Does brand attitude drive consumer pull?
Rohantha ATHUKORALA
What intrigues me is what is more important: is it consumer need
satisfaction which will drive consumer pull or is it the power of brand
attitude that is wrapped around a product that really makes a consumer
pick a brand?
Some of most strongest marketing campaigns that the world saw was IPL
2011. The power brands Mumbai Indians and worthy winners Chennai Super
Kings both secured sponsorships totalling a staggering two and fifty
million dollars plus even though the brands put together value only a
one hundred million plus.
This clearly reflects that the brand attitude that has been garnered
drives marketers wanting to secure associations so that it can garner
consumer pull.
But the key question that one can ask is does it make business sense
when the final numbers are tallied between share of expenditure, share
of voice and markets share.
Cricketers as brands
As product brands go through different stages in their life so does
sports personalities the like brand Lasith Malinga for instant also
moving on this same direction with advertising keeping pace be it with
the Pepsi campaigns that got the attention of the IPL audience.
It is strange that even though some power brands like Dhoni and
Sehwag endorsed Pepsi at IPL four, some brands have the power of
screaming for audience attention by way of advertising relics and
persona that results in standing out from the crowd.
The one brand that comes to my mind is brand Lasith Malinga.
Eventhough he could not take Mumbai India into the final and win
IPL-4, the brand had the power to fight through the clutter and make a
point of being an explosive cricketer that can entertain the crowd.
This takes me back to my argument that it is brand attitude that
drives consumer pull or need satisfaction. Which one is more important
from a brand perspective.
Some can argue that brand attitude is more important in the
short-term whilst need satisfaction is what ensures in the long-term but
then again this can be also argued with real life examples in the market
place.
A classic example is where the brand Sanath Jayasuriya was voted in
as the favourite sports personality by Sri Lanka at the SLIM awards when
in actual fact there was no need satisfaction as the brand had not
played international cricket for quite some time.
Building the DNA
If one digs deeper into the two brands discussed what one can argue
is that if the message is the vehicle that builds the brand DNA if the
personality aptly matches this brand imagery that one is trying to
create this creates such a strong attitude that can drive consumer pull
even in an entrechedly competitive market where one cannot equate the
numbers based on share of expenditure, share of voice and markets share.
The essence
To capture the essence, the brand Lasith Malinga gives an attitude to
the brand that drives differentiation. Hence, even though a brand
constitutes a bundle features that constitute product features and
consumer benefits, what finally gives the brand that edge, is none of
the above but something that may be called attitude.
Regardless of the type of exposure that a typical brand gets, what
makes brands stand out in a crowd is the attitude it imparts to the
brand. Such brands become icons.
At its best
When Pepsi came out with the campaign ‘Nothing official about it’
Pepsi became a brand with an attitude. With the advantage of being a
challenger brand it affords to cook a snook at leader Coca Cola and
become the brand of preference among the youth.
When Cloguard toothpaste launched the first herbal toothpaste in Sri
Lanka, conventional wisdom drove the market towards ‘Herbal- Natural
toothpastes’.
When Anchor full cream powder was launched in Sri Lanka sometime back
we saw the fire unleashed in this category with the mother was made to
separate the grain from the chaff and would not hesitate to call a spade
a spade when she said ‘best next mothers milk’. Her slightly know it all
attitude may not have endeared her to all housewives but they were more
than willing to stop and listen to her. Today Anchor is the market
leader in Sri Lanka and the brand has become ‘icon’ with an attitude
today.
Another one
For years chocolates had been advertised as the bond between loved
ones, with parents or adults gifting it to the children on special
occasions. The cricket ad with the girl running with great abandon on to
the field breaking cordons and rules made Cadbury dairy milk an icon
with attitude.
When soap advertising was fighting shy of showing women bathing,
Lyril broke open the bathroom door with the legendary girl in the
waterfall.
Upside down
It is always easier to describe something by what it is not than what
it is. The same goes for attitude. It is perhaps evident from these
examples that brands with an attitude need not be from a particular
product category or a lifestyle or for that matter a recent phenomenon.
When a campaign has the courage to buck the trend, may be it is on
its way to acquiring an attitude. However, just being different is not
enough as in the Ceylinco VIP advertisement where for the first time in
Sri Lanka we saw a dynamics of a working woman and a rough street lad
was depicted in the insurance industry.
The promise of Ceylinco coming to her rescue to help her carry on
with the busy schedule drove home the attitude of the brand.
The use of a movie star or sports personalities is perhaps not enough
to give a brand an attitude. They certainly make it more interesting and
entertaining but you need far stronger characters and stronger
statements or far more iconoclastic treatment to impart an attitude to
the brand just like what the brand Lasith Malinga has in cricket where
his communication perfectly fitted his DNA.
Like stars
In my view brands are like stars, or even better. Lady Gaga is known
to have said “Right from the beginning I wanted to be more famous than
Persil Automatic” and in fact she has become that today just like brand
Malinga.
Stars come and go but brands lasts and last and are constantly being
rejuvenated. What gives stars their iconic status is their
attitude-think of intelligent captain Sangakkara, Angelo Mathews or the
optimism of Sanath Jayasuriya.
Their attitude makes them what they are-stars. So the question is why
not brands as it will sure lead to consumer pull. |