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BRAND SMALL BRANDS

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BRAND SMALL BRANDS
The small companies should
learn to understand this instrument in order
to be better equipped to govern and
strenghten their credibility.
But also to be able to understand the
strengths and weaknesses
of greater brands.
COCOS Jonas Bergvall
Should a small company use branding as a part
of its competitive strategy? I will point at some
factors that imply that brands with a small geographic
market have a good chance to steal
market shares from the gigantic, global brands.
If I ask you to think about a brand, one which
you consider to be a strong brand, the probability
that this would be a global brand is pretty
high. In rankings of the strongest, or the most
valuable, brand´s it is the same thing. It is the
global brands we tend to measure. But the most
important thing from a small brands perspective
is to be strong in its own defi ned market. However,
I will not defi ne an exact size of this market
to which these thoughts can be applied. My main
implication is that a smaller brand has an opportunity
to serve its customers in a more fl exible
and in a more creative way than its greater counterparts.
Most of all that goes for small brands
that live and breath closer to its customers than
big, global brands.
My belief is that many of these small brands
have a chance to get stronger if they stop having
inferiority complex against the bigger brands
and start to make their brands more clear and
focused, and build their brand in a new and exiting
way.
A defi nition of branding.
My defi nition of branding comes from the idea
that the winner in a competitive situation is the
product, or service, that the customers experience
as the best choice. The keyword is experience.
When a customer is about to make a choice
of buying something he weighs in several factors
against each other which in the end sums up in
what he experience to be his best choice. These
factors are partly the capacity and performance
of t he p roduct o r service, i n other w ords h ow
well it works in comparison to what the customer
is expecting. But also the brand´s ability to satisfy
more of the customer´s needs, may it be
cultural, psychological, social etc. These intangible
assets are what you through branding want
to control and collect under one symbol so that
it will be easy for the customer to identify the
product which he feels satisfi es his needs in the
best and most exciting way.
Branding demands a lot of money
Considering that the strongest and most valuable
brands seem to be global it is easy to come
to the conclusion that the only ones that are
able to build strong brands are big, multinational
companies. It seems like branding always have
to cost a lot of money since it can only be done
through advertising and media. And big investments
in media takes a lot of money.
Yes, big investments in media do take a lot of
money. But no, brand building is not done solely
through advertising and media. This is a misconception
that in many cases lead small brands to
think that they have to focus on product and
price. You can think of it this way, global brands
are forced to invest heavily in media due to their
lack of possibilities to be present locally everywhere,
which simply would be even more expensive.
The paradoxical in this situation is that global
brands may feel closer to its customers than
the smaller brands, even though they are much
closer physically. The big brands invest in for
example TV-commercials and activities on the
web which b ring their b rands into your homes.
You can not get much closer than that. Or can
you?
Branding and small companies
It is like David´s fi ght against Goliath with the
difference that most people no longer only want
to see David as the winner. Even though it seems
like it is a human characteristic to support the
smaller a nd w eaker, w e now know Goliath so
much better than David. We know what Goliath
stands for, what he believes in and what he wants
to accomplish.
What do the smaller brands do?
Small companies with local and regional markets
seem to have accepted the global brand´s dominance
over their customers and live by the convention
that branding costs too much money
and they are left to compete with product offerings
and price. Even though they have realized
their opportunity to offer personal service, it is
seldom you come across companies that manage
to do so in a unique or exiting way. Therefore
they do not manage to overcross the hindrance
which the credibility of the big brands put up.
This seems to be a general phenomenon, no
matter if it is consumer or B2B.
The small brand´s opportunity
Then what can the small brands do to increase
their profi tability, or even survive, in their struggle
against the great brands?
I think they have a great opportunity to create a
compelling experience with the customers which
would insure them that the small brands are a
better choice. After all, branding is nothing new,
it has always been crucial for anyone who wants
to sell something to gain credibility. But the small
companies need to understand this instrument
in order to control and strengthen their credibility,
and also to better understand the strengths
and weaknesses of the greater brands.
You do not build a strong brand only through
advertising and media, it is the collected, over
all experience that makes a strong brand. This
experience is infl uenced by all encounters you
have with a brand, how the salesperson act, how
other personnel interact with you, service, packaging,
public relations, contributions to the community
e tcetera. T here m ay e ven be w ays to
interact with your customers that has yet to be
invented. The bottom line is to which degree you
manage to satisfy those needs that you have
promised to satisfy. One of the problems big
brands have to deal with, is how to deliver what
their advertising has promised. It is diffi cult for
big companies to have complete control over
the whole experience all through the distribution
channel. There are of course exceptions, but
over all, most big brands are dependent upon
subcontractors when it comes to the distribution
channel. The consequences of this are that they
have to deal with the channel as more of a distribution
channel than a communications channel.
Apple computer is a good example of a strong,
global b rand w hich r ecently found themselves
forced to expand their brand experience by opening
Apple branded stores. Earlier they were
dependent upon the good will of the computer
to promote Macintosh, Apples computer brand.
This move is probably expensive, and for the time
being limited to the North American market.
McDonald´s is also a good example of a brand
who tries hard to push the brand experience
down to the local restaurants. But McDonald´s is
also an example of how diffi cult it is to manage
the experience over time. How many times have
you not waited a lot longer for your hamburger
than what you have come to expect? How
many times have you not felt that the young
person behind the counter really would like to
be somewhere else, and therefore not being able
to perform the service you expect? Naturally,
McDonald´s deals with these kinds of problems,
and over all manage to handle them very well.
But it shows how hard it is for a big company
to be consistent, despite all control and internal
education. It is after all a very simple product, a
hamburger.
But if it is diffi cult for a big brand to be consistent,
there is something that is even more diffi -
cult, namely to be fl exible and creative. You do
not easily change direction with a tanker that has
gained speed.
Small companies and small brands have a great
opportunity to take advantage of the giant´s
weaknesses. In small companies there is the
opposite situation from the big companies. Small
companies have fl at organisations, the decision
making process should be a lot easier and they
are physically close to the market they wish
to attract. Yes, small companies may have less
money to spend on large media, but due to their
small sizes a possibility to create a near, unique
and possibly also an exciting experience for their
customers. In a small organisation it should be
much easier to manage and perform a consistent
branding strategy.
The possibility lays not in thinking big, but to
think further. A small company has an opportunity
to stop saying ”if we only had money we
would communicate in large media”, and take
better use of existing channels to create an
expressive experience for its customers.
Creative Sales Promotion
- an underestimated experience
A concrete suggestion to small companies and
small brands is to examine their sales promotion.
When you are short on money the risk is that you
focus too much on short term sales. When the
battle against big brands already feels lost it all
becomes a struggle of taking what you can, often
by putting the focus on price. But due to the littleness
of the small companies they seldom have
the resources to create long term cost advantages,
but are forced to a profi tability way below
the market leading brands. Sales risk to become
a hunt for closures where your own short term
interests are more important than the ambition
to create satisfi ed and loyal customers. The internet
does not make the situation any better where
it is becoming increasingly easier to fi nd undifferentiated,
cheap products and brands. This is
naturally an attracting place for those who are
always looking for the lowest price.
For t hose s mall c ompanies a nd b rands w ho
w ish to explore the possibility to use branding
as a part of their competitive strength, I suggest
that the sales channel, or the sales force, is a
good p lace to start. This is w here you a lready
are in contact with your customers and the sales
people are often in a crying need of better support.
Since the big brands have to go through
big t rouble t o ”push dow n” t he b rand e xperience
through the distribution channel, and may
not be giving sales promotion top priority, this is
the perfect place to create unique experiences.
Also, among advertising agencies, sales promotion
has not been as fancy to work with as TVcommercials
or other large media.
In business after business we see that they are
dominated by a few market leaders, and these
are often globally active brands. The smaller
brands with a narrower geographic market are
left to fi ght for the bits and pieces that are left
over. Some even see a moral dilemma in the
dominance of the big brands, not least after the
release of the book No Logo by Naomi Klein.
But from a small brand´s perspective this is
more of a profi tability problem. But why are there
so few small brands that act with a clear differentiation
strategy and make themselves heard and
liked?
Surely, there are as many explanations as there
are brands and there are differences from nation
to nation. In Sweden for example we have something
which is commonly referred to as ”the law
of Jante”. This nationspread convention means
”you shall not consider yourself to be somebody”.
Although this conception has lost its grip
around the swedish minds, it still sets its mark on
the swedish society. To differentiate yourself, to
make a stand, is therefore something that probably
feels awkward and strange. In a small organisation
there are a few people who are to stand
by the identity of the brand and communicate its
aspiration. This makes it much more diffi cult to
”hide” than if you are part of a bigger organisation.
Many small companies are founded and run by
entrepreneurs who are often mainly focused on
a product or a service in which they saw a potential
in the fi rst place. Unfortunately this makes it
diffi cult for him to think that marketing could be
something else than solely that product or service.
When the big brand comes along and satisfi
es more of the costumer´s needs, other than
the functional needs the product or service satisfi
es, the competitive strength of the small brand
becomes rather weak.
The will to invest in a small brand may be connected
to the small companies´ will to grow at all.
If that is the case, maybe we can learn something
from a l icentiate thesis written by Henrik Barth
at Luleå university, Sweden. In order to write the
thesis ”Barriers to growth in small fi rms” Barth
interview ed 1 .240 small c ompanies i n Sw eden,
Finland, Belgium and Ireland about what they see
as the main hindrances for innovation. Although
the results differ between the countries the conclusion
is that a company has problems to grow
above t he s ize w here t he C EO n o longer c an
manage e verything by h imself. Lack o f know ledge
about organisational issues makes it hard
to create an organisation that are able to grow.
Also the lack of knowledge in other areas and the
diffi culty to attract competent employees makes
it even more diffi cult.
Since an effective brand strategy in a small
company depend upon its organisation this is a
serious problem. To have a stiff hierarchy and
other internal problems is of course not a good
way to start if you want to stimulate your organisation
to communicate certain common values
Why do we not see more of the small brands?
Jonas Bergvall
COCOS
phone +46 152-150 01
e-mail cocosagency@mac.com
 

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