34 Week 7: Why It Matters: Branding

Why analyze elements of a brand and explain how the brand-building process contributes to the success of products or services?

Pop Quiz!

Instructions: Grab a piece of paper and jot down answers to the following questions:

A mug containing a foamy drink. The foam is in the shape of a happy cat.

  • What is your favorite brand of clothing?
    • Why is it your favorite?
    • List a word or phrase that describes how this brand makes you feel:
  • What is your favorite brand of car?
    • Why is it your favorite?
    • List a word or phrase that describes how this brand makes you feel:
  • What is your favorite place to stop for coffee, donuts, a bagel, or some other snack?
    • Why is it your favorite?
    • List a word or phrase that describes how this place (which is also a brand) makes you feel:

Set the paper aside for a moment and keep reading. We’ll come back to it.

The Power of Brand

Brands are images that exist in your mind–and in the minds of other consumers–about the things around you: products, services, places, companies, people, entertainment, and so on. In a modern world that offers many choices, brands help simplify the decisions you make about what to buy, where to go, and how to spend your time.

Brands are powerful. When you explain why a brand is your favorite, you probably identify some of the traits or features of its products or services that explain rationally what makes it better than others. But rational explanations are just part of the story. Strong brands are powerful because they also tap into emotions. They make you feel a certain way, and that feeling is hard for any other brand to replicate—let alone replace.

Brands can cause people to spend more money on a product than they would otherwise. Brands can create a sense of loyalty and even lock-in—that haloed point where a tribe of dedicated fans always chooses one company’s product or services over another.

Five men wearing utilikilts and facing the camera, their arms crossed in front of their chests.
“Utilikilt” customers. Source: http://www.utilikilts.com/customer-photos

So how do they do it? What’s happening in marketing departments to create these powerful, emotional assets called brands?

What Creates a Brand Experience?

Go back to your pop quiz responses. Pick one of your favorite brands and list 2–3 things the company behind the brand provides to help make that favorite brand so memorable or special for you. It could be any of the following things–or something else entirely:

  • Brand name
  • Product design
  • The shopping experience
  • The post-purchase experience
  • People or communities associated with the brand
  • Product packaging
  • Advertising
  • Social media activity
  • Customer service
  • Comfort, convenience, or ease-of-use
  • Attitude or personality of the brand
  • Special information, deals, or promotions targeted to you
  • Membership or loyalty programs
  • Pricing or value for the money
  • Events or activities tied to the brand
  • Something else?

Marketers use these tools and many others to create the total experience with a product, service, or company that turns it into an actual “brand.” In this module, you’ll learn how a brand starts and discover what it takes to coordinate all the different parts of the unique brand.

Read on to learn more.

Learning Outcomes

  • Describe the elements of brand and how brands add value to an organization’s products and services

License

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Week 7: Why It Matters: Branding Copyright © 2015 by University of Minnesota is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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