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Author: Nick Wreden
Visit his website www.fusionbrand.com or contact him by e-mail nick@fusionbrand.com
Global branding in the 1980s was influenced by a famous 1983 Harvard Business Review article, "The Globalization of Markets." The article argued that companies should leverage the "economics of simplicity" and sell standardized products around the globe. The benefits were lower costs and consistent customer communications. That approach lost favor. Companies found that messages that resonated with South Americans fell flat in Europe. The "least common denominator" approach also shrank opportunities for differentiation. So the next generation of branding in the 1990s focused on the so-called "glocal" approach. Companies would centralize production, research and technology, but localize marketing, distribution and PR to accommodate cultural and geographic differences. Now another article—"How Global Brands Compete"—in the September issue of Harvard Business Review may presage the next generation of branding. Based on results from focus groups involving 1,500 urban consumers, age 20 to 35, in 41 countries, the article argues that many popular brands have largely lost their nationalistic connotation. Coca-Cola is not an American brand, L'Oreal is not a French brand, and Samsung is not a Korean brand. Rather, they are global brands. They are symbols of a global culture created by the Internet, travel, music and other influences that easily seep across borders. Global brands have three dimensions:
Another aspect of the study identified four consumer segments: global citizens, global dreamers, antiglobals and global agnostics. Some 55% of respondents were global citizens who saw global brands in terms of quality and as guardians of consumer health, the environment and worker rights. Global dreamers, constituting 23% of respondents, were consistent admirers of global brands. Said one Costa Rican, "Local brands show what we are; global brands show what we want to be." Antiglobals (13%) did not trust global brands and avoided doing business with them. Global agnostics (8%) judged local and global brands by the same criteria. The implications for global branding strategists:
The study is good news for US companies, which (understandably) worry that the global fallout from Bush's policies in Iraq will hurt American brand profitability. Said the authors: "We found that it simply didn't matter to consumers whether the global brands they bought were American." It is also good news for national brands around the world that worry whether their association with a particular country will limit their potential. But it does place new pressures on brand managers to understand not just French or American or Chinese requirements but also global imperatives as ubiquitous as hip-hop or tattoos.
Ó Copyright Nick Wreden 2004 |
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