identities. We could say, for example:advertising is the discovery
and communication of a persuasive difference for a brand to
the target prospect.There are three critical elements here.
Advertising must communi-cate a difference for the brand. It
must be a competitive and persuasive difference. Such a difference
may not fall into the ommunicators lap in the form of a
readymade USP. In the absence of strong functional superiority
or distinction, he must search and discover where such persuasive
differentiation lies.
Brand building
36
they give us a practical fix on how close our brand has moved to
its desired spot in the consumers perception, following the
campaign.
The Dagmar model for testing pre- and post-exposure
comprehen-sion of the brand benefit and the ad campaigns
ability to persuade-as in the example given by Colley-has on its
side, simplicity and ease of application. But it also fails to track
our brands movement in the consumers perception in relation
to competing brands and in relation to the ideal which our target
segment is seeking.
Measuring results and position change
Thinking : Informative
Feeling
: Affective
Low Involvement
Thinking : Habitual
Feeling
: Satisfaction
Applying the grid to the Indian context we could slot products
into broad quadrants:
I : Automobiles, TVs
II : Perfumes, Cosmetics
III : Pain balms, Detergents
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BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 13
HOW TO CREATE BRAND BUILDING ADVERTISING?
BRAND POSITIONING
IV : Confectionery
Often it makes sense to look at the quadrant, see what kind of
advertising would work, look at competitive advertising and
then decide the path to follow. At times, brands have been built
by going just about a little off centre and stretching the limit.
Brand building advertising
Consumer product advertising is probably the most researched
form of advertising. It also eminently makes sense to research it
thoroughly sincein no other product does advertising comprise
such a large part of investment. However, it is necessary to
research advertising for consumer products with a lot more
sensitivity. Often we are dealing with feefings and human
emotions. Unless we are careful, it is likely that great brand
building advertising would get rejected by a group of women
sitting in a room, sipping tea in a remote town like
Muzzafarpur.
The usual process of advertising testing in consumer products
is lengthy and often well-documented.
Unaided Awareness
Current Usage
38
Benefit Dimensions
similarly there are different advertising strategies for
Consumer durables
Services
Corporate advertising
Rural inputs advertising
Notes
LESSON 14
STRETCH YOUR BRAND BUT WATCH
ITS LIMITS
Why does Coca Cola lend its name to a range of clothes? Why
does the name of the worlds most famous cigarette also adorn
sports gar-ments? Why does Dettol-the household name for
antiseptic liquids- become a bath soap as well? Why does North
Star, the easy-living shoe, also become transformed into jeans
and jackets? And whoever would have thought of Cadbury
mashed potatoes?
To those of us who have been brought up on a diet of the
distinct brand identity, on the philosophy of one product,
one brand name, of a brand being a single, indivisible, unique
entity -to us this habit of slapping on the same brand name to
a host of other products is somewhat disturbing. And yet this
trend is accelerating.
Earlier pattern
Earlier, we were familiar-and comfortable-with a corporate name
doing duty for several brands: Bajaj scooters, Bajaj mixies and
Bajaj water heaters, for example. We were also familiar with the
same brand name being used for closely related productsColgate toothpaste and toothbrushes.
But what is happening today seems to upset all our earlier
notions of the sanctity and uniqueness of a brand name. There
were some companies which resolutely stuck to the philosophy
of one product, one brand name. Although Swastiks Det was
both a detergent powder and a detergent bar, Hindustan Lever
did not brand its detergent bar as Surf but called it Rin. And
when the company launched another cheaper bar they called it
Wheel, not Rin Popular or Rin Janata! But surprisingly, the
companys low-cost detergent powder is also branded as Wheel.
What are the forces behind this fundamental change in our
tradi-tional philosophy of branding? We discussed this
phenomenon briefly when we considered the Who am I?
aspect of a brand. But what is the driving force behind this
phenomenon?
Brand equity:
39
BRAND POSITIONING
UNIT 3
BRAND EQUITY AND FRANCHISING OBJECTIVES
BRAND POSITIONING
A somewhat close cousin of licensing is the system of franchising which is catching on in India. The owner of the brand name
(which may refer to a product or a service) awards a franchise to
another party which runs the business-either an outlet, a
producer or service outfit-and the franchisee pays a fee or royalty
to the franchiser. Thus, Tatas Titan are appointing franchised
outlets for sales and service of their watches. Soft drinks are
generally franchised. The owner of the brand name appoints
bottlers, supplies them with the concentrate and backs them
with national advertising for the brand. Mothercare India which
operates a chain of stores for childrens requirements, is setting
up franchised outlets under the name of Little Kingdom. This
is somewhat similar to exclusive dealer outlets (not permitted
by the MRTP Act) which operate under the same brand name
and only stock products bearing one brand name or family of
brand names. A successful marketer of a brand of potato chips
in Calcutta is looking for franchisees in other cities.
(i)What Is franchising?
You are an executive who is being displaced or who is dissatisfied with the way you are being treated by your company.
Recently you have been thinking about putting your resume on
the street, but more often than not you have found yourself
thinking about going into business for yourself.
Whenever you think about going into business for yourself,
you think about the horror stories and statistics you read in
USA Today and the Wall Street Journal about the failure rate of
independent businesses. Those statistics dampen your desire to
own your own business.
Yet every week in those same newspapers you see ads by
companies offering franchise opportunities. If you want to be
self employed and are intrigued by the idea of operating a
franchise and want to find out more about selecting the right
one for you, read on.
(ii)What Is franchising?
A brand identification
A successful method of doing business
A proven marketing and distribution system
In short, franchising is a strategic alliance between groups of
people who have specific relationships and responsibilities with
a common goal to dominate markets, i.e., to get and keep more
customers than their competitors.
There are many misconceptions about franchising, but probably
the most widely held is that you as a franchisee are buying a
40
Investing in a Franchise:
In reality you are taking your assets, which you own, and
investing them in someone elses brand and operating system.
You will always own your assets. You will always own your
corporation. But you will do business as (dba) a licensee of
the franchiser.
Before you select a franchise. . .
Step1:Evaluate yourself:
Your job is to make an informed business decision about
whether a franchisers business opportunity meets your needs
and whether you can provide what the franchiser wants and
needs in a franchisee.
You need to ask yourself basic questions:
What do you want from life at this time? What are your wants,
needs, and desires? What are your goals, objectives, and
dreams? What are you looking for in a business? Have you
decided to leave what you are now doingnot just the job, but
the profession?
Have you made a decision to become a part of another
organization? Remember that in franchising you joined
someone elses business. You are going to be using their
marketing system to generate customers and their operating
system to satisfy them.
Do you have the kind of personality that can accept running the
business according to someone elses plan without feeling that
The franchiser should have a business plan for the system that
41
BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND POSITIONING
covers at least the length of the agreement you are being asked
to commit to. Ask for the plan for the market where you are
going to locate the operation. Ask for their analysis of the
competition. Ask how many units are being planned for your
area and why that many. Why not more, why not less? Ask how
much is going to be spent on marketing in your area.
Ask to look at the operations manuals or at least to see an
outline of them. This is important because the operations
manuals are your guideline to a successful operation. You need
to feel comfortable that they are complete and clear and meet
your abilities, needs, and goals.
Ask to receive a full explanation of the initial and subsequent
training programs. Ask how people are trained. Is it classroom
or hands-on practice? Are there case studies and discussions or
is it straight lecture?
Ask for a full explanation of the pre-opening assistance offered
by the franchisor. Understand any help franchisors give for site
selection and lease negotiation. Be clear about what ongoing
support the franchisor provides to the franchisees.
In Summary
Keep in mind that you own the assets of your company but
are licensed to operate someone elses business.
42
A brand identification
A successful method of doing business
A proven marketing and distribution system
In short, franchising is a strategic alliance between groups of
people who have specific relationships and responsibilities with
a common goal to dominate markets, i.e., to get and keep more
customers than their competitors.
There are many misconceptions about franchising, but probably
the most widely held is that you as a franchisee are buying a
franchise. In reality you are investing your assets in a system to
utilize the brand name, operating system and ongoing support.
You and everyone in the system are licensed to use the brand
name and operating system.
The business relationship is a joint commitment by all franchisees to get and keep customers. Legally you are bound to get
and keep them using the prescribed marketing and operating
systems of the franchiser.
To be successful in franchising you must understand the
business and legal ramifications of your relationship with the
franchiser and all the franchisees. Your focus must be on
working with other franchisees and company managers to
market the brand, and fully use the operating system to get and
keep customers.
Throughout this article we will discuss in detail some of the
benefits of conducting business as part of a larger group.
Other franchisees and company operated units are not your
competition. The opposite is true. They and you share the task
of establishing the brand as the dominant brand in all markets
entered and reinforcing the customers familiarity with and trust
in the brand. So in this respect you are working as a team with
others in the system. Other franchisees share with you the
responsibility for quality, consistency, convenience, and other
factors that define your franchise and insures repeat business for
everyone. Increasing the value of the brand name is a shared
responsibility of the franchiser and franchisee.
An ownership mentality destroys the reason franchised and
company-operated units are successful. Think about it. If you
think you bought a franchise, you become an owner and
begin to think and act like an owner. You will want to change
the system because of your needs, you will wonder what you
are paying the royalty for, and you will begin thinking of other
franchisees as your competitors. For these and many other
reasons you do not want to think of yourself as an independent owner.
As a franchisee you own the assets of your company, which you
have chosen to invest in someone elses brand and operating
system and ongoing support. You own the assets of your
company, but you are licensed to operate someone elses
business system.
Finally, your desire to become a franchisee must be grounded in
your belief that you can be more successful using someone
elses brand and operating according to their systems and
methods, than you could if you opened up your own indepen-
Investing in a Franchise:
In reality you are taking your assets, which you own, and
investing them in someone elses brand and operating system.
You will always own your assets. You will always own your
corporation. But you will do business as (dba) a licensee of
the franchiser.
Before you select a franchise. . .
Step1:Evaluate yourself:
Your job is to make an informed business decision about
whether a franchisers business opportunity meets your needs
and whether you can provide what the franchiser wants and
needs in a franchisee.
BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND POSITIONING
Keep in mind that you own the assets of your company but
are licensed to operate someone elses business.
44
Notes
BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 15
BRAND EXTENSION
BRAND POSITIONING
First, the category chosen for the brand extension must be seen
as compatible with the nature of the parent brand and the
expertise it represents. There must be a fit. Management
judgement acts as the first screen. Will Nirma be acceptable as a
scourer, a dish-washing liquid, a wax polish, a toilet cleaner?
Will it be equally acceptable as cooking oil, as branded spice, as
sauce, ketchup and noodles? What do consumers think?
Gamble, to whom we referred earlier, gives examples of
consumer research in the sixties to test the fit between the Pet
Milk Company and the extensions being considered under the
Pet name. Thus, baby foods were perceived as being close to
the Pet image...Pickles were regarded as distant and inconsistent. In the context of brand exten-sion, says Gamble, the
concept of constellations of related products comes into the
picture.
More recently, Professors Aaker and Keller made a study to find
out how far a brand name could be stretched. They checked
consumer perceptions to aid management judgement. What
they did was to slap on some well-known brand names on a
variety of different products and check consumer response.
These were some of their findings:
McDonalds reputation for fast, efficient service did not carry
over to photo-processing services.
Heinken wine wont work. People would expect it to taste like
beer.Heinken popcorn was not seen as needing Heinkens
know-how.C Merle Crawford describes how a consumer
research technique called brand elasticity analysis can measure the
elasticity of a brand- its ability to stretch to other product
categories and still carry its consumer franchise. Crawford also
reports a hypothetical elasticity profile for the well-known
Minute Maid brand of orange juice. Thus, it would be most
elastic, ie. there would be a good fit of the Minute Maid brand
name with jellies, soups, even dinner rolls; but it was least
elastic with packaged meats, ice cream and peanut butter. Cakes
were a borderline case.
A company in India, very successful in beverages, undertook a
study to measure how well consumers would accept the
corporate name (which also served as the umbrella brand name
for their beverages), when applied to a range of other products
being considered for diversification. The findings were revealing.
The sample was drawn from housewives in all the four metros
in the Rs 1,500+ household income group, in the age-group of
25 to 45, and at least matriculates. A score of 3 indicated
perfectly natural, i.e. a good fit between the corporate name
and the new product category; 2 indicated not surprising; a
46
47
BRAND POSITIONING
line with the basic position which the parent brand occupies in
the consumers mind. Sometimes, we can be taken by surprise
by consumers judge-ments. Raymonds is the brand name for
an expensive, highly regarded, prestigious suiting fabric. What
could be more logical than to extend this brand name to readyto-wear trousers? Good inside-out thinking, as Trout and Ries
would say. Ra:ymonds trousers, branded as Raymonds Double
Barrels, promised no hassles with tailors and great fit-a highly
desirable benefit in readymades. Consumer response was
lukewarm.When Lintas took over the account, they found that
while con-sumers were perfectly happy with Indian-made
fabrics-and Raymonds occupied a lofty place-they associated
good fit with foreign brands like Levis or Wrangler. What
Lintas contributed was a re-branding exercise. He-launch
Raymonds ready-to-wear trousers with a brand name that
stood for sophistication, class and a hint of the foreign
expertise that went with good readymades. The brand name
chosen was Park Avenue. Raymonds perceived value was great
fabric, not great fit. So, the Raymond brand extension didnt
work. A new brand name that helped to credibly convey the
value of great fit -Park A venue-did work. From a fledgling
loss-making division in 1983, sales moved up to over Rs 10
crore in 1986 and further doubled by 1988.
The newly branded Park Avenue-initially trousers, shirts and
suits-has extended itself to a range of Park Avenue mens
toiletries: shaving cream, after-shave, talcum powder and the
like.A successful brand extension must, therefore, have a good
fit with the new category and its value perception must match
the needs of the target consumer. In the case of Raymonds, as
we saw, there was a good fit between the brand name and high
quality ready-to-wear trousers but its value perception did not
match what the buyer was looking for_ great fit.
BRAND POSITIONING
remain unchanged for some time, and the fashion line garments to be made in limited volume for one season only.
New North Star shoes have been designed to strengthen a
common value perception of comfortable fit, style, youthfulness and freedom. The brand extension has been so managed
as to forge an integrated whole in which shoes and apparel
complement one another.
The brand extension also embraces North Star accessories which
reflect the target consumers lifestyle-belts, socks, backpacks,
watches, Walkman type music systems.
The retail network has been expanded beyond Bata stores.
Specially designed North Star outlets, where the mood and
decor will match the North Star spirit, are being opened in all
major cities.
The goal: to make North Star apparel the top-selling brand in
the market for casual, trendy clothing.
48
LESSON 16
UNIT 4
READING MINDS: RESEARCH TECHNIQUES
BRAND MAPPING AND EXTENSION
FOR BRAND POSITIONING
This is probably the oldest and most widely used technique for
measuring consumer perceptions of, competitive brands,
services or companies. The starting point for this analysis is the
measurement of perceptions of each brand on a 5 or 7 point
numerical scale against a series of pre-selected functional and
psychological attributes. The individual scores are then averaged
to obtain a composite mean score for each brand on different
attribute Figure the relative positions in consumers minds of
for
An examination of the chart provides a profile of competitive
brands and their perceived strengths and weaknesses. A further
improvement on this chart could be achieved by superimposing
the profile of the ideal brand for each attribute. An observation
of this type of chart provides useful insights about which
brand is competing against whom, and on what attribute or
attributes, and to what extent they are close to or away from the
ideal image.
However, image -profile analysis has its limitations. First, it is
difficult to plot all the brands in a single chart when the number
of competitive brands is large (e.g. toilet soaps or soft drinks).
Moreover, all the attributes considered for image perceptions
may not be equally important or independent of each other. In
other words, some of the attributes may be highly correlated
and thereby represent basically the same dimension (or factor).
This limitation can, however, be overcome by first factoranalysing the total set of attributes and reducing them to some
basic independent factors or dimensions.
2. Factor analysis
The brand image data may be collected on all variables which
could possibly have some relevance to the objective of the
study. Initially, a large set of variables (attributes) is considered.
Without going into the mathematical details of factor analysis
one can say that its prime objective is to reduce the initial set of
variables and express them as a linear combination of a small
set of independent factors or dimen-sions. The input data in
all factor analysis procedures are the correla-tion coefficients
between all possible pairs of original variables. A satisfactory
solution is the one which will yield the minimum number of
factors that conveys all the essential information , contained
in the original set of variables. Statistically speaking, the
objective becomes:
16.Not so bitter
21.Best quality
24.Expensive coffee
28.Recently introduced
29.Believable advertising
BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND POSITIONING
3. Maaza, Frooti
4. Horlicks, Viva, Complan (though the last is more distant
from theother two)Major attribute(s) Stimulating drink.
Refreshing drin_, fizzy, liked by the young people.
Refreshing, not fizzy, liked by the young and children.
Nourishing drink, good for childrens growth, for old and
convalescent people.Cluster analysis of this type can also be
applied to identify homogeneous groups for alternative
advertisements, brand names, package designs or any other
communication stimuli.
Multidimensional scaling
Why do some people prefer a branded soft drink to fresh fruit
juice? Why do some prefer Nirma washing powder to any other
detergent of unquestionable quality? Why do people vote for a
particular party or individual? How do boys decide their girl
friends (or vice versa)? Can these questions and others like them
relating to perceptions and preferences be systematized?
Multidimensional Scaling (MDS) is a set of techniques to
understand and measure this variety of human responses. We
will deal with MDS at some length because of its frequent use
for perceptual mapping.
Multidimensional Scaling tackles basically two problems:
1. Dimensions involved for consumer perception of objects
(products, brands, companies, services, etc.)
2. Configuration of points (of objects) in that dimensionality.
As regards dimensionality, the number can be two or more.
How-ever, for illustrative purposes, only two most important
dimensions are chosen as the resultant configuration can then
be shown graphi-cally (although in practice, MDS involves
several dimensions, and hence the name). The output of MDS
is the location of objects on the relevant dimensions and is
usually termed as perceptual mapping.
As in cluster analysis, the starting point for MDS is also some
measure of proximity between pairs of objects. These proximity measures can be expressed either as Euclidean distances or
preference (dominance) data. For both the approaches the
similarity or dis-similiarty (distances) data can be obtained in
metric (interval-scaled) or nonmetric (ordinal-scaled) measures.
For example:
(i) If the respondent is asked to indicate on a 7-point scale,
how
1. A stimulating drink
similar or dissimilar two objects are, the data are called metric.
2. A refreshing drink
3. A fizzy drink
4. Liked by young people
5. A nourishing drink
6. For old and convalescent people
7. Good for childrens growth
8. Liked by children
Four distinct clusters have emerged. Their groupings and
corres-ponding major attribute(s) are as under:
Product/brand
1. Tea, coffee
2. Campa Cola, Thums Up, Limca
50
BRAND POSITIONING
LESSON 17
NEW PRODUCT OPPORTUNITIES
BRAND POSITIONING
52
UNIT 5
CASE STUDIES
53
BRAND POSITIONING
BRAND POSITIONING
The Indian consumer over the last one year has been showing
interest in possessing premium international brands and
therefore enquiries about these watches have also increased.
He says that while sports brands such as Tag Heuer are a rage
among the youngsters between the age group of 25 and 35, the
35-plus consumers generally opt for classical watches such as
Omega and Cartier. And LVMHs goal is to boost the luxury
watch category through various marketing and promotional
exercises. The company is also going to shortly launch two
more new watches from its international portfolio Fendi and
Zenith to give the Indian consumers further choice in the
luxury watch segment.
54
55
BRAND POSITIONING
the feedback that the advertising for Levis went above many
people. With Low Rise, we have hit a campaign that is
simple, classy and very much Levis. The product is the hero,
Chatterjee quips. In its media plan, Levis now focuses mainly
on print including premium magazines. The reinvigorated
marketing, along with the price drop effected sometime ago,
seem to have helped the brand to establish that elusive connect
with the youth.
Explains Chatterjee: A couple of years ago, only 45 per cent of
our sales came from people aged below 25 years. Now, the same
age group accounts for nearly 71 per cent of our sales. Some
imaginative promotional efforts have also helped this cause. For
instance, the brand tied-up with Caf Coffee Day to promote
Low Rise, with a contest `6" Below (Six Inches Below).
While this clicked instantly, the sponsorship of the Great
Indian Rock, a two-day annual event held in Mumbai and Delhi
to identify genuine young talent in the domestic rock music
scene, has also helped. So, as Levis begins to flex muscles in an
increasingly attractive market, what might shake up the industry
is its proposed foray into the value segment priced below Rs
600. Levi Strauss is making plans to launch its new mass
marketed jeans label, Levis Signature, in the Indian market.
Chatterjee says it is at least 18 months away. We are talking
about a mass market of about 2,000 outlets (as against 400
now) and a product price point of about Rs 500. It requires an
entirely different model of sourcing (the company has a current
vendor base of 10), marketing and retailing, he adds. While
Chatterjee is betting on Levi Strauss inherent strengths of
consumer insight, innovation, product development and
marketing to pull it off, industry rivals remain doubtful. The
vast value segment of the apparel market is a dicey proposition.
It is more akin to the FMCG model. The Indian companies
such as Arvind (with Newport Jeans) and Madura Garments
(with Peter England) have struggled to set up a profitable
branded business in this segment, says the head of a prominent apparel company.
Even as the success of Signature is key to the companys
emergence as a volume player in the Indian market, Chatterjee
says the companys non-denim businesses also have a role to
play. At present, almost 65 per cent of Levi Strauss business in
the country comes from denim. But that ratio could change if
the emerging fashion trends in Europe hit India in a big way.
Chatterjee says there are signs that denim might hit a plateau in
the coming quarters (not to be mistaken with plunging sales as
mills across the world continue to work on denim to prevent
another precipitous slide as witnessed in the 90s) and street
wear could emerge a hot contender. This has prompted the
company to forecast a 100 per cent jump in sales for Levis
Sykes, targeted at the school and college-going teen crowd.
Cargos, three-fourths and military pants are currently hogging
the limelight in the fashion capitals of Europe. Levi Strauss
India is waiting to storm the domestic market and has already
announced that it is boosting the portfolio of Sykes with
Reversibles clothes that can be worn in different ways and
combinations. Meanwhile, Dockers, the casual workwear or
khakis, is making a return after it faded away with the dotcom
bust of 2000-01. We are perhaps the only apparel company in
the country maybe along with Arvind to have a robust
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