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As marketing
managers seek to keep their brands fresh and relevant,
many are tempted to jump on the latest trends and
fads. You know: online and major media advertising
with new imagery... new slogans and taglines... new
product packaging—all playing to the latest
pop-cult phenomena, hot colors, and new vibes.
But is that really the solution? The short answer
is "no."
If anything, jumping on the latest trends will have
the opposite effect. Brands cannot and should not
be all things to all people. Nor should they be diluted
by constantly going after whatever is trendy at the
expense of consistently reinforcing their core values
and assets.
If brands are less relevant than they should be,
then their core values, and the way they are aligned
and projected—or not—should be examined
and addressed.
Consumers respond to values they identify with more
than they do passing trends. Especially if those values
are culturally ingrained and have deep personal meaning
for them as human beings.
Brands should have the ring of authenticity and conviction.
They should possess and express the following:
• A reason for being
• A definitive point of view
• A system of beliefs
• Clearly defined values and assets
The unearthing of a brand's core values and truths
must then be consistently acted upon in everything
that companies communicate and in every decision that
is made. There has to be complete alignment at every
touch point so that the brand is consistently and
faithfully portrayed to employees, business partners,
stakeholders, and customers.
Cultural anthropology can play an important role
in developing consumer connections by taking marketing
to a more meaningful, more human level. Tying core
brand essences to deeply held cultural meaning gives
consumers "reason to believe" in them. By
being firmly grounded in cultural values that really
matter to the customer, brands can transcend competitors
to become not only category leaders, but icons.
These kinds of brands become a way for consumers
to affirm who they are and what their lifestyles are—and
allow them to project their identity to the world.
In their book Symbolic Brands and Authenticity of
Identity Performance, British marketing professors
Richard Elliott and Andrea Davies* state: "In
a consumer culture people no longer consume for merely
functional satisfaction, but consumption becomes meaning-based,
and brands are often used as symbolic resources for
the construction and maintenance of identity."
It is still true that consumers choose products
based on price, quality, and cachet. Yet to a considerable
degree brands with deeply significant cultural meaning
override these aspects of marketing. For example,
Apple, the brand, has an iconic presence among consumer-product
brands and a cult-like following. So do brands like
Harley Davidson, Coca Cola, Nike, Starbucks, The NFL,
NASCAR and Whole Foods.
None of these brands appeals to everyone, but among
the consumers they do appeal to they enjoy a devoted,
and even fanatical, following. We can also point out
that whether consumers are devotees of these brands
or not, very few consumers the world over do not recognize
their brand marks or fail to understand the essence
of these brands' core values.
The evangelism inspired by these brands has everything
to do with their meaning and an integrated lifestyle
fit among their devotees. When these brands are marketed,
and their products and services packaged, their core
values are leveraged in a consistent, targeted manner
that does not respond to every trend or fad. Otherwise,
a dilution would occur with the very audience for
whom they are viable and relevant.
Brand Evolution
Since consumer culture continues to change and evolve,
brands must change with it, but without losing their
essences in the process. Companies no longer operate
autonomously behind impenetrable walls. So why do
some continue to market in that manner?
Brand marketers have to realize that they no longer
have absolute control over their brands through carefully
crafted external images. Consumers have wrested a
sizeable share of control away from them.
Everything about companies and their brands is transparent
now. Consumers play an active role in the shaping
of brands, thanks to...
• The Internet
• Social media
• YouTube
• A significant increase in WOM (word-of-mouth).
The culture of those consumers, who are active participants
in the Apple brand, for example, or the Harley Davidson
or NFL brands, and the way they attribute specific
meanings to those brands, help determine their evolution.
These brands, over time, have increasingly come out
of the hands of the marketers and become shaped by
their adherents.
Smart marketers actively engage their customer bases,
seeking their input on company-sponsored blogs, even
asking for submissions of ideas. They plug into the
free-flowing conversations among consumers to learn
more from their adherents. They pay attention to what
WOM is conveying about their brands.
Brand marketers are increasingly hiring cultural
anthropologists to conduct additional research. By
asking consumers—or, better yet, watching how
consumers use the products to gauge—what they
like, what they don't like, what they would like to
see integrated into product designs as well as what
they say, anthropologists gain great insights into
the current culture around the brand.
These insights should be valued, and they should
enable marketers to see the souls of their brands
mirrored in their customers' comments.
Anthropologists delve into...
• The deeper meanings that consumers ascribe
to brands
• The changing way they are integrated into
consumers' lifestyles
• Consumers' emotional attachments to specific
brand assets and drivers
• The evolution of consumer base culture
Thus, as the culture of customer bases subtly changes,
brands can evolve with those changes in a subtle,
rather than overriding manner. Jumping on superficial,
passing trends would only muddy the brand to its adherents
and cause disconnects. By making changes that are
responsive to the ways customers' view of the brand
and how they want to use it, however, the brand remains
viable, relevant, and meaningful to its adherents.
The idea of letting consumers internalize the brands
they identify with in a deeply, more personal way,
and dictating gradual changes is orchestrating brand
new thinking. Result: the consumer is more in tune
with culturally significant brands more than ever.
And when it comes to brands, ongoing cultural relevance
trumps the latest fads and trends hands down.
| *Richard Elliott is a professor
of marketing and consumer research, Warwick Business
School, University of Warwick, UK; Andrea Davies
is a senior lecturer in marketing at the University
of Leicester, UK. |
Ted Mininni is President
of Design Force, Inc., the leading brand design consultancy
to consumer product companies with Enjoyment Brands™.
Ted has two decades of experience in brand consulting,
package design and consumer promotion design. His
consultancy, Design Force helps their clients market
brands that deliver positive, gratifying experiences
to consumers. Their expertise lies in emotionally
connecting consumers to brands by creating compelling
visual brand experiences, which motivate purchase
decisions. www.designforceinc.com.
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