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Al and Laura Ries |
Rather than repositioning a brand, Al and Laura Ries,
marketing consultants and authors of two bestsellers on
branding, recommend creating a new one. Why? A brand
can stand for only one idea, and trying to extend it will
weaken it. Here are some of their tips for launching
powerful new brands.
Explain the concepts of brand divergence and
convergence?
The hottest concept today, especially in the
consumer electronics and high-tech fields, is
convergence. Convergence means to try to bring two
categories together. Most companies or organizations
are chasing this dream with products
like interactive television, the tablet
computer, the TV computer and the
smart phone. Divergence means to
create a new category, have a new
name and perform a single function.
Apple’s iPod is a divergence brand.
And the new Nano enhances Apple’s
reputation as the country’s most
brilliant exploiter of divergence
concepts. Divergence creates
endless opportunities to build new
brands. The day is coming when the
convergence bubble bursts.
Why do you believe that new,
successful brands can be created
only through divergence?
Our studies show that virtually
every successful new brand was
created by divergence of an existing
category. Take the first commercial computer, the
mainframe computer, the category that built the IBM
brand. Did the mainframe computer converge with
another product to create an opportunity to build a new
brand? No, the mainframe computer diverged creating
endless opportunities to build brands.
Some computer divergence categories and the
brands they spawned include: the minicomputer
(Digital Equipment); the workstation (Sun
Microsystems);the 3-D workstation (Silicon Graphics);
the personal computer (Apple); the business personal
computer (Compaq); the personal computer retail
store (Comp USA); the personal computer sold direct
(Dell); the handheld personal computer (Palm).
Virtually every product or service category goes
through the same process. It starts with a single product
and then through the process of divergence creates
many new categories and many new
opportunities to build brands.
What have been some of the
worst branding mistakes you
have witnessed over the past few
years?
Without a doubt, product or
service line extension. Instead of
launching new brands, companies
and organizations try to cover
diverging categories by line
extending their brand names.
Companies often line extend because
they are focused on building brands
rather than creating new categories.
But brands are worthless unless they
stand for something in the mind. And
the more things you try to hang on a
brand name, the less it stands for.
Invariably the long-term winners in
new categories are the brands with new names, not the
brands with line-extended names: Dell, not IBM personal
computers; Palm, not Compaq handheld computers;
eBay, not Yahoo! Auctions; Quicken, not Microsoft
Money; PowerBar, not Gatorade energy bars; Red Bull,
not Arizona Extreme Energy; H&R Block, not Merrill
Lynch Tax Service.
Tell us some branding success stories?
Dietrich Mateschitz was traveling in Thailand when
he encountered a popular health tonic called Krating
Daeng. When he returned to Austria, he decided to
introduce a similar product, which he called Red Bull.
Even more important than the Red Bull name was his
choice of a category name. He called the category an“energy drink.” As it happens, the first energy drink.
Red Bull benefits from an analogy with PowerBar, the
first energy bar.
Marketing can be visualized as filling a hole in the
mind. If there is a category called energy bar, the
prospect thinks, there must be a category called energy
drink. Red Bull, of course, was the first brand to fill the
empty hole in the mind called energy drink. Today, Red
Bull does $1.5 billion in sales worldwide.
Almost every branding success
story follows the same pattern. An
innovator notices an empty hole in
the marketplace and then introduces
a new brand that goes on to exploit
that new category. Some examples:
Starbucks, the first high-end coffee
house; Häagen-Dazs, the first high-end
ice cream; Silk, the first soymilk;
Spin Brush, the first battery-operated
electric toothbrush; Glide, the first
flat dental floss; Body Shop, the first
natural cosmetics company.
The list is endless and they all
follow the same pattern. Find an
open category and then develop a
new brand to dominate that category.
As the category takes off, your brand
also takes off.
A challenge for organizations is
how to develop customer loyalty to online and
offline brands. What’s the key?
By expanding a brand to include both online and
offline operations, you muddy the brand’s perception in
the mind. Not only should your online brand have a
different name, it should probably also have a different
strategy. The most powerful Internet brands have no offline
counterparts, Yahoo!, eBay, Amazon.com and
Priceline.com, for example.
Is there ever a time to reposition an organization
or brand?
The right time to reposition a company or brand is
when the market changes. For example, the market for
mainframe computers has been dying a slow death over
many decades. IBM has successfully repositioned itself
as a “global computer service company.”
You need a lot of patience to reposition a company or
brand. It’s harder to change a brand in the mind than it
is to put a new brand in the mind. So you need to give
the repositioning process enough time to make the
changes you want to make. Also, you need a link to the past. IBM was successful
because it traded on its mainframe reputation to build a
new position as a computer service company. You can’t
walk away from what you already are.
How important are “differentiation” and“innovation” for organizations to stand still and
live longer?
You need to differentiate between a brand and a
company. A brand lives or dies by its
category. Polaroid was a powerful
instant photography brand. But when
instant photography declined, so did
the Polaroid brand. The Polaroid
company, however, could have
prospered by introducing new
brands to exploit new categories.
They probably should have
introduced a new brand of digital
cameras. Instead, they tried to use
the Polaroid brand on regular film
and a variety of other products. They
all were failures and Polaroid, the
company, went bankrupt.
Kodak is making the same
mistake. They are trying to save the
brand when they should be trying to
save the company. The Kodak brand
means photographic film. Yet
because the photographic film business is dying,
Kodak is trying to use its brand name on digital
cameras and other digital products. Big mistake. They
should use a new brand.
Can you break down the steps that an
organization should take in creating a new,
successful brand?
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Find an open category in the mind.
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Give that open category a simple name. Sports drink,
energy bar, energy drink.
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Select a powerful brand name that conjures up vivid
imagery. Red Bull energy drink, DieHard batteries,
Amazon books, Silk soymilk.
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Launch the brand with an intensive PR campaign.
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When the brand is established, protect your position
with a massive advertising program.
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