Abstract
Good Brands
are the invaluable assets of any kind of organization- Profit or Non-Profit.
Developing, nurturing and managing good brands are the daunting tasks for the
organizations across the world. Given the huge impact of good brands on the
organizations’ market capitalization and ultimately on the very success of
that, developing good brands by invoking innovative as well as time-tested
brand building methods makes sense. Therefore, the Researchers are trying to
give a wholesome treatise on various Branding methods in order to make a solemn
appeal to the organizations across the sectors by keeping in mind that if a
brand should defy the dynamic changes in the business environment over the
period of time and attain the status of immortality in the collective psyche of
the customers, the organizations have to start the brand building endeavors on
the firm footing given by these methods.
Key
words: Branding
methods, Brand Archetype and Brand Resonance.
The Concept of a Brand
A brand is a set
of associations that a person (or group of people) makes with a company,
product, service, individual or organization. These associations may be
intentional – that is, they may be actively promoted via marketing and
corporate identity, for example – or they may be outside the company’s control.
The following points elucidate concept of a brand from different perspectives.











The key ingredients of a Brand
The following words, which
are in bold, indicate various ingredient of a typical brand. Every good brand
has a big idea behind it. In
order to correctly understand the big idea, one has to ponder over on the
following things: the core focus of the company; the kind of value the company fundamentally
imbibe; the core vision of the
company; if the company is personified, the kind of personality type it would like to be seen and understood; the core nature of the company’s offer -
on what basis, it is different from others; the kind of personality trait that could
be ascribed to the product; exact nature of the customer’s need. A good brand
should reflect its organization’s vision. There are many forms of vision of an
organization. It may be about what that organization would like to achieve in
future or it may be about ways and means to challenge the market or transform
an industry or it may be a big one or as simple as offering an existing product
in a completely new way.
It is essential of a brand
to imbibe certain values and that can be communicated either explicitly or
implicitly. The following are the few examples of Values in the context of a
Brand: quality, openness, innovation, individual responsibility, fairness, and
respect for the individual, empowerment, passion, flexibility, teamwork and
pride. The value can be expressed through graphic design, language, advertising,
staff training, the materials used in product manufacture and so on. After
completely doing the fundamental spade work of establishing ‘big idea’, vision
and values in connection with a brand, one has to infuse a personality trait
around the brand. Personality traits
could be ‘efficient and businesslike’, ‘friendly and chatty’, or perhaps
‘humorous and irreverent’, although they would obviously have to be appropriate
to the type of product or service sold. The product design, package, color being
used, packaging, brand name, brand logo, Unique Selling Proposition, the kind
of media channel chosen, celebrity chosen, etc., should be in tune with that
personality trait chosen for the brand.
Need for a brand
Effective branding elevates
a product or organization from being just one commodity amongst many identical
commodities, to become something with a unique character and promise. It can
create an emotional resonance in the minds of consumers who choose products and
services using both emotional and pragmatic judgments. People are generally
willing to pay more for a branded product than they are for something which is
largely unbranded as branded products ability to give perceived value to the
customers. Creating a connection with people is important for all organizations
and a brand can embody attributes which consumers will feel drawn to.
Essential Qualities of Good Brands





The Concept of Branding
If a brand results from a
set of associations and perceptions in people’s minds, then branding is an
attempt to harness, generate, influence and control these associations to help
the business perform better. While absolute control over a brand is not possible
due to outside influences, intelligent use of design, advertising, marketing,
service proposition, and corporate culture can really help to generate
associations in people’s minds that will benefit the organization.
Innovative Branding Methods to Develop
Good Brands
Method 1: Communicating the Brand
Promise in an effective way
As far as
this method is concerned, the following are the ways and means to communicate
the brand promise in an effective way.








Method 2: Imbibing Universal
Branding Truths
According
to this method, following are the universal branding truths:






Method 3: Tapping into People’s Deepest Desires
Brands that tap into people’s
deepest desires make strong lasting connections with those people. Deep desires
most often come from a feeling of lack but can also result from seeking a place
of safety, peace or comfort. The following are deep desires into which brands
can tap:
















Any brand that can make people
feel as though they have a little bit more of one or more of these if they
interact with the brand will connect with those people on a deeply emotional
level.
Method 4: Using Archetypes to develop Good Brands
Concept of Archetype
An archetype is a universally
understood symbol, term, or pattern of behavior, a prototype upon which others
are copied, patterned, or emulated. Archetypes are often used in myths and
storytelling across different cultures. In psychology, an archetype is a model
of a person, personality, or behavior. In philosophy, archetypes are referred
to as ideal forms of the perceived or sensible objects or types. In the
analysis of personality, the term archetype is often broadly used to refer to: A
stereotype-a personality type observed multiple times, especially an
oversimplification of such a type. An epitome-a personality type exemplified,
especially the "greatest" such example. Archetype refers to a generic
version of a personality. In this sense, "mother figure" may be
considered an archetype, and may be identified in various characters with
otherwise distinct (non-generic) personalities.
Jungian
Archetypes
The concept of psychological archetypes was advanced by the
Swiss psychiatrist Carl Jung, c. 1919. In Jung's psychological framework,
archetypes are innate, universal prototypes for ideas and may be used to
interpret observations. A group of memories and interpretations associated with
an archetype is a complex (e.g. a mother complex associated with the mother
archetype).
Archetypal Stories Are Universal C.G. Jung used the term
“archetype” to refer to universal ideas or characters he found appearing
consistently in dreams and stories from cultures around the globe. He felt that
the archetypes were what made up the content of our “collective unconscious.”
These characters shared fundamental similarities across time and across
geographies. Jung outlined five main archetypes:





Although archetypes can take on innumerable forms, there are a
few particularly notable, recurring archetypal images
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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Jung also outlined what he called archetypes of
transformation, which are situations, places, ways, and means that
symbolize the transformation in question. These archetypes exist primarily as
energy and are useful in organizational development, personal and
organizational change management, and extensively used in branding.
Brand as Stereotype and
Archetype
Stereotype
|
Archetype
|
Brands rooted in
Culture-specific norms are
simplistic and undifferentiated
|
Brands rooted in
Universal and eternal truths are
rich and distinctive
|
Source: www.livingbrands.co.uk
Figure
1: Brand as Stereotype and Archetype
An archetype is a universally familiar character or situation
that transcends time, place, culture, gender and age. It represents an eternal truth’
(Figure 1). Brand development is nothing short of creating a story that people
want to be part of; a character with values that have deep resonance which the target audience. Archetypes can be manifested
– and often combined – in a multitude of distinct ways, each of which taps into
primal needs and motivations whilst retaining the freedom and flexibility to change
external trappings with the times.
Companies
can develop their brand strategies by identifying the “archetypal” story that
best expresses their brand experience. These are stories like the hero, the
caregiver and the mentor, stories that have been told around the campfire since
the dawn of man. Archetypes prove to be very powerful tools to align a brand
around a key emotional need in a way that both the client and the consumer can
readily grasp. This approach has worked successfully for some of the largest
consumer brands in the world, as well as for small non-profits and even
business-to-business companies.
Consumers
don’t just buy products — they buy the story about the products, and all the
emotion that comes along with these stories. The power of identifying a brand
with one of these timeless stories is that the story already exists deep within
our subconscious — it does not need to be created. The task for the brand is to
simply evoke the story with cues. If it does this well, the brand will also
evoke the emotion that consumers seek to derive from the brand. Archetypal
stories like the “hero” story have existed through the ages because they
deliver on very important emotional needs all the humans share. The hero story
helps us understand our mortality and speaks to our desire to achieve great
things. Such timeless stories bring understanding and meaning to our lives.
The
task of an established brand is to discover and clarify its core archetypal (Figure
3) story. Psychological
interviews and their projective techniques are essential because the company needs
to discover the core emotional benefit that the fans derive from the brand, and
consumers often cannot tell that or are hesitant to tell marketers their true
reasons for buying a brand. The task of new or undefined brands is to identify
an archetypal story and stick with it. The key to selecting the right story is
to conduct the projective qualitative research to understand consumers’
emotional needs in the category. Once the emotional need is identified, the
team should select the archetypal story that delivers this need. Other key
consideration is how competitors have positioned themselves and whether or not
they own a relevant archetypal space
(Figure 2). If so, the
companies have two options: (1) outspend the competitor and try to usurp the
archetypal story, or (2) pick a different story. Archetypal branding works because
it appeals to deeply shared human needs like stability, belonging, discovery
and achievement.
Archetype that can be considered to build Good
Brands
Order
|
Group
Belonging
|
Self -Knowledge
|
Change
|
Source: www.theblakeproject.typepad.com
Figure 2:
Archetypes to Build Good Brands
Creator - GE
|
Stability
|
Discovery
|
Achievement
|
Belonging
|
Innocent – Coca-Cola
|
Mentor
The New York Times
|
Explorer – Jeep
|
Hero
Nike
|
Rebel
Apple
|
Magician
Disney
|
Lover
AXE
|
Source: www.brandgarten.com
Figure
3: A few Good Brands and their Archetypes
Method 5: Using Brand Resonance Model to develop Good Brands
According
to Kevin Lane Keller (2008), a good brand has essentially the following
dimensions: Brand salience,
imagery, performance, judgments, feelings and Resonance. The Brand salience is
to what extend consumers aware about the brand. If the customer knows very well
about which product category the brand belongs to and what kind of need the
brand fundamentally fulfills, one can infer that there is a good Brand
Salience. The Brand Performance focuses on product quality and service quality.
It entails the following aspects of product quality and service quality: Product
characteristics and secondary features, product reliability, durability, and
serviceability, service effectiveness, efficiency, and empathy, style, design
and price. Brand imagery tries to create unique image about the brand in the
customers’ mind. The aspects like User profiles, Purchase & usage, Situations,
Personality and values, History, Heritage, and Experiences are parts and parcel
of this dimension of a strong brand.
Brand
judgments talk about the basis in which customers evaluate the brand. In the
light of the bases like Quality, Credibility, Consideration and Superiority,
the customers evaluate and judge the functional strength of a brand relatively.
Brand feelings make the customers emotionally attached with the brand. Infusing
a few of the emotional constructs like Warmth, Fun, Excitement, Security, Social
approval and Self-respect in to a brand, marketers try to reach out to the
customers by making them emotionally connected with the brand. To develop Brand
resonance is the ultimate aim of a good Brand. One of the reliable yardsticks
to know whether a brand is a good brand is measuring the degree of brand
resonance it makes with its customers.
One of the significant indicators of Brand Resonance is the existence of
group of emotionally attached loyal customers.
Method 6: Building a Good Brand through Valued
Discrimination
According to Harsh V Verma (2002), if a brand delivers certain
benefits which are desired by the customers, provided that competitors in that
product category fail to deliver those benefits can be called as “Valued
Discrimination.” Answering to the following three questions will help a company
to understand the kind of valued discrimination it could infuse in to its brand.
For who is the product meant? (The Target Customers), what do competitive brands
offer? (The similarity) and what do customers desire/value but do not get? (Discriminative
Value). The procedure to achieve Valued Discrimination consists of the
following steps: Identify Segments ,understand
the key drivers of buying, determine Relative Importance of those
drivers from the perspective of the target customers and find sources of
Discriminative Value by singling out important drivers of purchase that are not
offered by the existing competitors.
Conclusion
The kinds of branding methods discussed in this paper are not
only innovative but also timeless. If these strategies are considered, either
by using one of that or a few of that combinely, and adopted in an organization
in right earnest, there is no looking back as far as the organization’s future
business prospects are concerned. It seems that everything in the universe is
governed by everlasting immutable laws. It is applicable to branding also. It
is a proven fact that understanding the underlying laws behind branding and
applying that through appropriate methods without any compromise are sure
recipe for any organization’s long-lasting success.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archetype