This article throws light on the significance of branding a business and how carefully thought brand names can potentially result in a more successful and a profitable business.
Branding
is perhaps the most important facet of any business--beyond product,
distribution, pricing, or location. A
company's brand is its definition in the world, the name that identifies it to
itself and the marketplace. A model may
be beautiful, but without a name, she's just "that girl in that
picture." Where would Norma Jean be
without Marilyn Monroe, or who would imagine Coca-Cola as just a soft-drink
manufacturer? A brand provides a
concrete descriptor to customers and competitors alike, a name for a product or
service to distinguish it from anything else.
Bob may run a hobby shop, but trying to advertise as "The hobby
shop a guy named Bob runs down the street a ways" is financial suicide. Each customer will have to describe the shop,
who Bob is, and what the shop does every time someone asks about it. This makes the process of recommending a good
hobby shop too much work for the average customer, and far too much work for a
user looking for hobby shops on the Internet.
A customer looking up Bob's hobby shop will have an easier time of it if
he or she knows to refer to it as "Bob's House of Hobbies," and the
customer can then refer others to Bob's hobby shop by name, increasing the
potential advertising exponentially.
Developing
a brand involves more than just picking a catchy name and placing an ad in the
newspaper--a brand is more than a unique string of letters denoting a
particular product; a successful brand is a mnemonic trigger that makes a
consumer feel a certain way when the brand is thought of. For those who drink cola-flavored soft
drinks, which is more appealing on a hot day: a cold cola soda, or an ice-cold
Coke? Coca-Cola has spent 100 years
developing their particular brand of cola-flavored soda as a refreshing beverage
and a seminal representation of a market segment. Coca-Cola has used a combination of direct
marketing, give-away techniques, and multi-product cross-branding to achieve
maximum brand recognition and visibility in not only its immediately competitive
market, but in markets as diverse as Coca-Cola branded race cars and house
wares.
Brand
loyalty is an integral part of building a brand, as consumers usually have a
choice of products in the same market segment, and so a successful company will
come up with a way to keep consumers re-buying their product or coming back to
their location rather than going to a competitor. These brand loyalty-building efforts may come
in the form of coupons, incentives such as many grocery chains' technique of
"grocery discount cards" or "loss leaders," meant to draw
consumers into the store, where they will hopefully buy products along with the
discounted fare at a higher profit ratio.
In exchange for these discounts and grocery cards, many companies
collect information about buying habits and average spending amounts, the
better to tailor advertisements and better-focus future promotional
efforts. Once a consumer is hooked,
brand loyalty tends to result in higher sales volume, as well as loyal
customers being less sensitive to price changes of their favorite brands
(within reason, of course), as well as less sensitive to competitors'
incentives. Studies have shown that it
takes 5 times as much money to gain a customer as it does to retain one. That's 5 times as much money as could have
been spent on other things.
A
brand is who your company is, and what it is selling--it is as important as
naming a baby, and should require the same amount of effort to develop it, but
if done well, can mature into a successful and profitable adult.
© 2005, Wholesale Pages UK.
All rights reserved.
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