D2C09 Identifying The Product/Brand To Be Marketed Flashcards
Stages of product life cycle
- Introduction
- Growth
- Maturity or stabilisation
- Decline
Marketing strategy for each phase of the prod life cycle
Introduction
- Focus on getting product into market,
- Gain recognition and reputation
- Distribution limited to a few carefully selected channels to begin with
Growth
- Aim at broader target market,
- Encourage strong growth
- Increasingly widely distributed
Stabilization
- Highlight the difference between the product and other competing products
Decline
- Extend life cycle Improving product
- Update packaging,
- Reduce price to make it more competitive
- Seek new markets
Give the definition of branding, and describe its purpose
- CIM: the set of physical attributes of a product or service, together with the beliefs and expectations surrounding it
- a unique combination which the name or the logo of the product or service should evoke in the mind of the audience
Purpose
- Seeks to move a product away from being a commodity
- so that consumers want to buy that product even if it costs more than the minimum possible price E.g. Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc - Cloudy Bay compared with others
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To be successful a brand must create a positive image in a consumer’s mind. Describe methods used to do this.
Substance
- Consistently deliver same level of quality and style E.g., Champagne NV
Consumer trust
- (Due to consistency) trust a brand to always give them what they want
- E.g. supermarket own-brand wine- low-involvement consumers
Consumer engagement
- Consumer have a relationship with brand (ask for it by name)
- They feel the brand’s marketing strategy is aimed directly at them
- Changes need to be made very carefully
Brand story & what it covers
- Successful brands have a “story”
- Producer history - creates authenticity - link to place/time/product
- Where grapes grown (rocky/misty/special name? /resident animals?)
- How wine made - any philosophy or process
- Story behind name, label, bottle design
- Price, where wine is sold and how sold
- What other people say about the wine
Price premium
- many good brands command higher price
- Consumers view high price as a guarantee of quality
Longevity
- products associated with a long existence in the mkt (good ex in Champagne)
Strong brand name
- Is easy to to remember/ pronounce
- Translates well - e.g. of “mist” in German.
- May need to be adjusted for market (Lafite = La Fei in CN)
- Good to have reference to iconic geog feature
- Must be protected by trademark - beware China’s award to first ap,plicant, not first user
- Strength measured by? Brand equity is abstract concept, however many companies have consultants establish a value and they include this value on their balance sheet.
Brand Position
- Where a brand sits within a market and the indicators of that: value, standard, premium, super-premium
- Often linked to retail price
- Should be set at launch - can often be lowered to remain competitive, but seldom raised (except with significant work)!!
- Inexp end of market not a bad area - if that is be design. opport. for high vol….
- Some co’s have brands at various positions in the market (ladder….)
Private label brands
- found in various retail segments, benefit directly to the retailer (Sainsbury Tase the Difference)
Ladder Brands
- Give customers rungs to help them trade up to higher price / quality /expression of the brand
- 3 rungs:
- Accessible (least expensive bought most often)
- Stretch (affordable for special occasions)
- Aspiring (most prestigous)
- will be too expensive for the consumer but casts its “super-prem” glow over the entire ladder
- This does not work for low-inv cons - they may recog. Accessible/Stretch but will not even know that Aspiration exists
- Worst case scenario the entire ladder may be judged by the cheapest wine, result - higher levels just considered over-priced.
Soft Brand
- the cue that triggers choice of one product broadly over another, e.g. country of origin / GI or region / style / variety
- e.g. Australian / Burgundy/ “oaky chardonnay”
- controversial - many dispute this as branding, others use it actively
- GI’s often set up to create a regional identity and actually promote wine (“Napa” / “Marlborough” )
- example “Pouilly-Fume AOC” more likely to be remembered than a small producer’s name
Luxury Brands
- Similar to “fine wine” or “investment wine” - no definition
- Tend to be super-premium priced wines -few can afford
- Bordeaux Premier Cru Classe; Screaming Eagle
- Promote idea of scarcity: perceived
- Promote other assets such as fruit quality, vineyard, winemaking, rich heritage etc
- Promote the idea of luxury: sponsorship of exclusive and luxury events,
- Positioning in the most upmarket retailers / wine lists of fine dining restaurants
Name some examples of where ladder brands work well and what wines might be featured in these brands.
Explain when and why ladder branding does not work.
Ladder branding can be well illustrated with certain champagne houses:
Accessible: Pol Roger non-vintage
Stretch : Pol Roger vintage
Aspirational : Pol Roger Cuvee Winston Churchill
And then for Burgundy also one can illustrate this concept:
Accessible : Bourgogne Rouge,
Stretch : Gevrey-Chambertin
Aspirational : Le Chambertin Grand Cru
Ladder Branding does not work:
Low-involvement consumers
- Few will buy even the accessible range,
- They are unlikely to be aware that the aspirational wine exists
- WCS entire ladder is judged baded on accessible sample and the other tiers are simply considered overpriced.
What are the worlds leading brands in 2017, and how is their status judged?
- Top 10, “Wine Intelligence”consumer user data from 21 markets.
- criteria: awareness / purchase / connection (or affinity)
- sales value was not used
- Barefoot (USA)
- Casillero del Diablo (Chile)
- Carlo Rossi (USA)
- Frontera (Chile)
- Gallo family Vineyards (USA)
- Gato Negro (Chile)
- Jacobs Creek (Australia)
- J P Chenet (France)
- Mouton Cadet (France)
- Yellow tail (Australia)
List biggest champagne brands in 2016
- Moët &Chandon
- Veuve Clicquot
- Nicolas Feuillatte G.H.
- Mumm
- Laurent Perrier
- Taittinger
- Pommery
- Piper-Heidsieck
- Landon
- Canard-Duchene