Jan 17

?People spend money when and where they feel good.??
- Walt Disney

Most brands & products are now interchangeable. This sad statement emanates from one of the fathers of marketing, Philip Kotler.

For a brand to be identified, recognized and understood in its values is the core of every strategy, the nagging issue of every marketing manager.

However, in a competitive environment where the usage & functional value of a brand (a product or a service) can be easily copied or duplicated, what is left to stand out from the crowd? How can the customer?s preference be triggered to ensure their loyalty? How can the tie that will closely link your brand to the consumer and put you ahead of the competition be built, retained or strengthened?

These are questions to which sensorial branding answers: use senses (and their impact on the consumers? perceptions) to enrich the brand experience and build up its uniqueness and personality, while ultimately paving the way to the consumers? affection, preference and loyalty.

Sensorial branding (and sensorial marketing) fills the gap left by traditional marketing theories when it comes to answering today?s consumer mindset. This new kind of thinking finds its origins in the ?90s, with the shift from the rational mindset that formerly prevailed in the consumer?s decision-making process to the emotional and hedonist quest that now drives their desires and consumption acts.

In reaction to an increasingly virtual and pressurized industrial world, people have started seeking a way to reconnect to reality in their private sphere, for a pathway to re-enchant their world. The individual values of pleasure, well-being and hedonism rose along with a true new concept of consumption that exposed the limits of traditional marketing theories.

Consumption today is a form of ?being?. Just like any leisure activity, it becomes a place to express a piece of your personality, where you share common values with a small group of other individuals (a tribe). And maybe more than anything else, consumption acts must be analyzed as ?felt? acts, as experiences capable of providing emotions, sensations and pleasure.

Purchasing acts are driven by this desire for sensational experiences that re-ignite senses and drive emotions. No matter how effective a product may be, it is its hedonist and emotional added-value, as well as the distinctive experience it offers, that lead consumers to buy it and ensure its loyalty.

What does it mean from a branding point of view?

First, it means that price and functionality are now taken for granted (or, in other words, not sufficiently differentiating). It is now the intangible, irrational and subjective attributes of the brand offering that are the new factors of success.

Second, it highlights the fact that sensations, new experiences and emotions must be part and parcel of the brand experience. It is through these 3 channels that the brand can create greater differentiation, influence consumer?s preference and secure their affection.

In summary, focusing the brand strategy on rational arguments regarding its functional value is no longer sufficient to ensure success. What is clear is that empowered brands are the ones managing to deliver hedonist and emotional attributes throughout the brand experience. This is where brands can add meaning and, therefore, value and sense to products and services, transforming them from interchangeable commodities into powerful brands.

This is where sensorial branding is competent: exploring and unveiling how brands can connect with people in a more sensitive way, at this true level of senses and emotions. To put it more clearly, it focuses on exploring, expressing, and empowering the brand?s hedonist and emotional potentials.

In this theory, sensations prevail because they are a direct link to consumers? affections. Senses are directly affected by the limbic part of the brain, the area responsible for emotion, pleasure and memory. In a way, it is no big surprise. This is all about going back to basics, to what actually appeals to a human being on an everyday basis. Sense is a vital part of our human experience. Almost our entire understanding and perception of the world is experienced through our senses. A growing number of research shows that the more senses your product appeals to, the greater the brand experience.

While communication & visual identity focus mainly on sight and sound, an accurate poly-sensorial identity integrating touch, smell (and taste when applicable), sends a more powerful emotional message to consumers, multiplying the connections or touch points through which the consumers can be attracted, convinced and touched by the brand. It enables and encourages consumers to ?feel? and ?experience? the brand (product or service) with their ?emotional brain?.

As Martin Lindstrom, author of best-selling book Brand Sense states, success lies in mastering a true sensory synergy between the brand and its message.

The first brand to intuitively implement the sensorial branding theory was Singapore Airlines. Like any other airline company, Singapore Airlines? communication and promotions primarily focused on cabin comfort, design, food and price. The breakthrough was made when they decided to incorporate the emotional experience of air travel. The brand platform they implemented aimed at one simple, but rather revolutionary, objective: to present Singapore Airlines as an entertainment company. From that moment onward, every detail of the Singapore Airlines travel experience was scrutinized and a new set of branding tools were implemented: from the finest silk and colours chosen for the staff uniform, to the make up of the flight attendants that had to match Singapore Airline?s brand colour scheme; from the drastic selection of the flight attendants that had to be representative of the ?Asian beauty archetype?, to the way they should speak to passengers and serve food in the cabin. Everything had to convey smoothness and relaxation to transform the Singapore Airlines travel experience into a true sensorial journey. Right after turning the Singapore Airlines flight attendant into an iconic and emblematic figure of the brand (the famous ?Singapore Girl?), they broke through the barriers of marketing again by introducing a new dimension to the brand: a signature scent. They specifically designed a signature scent, called Stefan Floridian Waters. This olfactory signature was used by the crew, blended into the hot towels served to passengers, and it soon permeated the entire fleet of planes. Described as smooth, exotic and feminine, it was the perfect reflection of the brand and achieved instant recognition of Singapore Airlines upon stepping into the aircraft. It soon became a unique and distinctive trademark of Singapore Airlines, capable of conveying a set of memories all linked to comfort, sophistication and sensuality.

Another example given by Martin Lindstrom is Rolls Royce. To recapture the feeling of older ?rollers? and maintain the luxurious aura surrounding the brand, Rolls Royce analysed and recreated the unique smell made by materials like mahogany wood, leather and oil that permeated the interior of the 1965 Silver Cloud Rolls-Royce. Now every Rolls Royce leaving the factory is equipped with a diffuser in the underside of the car?s seat to convey this unique identity of the brand.

What we learn here is that only when all the sensory touch points between the brand and consumer are integrated, evaluated and leveraged can true enrichment of your brand identity be achieved. In the future, it can become the most cutting-edge tool to stand out from the crowd, boosting the brand experience and eventually influencing consumer loyalty.

Few brands today are truly integrating sensorial branding in their strategy, while forward thinking companies are already implementing it with success. Adding a sensorial dimension to the brand experience is surely about to become the next competitive asset.

In the future, brand building for marketers may lie in one simple question: what does my brand feel like?

Vladimir Djurovic is the founder and Managing Director of Labbrand, a Shanghai based innovative brand agency specialized in brand research, strategic and creative services. Labbrand website at:http://labbrand.com/ is also the portal to Labbrand branding blog: http://labbrand.com/english/news_and_articles.php/

which collects fresh ideas, trend analysis and reviews of branding related hot topics, with a special focus on China.

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Dec 29

An effective brand identity is commonly perceived as a good brand name and logo, trendy package design – dimensions which mainly concern visual senses. However, this common perception of branding is incomplete.

Human beings have five senses, so why would brand strategists leave four of them aside? Over the past few years, senses other than sight have been explored by brand experts and marketers. Although the senses of taste and touch are more difficult for brands to reach, some brands like Singapore Airlines and Rolls Royce have already used scent to build brand identity, also known as olfactive branding. (Please see our article on Sensorial Branding ). A new area of focus is now sound branding, which will be explored in this article.

Sound can be seen as a vague notion, so let’s define it first. Daniel Jackson, the author of the book Sonic Branding, distinguishes three types of sounds: voice, ambiance, and music.Voice covers any sound produced by human-beings, from a baby crying to Pavarotti singing. Ambiance refers to every sound produced by our environment, from weather to machines. Finally, to define music, we will quote the New Oxford Dictionary of English: “The art or science of combining vocal or instrumental sounds (or both) to produce beauty of form, harmony, and expression of emotion.”

Hearing: A powerful human sense

First of all, while visual, taste or touch features of a product or brand requires people to directly interact with it in order for it to be perceived, a sound characteristic is a good way to reach consumers without them doing anything. We are all exposed to sounds whether we like it or not, and we do not have to do anything to hear them.

Moreover, as Michaël Boumendil, the founder and general manager of Sixième Son* (a leading agency worldwide for sound branding based in Paris) explains, each of us has begun our communication life by decoding sounds as early as when we are in our mother’s belly. At this formative stage of our life, we had already heard and memorized sounds, the most important being the mother’s heart beat. We were able to interpret that a beat of 60 pulsations per minute means a calm and comfortable state. Due to this early biological exposure, human-beings are naturally sensitive to sounds and their meanings.

In addition to influencing our mood by making us feel energized or sleepy, happy or sad, sound has an amazing ability to inspire us and remind us of the past. Psychological studies have shown that humans strongly associate sounds with a particular memory. Thus, sound has this unique power to recall certain experiences, which is a crucial advantage when it comes to building a strong brand in the minds of consumers.

Sound Branding Examples

Many companies are now starting to realize the effectiveness of sound branding, also known as sonic branding, audio branding or auditory branding. Here are some examples of famous and efficient sound trademarks: the Intel jingle, McDonald’s “I’m loving it”, the Yahoo yodel, Apple computer sounds, and Nokia’s ringtone. These major brands evoke a strong and unique identity on their own, but their foothold in customers’ minds is made even stronger when coupled with a distinguished and memorable sound. All of these leading brands have built their own unique sound personality as an integral part of their brand identity, and they are now recognized not only through a logo or a slogan, but also through a few musical notes. The McDonald’s Corporation itself has set out an aggressive sound branding campaign here in China, and even commissioned the famous Chinese pop singer Leehom Wang to sing “I’m loving it” in Chinese.

Royal Air Maroc recently reviewed its entire brand identity and created a sound identity with the help of Sixieme Son. Wafaâ Ghiati, the marketing manager of the company, explains that the idea of a sound trademark came naturally with the whole brand revamp. Royal Air Maroc’s sound identity had to convey the five core values of the airlines, which are Moroccan, majestic, magical, maternal and modern, while respecting the oriental roots of the company and being strongly oriented to the future. The goal of this new identity was triple-fold: to better differentiate the airline, express its values, and reinforce the impact of its communication. Wafaâ Ghiati describes the new sound identity as music which is modern without being too “fashionable”, and which has personality without being aggressive. This sound trademark is used for TV and radio ads, on the company website, as a jingle at air terminals, on CDs for clients, ring tones, and more. Although the sound aspect of Royal Air Maroc’s brand identity is very recent, the success is already measurable: on the internal side, comments about the sound trademark have been very positive, and on the external side, the music of the TV ad has been well received and many people have asked for a way to obtain it.

Sound branding gives a brand a unique audio identity, which can over time become a valuable trademark. Branding in this sense not only helps trigger memory and associations, but it is also perceived as an indication of quality and trustworthiness.

How can a brand create an effective sound identity?

The five most important characteristics of a brand sound identity are:

* length and clarity
* distinctiveness
* relation to the product
* pleasantness
* familiarity and accessibility

The first four characteristics can be managed during the creation process, and the fifth one can be reached through an effective marketing strategy. However, a sound which is familiar to customers does not mean instant success for the brand. Marketers have to make sure that customers associate this familiar sound with the corresponding brand. An easy and efficient way to guarantee this correlation is to include the brand name within the sound itself.

Although sound branding may at first seem complex and abstract, when prepared and communicated effectively in accordance with brand strategy, it has the power to build your brand in an “unheard of” way.

Written in collaboration with Michaël Boumendil from Sixieme Son, a strategic partner of Labbrand.

1. Jackson, D.M. (2003). Sonic Branding. New York: Palgrave Macmillan New York.

Vladimir Djurovic is the founder and Managing Director of Labbrand, a Shanghai based innovative brand agency specialized in brand research, strategic and creative services. Labbrand website at: http://labbrand.com/ is also the portal to Labbrand branding blog: http://labbrand.com/english/news_and_articles.php/
and reviews of branding related hot topics, with a special focus on China.

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Nov 12

Corporate branding is the need of the hour. Every organization today, needs to promote its brand identity in order to make a lasting impression on the minds of the potential as well as the loyal consumers. As the world has advanced, time to impress clients or customers has become less. So branding has become essential as it helps to achieve the company?s long term goals, sustain customers and clients and create new client base. Successful branding is all about single thing – recognition from customers. It?s about making the customers aware of one company or its products and services in such a way that they would be able to separate the company from its competitors. Branding seeks to increase the product’s perceived value to the customer and thus increase brand franchise and brand equity. Brand works as an implied promise of quality level. It may also help increase the price of a product.

Basic branding can be done in various ways, starting from designing an effective logo, web address, visiting cards, letterheads to advertisements in television, media, events, and becoming a sponsor. The most important amongst these is probably the corporate logo. A corporate logo portrays a company?s identity, aims and objectives. It acts as an important tool for the promotion of a company?s culture. Corporate logos provide visibility and prominence to organizations by becoming a signature of the company. It goes a long way to explain the kind of service or product, the quality of the service or product and the time delivery. An ideal corporate should be simple, yet convey all the necessary information of the company.

Furthermore, logos an important aspect of branding as they can be used everywhere, on the business cards, letterheads, envelopes, websites and even on the company building. As every individual needs an identity, so does an organization. And a corporate house without a logo would seem like an individual without a face. A professional custom logo design gives a face to any business and makes it more memorable to the customer. Moreover, a well designed unique logo helps a business to gain an extra edge over its competitors. When more than one company is selling same products or services at the same price, consumers often tend to judge the products or services by the infrastructure, the overall look and feel of the company. A neat logo, in this case, helps to convey this belief to the consumers.

Three types of logos are generally used ? text logos, symbol logos and combination logos having both texts and symbols. Whichever is used, a corporate logo should always be well researched and rightly selected. It should be simple enough for general customers to remember correctly and at the same time attractive enough to remain in their minds. It should ideally stand apart from the competitor logos and communicate the essential information of the business and its products and services to the consumers and thus create a belief in them. If all these aspects are taken into consideration while choosing a corporate logo, it would surely go a long way to establish the company?s brand amongst the consumers.

This article is written by Ronn Jones, a marketing expert with years of experience in branding and internet marketing. Check out more information on corporate logo.

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Nov 07

First scenario: If a consumer is made to choose between a well known brand and a new one. Without blinking of an eye, the consumer will choose the well known brand.

Second scenario: The same customer will be made to choose between a new product and a well known brand that is at a higher price – the customer will still most likely choose the well known brand.

This only goes to show that in the world of business, brand identity and loyalty is of the utmost importance. This is the reason why brand promotion is an ongoing marketing strategy not only in big conglomerates but in small businesses as well.

Obviously, multi-national companies have big annual advertising budgets as well as well large marketing departments to spend the resource. They have millions available for advertising purposes and they can easily afford the big budget TV, radio, newspaper and magazine advertising campaigns.

So how can the more modest companies create brand identity? Of course, they have to use alternative marketing strategies that can convey their message to the public without making a big dent on the company pockets.

These companies can make use of their websites, flyers, and of course they can use an economical but effective marketing tool ? the promotional product strategy. What is great about this advertising tactic is the fact that these promotional products are relatively economical to produce. An added bonus is that many of their suppliers are available online. Ordering can be done with just a few clicks of the mouse. Once the product is chosen, the company can electronically send their logo to the supplier so that it can be reproduced on the item.

Promotional products include pens, clocks, mugs, umbrellas, bags, key rings or just about any other product that is commonly used everyday. Once these products are imprinted with the company logo, the contact information and perhaps a marketing slogan, they can effectively reinforce the brand identity of the company. Let?s take a promotional pen as an example ? a pen will be used many times during a day not only by the owner but by other people as well. Every time the pen is used, the imprinted logo will be noticed. Company brand recall therefore is generated.

Promotional products are not exclusively used by small companies. Big conglomerates use them too in addition to their tri- media advertising campaigns. They know that this effective marketing tool will ensure that their brand identity is maintained.

Lottie Carrot lives and breathes promotional gifts and promotional products. She works for the successful and innovative leaders in the field; Argon Promotions. Lottie works closely with businesses to help market their products and services. For our full range visit www.argonpromo.co.uk. For more details visit our promotional products and promotional gifts blog.

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Oct 31

Many businesses suffer from a serious case of multiple personality disorder. They have one “face” on their business cards, a second “face” on their storefront, and various others on the documents they generate. Customers will certainly be unable to determine the mission and goals of your business if you do not communicate those messages to them. Building a brand identity is simply a matter of choosing a single “face” for your business and presenting that face to your customers as part of every exchange. Brand identity can also be thought of as your company’s personality in the community.

Oftentimes we are very caught up in the day-to-day business of communicating information as quickly as we can without taking time to think about how that information will be perceived by those who receive it. We would never think of giving children birthday presents wrapped in burlap bags. The wrapping prepares the recipient for the gift. It only makes sense that if we want our messages to be understood, we should present those messages in a manner that is consistent with their content. A key ingredient in building a strong brand identity is proper presentation of documents to employees, customers, and potential clients.

If simply slap together your business proposals, your prospective clients may also wonder if you will treat their business projects in the same fashion. You can communicate a sense of professionalism and quality from the get-go by binding your reports and proposals. As soon as your prospective clients and employees see the manner in which you present your company’s message, they will realize that you are serious, organized, and professional. Binding communicates a sense of permanence and forethought that others will associate with quality. Bound documents do not appear to be the last-minute efforts of unconcerned managers; they demonstrate careful thought and planning ahead. You can choose from plastic combs, spiral coil, double loop wire, Velobind, Proclick, Zipbind or Unibind for your business communications to ensure the quality of the packaging serves as a visual indicator of the quality of the contents.

Binding can serve as part of a powerful solution to setting your company and brand apart. Consistent labeling, messaging, and presentation will let your future clients and employees know that you are an accomplished and serious professional. It can take up to a dozen interactions to make a lasting positive impression on a customer. Choose the image you would like to convey, and then select the specific things you can do with your communications to communicate this image.

In addition to establishing your business as a place of quality and attention to detail, binding your documents allows you to create custom documents that look as polished and professional as a big print run. You can give your smallest clients the same sense of importance and attention as you the biggest ones-all through the packaging of your communications with them. Once you establish a brand identity backed by quality service, you will see your business grow based on word of mouth as your satisfied clients share their experiences with others.

Jeff McRitchie is the director of marketing for MyBinding.com. He writes extensively on topics related to Binding Machines, Report Covers, Binding Supplies, Binders, Index Tabs, Laminators, Laminating Pouches, Report Covers, and Paper Handling Equipment.

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