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PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING Branding. Tangible Intangible Brand Name  Name given to a product  Consists of words, numbers, or letters that can be spoken.

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Presentation on theme: "PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING Branding. Tangible Intangible Brand Name  Name given to a product  Consists of words, numbers, or letters that can be spoken."— Presentation transcript:

1 PRINCIPLES OF MARKETING Branding

2 Tangible Intangible Brand Name  Name given to a product  Consists of words, numbers, or letters that can be spoken Logo  Picture, design, or graphic image associated with a brand  Trade character—human characteristics Slogan  Phrase or sentence that summarizes some essential aspect of the product  AKA tag line, jingle Image Personality Ability to influence customers to buy Example: http://www.youtube.co m/watch?v=VdeD6SrQu L0 http://www.youtube.co m/watch?v=VdeD6SrQu L0 Brands Have Two Parts

3 Corporate Brand Product Brand Represents the whole company Example: Nike is a corporate brand Brand of a specific product Example: Air Jordan is the brand of a specific Nike product Level of Brands

4 Types of Brands Manufacturer  Created by a manufacturer for its own products  AKA national brands or regional brands  Examples: Cover Girl, Lay’s Potato Chips, Wrangler  Sold through wholesalers, and ultimately to retailers, such as department stores Example: Jeans such as Diesel, Lee, Levi, Guess, Baby Phat are available at retailers such as Sears, Macy’s, or J. C. Penney, but not Abercrombie jeans

5 Private brand Definition: Resellers include retail stores, distributors, and wholesalers Resellers often develop their own products Private brand is a brand owned by a reseller AKA store brands, distributor brands, dealer brands, or private label brands Example: Abercrombie & Fitch carries private brand jeans only available at their stores

6 Generic Brand Product that is not branded Usually packaged in black and white packages Product category is the only label on the package Generally lower in price Examples: baking soda, paper towels, canned fruits, and many medicines

7 Branding and the Customer Identifies the product  Name, logo, slogan, and packaging  Coke is the “real thing” in a red and silver can with a wave  Pepsi is for a “new generation” in the blue and red can with a circle Provides assurance of quality Provides assurance of consistency

8 Quality Customers vary in the level of quality they want in various products Example: inexpensive ballpoint pens sell for under a dollar each and work well for a student; however, a successful executive might prefer an elegant fountain pen with platinum trim—the Montblanc brand sales for over $300

9 Consistency The product is the same whenever and wherever you buy it McDonald’s hamburger is the exact same each time you get it, even at a different location If you stay in a Hilton hotel anywhere in the United States, you know that you will be getting clean, comfortable, reasonably priced accomodations

10 Goals of Branding Create Unique Brand Identity  Some benefit of the product that sets it apart from other similar products  Benefit is the need-satisfying ability of a product  Customers buy benefits, not features  Product benefits in three categories  Functional benefits meet physical and safety needs  Emotional benefits meet acceptance and esteem needs  Self-expressive benefits meet esteem and self-actualization needs  Visual symbols is another aspect of a brand

11 What is the metaphor in the symbol?

12 Goals of Branding Develop a Positive Brand Image  Developed over time by promotion and by customer experience with the product  Positioning consists of the actions marketers take to create a certain image of a product in the minds of customers  Brand position is the image that a brand has in the mind of the customer  Consumers like companies that are socially responsible  “Naming rights” for new sports stadiums and other public places is very popular right now

13 Goals of Branding Brand Loyalty  Definition: a situation in which the customer will buy only a certain brand of a product; repeat purchases mean more profits  Research shows that it is less expensive to keep current customers than to find new customers

14 Protecting a Brand Brands are only valuable if your competitors cannot copy it U.S. Patent and Trademark Office will register brands Trademark is another term for brand; refers to the word, phrase, symbol, or design that identifies and distinguishes the source of goods Service mark is the same as a trademark, identifying the source of a service Symbols to use: ®©™ ℠

15 YOU as a Brand Many of the most famous and popular brand names are the names of people who developed the brands  Ford  Ritz-Carlton  Jennifer Lopez


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