The most imperative issue threatening brands this year isn’t particularly new. In fact, it’s been with us for a while.
An almost complete lack of differentiation is threatening the very existence of many brands. Of course, brand equity has, for various reasons, been in steady decline for some time. But changing consumer behaviors and a shifting media landscape make it more crucial than ever that brands focus their marketing communications efforts on stemming this loss.
To some extent, the blurring of brands in consumers’s minds can be attributed to the most active marketplace in the history of humanity. We have more choices than we can handle in most areas of commerce. This makes it hard for any one brand to stand out or to have a meaningful position in the mind of the consumer, especially if it’s in a product category considered dull (like toilet cleaners) or dreadful (like insurance). Even the best marketers in the world struggle with this.
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Unfortunately, this is made worse by the fear of missing out among advertisers and ad agency types that comes from a
world where advertising is viewed as largely dependent on emerging technology. It’s an assumption not often questioned by advertising decision makers, which leads to decisions that can hamper
results.
Digital and social media can play a key role in amplifying a brand’s messaging and motivating purchase. But, as wielded by many brands, digital and social media are not helping
to build perceived differentiation or brand equity.
When one focuses on media platform exposures or tactics that are close-in to the sale rather than an effort to build the brand, the brand suffers. Now, with a disproportionate fixation on tactics, trends, and possible sources of FOMO, a focus on brand-building is as scarce as ever. This is happening at a time when that focus is needed more desperately than ever.
So what’s a marketer to do?
It’s imperative for a brand to diagnose if each aspect of its advertising — be it ads run on TV, digital, social, outdoor, or other platforms — is pulling its weight or can realistically do so. For starters, here are some questions marketers can ask themselves:
If the answer to any of these questions is “We don’t know,” you’re not alone. The good news is, the answers are knowable and can help marketers regain (or create in the first place) the differentiation every brand needs to survive.
By measuring the right things, establishing distinctive brand assets, and focusing intensely on brand-building, advertisers can make massive gains in 2018. If they don’t, their competition just might take the moves that leave them in the dust.
Jeri, I both agree and disagree. Most advertiser spend a lot of money in ads and promotional efforts to create brand awareness and position their brands favorably abong product users. To do this, they do a lot of research on their brand's image, how it is perceived, how it does or does not fit in with the needs and mindsets of various user segments, etc. Once an ad campaign is launched, the savvier advertisers track these aspects as well as sales and make whatever adjustments are needed. They also engage in a great deal of sales promotion activity, including direct response efforts, often via digital means. Ideally these operations are coordinated for an overall effect. So, of course, advertisers should try to position a brand among consumers and, yes, this is more difficult when there are so many product categories---many new ones--- crying out for our attention. But I'm not certain that many advertisers have stopped positioning their brands and are now fixated on the direct response function. Nor am I aware that many brands have become lost in the crowd, so to speak. Most consumers who use a particular product or service, still have a favorite brand, along with second and even third choices---just as before. They don't just go to a store and buy brands at random. Brand loyalty still exists, though it's important to maintain it at a high level---if possible----by providing a consistantly good product, upgraded as necessary, as well as by advertising. Finally, many of the things in your checklist are extremely difficult to do. For example, determining the ROI of each media element utilized is almost impossible as their effects overlap and there are cummulative factors that defy analysis. I do agree, that many advertisers have failed to sharpen their evaluations and even to try to answer the questions you pose. That's a mistake. Just as treating media as an eyeball garnering, by the numbers, exercise with CPMs being the main focus is a mistake---a huge one. Sadly, I doubt that this will change in the near future.