Brand Equity
(noun)
the value of having a well-known name, logo, or other identifier
Examples of Brand Equity in the following topics:
-
Promotional Objectives
- A promotional plan can have a wide range of objectives, including: sales increases, new product acceptance, creation of brand equity, positioning, competitive retaliations, or creation of a corporate image.
- Promotional merchandise, promotional items, promotional products, promotional gifts, or advertising gifts, sometimes nicknamed swag or schwag, are articles of merchandise (often branded with a logo) used in marketing and communication programs.
- They are given away to promote a company, corporate image, brand, product or event.
- A promotional plan can have a wide range of objectives, including: sales increases, new product acceptance, creation of brand equity, positioning, competitive retaliations, or creation of a corporate image.
- They are given away to promote a company, corporate image, brand, product or event.
-
Marketing Environment Research
- Example of Marketing Research: Brand Equity Brand equity is a phrase used in the marketing industry to try to describe the value of having a well-known brand name, based on the idea that the owner of a well-known brand name can generate more money from products with that brand name than from products with a less well known name, as consumers believe that a product with a well-known name is better than products with less well known names. [1][2][3][4] Another word for "brand equity" is "brand value".
- Some marketing researchers have concluded that brands are one of the most valuable assets a company has,[5] as brand equity is one of the factors which can increase the financial value of a brand to the brand owner, although not the only one. [6] Elements that can be included in the valuation of brand equity include (but not limited to): changing market share, profit margins, consumer recognition of logos and other visual elements, brand language associations made by consumers, consumers' perceptions of quality and other relevant brand values.
- Consumers' knowledge about a brand also governs how manufacturers and advertisers market the brand. [7][8] Brand equity is created through strategic investments in communication channels and market education and appreciates through economic growth in profit margins, market share, prestige value, and critical associations[disambiguation needed].
- Brand equity can also appreciate without strategic direction.
- A Stockholm University study in 2011 documents the case of Jerusalem's city brand. [9] The city organically developed a brand, which experienced tremendous brand equity appreciation over the course of centuries through non-strategic activities.
-
Demanding a Premium
- Brands like Pepsi or Coke can price their goods at a premium, charging more than a generic soda brand due to its brand name.
- To the marketer, it means creating a brand equity or value for which the consumer is willing to pay extra.
- Marketers view luxury as the main factor differentiating a brand in a product category.
-
Branding will make your blossoms bloom! Branding: The memorable rim on the wheel
- In recent years a company's brand has become an asset with a financial worth known as "brand equity".
- What is the brand essence of your new product or service?
- The brand essence is the foundation of your brands true identity and the brand essence typically stays the same over time.
- Coaching: What sets our brand apart from that of the competition?
- What do customers see in the brand that the founders didn't?
-
Owners' Equity
- Shareholders' equity is the difference between total assets and total liabilities.
- If liability exceeds assets, negative equity exists.
- Ownership equity is also known as risk capital or liable capital.
- Ownership equity includes both tangible and intangible items (such as brand names and reputation/goodwill).
- Accounts listed under ownership equity include (for example):
-
Joint Ventures
- In a joint venture business model, two or more parties agree to invest time, equity, and effort for the development of a new shared project.
- A joint venture is a business agreement in which parties agree to develop a new entity and new assets by contributing equity.
- A consortium JV (also known as a cooperative agreement) is formed when one party seeks technological expertise, franchise and brand-use agreements, management contracts, and rental agreements for one-time contracts.
-
Developing a Brand
- Brands have different elements, namely brand personality (functional abilities), brand skill (its fundamental traits—e.g.
- Chanel No 5 is seen as sexy) and brand relationships (with buyers) or brand magic.
- The consumer perception of brands is brand knowledge: brand awareness, recognition and recall, and brand image denote how consumers perceive a brand based on quality and attitudes towards it and what stays in their memory.
- This suggests that brand associations are anything linked in memory to a brand.
- Pepsi brand in 10 - 50 year olds).
-
Brand Categories
- Coke, Pepsi, Sprite, and all other soda brand products fall into the same brand category of soft drinks.
- Branding began as a functional marketing tool.
- Brand awareness refers to the customer's ability to recall and recognize the brand under different conditions, using memory associations to link to the brand name, logo, jingles, and so forth.
- It consists of both brand recognition and brand recall.
- Brand awareness is of critical importance, since customers will not consider your brand if they are not aware of it .
-
The Benefits of a Good Brand
- Proper branding can yield higher product sales, and higher sales of products associated with the brand (or brand association).
- Brand experience is a brand's action perceived by a person.
- Orientation of the whole organization towards its brand is called brand orientation.
- The art of creating and maintaining a brand is called brand management.
- A brand which is widely known in the marketplace acquires brand recognition.
-
Brand Management Strategies
- Multi-product Branding – The inverse of individual branding in some ways, multi-product branding allows companies like Samsung, Apple, Sony, and Virgin to focus consumer loyalty on the broader parent brand.
- Through doing so, all investments in branding boost the brand across all product spheres.
- Sub-branding – Something of a cross between individual and multi-product branding, sub-branding allows an organization to create relatively large sub-brands for given product groups.
- Co-branding – As the name suggests, often companies collaborate on projects and pursue branding together.
- Nike's brand is iconic, for example.