Main | April 2006 »

March 31, 2006

Living the Brand

The CMO has two major internal objectives in ensuring brand vitality and consistency: (1) to develop programs that provide employees an in-depth understanding of the brand essence and (2) to ascertain the employees intimately know the customer experience. The latter helps with customer empathy and with brand innovation. In doing so frontline employees can identify gaps in the brand essence and the brand delivery that can help management improve the potency of the brand experience.

Good People Co. LTD, a South Korean manufacturer of clothing sponsors a “pajama day” where all the employees are required to wear sleepwear which allows them to innovate on the brand experience. In the photo, what looks quite whimsical could actually be a leg up on the competition.

Bunnyjams.jpg

Methods like “Staple yourself to the customer” “customer case analysis” “customer led innovation” are all ways of wiring your company into customer needs. However, one key thing to note is these methods are often those of incremental innovation rather than radical innovation. CMO’s that lead the market initiate projects that embody both types of innovation.

Website:
Good People Co. LTD.

March 28, 2006

Internal Branding: Simulate to Emulate

Internal brand communication is critically important in ensuring excellence in brand delivery. It provides the ultimate course for guiding employee decisions and actions. It is particularly important in customer service environments, whether it is pre-sales, sales, or post-sales. Singapore Airlines is well known for its customer service and that service embodies the core of the experience of flying on Singapore Airlines and its service excellence is touted in its advertising. The company takes great care to ensure the consistency of its customer experience and requires extensive ongoing training for its flight staff and crew.

In this age of computers one method to activate internal branding is to utilize computer games as a training tool. The mention of computer games brings to mind titles like Grand Theft Auto, Super Mario, and Civilization all of which are hardly suited for brand training. However there is another genre of games that provide an example of how games are suited towards training. One example is Diner Dash 2. Diner Dash 2 is a game that has been played more than 100 million times and is in the top 20 on MSN games.

In Diner Dash the player is working in a restaurant and “takes on her character as she races to seat customers, take their orders, serve food, bus up the tables and, of course, pick up the check. The player earns points for getting the job done and is rewarded by getting to upgrade the restaurant, like hiring a mime to entertain customers.” With a little imagination you could see how a game like this could be modified for use in training people at Starbucks, Holiday Inn, McDonalds, and the like.

Computer games can simulate real life events with the benefit of eliminating the risks of on-the-job training where repercussions can involve customer defections. Simulations have value and that is exactly why the military uses battle games and the police use training games. Its time leading service brands embrace games as a supplemental tool to ensure quality in brand delivery. Even a firm, like Singapore Airlines, which already has an extensive brand training program, could make use of computer simulations to help maintain its leadership in brand delivery.

Web Link:
Diner Dash at Yahoo Games

Source:
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2006/03/27/BUGATHTT051.DTL

March 27, 2006

Floats like a butterfly, stings like a Jollibee?


What brands from the Philippines are well-known globally? San Miguel beer is a global brand from the land of pinoys, although many people think it comes from Spain. That is pretty much where the list stops, however Jollibee is an upcoming contender as a global brand and cultural ambassador from the Philippines. Jollibee is a fast food restaurant and also the name of its mascot which is a big bee in a chef’s hat.

Jollibee dominates the Philippine fast food market, where it currently has 1079 stores. It also has 121 stores in other countries including US, Vietnam, Indonesia and Brunei. It started in 1978 as an ice cream parlor and has since expanded its menu to serve hamburgers, spaghetti, hotdogs, chicken, palabok, burgersteaks, and fries.

McDonalds entered the Philippine market in 1981 and many assumed the Big Mac would soon dominate the market. Surprisingly, McD’s ended up getting stung by the bee. Jollibee has secured a 65% market share and is out pacing McDonalds at its own game. Jollibee accomplished this by local adaptation of the menu and by positioning the food chain as a family restaurant. Jollibee attributes this success in part to its internal branding which focuses on "great taste and happiness" which includes "value for money, the happiest store experience, and the haven for kids.”

Where was the first Jollibee in the United States? It is situated right in Daly City California, a city located just south of San Francisco. This was a particularly wise location to choose as Daly City is jam-packed with Filipinos who naturally head to Jollibee anytime they are struck with nostalgia for the Philippines.

Jollibee now faces a conundrum. Filipinos like their burgers sweet and juicy, spaghetti that makes Ragu look sugarless, fatty pork served with pork cracklings, and mango deserts. These dishes might satisfy cravings for the pinoy community, but if it wants to expand in the US beyond its current half dozen stores it will have to beat McD’s on its own turf by creatively modifying its offer.

Jollibee already slightly modifies its menu with its Jollimeal, a rice dish where the topping is tailored to local markets. Nonetheless, it seems a better and easier route for it to pursue expansion through other brands. This is a strategy it is driving towards with its house of brands that include Greenwich Pizza, Delifrance (French Bakery), Chowking (Chinese), and Red Ribbon Bakeshop.

Goldilocks, a Philippine bakery and restaurant that does $50 MM business in the US, seems better poised for US expansion than Jollibee. Goldilocks’ bakery and cafeteria combo keeps it from directly competing with the fast food giants and its wider menu allows it to introduce a greater variety of cross-over foods. However, rather than targeting the average Americans, it seems Goldilocks is better suited to attracting other Asians, like Chinese and Koreans, as it’s bakery style of cakes and sweet breads better cater to their palate. This could be a worthwhile niche market as its stores are based in California in neighborhoods with a sizable Asian population. And focusing on this niche market is less risky than challenging in the competitive fast food business that Jollibee faces if it mainstreams against McDs.

Take Aways
Local brands: Brands in local market are strong contenders and are not to be underestimated. Local managed brands often have the advantage of intimate knowledge of consumer tastes and consumer preference through local pride.

Dominant brands: Dominant brands from mature markets do not always dominate when entering foreign markets. Local tastes often differ and it would be wise to partner with local experts to modify the brand offerings so it is better tailored to local affinities.

Beach head strategy: Emerging market brands can easily establish a beach head in foreign countries by targeting areas with a high immigrant population. However, to sustain success in foreign markets a beach head strategy needs to be followed up with a successive change in strategy to enable the brand to go mainstream. Some brands have an easier path to succession as their expansion strategy may place it in an uncontested market, where as other succession strategies place the contender in highly competitive markets where entry might not be too attractive.

Brand Architecture: A house of brands strategy is inherently less efficient than a branded house. Yet, pursuing a house of brands strategy may be the only real option when faced with modifying your entry in local markets where your strategy would have to be completely different and therefore would not reflect the strengths and meanings of the original brand, and would possibly even dilute the original brand in its home market.

Related Websites
- Jollibee website
- Goldilocks web

Sources:
Jollibee corporate documents.

- Continental Cuisine, Dipayan Baishya. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News. Washington: Aug 17, 2005. p. 1

- Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, Your Beloved Products. By: Esfahani, Elizabeth. Business 2.0, Oct2005, Vol. 6 Issue 9, p29-30, 2p, 1 chart, 1c; (AN 19319805)

- Jollibee. By: Sudhaman, Arun. Media Asia, 12/17/2004 Supp Asia's Top, p34-35, 2p, 4c, 4bw; (AN 17164063)

- A busy bee in the hamburger hive. Economist, 3/2/2002, Vol. 362 Issue 8262, p62-62, 1p, 1 chart, 1 graph, 1bw; (AN 6266544)

- US Census, Texas Becomes Nation’s Newest “Majority-Minority” State, Census Bureau Announces (Accessed 3/22/2006) Site

March 20, 2006

Brand Incongruity: The Movies, The Stars, and The Bucks

Movie theater attendance has fallen for three years in a row. According to the Motion Picture Association, domestic theater attendance fell 9% last year to 1.4 billion tickets sold, which is down from 1.64 billion sold in 2002. That situation is not quite as blissful as the “sound of music” to the ears of movie execs.

So what do you do if you’re a movie exec? How do you rebuild the buzz?

Well, coffee certainly provides a buzz, and Starbucks has “star” and “bucks” in its name which are two things a movie exec has to like. With a grande cappuccino priced at about $3.46 the people who frequent Starbucks must have discretionary cash to burn. And since people need discretionary cash to see movies which are priced at $10 a pop (when DVDs can be rented for $3) that makes Starbucks customers quite attractive to someone who sells movies.

Lions Gate Entertainment, a smaller Hollywood studio, inked a deal with Starbucks where the coffee behemoth will be marketing its upcoming film "Akeelah and the Bee"

How the Coffee Chain Will Promote Films
 Offer movie trivia on a chalk board
 Feature words from the film inside the pastry display case
 Sell DVDs
 Ads on Coffee-Cup Sleeves
 Show trailers over its WIFI network

Starbucks needs to be careful in choosing what movies to promote. "Akeelah and the Bee" is about a child with a passion for spelling bees. This seems innocuous enough, but Lions Gate Entertainment also makes slasher flicks like “Saw”. When you create an alliance you are effectively co-branding so if people associate Lions Gate with slasher films, and see Starbucks is promoting films from that studio it could impact the coffee giant’s brand negatively, especially since Starbucks takes great care to promote a social mission in its charter. Brand incongruity can be a brand killer.

As a mere promoter Starbucks might not have an impact on the overall movie going audience. Nielsen Analytics found that high ticket prices and bad movies are the top reasons people are going to fewer films. And 36% are avoiding the theaters because of high concession prices. Concessions are the lifeblood of theaters as they only keep half the box-office receipts. The rest of their profits come from the concessions, where profit margins can top 85%. However, it seems Starbucks has high hopes to improve the quality of the movies, as it has indicated it might tackle movie production. And since its customers are already used to paying high fees for convenient food the movie theater owners might find the Starbucks crowd a profitable one.

Sources:
- Horn, John, “Now Showing: Declining Sales at Theater Snack Bars,” Los Angeles Times, March 16, 2006

- Gray, Steven and Kate Kelly “Starbucks Plans to Make Debut in Movie Business”, Wall Street Journal, 12 January 2006

The Start of Something: The ZIBS Blog

Welcome to the Zyman Institute of Brand Science's blog - where we focus on the intersection of branding practices and business performance.

The blog's goal will be to start conversations around a few topics of interest to ZIBS:

- Branding History
- Benefits of Branding
- Brand Strategy
- Resource Allocation
- Brand Lifecycle Management
- Marketing Programs
- Operations Management and Branding
- Brand Strength Assessment
- Brand Performance
- Brand Valuation
- Business to Consumer Branding
- Business to Business Branding
- Technology Branding
- Services Branding
- Branding Case Studies
- Branding Best/Worst Practices
- Private Label Competition
- Branding Commodities
- Branding in Emerging Markets
- Branding Retail Organizations

We invite you to participate, to contribute - ideas, suggestion, comments and insights. Join us in our learning journey...

We've been thinking about doing this for some time now, prodded by Greg, Christian and you, our visitors.