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PIXEL PERFECTION – PERSONAL SERVICE – COMPETETIVE PRICES
MADS SCHOU DESIGN
BRANDING & MARKETEERS
BLOG MATERIAL
Branding is like your companies images out to the world and will be what any customers sees before they buy from you. Getting your brand to fit your target-market can be a very important and big influence on your results.
Great article from: http://www.atomictango.com/marketing-101/brands-first/
Sometimes The Product Is Just An Excuse: When Brands Come First
In the marketing version of chicken-and-egg, we marketers love to
endlessly debate which should come first…
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Needs: Some say you should research customer wants and needs
before you even lift a finger to develop a product. -
Products: Some — primarily inventors and artists — say you should
create whatever inspires you first, then make customers want it. -
Brand: And some say if you create a great brand first, you can sell
almost anything with its logo on it.
Now in the real world (where many professors and pundits fear to tread),
you’ll find examples of all the above, both successful and disastrous.
Of course, many marketers refuse to admit when they’re not absolutely
right. So when confronted withreal world examples, they’ll reduce their
argument to the point of absurdity.
For example, try telling a needs-based marketer that some musician
just composed a hit based on her own inspiration — no research at all.
He’ll likely respond that the musician still met a customer need that she instinctively knew, or that she passively acquired customer insights somewhere along the path of her life. If you point out that “instinct and passive acquisitionare NOT research,” he”ll counter that she still met her own needs, and she’s a customer of her own music, right?
That’s when you sigh, turn away, and poke a sharpened pencil into your forehead to alleviate the inner pressure.
I recently had a similar debate with a marketer on Twitter who posted the following:
“We don’t get ppl to try our product by convincing them to love our brand.
We get them to love our brand by convincing them to try our product.”
Cute. And sometimes true. Sometimes.
Certainly I didn’t come to love Slicetruck Pizza because of their brand — I didn’t know them when they actually sold pizza out the side of a truck. And since they no longer use a truck, their brand name didn’t make sense to me. I just stumbled across their store in my neighborhood and then came to swear by them because they make the best damn pizza in L.A.
BUT there are exceptions to the product first rule. Many exceptions.
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I tried my first Dos Equis beer because of the brilliant “Most Interesting Man In the World” campaign — not because I had heard anything about the quality of the brew. Indeed, there are far tastier beers that get a bare fraction of Dos Equis’ sales, and Dos Equis itself was just a second-tier brand until the Most Interesting Man came along. That brand campaign has propelled Dos Equis to being the No. 1 imported beer in the United States.
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In the same category, Pabst Blue Ribbon won over hipsters, and not because they prefer beers that taste like rusty tapwater. They just dig the retro, niche image PBR conveys.
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Likewise, Miller Lite boosted sales by bringing back their vintage label design and tying in with the movie “Anchorman.” And if there’s one beer that makes PBR taste good, that’s Miller Lite. The headline of the Bloomberg story says it all: “How Miller Lite Tricked New Drinkers Into Liking Its Same Old Beer”
When you can’t sell the flavor, you talk about the packaging.
The marketer I was debating responded that, in all cases, “the product came first.” I agreed, but the point is that in many cases, you get people to love the brand (or at least be curious about it) before they’ll try the product. In their minds, the brand must come first.
When The Brand Is The Product
Now think of all the brands that people love without having ever tried the product:
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I fell in love with the Ford Mustang eons ago when I was a teenager, but didn’t ever drive one until the day I bought one. Yes, I had seen Mustangs on the road, but the design is part of the brand.
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Kids dream of going to Disneyland, even though they may live impossibly far from one.
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And both parents and ambitious high school students aspire to Harvard even though they’ve never taken a class there.
Indeed, when I was growing up in Taiwan, I would see street vendors briskly selling T-shirts emblazoned with the logos of famous American universities, even though most of the buyers would never so much as set foot on those campuses. So what exactly were the customers buying, since they were paying a premium for those shirts? It wasn’t the quality of the fabrics.
Some brands are so admired, they could sell almost any product. The product is simply an excuse for customers to flaunt the brand:
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When Starbucks opened in China, throngs of people waited to get in, even though they had never tried the product. What’s more, most Chinese prefer tea, and coffee lovers will tell you that Starbucks is hardly the world’s best. But these customers wanted to spend $8 (more than a day’s wage for some) on a cup of Starbucks to show how Western, sophisticated, and “wealthy” they were. That’s brand love.
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When the Kardashians put their name on a clothing line at Sears — perhaps the worst place to buy fashion in America — many of the items sold out within 24 hours. Where’s the product trial that led to love of that brand?
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Indeed, many celebrities make money by putting their personal brands on products. Dr. Dre became the first hip-hop billionaire by selling Beats by Dre — not the best headphones on the market, but arguably the best marketed. Kids fell in love with Dre’s brand, which got them to try his headphones.
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Then there’s Fiji Water, which has beautiful packaging, celebrity relationships, and the exotic tropical imagery and back story, but it’s simply H20. Customers were intrigued by the brand in a category (bottled water) that’s driven far more by image than product features. Fiji Water could probably have the same success applying that brand imagery to fashion — oh, wait, Tommy Bahama already does that.
As long as the product meets minimum quality standards — it doesn’t disintegrate on touch and it doesn’t kill you — then customers might just love it. But without the strong brand to begin with, these customers might never have even heard of these products, least of all tried them.
The Brand As Entry Ticket
We live in hyper-competitive times with tens of thousands of products available in a single store. You’ll find very few truly unique products, or even products so remarkable that they tower over the competition. A strong brand must come first just to get the attention of an overwhelmed consumer — or to even get the product into the store in the first place.
I recently spoke with an Asian electronics company that wanted to break into the U.S. They had a sad-looking logo designed by their website programmers, and their website looked like a WordPress template. Their name (which I won’t disclose here) was a nonsense word they made up. I told them they would need total rebranding if they even hoped to get any attention in the congested U.S. market, where other, bigger electronics brands had failed, and where Samsung alone spends tens of millions of dollars annually in advertising. Their response: help us get sales first, then they’ll work on the branding.
I wished them the best of luck and suggested they try playing the lottery.
Of course, they wound up going nowhere. Through other connections, they got a meeting with Costco, who bluntly told them that they (Costco) weren’t interested in building the electronics company’s brand. Yes, the electronics company had a product to sell first, and it was something consumers need (based on sales by their competitors), but without a strong brand a major retailer wouldn’t even give their product a chance.
Beyond Customer Experience
I once knew a Silicon Valley VP of Marketing who strictly defined a brand as “customer experience,” which was her excuse for not investing in the image of the company. The problem? The company was a startup, so where was this “customer experience” going to come from?
Yes, a great customer experience is essential, but keep in mind that the primary purpose of a strong brand is to create trust, and if you don’t have that, very few people will give you a shot. So waiting for customer experience to shape your brand isn’t marketing; it’s laziness.
Picture a lonely single guy who hits a trendy club without dressing up or demonstrating any personality. (Assuming the club admits him in the first place.) As his fashionable rivals work the room, he thinks, “If a girl goes out with me, she’ll have a great experience… Now if only a girl would talk to me…”
Now this guy might get lucky — and it would certainly just be luck. Or he might spend the rest of the evening drinking by himself. Hopefully he’ll be drinking Dos Equis in the off chance it makes him interesting.