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If properly designed, brands should promise relevant differentiated benefits to their target customers.
Carefully choosing the most powerful benefits will not only result in brand preference, but brand insistence. That is, the brand will be perceived to be the only viable solution for the customer’s need. Put another way, the customer will not pursue substitutes if the brand is not available. The brand establishes a consideration set of one.
The optimal benefits for a brand to claim are those that are:
(1) very important to the target customer
(2) supported by organizational strengths
(3) not being addressed by the competition
Ideally, the brand tries to ‘own’ only one or two key benefits, as that is all a customer will remember. The benefits should be understandable, believable, unique and compelling.
A brand’s promise can be stated as follows:
Only [brand] delivers [unique differentiating benefit] to [target customer].
Following are the most common sources of brand differentiation [unique differentiating benefits]:
The brand promise should be reinforced with proof points to substantiate its claim, that is, to make it believable. The following are the most common types of proof points or ‘reasons to believe’:
The Blake Project Can Help Differentiate Your Brand: The Brand Positioning Workshop
Branding Strategy Insider is a service of The Blake Project: a strategic brand consultancy helping brands create and communicate value through Brand Research, Brand Strategy, Brand Licensing and Brand Education
C.A.T. (competitive advantage tool) – philosopher stone of advertising…
It’s a very useful tool to build strong brand will form such customers’ attitude that will allow effective usage of value pricing; strong brand forms inspirational attitude towards it, and that drive sales and grow market share. (examples: Nescafe, Coca-Cola in FMCG, Apple with its products in electronics, Nokia, Sony-Erickson in mobile phones; HSBC in banking, Vodafone in mobile communications, Armani, D&G, CAT in wear and many more).
In addition to the “what” your brand delivers, the “how” you deliver can also a really important source of differentiation. Its about a combination of smart strategy PLUS excellent execution. Some of things can help differentiate through execution include:
– Tone of voice
– Colours/symbols
– Spokespeople (real or imaginary)
– Being first to market
– Over-commiting in investment