Brands

Brand

A name, term, sign, symbol, or design, or a combination of them intended to identify the goods and services of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate them from those of the competition

Brand Equity

A set of assets (and liabilities) linked to a brand’s names and symbol that add to (or subtract from) the value provided by a product or service to a firm and/ or that firm’s customers.

Brand equity is a combination of intermediate consumer responses and both customer and firm benefits.

Consumer Responses that Make up Brand Equity

Strength of Association

Refers to the intensity with which target consumers link a particular word, phrase, or meaning to a particular brand.

Strong associations tend to those that are “top of mind” for the customer.

Measures of strength include the number of times an association was mentioned, rank order of the association and speed of recall.

Strength of association is often divided among two criteria: relevance and consistency.

Relevance: degree to which the brand is perceived as meeting the needs of the target customer.

Consistency:degree to which each element of the brand reinforces the brand intent.

Valence

Refers to the degree to which the association is positive or negative.

Uniqueness

Captures the degree to which the association is distinct relative to other brands.

Uniqueness can be further subdivided into distinctiveness and memorability.

Distinctiveness is the degree to which the brand is differentiated from competitors.

Memorability is the brand’s ability to provide a lasting communication effect.

Ways to Measure Brand Equity

Depth Interviews

Needed to dig deeply into respondents’ memories.

Portfolio of techniques

No single technique is adequate.

Complementary techniques interact with each other to stimulate respondents’ abilities to access and verbalize memories and overcome their unwillingness to share them with the researcher.

Validate research findings

Can be achieved using multiple techniques including structured and unstructured projective methods, in-depth interviews and surveys.

Finding the same associations with more than one method adds confidence to the results.

Techniques for measuring brand associations:

Thought listing

Visual techniques

Projective technique

Sentence completion

Depth interviews

Rating scales

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*