Search


  • WWW
    This Blog

  • Add to Technorati Favorites

About The Authors

  • Derrick Daye
    Managing Partner
    Email Derrick
    Derrick has spent the past 18 years helping organizations release the full potential of their brands. His experience is as deep as it is diverse encompassing the disciplines of advertising, branding, sales promotion and public relations. Most notably he has worked with the White House Press Corps, Johnson & Johnson and the National Basketball Association.

    Call The Blake Project - here's my cell:
    813.842.2260
  • Brad VanAuken
    Chief Brand Strategist
    Email Brad
    Recognized as one of the world’s leading experts on brand management and marketing, Brad wrote the best selling book Brand Aid, the first comprehensive practical, ‘how-to’ guide on building winning brands. A much sought after consultant and speaker, he writes extensively for the business press and academic journals and is regularly quoted in trade publications.

Categories

Top Posts

Recognition

  • TypePad Featured Weblog
  • Ad Age Power 150

    Featured in Alltop 9 Rules Member

« Brand Architecture Defined | Main | The Anti-laws of Luxury Marketing #7 »

September 11, 2009

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451b74a69e20120a561f43b970b

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Simply Different: A Brand Advantage:

Comments

Debashish Brahma

Excellent Post, I have a point to make with my observations.

It's a complete Features, Atractiveness, Benefits analysis that's required in the designing stages and post launching stages, be any product/services FAB is a must.

A=Attractiveness may be replaced by Advantages, value addition enhances the attractiveness,Sony, Microsoft, Apple all new features ,attractiveness, benefits, enhances the Brand Equity=Brand Valuation but the inherent strength of the product has to be there.

Apple CEO Jobs said:"Make Product The King"
Apple is a typical company whose growth has been organic, any product from Apple's basket has made them unique and this inherent strength and uniqueness has made them market leaders.

Warm Regards,

Debashish

twitter.com/justinbasini

I worry about any prescriptions one way or the other. There is undoubtedly a powerful approach to building a brand quickly through differentiation. However I wouldn't dismiss the simply better approach.

The Simply Better approach definitely requires long term commitment and change/development on a wide range of fronts, but if it can be captured - to be recognised as "simply the best" in any category is a source of long term competitive advantage.

Great blog and thinking. Thanks for sharing.

Justin Basini
http://www.twitter.com/justinbasini

Sam Ho

Interesting article, but I don't think brand innovation is the only driver behind its success-

1) I think the largest driver of success for the Wii is that it attracted new to market consumers ..because of the kinds of games that developers were producing for it. My grandma loves the Wii. It's the first console she enjoyed playing. She likes cuddly things, not guns and ammo! I prefer more serious games, so I will stick to the Xbox. (I'm male and 28 btw).

2) It's also important to not forget that a brand new Wii when it was first released was apx. $250 and a PS3 for example was apx. $500 - which is a very large cost differentiation indeed and undoubtedly another driver splitting the market and lending Nintendo some financial success.

Looking forward - with innovation such as Microsoft's Project Natal http://bit.ly/WfIAr - somewhat leveling the playing field and the likelihood that Microsoft and Sony are going to be the next in line to develop the next generation of consoles and not Nintendo, I don't think that we can assume that on the basis of innovation - Nintendo's current valued position right now will be sustained for a long time.

Joy Levin

Great point about being different - in other words, creating a unique, sustainable advantage. It would be difficult, if not impossible, for anyone to touch Nintendo, as they have, in effect, created an entirely different category - perhaps "exercise/video gaming", or "non-couch potato video gaming". In order to understand and develop products that are truly unique and impact purchase behavior, it is critical to understand which differences will meet the needs of the target and how to position the product correctly to communicate its benefits.

Joel Rubinson

I wrote an article in Marketing Research magazine about the ridiculous premise of simply better. I showed virtually no correlation between consumer reports ratings and market share in 4 appliance categories. Make a new promise, deliver on expectations--"better" leads you down a red ocean path every time.

On twitter @joelrubinson

twitter.com/dmartiniano

Interesting article!

I think that "different" in this case means adding new features/functions/capabilities to the platform or product that totally change the concept itself (in this case: the way we play videogames). If the new concept is accepted, it changes the paradigm of "linear improvement" in which we are supposed to improve a product by making its features better (better processors, graphic chips, more memory, more buttons for gamepads, etc).
Nintendo changed the paradigm (again) making it possible for grandpas and grandmas to play without the need of Hardcore Gamer's speed & sync skills.

Cheers,
D.

Paul Daigle

Interesting post. I've been exploring this topic. I would argue that just thinking differently may not be as important as engaging the will of the marketplace. The Wii is a gravity brand in an electric marketplace. See Gravity vs Electricity.

http://neteffect.wordpress.com/2009/09/18/gravity-vs-electricity

Verify your Comment

Previewing your Comment

This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

Working...
Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
Your comment has been saved. Comments are moderated and will not appear until approved by the author. Post another comment

The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

Working...

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until the author has approved them.

Partners

  • Special Offers from PR Newswire Scent World Expo FREE Marketing Magazine Subscriptions

Prefer email to a blog?

  • Sign up below and we'll send new posts to your email inbox. We'll never spam, sell or trade your address.

    Enter your email address:

    Delivered by FeedBurner

BSI on your Phone or Blog

  • Our Feed In A Widget

    Get this widget from Widgetbox
  • Our Feed On Your Phone

Featured Reading

2010 Brand Education Seminars



  • The Blake Project offers comprehensive seminars on many key branding topics. They are designed to educate and empower executives, brand managers and marketing professionals to release the full potential of their brands. Download 2008BrandEducation.pdf (675.2K)

Subscribe to the Brand Management Newsletter


  • A leading source for brand management insight, strategy and advice for marketing oriented leaders and professionals.







Follow BSI

  • Follow BrandingInsider on Twitter

Top Ten

  • Benefits of Building Strong Brands
    1. Increased revenues and market share
    2. Decreased price sensitivity
    3. Increased customer loyalty
    4. Additional leverage with vendors and retailers (for manufacturers)
    5. Increased profitability
    6. Increased stock price, shareholder value and sale value
    7. Increased clarity of vision
    8. Increased ability to mobilize an organization's people and focus its activities
    9. Increased ability to expand into new product and service categories
    10. Increased ability to attract and retain high quality employees