The point I'm going to make today is that great branding comes about
through great innovation and that licensing is a way for brands to
innovate ahead of the market opportunity curve. So why is innovation so important to branding? If you ask enough people what a brand is some will say it's a logo or a
product, some will say a mark of quality, or a promise of an
experience. Eventually, if you dig deep enough, people start to talk
about a set of values, or even a belief system.
A logo and a product
are only the tip of the iceberg—what lies beneath all brands is a
vision and a degree of faith in that vision. If I say Apple, Levi's, Coca-Cola or Montblanc, I immediately trigger
off a set of synapses in your brain that conjure up an image, a taste,
maybe even a sense of status—all based on a set of beliefs and
expectations built up during continued and consistent brand exposure.
If you were asked to describe the NASA brand you'd probably find words
like "exploration of space for the benefit of mankind"—much more than
just a logo.
You can register an image or a trademark but real
intellectual property is in the minds of people who believe in the
brand's ability to deliver. Brands generate belief as the result of an
innovation process that can broadly be broken down into:
- Identify a market opportunity that justifies belief and invest in a specific competency.
- Develop that competency to a point beyond the initial market
opportunity so that as the belief is realized, the business can grow.
- Develop a reputation for the brand by consistently delivering the product/service.
In my opinion, sustained market-making innovation beats advertising
hands-down as a powerful way of forming a strong and distinct mental
impression and gaining continual brand recognition—as Jean Noel
Kapferer puts it in his book Strategic Brand Management: "Brands are rejuvenated by new products matching new needs, not by advertising."
In the 60s, Jaguar's designers identified an opportunity for a
groundbreaking sports car and rightly believed that the E-type would
give them sustainable ownership of the category. In the 70s, Sony
uncovered the latent desire to have your own music in your own space,
making the Walkman the teenage product du jour; and in the 80s Apple
created a stylish, user friendly personal computer giving the Apple
brand the right to innovate in a wide range of categories where
personal computing and style overlap.
Of course it's easier to own innovation in the expensive
world of high-tech but even in FMCG there are brands that can claim to
have created categories through innovation. Innocent is the definitive
smoothie brand. Häagen-Dazs and Ben & Jerry's grew the luxury,
adult ice-cream category by investing heavily ahead of the curve.
Kellogg's launched Nutrigrain to bring us breakfast in a bar. Red Bull
and Gatorade brought us energy drinks. So the question is, if brands
can claim category ownership through innovation, why don't we see
established brands innovating more successfully?'
Well the short answer is that innovation is easy when all you
have is faith. Once you have a successful business with real profits,
developing new competencies is risky and expensive. It takes a long
time, drains resources away from the core business, and risks the
brand's reputation.
A lot of branded innovation is actually incremental,
developed in response to market opportunity—as people moved from
cassette to CD, the Sony Walkman became the Sony Discman. Surprisingly
though, Sony missed the whole MP3 opportunity until it was too late.
Apple's broader underlying vision meant they were geared up to exploit
the market opportunity presented by music digitalization, and their
reputation for technological innovation meant customers were ready to
trust them. Apple didn't have to massively extend their manufacturing
or programming base to launch the iPod because their vision meant they
were already experts in hardware, software and networking. Smart brands
like Apple don't just grow in response to market opportunity, they grow
market opportunity by harvesting competencies built to support the
unrelenting pursuit of a relevant vision.
It would probably have taken Caterpillar forever to build the
business case, let alone develop, manufacturer and distribute a
successful clothing range. Their shoe manufacturer recognized the
brand's relevance in rugged outerwear and, after securing a license,
grew the market such that, in some countries, Caterpillar is better
known as a fashion brand than a hard goods manufacturer.
In today's world, brand origin has been lost (everything is
made in China), the product development cycle is speeding up
(everything is made in China while we sleep), and fashion and celebrity
culture has invaded every category from ready meals and functional
foods to curling tongs, cooking equipment and furniture (because of
reduced development cycles, media-fragmentation and because
everything's made in China). Functional benefits are easy to imitate
and in grocery stores, private label is the number-one brand in
virtually every category. Pressure on brands to reduce margins is only
matched by the pressure to innovate.
In today's economy, brand's often can't justify the time and
expense of developing new competencies until they are well behind the
opportunity curve. Successful licensing offers a way of accelerating
new product development and deepening brand relevance. However, before
licensing, brand owners should invest in learning one more important
new competency: "How to run a licensing program."
Why is it hard to set up a licensing department?
One of the reasons so few specific licensing departments exist is
because licensing intersects with many other areas of business. As a
Brand Licensing Consultancy, our work overlaps with both internal and
external teams including:
Brand—because new products will only add to the brand's
relevance if we communicate the strategic brand vision to partner
manufacturers—in some cases that means helping to research and reinvent
the vision itself.
Legal—before licensing your brand into new categories, you
need to understand the details of your trademark registrations, and any
copyright issues there may be over images and designs. You may also
have to issue cease and desist letters to people who are currently
infringing on your brand in different categories, and you'll almost
certainly have to prepare a standard licensing contract.
Design—because licensees need brand guidelines and these can
be very different from the current guidelines. This is especially true
if the brand is moving down the price scale where logos are more
ostentatious and design more disposable.
Marketing—because licensees need help communicating the point
of difference and the underlying vision, and the internal marketing
department needs to be part of any conversation about licensing.
Technical—because new licensees production processes need to be inspected and approved.
Trade sales—because sometimes the licensor has to supply a core ingredient
Other licensees—joint promotions and marketing initiatives should deliver the brand consistently to the consumer
Online—because the new products will need online marketing
Retail sales—because we're screwed unless we're SKU'd.
Accounts—because unless you collect your royalty and audit potential licensees, things can very quickly get out of control.
So how do licensing experts do things?
Licensing experts, Disney Consumer Products, generated $21 billion in
retail sales in 2005, up 15% over 2004, with 2006 projected at $23
billion. Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Winnie the Pooh are some of the
most successful licensed brands in history so it's useful to study
their activity as an example of how licensing can work. After serving
out a 10-year contract with McDonalds, Mickey and Winnie have responded
to the obesity epidemic by reinventing themselves and getting ahead of
the healthy eating curve. Mickey has abandoned the burgers and is
working hard as an ambassador for healthy, locally sourced food.
Across the world "Farmer Mickey" and his friends are helping
to sell fruit, vegetables and other nutritious products in conjunction
with major retailers such as Tesco, Carrefour, and Krogers. One of my
favorite variations on this theme is Marvel-inspired vitamins which
have taken a leaf out of Popeye's book by licensing onto Spiderman
Vitamins. There is a risk attached though—imagine the disappointment of
the adult who, after taking these pills for years, fails to develop the
ability to walk up walls!
The move into making fun healthy food, is fully in line with
Disney's vision of family friendly fun and speaks volumes for their
licensing expertise. Disney Consumer Products have such confidence in
the power of their brands that when they decided to launch into another
category, consumer electronics, they invested heavily in research,
commissioned product designs and even sourced factories in China ready
to make the designed product. Only at that stage did they initiate
conversations with manufacturers and distributors. This up front
investment massively reduced the licensee's risks and increased the
prospects of success.
Any brand manager who dismisses licensing as a cheap way of
generating quick incremental income or a way of developing merchandise
is missing the point. Licensing is brand building through innovation
and can be an integral part of the marketing and new product
development process.
A licensing program should start with a blank piece of paper
and some real, out-of-the-box thinking. We use mind-maps to help
understand how the brand can pivot around specific axes. Other
companies will run consumer ideation sessions generating a list of
possible extensions.
Once you strip your brand back to its core vision it's almost like
starting again. Yes, Montblanc makes expensive, high quality pens—but
the owners have decided that the brand's vision is about delivering
luxury in other categories and have taken the brand into familiar
lifestyle extensions such as perfume, jewelry, eyewear, and leather
goods. Putting aside the practicalities of product ranges and extended
SKU's and tapping into the real Montblanc vision, it could be argued
that Montblanc is actually in the enhanced written communication
business and the founder would probably have been more intrigued by
PDA's than perfume. Imagine the potential features of a Montblanc
PDA—valuable raw materials, totally indestructible, beautifully
engineered, great design, works every time, beautiful packaging in
short: as valuable as the work you'd do on it. Aren't these qualities
more in-line with the brand's vision than the ephemeral vanity of
perfume? This is especially true when you see the perfume because the
only liquid I associate with Montblanc is ink.
So what do you do once you know what categories you want to be in?
In Strategic Brand Management, Jean-Noel Kapferer
writes about his research on brand extension which found that consumers
gave brands permission to extend a long way, but only after a series of
steps via related extensions. This step-by-step consumer buy-in means
it's not only important to consider which potential extensions are
brand enhancing, but also in which order to pursue them.
It's a long way from Jaguar cars to Jaguar speedboats but it would be
possible via Jaguar motors that could be applied to everything from
lawnmowers to leaf-blowers to boats—Honda has successfully extended
along this axis.
To establish an order it's important to prepare a clear
strategy evaluating opportunities against criteria weighted according
to priorities of speed, visibility, revenue generation and target
audience. With this approach some of the far out extensions may end up
higher than expected on the list of priorities because they stake a
claim to new territory.
Land Rover's move into licensed baby buggies in the 90s was a
great example of the rugged proto-military machine's transformation
into the family friendly people carrier. This category may not have
been top of the list in ideation sessions but it was a great strategic
fit, putting Land Rover way ahead of the emerging Chelsea tractor
curve.
With a clear licensing strategy in place, a style guide can
be prepared featuring potential products, packaging, and artwork. This
will save a lot of heartache later when several licensees propose
alternative color schemes for similar products.
Food brands looking to develop a licensing strategy need to
consider developing a flavor map as well as a style guide. In recent
work for OXO, we developed a set of recipes pivoting on the brand's
axes of Beef, Chicken, Lamb, and Vegetarian—using the colors to
identify which were the target product areas and which flavors best
suited these food groups.
What happens to brands that don't innovate?
A walk through the Museum of Brands in Notting Hill provides
interesting food for thought because the display cases are full of
advertisements and packaging from brands for boot blacking and other
arcane household products that no longer exist. Whilst these ancient
brands might have spotted and satisfied a market opportunity, they
didn't notice it disappear and so they no longer exist.
Unless their vision is deep enough, companies only invest in
technology and core competence to extend their offering in response to
market opportunity, putting them at risk from increasing competition
and the winds of change. Core competence is slow to learn, and rarely
reproduces the impact of the original innovation.
The deep underlying vision of successful brands ensures that they
already have the competence they need to create new market
opportunities and can grow market opportunity and brand relevance in
tandem. Smaller brands with a deeply relevant vision but no power to
invest should consider licensing rather than powerlessly witnessing
their market's decline. The only sustainable competitive advantage
brands have over private label is a vision built on a genuine heritage
and history that originated the category in the first place. If you're
not satisfying the next generation of customers your claim to history
and heritage diminishes in value every day. To accelerate growth and
brand extension via licensing, brands need to invest in developing
licensing competency so that new products deepen their reason for
being. If they can't find a reason for being, it may be time to move
on.
(Source: Interbrand)
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