- Book Options and Supplements
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
- Preface
- Chapter 1: Meet SS+K: A Real Agency Pitches a Real ClientPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 2: A User’s Manual: Advertising, Promotion and Marketing EssentialsPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 3: Advertising and SocietyPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 4: Consumers and the Communications Process: SS+K Gets to Know Its ConsumersPrint Chapter|
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- Section 1: From Talking to Consumers to Talking With Consumers
- Section 2: Is the Medium the Message? Components of Communications
- Section 3: Diffusion of Innovations
- Section 4: Decision Making
- Section 5: Internal Influences on Consumers
- Section 6: External Influences on Consumers
- Section 7: Culture, Globalization, and Advertising
- Section 8: Exercises
- Chapter 5: Know Your Audience: SS+K Learns All About msnbc.com, Inside and OutPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 6: Segment, Target, and Position Your Audience: SS+K Identifies the Most Valuable News ConsumerPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 7: Decide What You Can Afford to Say: msnbc.com Sets the BudgetPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 8: Create a Strategy: SS+K Puts Its Research to Use as the Agency Creates the BriefPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 9: Choose Your Communication Weapons: SS+K Decides Upon a Creative Strategy and Media TacticsPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 10: Plan and Buy Media: SS+K Chooses the Right Media for the Client’s New Branding MessagePrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 11: Execute on All Platforms: SS+K Goes into Production OverdrivePrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 12: Make the Message Sell: SS+K Ensures that All Components Tell the Brand StoryPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 13: Launch! msnbc.com’s First-Ever Branding CampaignPrint Chapter|
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- Chapter 14: ROI: msnbc.com Decides if the Campaign WorkedPrint Chapter|
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There are no key terms for this page.
The Power of Branding
Learning Objectives
After studying this section, students should be able to do the following:
Define branding and branding strategy.
Identify the characteristics of a solid branding strategy.
Explain the concepts of brand equity and value proposition.
List and discuss the benefits of branding from the advertiser’s and buyer’s point of view.
What does your product or service mean to consumers?
Catherine and her team realized that the meaning of msnbc.com in the minds of their customers was not as strong as they desired. In essence, the Web site did not have a brand positioning that was distinctive, or as distinctive as they wanted. This section will discuss the power of brands. We’ll learn why creating that distinct positioning of your product or service, and often your entire company, is so vital.
Video Highlight
Rob Frankel on Branding
Rob Frankel, a branding expert, talks about what it takes for a brand to be successful.
BrandingbrandingA way to distinguish a particular product or service from others using a trademarked name or logo. is a way to distinguish your product or service from others using a trademarked name or logo. Brands have been around for centuries. Early craftsmen put their marks on their wares to identify who made them, and artists have long signed their artwork. Since that time, however, branding has expanded well beyond just differentiation through marks and logos. Modern brands such as Apple, Nike, Tommy Hilfiger, and Wal-Mart now communicate meaning through attributes such as accountability, consistency, and even personality traits that their names have become associated with. These meanings translate to monetary value for the firm because their brand names acquire value—consumers willingly pay a premium to buy a product carrying a respected brand name as opposed to a similar product that carries an unknown brand name.
Figure 8.2.

A brand logo is a key component of corporate identity. SS+K’s client Delta Airlines relies upon its well-known triangular logo to inspire a feeling of familiarity among consumers.
Developing a branding strategybranding strategyPlan that creates a clear picture of the values a particular product or service represents. creates a clear picture of the values your product or service represents. Why is that so important? The answer is simple, yet profound: People don’t buy things because of what the things do. They buy things because of what they mean. There are many MP3 players out there that do just as good a job as an iPod, but they don’t convey the same image to consumers. So, one result of a solid branding strategy is to create a barrier to entrybarrier to entryAn obstacle that makes it more difficult for competitors to introduce their product to the marketplace. so that competitors will find it difficult to persuade loyal consumers to abandon their favorite product for a newcomer.
Brands impose a sense of accountability on the maker of a product. If you buy an Acme shoe and it performs poorly, you’re unlikely to buy Acme shoes again. On the other hand, if you’ve had a good experience with Acme, you’re likely to buy its shoes again and perhaps its socks, shirts, or golf clubs as well. In this way, the brand is a shorthand way of signaling quality that simplifies decision making for customers. People who know and like a given brand are more likely to buy it again.
Brands don’t have to be high end to command loyalty; they just need to communicate a consistent meaning to consumers. That might mean projecting an image of quality, but it can also mean being associated with consistently low costs (e.g., Wal-Mart), trendy fashion (e.g., Juicy Couture), or a particular lifestyle (e.g., Whole Foods Market). A brand thus serves to express key properties of the products the company produces.
Just as people have personalities, so do brands. Personality refers to the traits that a person exhibits. The person may not exhibit those characteristics all the time, but they tend to exhibit them regularly. A brand personalitybrand personalityA set of traits that people attribute to a product as if it were a person. is a set of traits that people attribute to a product as if it were a person.
Corporations often engage in image advertisingimage advertisingCampaigns aimed at enhancing a corporation’s image and promoting the company’s public identity rather than selling a specific product. to enhance the public perception of the firm in the eyes of its most important constituencies—typically the firm’s customers, employees, and local communities. Although these campaigns aim to promote the company’s public identity rather than sell a specific product, a corporation’s image is intimately tied to its brand personality. The image of the firm reflects on the image of its brands.
In 2007, for example, Dow Chemical Company allocated over $25 million for a corporate ad campaign it called “the human element.”[212] The campaign was meant to appeal to local communities (who may or may not welcome Dow into their backyards), as well as legislators, journalists, environmentalists, employees, and shareholders. The idea behind the campaign is to show what the “human element” can do to solve some of the world’s problems, such as countering climate change and providing clean water, decent housing, health, safety, and an affordable and adequate food supply. Dow’s goal for the campaign is “to be acknowledged as the largest, most profitable, and most respected chemical company in the world.” Its CEO, Andrew Liveris, will consider the campaign a success “when a Dow employee in a bar anywhere in the world can tell the guy next to him where he works and get the response, ‘Oh, Dow. That’s good.’”
Brand equitybrand equityThe value of a brand name over and above the value of a generic product in the same category. is the extent to which a consumer holds strong, favorable associations with a brand and is willing to pay more for the branded version of a product. Differentiation, accountability, consistency, and personality all support brand equity by creating a clear sense of the brand’s value propositionvalue propositionThe clearly identifiable benefit that a certain brand provides relative to competing brands.: the clearly identifiable benefit it provides relative to competing brands. As Roger Adams, senior vice president–CMO of Home Depot, said, “If you go to a grocery store or department store, there are brands on the shelf that have fundamentally the same function and one is 20 percent more than the other one. But people are paying that because there’s a belief in the brand or there’s an experience with the brand that builds trust, or they know if there’s a problem they can get service, that type of thing. And people do it every day.…That’s pretty much what brand marketing is about.”
Dig Deeper
Identify your five favorite brands. What makes them special? How do they differ from other, similar products you might choose instead? Interview a set of friends about their brand preferences and determine how much their preferences agree with each other. How do you explain what you found?
The benefit of a brand for advertisers is higher profitability: it is less expensive to attract repeat buyers than to find new customers. Moreover, satisfied buyers may pay a higher price for a trusted brand.
Brands have benefits for the buyer:
Signals known properties (quality, performance, cost, etc.)
Simplifies decision making
Simplifies repeat purchase with a memorable name or logo
Brands have benefits for the manufacturer:
Offers legal protection (through trademarks)
Creates a barrier to entry for competitors
Translates to financial benefits (both for the company’s bottom line and to impress Wall Street)
[212] Rance Crain, “Dow’s Corporate Ads Have Great Chemistry, but Will Respect Follow?” Advertising Age, August 6, 2007, 13.

Citation Information
APA Format:Solomon, Michael., Duke Cornell, Lisa., and Nizan, Amit., Launch! Advertising and Promotion in Real Time. Retrieved Sep 2, 2010 from http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/28421 .
MLA Format:Solomon, Michael, Duke Cornell, Lisa, , and Amit Nizan. Launch! Advertising and Promotion in Real Time. 1969 . Flat World Knowledge. 2 Sep, 2010. <http://www.flatworldknowledge.com/node/28421> .
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