Archive for the ‘marketing mistakes’ Category

Celebrities and brands – a marriage made in heaven or a blind date disaster?

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Brand owners have long used celebrities in an ambassadorial role in an effort to associate their brand with the celebrity lifestyle and hope to reflect in their glory. Using a famous face can be a real shortcut to brand recognition and is therefore a tempting strategy. Whether it’s an A-list film star or a family friendly D-list soap star, having the right ambassador to represent the brand can boost the bottom line. But, whilst the celeb can bring Midas touch rewards at the height of their fame and popularity, it’s a risky strategy, as it can become a minefield when something goes wrong, with the fall-out often reflecting equally publicly on the brand.

It was back in January 2008 that Kerry Katona was finally dropped from Iceland’s advertising campaigns after reports of her alleged drug taking became too much for the frozen food chain. Chosen because of her status as one-time ‘mother of the year’, Katona seemed to epitomise the brand’s slogan ‘That’s why mums go to Iceland’, but the reality was somewhat different.

More recently, the golden boy Tiger Woods’ tarnished private life lost him the brand ambassador roles with both Gillette (lending a whole new meaning to ‘the best a man can get’) and AT&T (when ‘scoring birdies’ in the US PGA Tour had nothing to do with golf clubs!).

But brand owners don’t always drop celebrities going through a rough time. When Kate Moss’s alleged cocaine use was on the front of all the newspapers she suffered the blow of having her contracts with Chanel, Burberry and H&M cancelled. Conversely, Rimmel kept Moss on and rode the storm. Whilst possibly not back to her peak of popularity, Moss has since rebuilt her reputation and now has a clothing line in Top Shop and her own perfume.

A new celebrity tie up announced this week leaves me rather perplexed; Victoria Beckham was appointed the creative design director at Range Rover with her first project being the new interior of the Special Edition Range Rover Evoque. The brand owners say that this is a smaller, sleeker vehicle so can only assume Victoria is doing her own version of ‘Pimp My Ride’ for size zero fashionista WAGs?!

A great article that includes this and another 11 celebrity endorsements that went wrong is on T3 http://tinyurl.com/34vvbmm and includes the classic of Bill Wyman endorsing a metal detector (not very rock and roll but perhaps because of The Rolling Stones ‘Money, that’s what I want’?).

Back to the everyday, Morrison’s is another supermarket that has used celebrities to raise their presence, particularly in the south. Who can forget Denise van Outen and Top Gear’s Richard Hammond wheeling their trolleys across open countryside to get to the fresh food in a Morrison’s supermarket. In a change of strategy, their new ad, which breaks mid July 210, uses children instead of celebrities. So is the power of the celeb fading or are there still sufficient numbers of us gullible enough to believe that Sharon Osbourne shopped at Asda to keep this phenomenon alive?

Brands put the boot in after England World Cup defeat

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Now that the much-hyped England World Cup football team have returned home after their trouncing by the Germans, brands have had to re-evaluate their planned ‘England win’ executional strategies and instead ‘put the boot on’ for the purpose of brand marketing.

Jumping on the Frank Lampard goal that was not given in the England – Germany game because the linesman from Uruguay did not see it, Asda have grasped the marketing opportunity and are offering anyone with a Uruguayan passport a free eye test!

As reported by Marketing, the first two newspaper ads capitalising on the defeat ran the day after the game by two car companies. Kia ran an ad in The Times to promotes their seven-year warranty with the headline “Oh well, at least our warranty beats the Germans”. Nissan chose The Sun to promote its GT-R with the headline “One match the Germans didn’t win”. Read more at http://tinyurl.com/2dznawa

Interestingly, the Nationwide sponsorship of the England team runs out at the end of June, just days after the crushing defeat. Their exclusive renewal period ran out earlier in the year but they claim that the brand is still in talks about the future. At least Sunday’s dire result should have brought the price down if they are still interested!

If not, who else could take up the mantle? Here are just a few of my suggestions but feel free to send me your own:

  • An obvious choice would be Avis who could adapt their well-known brand slogan to, ‘We must try harder’
  • Or, how about an oil company (topical industry at the moment!?) with Esso’s old slogan ‘Put a Tiger in your Tank’!
  • A tea brand makes sense – either the about to be revived Tetley Tea Folk for ‘the Gaffer’ or the PG Tips chimps (needs no further explanation!)
  • Or how about Bahlsen’s Messino that is trying to steal share from McVitie’s Jaffa Cakes brand with the slogan ‘the future’s oblong’
  • And back to sport, Nike’s brand slogan would sum up what we all think ‘Just do it!’

Branding – what’s in a name?

Friday, February 12th, 2010

According to Shakespeare: “What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.”

Well, yes it would but how would you market it to gardeners and lovers? A name is an identifier, a shorthand designation that sets one person, product or service apart from another. And, as such, it does matter what that name is as it can either enhance the reputation of that to which it refers, or it can damage it absolutely.  Otherwise why did Marion Michael Morrison change his name to John Wayne?!

It’s the same in marketing. Your name is the first, and most important, part of your brand. A strong name helps you stand out and convey your brand values. A weak or inappropriate name can work against everything else you do to build a position for your offering. So it’s interesting to explore why some of today’s infamous brands started life with very dubious brand names:

  • Google was launched in 1996 as BackRub. It was quickly (and thankfully) renamed by founders Larry Brin and Serge Page in 1998
  • Pepsi-Cola was the brand name in 1898 for a product that had launched five years earlier as Brad’s Drink after a young American pharmacist called Caleb Bradham
  • Jerry’s Guide to the World Wide Web was the original name for Yahoo, founded by Jerry Yang and David Filo. It was soon renamed to the acronym for “Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle”

And then there are those brand names that we all think are fine, only to have their powerful brand owners change them on us, usually with the intention of enhancing the brand’s global domination:

  • In 1990 Mars changed the name of its popular peanut chocolate bar from Snickers to Marathon and eight years later did the same thing with fruit chews Opal Fruits, renaming them Starburst
  • In 2001 Unilever chose to change the name of household cleaner Jif to Cif, apparently to help Hispanic and French speakers pronounce it better
  • Only last year, the UK’s biggest insurer turned its back on its Norfolk roots to change its brand name from Norwich Union to Aviva

And now we have another contender as Charmin toilet tissue is dropped in favour of Cushelle, with its big cuddly bear icon morphing into a koala! The name change is part of an agreement made during SCA Hygiene’s acquisition of Charmin from Procter & Gamble in 2007.

Changing a brand name is not a cheap exercise, not forgetting the discarded consumer goodwill for the previous incarnation. So why do it? It all comes down to getting the long-term brand strategy right in the beginning. If you are already a global player, like Unilever or Procter & Gamble, you should really be thinking of appropriate global brand names at the outset and avoiding costly rebranding exercises further down the line.

It’s true that global branding can bring cost savings by producing a single global advertising and marketing campaign for all countries. But there is also a well-respected view that global branding can be counter-productive. Advertising campaigns produced by the so-called ‘lead’ market can look very alien in other markets. Often being dumbed down so as to minimize cultural differences, these global campaigns can appear bland and not relate directly to any market, giving local brands an advantage.

Another reason given for a brand name change is to distance the brand from a negative experience. Personally, I think this is misguided. It assumes we all have very short memories and cannot tie up the two identities. In this way, not only does the new brand bring its old baggage with it, but it also risks alienating us even further as we think they may be trying to get away with something! It is better to invest the resource that would have gone into establishing a new brand in overcoming the original brand’s difficulties.

So, the lesson is that a brand name should be for life and therefore deserves careful thought and planning to avoid future costly changes. Would a rose smell as sweet if it had been called a stinker?

Retailers need to checkout social media

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

According to a survey of 100 UK retailers by dotCommerce http://www.dotdigitalblog.com/ecommerce/464/ most retailers are failing to utilize social media to exploit the opportunities it offers to engage consumers. Nearly 60% of retailers have no social media presence at all! Even for the 42% that do use social media, only 32% with a Twitter or Facebook account are promoting this on their website and a mere 12% use more than one social media channel. For those that are using social media, Twitter is taking over from Facebook as the channel of choice. Retailers using Twitter are mainly using it for push marketing with 73% using it for announcing product updates, 62% for marketing and 58% to promote company news. It seems that neither large nor small retailers have embraced the idea of blogging with only 10% small and 6% large retailers having a blog.

It seems such a missed opportunity for retailers who are in the perfect position to identify their consumers and engage them via social media. Retailers should be engaging with customers to supply more of their needs and thereby secure a larger share of their expenditure. Farming their existing customers in this way would be a much more cost effective exercise than looking for new customers or, even worse, just waiting to see who wanders in!

Marketing is all about product too!

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Following the Guardian’s interview with Starbucks founder, Howard Schultz (http://tinyurl.com/ycffluw) there has been a lot of tweeting about the rights and wrongs of his strategy for Starbucks. The fact is that Starbucks ranked number 90 on Interbrand’s 2009 list of global brands (http://tinyurl.com/3e9lyp), down five places on a year ago, coinciding with a 16% decrease in brand value; so something has to be done.

Schultz’s diagnosis of the company’s problem is that growth had been seen as a strategy when, in fact, it is merely a tactic. By putting too much of the company’s focus on growth, mistakes were made that were disguised, when they should have been investigated and corrected. His solution is to go back to his original inspiration of the ‘romance of coffee-making’ and cater for the communities that Starbucks serve with an individual, non-corporate look.

The first experiment of this new look was in London’s Conduit Street that opened in November 2009 (see photos at http://tinyurl.com/ye79s8r). It looks more upmarket, with great attention to the furnishings, and the coffee counter has apparently been designed to emphasise the brand’s coffee authority. There are due to be another 100 of these individual refits across the UK by the end of 2010.

Whilst, in this new look, the corporate branding is much more recessive, even tasteful, in Seattle, USA, Starbucks has gone a stage further and is trialling three totally unbranded stores that have been designed to resemble independent local cafes. Critics have dubbed these outlets as ‘Stealth Starbucks’.

Fundamentally, I believe Starbucks has two marketing problems in the UK. Firstly, the brand needs to engage with its consumers and deliver the type of coffee experience they want. It can’t do this by refitting stores to ‘pretend’ to be a local coffee shop that will be rejected when people realise it’s really global brand Starbucks. They should look at the challenger brands that have grown up in their wake and see why consumers. In many cases, have a closer relationship with some of these.

Secondly, and most importantly for me, they need to look at their product. I am a real coffee drinker. I drink my coffee black (ideally a double espresso) and unsweetened, not frappuccinoed with fruit juices and cream! So I actually TASTE what I drink and Starbucks coffee is not good! I can only really liken the thin flavour and strange aftertaste to the comparison between real 70% cocoa chocolate and American chocolate like Hershey’s. There is no comparison.

So, if you’re listening Mr Schultz, marketing is all about the product too!

What’s in a brand?

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

In the Interbrand survey of global brands by value for 2009 (http://tinyurl.com/3e9lyp), it is probably not surprising that over half (51%) of the world’s biggest brands are based in the USA with Coca-Cola, IBM, Microsoft and General Electric staying in their same 1 – 4 slots as last year. But why should the USA dominate over half of the world’s brands when they only account for less than a quarter (23.6%) of the world’s GDP? Two other countries that punch above their weight in the brand stakes are Germany, with 11% global brands versus 6% GDP, and France, with 8% global brands versus 4.8% GDP. And what about us Brits? Where else but in the middle of the road with 4% global brands versus our 4.4.% GDP; our first entry is HSBC at number 32 with no further entries in the top 100 until Smirnoff at number 83!

So why don’t we in the UK punch above our weight? We are praised internationally for the quality of our TV advertising yet we are more keen to ridicule brands for the most irritating ads of the year as published by Marketing Magazine (http://tinyurl.com/yc5acdh). Number one of that chart was GoCompare.com with the over-inflated opera singer. This was an in-house produced ad as were the ads at position five (confused.com) and seven (WeBuyAnyCar.com), also for internet brands.

The price comparison industry is over ten tears old and visitor numbers to some of the largest sites fell by 30 per cent in the first four months of 2009; so it’s no surprise that GoCompare.com and confused.com are battling it out in the irritating jingle stakes. It’s undeniable that irritating ads stand out; GoCompare’s own consumer research boasts a 200% increase in brand awareness since the activity began in August.

But the ten million dollar question is… does awareness translate to sales? Previous annoying ads, such as Cillit Bang, created sales spikes that could not be maintained post advertising. In fact, Cillit Bang has just been voted the UK’s most disliked brand name according to a survey by branding consultants G2 (http://tinyurl.com/yesbqbb)

A poll by TellyAds.com (http://tinyurl.com/yaxwe94) for the most popular TV ads of the noughties had GoCompare.com at seventh position with the only other brand to appear on the most irritating AND most viewed top 10 lists was Churchill, the world’s most famous nodding dog. Top of the TellyAds poll was Cadbury’s Dairy Milk ad featuring a boy and a girl with dancing eyebrows. But where has the most viewed ad got Cadbury? A hostile take over bid that is being given more likelihood of success, despite warnings of up to 7,000 job cuts, with the withdrawal of Ferrero from the race.

So, what’s in a brand? A brand allows you to give your product or service a personality and there’s nothing to stop your brand being as important to your specific target audience as the giant brands are to theirs. In fact, the more specific and ‘niche’ you are, the more you can gain a competitive advantage over the big guys. These are often called challenger brands. Think of Innocent versus Tropicana or Apple versus Microsoft. The key thing is to engage with your audience and, ideally, not irritate them to death!

The dangers of social media for small businesses

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

There is no doubt that social networks have become far more relevant to consumers than traditional branded websites. The perception of the power base has shifted as consumers feel they have assumed control as individuals and can voice their opinions freely. In some ways this is marketing utopia as the holy grail for a brand or company has always been to identify and engage directly with their consumers. But, in the wrong hands, this new freedom can be a minefield for any company, let alone a small business that may have neither the skill nor the resource to be at the cutting edge of these fast moving developments!

As a result, companies looking to engage with social media can break some cardinal golden rules:

  1. Engagement with social networks is STILL marketing and therefore all the usual rules apply about setting your objectives and deciding the elements of your strategy – it is not good enough to just ‘put stuff out there’ and see what happens. You have to carefully think through your campaign in the same way you would any other element of your marketing activity and ensure that, whatever you decide, it is measurable against your objectives. Otherwise, what’s the point?
  2. There is a perception that, because anyone can access social media free of charge, there is no value in engaging professionals to do the work for you. That view is very short sighted as why would a small business owner be up to date with all the nuances of social media and, even if you are, is your time not better spent doing whatever your specialism is? You could apply the same logic to bookkeeping. As business owners you need to have a working knowledge of your accounts to run your business but I am sure most of you use a professional third party to do the detailed work?
  3. Consumers in social networks demand honesty and transparency. So DO NOT set up fictitious accounts pretending to be a fan of your product or service; you will be found out and it will not be to your benefit. A much better solution is to be open about who you are from the outset and engage with your customers honestly. If you handle a complaint or negative post about your brand or company well, you are more likely to convert the complainant to your business than if you either ignore or try to block them.
  4. If you set up something where you are inviting interaction or questions, say a facebook page or blog, then make sure that you or your chosen supplier are organised to monitor instantly and informed on how to reply. There is nothing worse for your company’s image than to have actual or potential consumers trying to engage with your product or service and feeling ignored over days or even forever. Better not to be on the network at all. Also remember that this is a fast-moving medium and needs to be constantly updated to make it current.
  5. If you are personally interested in social networks and have a private facebook or twitter account, think twice before you link these to your company’s social media presence. It obviously depends on who you are and what you do but would it help or hinder your professional choice of a potential supplier if you could also see what they do in their free time?!

I believe that we are only at the beginning of how the social media revolution can inspire and inform our marketing strategies and that there is an exciting future ahead for businesses and consumers alike. So, as business owners, let’s not enter the arena without remembering the tried and trusted marketing principles learned over many years of consumer engagement.

That’s ASDA [Katie] Price

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

On the eve of breast cancer awareness month and as a breast cancer sufferer myself, it was with complete incredulity that I saw Katie Price had been chosen by ASDA to promote their Tickled Pink campaign. I failed to see how having huge, false assets was any qualification to appeal to women who have been touched by this disease. But then it was what Katie did next that put the cherry on the top! She made a comment about her ugly breast scars from her various cosmetic breast operations without any thought for those of us who bear these scars involuntarily but are grateful to be alive. At least ASDA dropped using her under the pressure of public anger but surely for next year they can find a face for their campaign that has some empathy with women affected by this disease.