Dictionary Definition
brand
Noun
2 a recognizable kind; "there's a new brand of
hero in the movies now"; "what make of car is that?" [syn: make]
3 identification mark on skin, made by
burning
4 a piece of wood that has been burned or is
burning [syn: firebrand]
5 a symbol of disgrace or infamy; "And the Lord
set a mark upon Cain"--Genesis [syn: mark, stigma, stain]
Verb
1 burn with a branding iron to indicate
ownership; of animals
2 to accuse or condemn or openly or formally or
brand as disgraceful; "He denounced the government action"; "She
was stigmatized by society because she had a child out of wedlock"
[syn: stigmatize,
stigmatise, denounce, mark]
3 mark or expose as infamous; "She was branded a
loose woman" [syn: post]
User Contributed Dictionary
-
- Rhymes: -ænd
Noun
- A branding iron.
- A mark of ownership made by burning, e.g. on cattle.
- In the context of "advertising": A name, symbol, logo, or other item used to distinguish a product or manufacturer from its competitors.
- A product or manufacturer so distinguished.
- Some brands of breakfast cereal have more sugar than is really healthy.
- In the context of "advertising": A product's attributes — name,
appearance, reputation, and so on — taken collectively and
abstractly.
- The company still has to do more to build the brand.
Translations
marker for cattle
See: branding
iron
- German: Brandeisen
mark made by burning
- Danish: brændemærke
- Dutch: brandmerk
- Finnish: polttomerkki
- German: Brandzeichen, Brandmal, Zuchtbrand
- Portuguese: marca a fogo
name, symbol, logo
- Danish: mærke , varemærke
- Dutch: merk
- Finnish: tuotemerkki
- German: Marke, Label
- Kurdish: مارکه
intangible sum of a product's atrributes
- Danish: kvalitet
- Dutch: merk
- Finnish: brandi
- German: Marke
- Kurdish:
See also
- advertising
- advertising research
- brand image
- brand linkage
- brand stretch
- branding
- branding moment
- copy testing
- global advertising
- integrated marketing communicatinos
- marketing
- market research
- Picture Sorts
Verb
- To burn the flesh with a hot iron, either as a marker (for
criminals, slaves etc.) or to cauterise a wound.
- When they caught him, he was branded and then locked up.
- To mark (especially cattle) with a brand as proof of ownership.
- The ranch hands had to brand every new calf by lunchtime.
- To make an indelible impression on the memory or senses.
- Her face is branded upon my memory.
- To stigmatize,
label (someone).
- He was branded a fool by everyone that heard his story.
- transitive marketing To associate a
product or service with a trademark or other name and related
images.
- They branded the new detergent "Suds-O", with a nature scene inside a green O on the muted-colored recycled-cardboard box.
Translations
burn the flesh
- Danish: brændemærke
- French: flétrir
mark with proof of ownership
- Danish: brændemærke
- Dutch: brandmerken
- Finnish: polttomerkitä
- French: marquer
- Swedish: brännmärka
impress on the memory or senses
- Danish: indprente
- French: graver
stigmatize
- Danish: stemple
- French: cataloguer, flétrir
- Swedish: brännmärka
Adjective
- In the context of "advertising": Associated with a particular
product, service, or company.
- That computer company has brand recognition.
- Have we settled on our brand name?
- That computer company has brand recognition.
Related terms
Danish
Noun
brandDutch
Noun
- fire (such as a house fire)
Verb
brandSwedish
Pronunciation
Noun
- accidental, uncontrollable fire
Related terms
Extensive Definition
A brand is a collection of images and ideas
representing an economic producer; more specifically, it refers to
the concrete symbols such as a name, logo, slogan, and design
scheme. Brand recognition and other reactions are created by the
accumulation of experiences with the specific product or service,
both directly relating to its use, and through the influence of
advertising,
design, and media
commentary. A brand is a symbolic embodiment of all the
information connected to a company, product
or service. A brand
serves to create associations and expectations among products
made by a
producer. A brand often includes an explicit logo, fonts, color
schemes, symbols,
sound which may be
developed to represent implicit
values, ideas, and
even personality.
The brand, and "branding" and brand equity
have become increasingly important components of culture and the economy, now being described as
"cultural accessories and personal philosophies".
Concepts
Some marketers distinguish the psychological aspect of a brand from the experiential aspect. The experiential aspect consists of the sum of all points of contact with the brand and is known as the brand experience. The psychological aspect, sometimes referred to as the brand image, is a symbolic construct created within the minds of people and consists of all the information and expectations associated with a product or service.Marketers engaged in branding seek to develop or
align the expectations behind the brand experience, creating the
impression that a brand associated with a product or service has
certain qualities or characteristics that make it special or
unique. A brand image may be developed by attributing a
"personality" to or associating an "image" with a product or
service, whereby the personality or image is "branded" into the
consciousness of consumers. A brand is therefore one of the most
valuable elements in an advertising theme, as it
demonstrates what the brand owner is able to offer in the marketplace. The art of
creating and maintaining a brand is called brand
management. This approach works not only for consumer goods B2C
(Business-to-Consumer), but also for B2B (Business-to-Business),
see Philip
Kotler & Waldemar
Pfoertsch.
A brand which is widely known in the marketplace
acquires brand recognition. When brand recognition builds up to a
point where a brand enjoys a critical mass of positive sentiment in
the marketplace, it is said to have achieved brand franchise. One
goal in brand recognition is the identification of a brand without
the name of the company present. For example, Disney
has been successful at branding with their particular script font
(originally created for Walt Disney's "signature" logo), which it
used in the logo for go.com.
Brand equity
measures the total value of the brand to the brand owner, and
reflects the extent of brand franchise. The term brand name is
often used interchangeably with "brand", although it is more
correctly used to specifically denote written or spoken linguistic
elements of a brand. In this context a "brand name" constitutes a
type of trademark, if
the brand name exclusively identifies the brand owner as the
commercial source of products or services. A brand owner may seek
to protect proprietary rights in
relation to a brand name through trademark registration.
The act of associating a product or service with
a brand has become part of pop culture.
Most products have some kind of brand identity, from common
table
salt to designer
clothes. In non-commercial contexts, the marketing of entities
which supply ideas or promises rather than product and services
(e.g. political
parties or religious organizations) may also be known as
"branding".
Consumers may look on branding as an important
value
added aspect of products or services, as it often serves to
denote a certain attractive quality or characteristic. From the
perspective of brand owners, branded products or services also
command higher prices. Where two products resemble each other, but
one of the products has no associated branding (such as a generic,
store-branded product), people may often select the more expensive
branded product on the basis of the quality of the brand or the
reputation of the brand owner.
Advertising spokespersons have also become part
of some brands, for example: Mr. Whipple
of Charmin
toilet tissue and Tony the
Tiger of Kellogg’s.
Brand Identity How you want the consumer to
perceive your product or your brand. Brand Promise This is what the
company says it will do for the customer. What customers perceive
they can expect from the company.
Brand monopoly
In economic terms the "brand" is, in effect, a device to create a "monopoly" — or at least some form of "imperfect competition" — so that the brand owner can obtain some of the benefits which accrue to a monopoly, particularly those related to decreased price competition. In this context, most "branding" is established by promotional means. However, there is also a legal dimension, for it is essential that the brand names and trademarks are protected by all means available. The monopoly may also be extended, or even created, by patent, copyright, trade secret (e.g. secret recipe), and other sui generis intellectual property regimes (e.g.: Plant Varieties Act, Design Act).In all these contexts, retailers' "own label"
brands can be just as powerful. The "brand", whatever its
derivation, is a very important investment for any organization.
RHM (Rank Hovis
McDougall), for example, have valued their international brands at
anything up to twenty times their annual earnings.
Branding policies
There are a number of possible policies.Company name
Often, especially in the industrial sector, it is
just the company's name which is promoted (leading to one of the
most powerful statements of "branding"; the saying, before the
company's downgrading, "No-one ever got fired for buying
IBM").
In this case a very strong brand name (or company
name) is made the vehicle for a range of products (for example,
Mercedes or Black & Decker) or even a range of subsidiary
brands (such as Cadbury Dairy Milk, Cadbury Flake or Cadbury
Fingers in the United States).
Individual branding
Each brand has a separate name (such as Seven-Up or Nivea Sun (Beiersdorf)), which may even compete against other brands from the same company (for example, Persil, Omo, Surf and Lynx are all owned by Unilever).Derived brands
In this case the supplier of a key component,
used by a number of suppliers of the end-product, may wish to
guarantee its own position by promoting that component as a brand
in its own right. The most frequently quoted example is Intel (in
the PC market, with the slogan 'Intel Inside'), but the sweetener
Aspartame used much the same approach (to lock in the soft drinks
manufacturers who represented a major market for the
product).
Brand development
In terms of existing products, brands may be
developed in a number of ways:
Brand extension
The existing strong brand name can be used as a
vehicle for new or modified products; for example, many fashion and
designer companies extended brands into fragrances, shoes and
accessories, home textile, home decor, luaggage, (sun-) glasses,
furniture, hotels, etc.
Mars extended its brand to ice cream, Caterpillar
to shoes and watches, Michelin to a restaurant guide, Adidas and
Puma to personal hygiene.
There is a difference between brand extension and
line extension. When Coca-Cola launched "Diet Coke" and "Cherry
Coke" they stayed within the originating product category:
non-alcoholic carbonated beverages. Procter & Gamble (P&G)
did likewise extending its strong lines (such as Fairy Soap) into
neighboring products (Fairy Liquid and Fairy Automatic) within the
same category, dish washing detergents.
Multi-brands
Alternatively, in a market that is fragmented
amongst a number of brands a supplier can choose deliberately to
launch totally new brands in apparent competition with its own
existing strong brand (and often with identical product
characteristics); simply to soak up some of the share of the market
which will in any case go to minor brands. The rationale is that
having 3 out of 12 brands in such a market will give a greater
overall share than having 1 out of 10 (even if much of the share of
these new brands is taken from the existing one). In its most
extreme manifestation, a supplier pioneering a new market which it
believes will be particularly attractive may choose immediately to
launch a second brand in competition with its first, in order to
pre-empt others entering the market.
Individual brand names naturally allow greater
flexibility by permitting a variety of different products, of
differing quality, to be sold without confusing the consumer's
perception of what business the company is in or diluting higher
quality products.
Once again, Procter & Gamble is a leading
exponent of this philosophy, running as many as ten detergent
brands in the US market. This also increases the total number of
"facings" it receives on supermarket shelves. Sara Lee, on the
other hand, uses it to keep the very different parts of the
business separate — from Sara Lee cakes through Kiwi
polishes to L'Eggs pantyhose. In the hotel business, Marriott uses
the name Fairfield Inns for its budget chain (and Ramada uses
Rodeway for its own cheaper hotels).
Cannibalization
is a particular problem of a "multibrand" approach, in which the
new brand takes business away from an established one which the
organization also owns. This may be acceptable (indeed to be
expected) if there is a net gain overall. Alternatively, it may be
the price the organization is willing to pay for shifting its
position in the market; the new product being one stage in this
process.
Small business brands
Branding a small business is essentially the same thing as a larger corporation, the only differences being that small businesses usually have a smaller market and have less reach than larger brands. Some people argue that it is not possible to brand a small business, however there are many examples of small businesses that became very successful due to branding. Starbucks is one company that used almost no advertising and over a period of ten years developed such a strong brand that the company went from one shop to hundreds.Own brands and generics
With the emergence of strong retailers the "own brand", the retailer's own branded product (or service), also emerged as a major factor in the marketplace. Where the retailer has a particularly strong identity (such as Marks & Spencer in clothing) this "own brand" may be able to compete against even the strongest brand leaders, and may dominate those markets which are not otherwise strongly branded.There was a fear that such "own brands" might
displace all other brands (as they have done in Marks & Spencer
outlets), but the evidence is that — at least in
supermarkets and department stores — consumers generally
expect to see on display something over 50 per cent (and preferably
over 60 per cent) of brands other than those of the retailer.
Indeed, even the strongest own brands in the United Kingdom rarely
achieve better than third place in the overall market.
Therefore the strongest independent brands (such
as Kellogg's and Heinz), which have maintained their marketing
investments, should continue to flourish. More than 50 per cent of
United Kingdom FMCG brand leaders have held their position for more
than two decades, although it is arguable that those which have
switched their budgets to "buy space" in the retailers may be more
exposed.
The strength of the retailers has, perhaps, been
seen more in the pressure they have been able to exert on the
owners of even the strongest brands (and in particular on the
owners of the weaker third and fourth brands). Relationship
marketing has been applied most often to meet the wishes of
such large customers (and indeed has been demanded by them as
recognition of their buying power). Some of the more active
marketers have now also switched to 'category marketing' - in which
they take into account all the needs of a retailer in a product
category rather than more narrowly focusing on their own
brand.
At the same time, probably as an outgrowth of
consumerism, "generic" (that is, effectively unbranded goods) have
also emerged. These made a positive virtue of saving the cost of
almost all marketing activities; emphasizing the lack of
advertising and, especially, the plain packaging (which was,
however, often simply a vehicle for a different kind of image). It
would appear that the penetration of such generic products peaked
in the early 1980s, and most
consumers still seem to be looking for the qualities that the
conventional brand provides.
History
Brands in the field of marketing originated in the 19th century with the advent of packaged goods. Industrialization moved the production of many household items, such as soap, from local communities to centralized factories. When shipping their items, the factories would literally brand their logo or insignia on the barrels used, which is where the term comes from.These factories, generating mass-produced goods,
needed to sell their products to a wider market, to a customer base
familiar only with local goods. It quickly became apparent that a
generic package of soap had difficulty competing with familiar,
local products. The packaged goods manufacturers needed to convince
the market that the public could place just as much trust in the
non-local product. Campbell
soup, Coca-Cola,
Juicy
Fruit gum, Aunt Jemima,
and Quaker Oats
were among the first products to be 'branded', in an effort to
increase the consumer's familiarity with their products. Many
brands of that era, such as Uncle Ben's
rice and Kellogg's
breakfast cereal furnish illustrations of the problem.
Around 1900, James
Walter Thompson published a house ad explaining trademark
advertising. This was an early commercial explanation of what we
now know as branding. Companies soon adopted slogans, mascots, and jingles which began to appear on
radio and early television. By the 1940s, manufacturers
began to recognize the way in which consumers were developing
relationships with their brands in a
social/psychological/anthropological sense.
From there, manufacturers quickly learned to
associate other kinds of brand values, such as youthfulness, fun or
luxury, with their products. This began the practice we now know as
branding, where it is felt that consumers buy the brand instead of
the product. This trend continued to the 1980s, which have
been described as "brand equity mania". In 1988, Phillip
Morris purchased Kraft for six times
what the company was worth on paper; it was felt that what they
really purchased was its brand name.
Marlboro Friday
April 2, 1993 was marked by some as the death of the brand. On that day, Phillip Morris declared that they were to cut the price of Marlboro cigarettes by 20%, in order to compete with bargain cigarettes. Marlboro cigarettes were notorious at the time for their heavy advertising campaigns, and well-nuanced brand image. On that day, Wall street stocks nose-dived for a large number of 'branded' companies: Heinz, Coca Cola, Quaker Oats, PepsiCo. Many thought the event signalled the beginning of a trend towards "brand blindness" (Klein 13).Attitude branding
Attitude branding is the choice to represent a large feeling, which is not necessarily connected with the product or consumption of the product at all. Marketing labeled as attitude branding include that of Nike, Starbucks, The Body Shop, Safeway, and Apple Computer. In the 2000 book, No Logo, attitude branding is described as a "fetish strategy". "A great brand raises the bar -- it adds a greater sense of purpose to the experience, whether it's the challenge to do your best in sports and fitness, or the affirmation that the cup of coffee you're drinking really matters." - Howard Schultz (president, ceo and chairman of Starbucks]]See also
- Aspirational brand
- Individual branding
- Personal branding
- Brand architecture
- Brand community
- Brand engagement
- Brand implementation
- Brand loyalty
- Brand management
- Brand name
- Brand orientation
- Branded environments
- Designer label
- Employer branding
- Generic brand
- Integrated marketing communications
- Logo extraction puzzles
- Name generator
- Naming firms
- Trademark
Bibliography
- Birkin, Michael (1994). "Assessing Brand Value," in Brand Power. ISBN 0-8147-7965-4
- Gregory, James (2003). Best of Branding. ISBN 0-07-140329-9
- Klein, Naomi (2000) No logo, Canada: Random House, ISBN 0-676-97282-9
- Fan, Y. (2002) “The National Image of Global Brands”, Journal of Brand Management, 9:3, 180-192, available at http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/1289
- Kotler, Philip and Pfoertsch, Waldemar (2006). B2B Brand Management, ISBN 3-540-25360-2.
- Miller & Muir (2004). The Business of Brands, ISBN 0-470-86259-9.
- Olins, Wally (2003). On Brand, London: Thames and Hudson, ISBN 0-500-51145-4.
- Schmidt, Klaus and Chris Ludlow (2002). Inclusive Branding: The Why and How of a Holistic approach to Brands. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0-333-98079-4
- Wernick, Andrew (1991). Promotional Culture: Advertising, Ideology and Symbolic Expression (Theory, Culture & Society S.), London: Sage Publications, ISBN 0-8039-8390-5
External links
References
brand in Catalan: Marca comercial
brand in Danish: Branding
brand in German: Markenartikel
brand in Spanish: Marca comercial
brand in French: Marque commerciale
brand in Korean: 브랜드
brand in Croatian: Brand
brand in Italian: Marca
brand in Hebrew: מותג
brand in Dutch: Merk
brand in Japanese: ブランド
brand in Polish: Marka (producenta)
brand in Portuguese: Marca
brand in Russian: Бренд
brand in Simple English: Brand
brand in Serbian: Бренд
brand in Finnish: Brändi
brand in Swedish: Varumärke
brand in Tagalog: Tatak
brand in Turkish: Marka
brand in Chinese: 品牌
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
acid,
actual cautery, aroma,
ash, ashes, aspersion, attaint, attribute, badge, badge of infamy, bar
sinister, baton, bedaub, bend sinister, besmear, besmirch, besmoke, bespatter, bestain, billhead, birthmark, black eye, black
mark, blacken, blaze, blaze a trail, blemish, blister, blood, bloodstain, blot, blotch, blow upon, blur, body-build, book stamp,
bookplate, brand iron,
branding iron, breed,
broad arrow, burn, burn in,
burn off, burning ember, butane lighter, cachet, calx, carbon, cast, caste mark, caustic, cauter, cauterant, cauterize, cauterizer, cautery, censure, chalk, chalk up, champain, char, character, characteristic, characteristics,
characterize,
charcoal, check, check off, checkmark, cicatrix, cicatrize, cigarette lighter,
cinder, clan, clinker, coal, coke, colophon, color, complexion, composition, configuration, constituents, constitution, coom, corrosive, counterfoil, countermark, crack, crasis, cupel, cut, dab, dapple, darken, daub, defame, defile, define, delimit, demarcate, denomination, description, designation, dharma, diathesis, differentia, differential, dirty, disapprove, discolor, discoloration, discredit, disgrace, disparage, disparagement, disposition, distinctive
feature, docket, dot, dross, earmark, electrocautery, ember, engrave, engraving, escharotic, ethos, expose, expose to infamy,
eyesore, feather, feature, fiber, figure, firebrand, flambeau, flame, flavor, fleck, flick, flint, flint and steel, flyspeck, form, found, frame, freckle, fume, gash, genius, genre, genus, gibbet, government mark,
government stamp, grain,
graving, gust, habit, hack, hallmark, hang in effigy,
hatch, hot iron, hue, humor, humors, identify, idiocrasy, idiosyncrasy, igniter, ilk, impress, impression, imprint, imputation, index, individualism, jot, keynote, kidney, kin, kind, label, lava, lentigo, letterhead, light, lighter, line, lineaments, live coal,
logo, logotype, lot, lunar caustic, macula, maculation, macule, make, make a mark, maker, makeup, manner, mannerism, manufacturer, mark, mark of Cain, mark off, mark
out, marking, masthead, mat burn, mold, mole, mordant, mottle, moxa, nature, nevus, nick, notch, number, odium, odor, onus, oxidate, oxidize, parch, particularity, patch, peculiarity, pencil, pepper, persuasion, phylum, physique, pillory, pillorying, plate, point, point champain, polka dot,
portfire, potential
cautery, price tag, prick,
print, property, punch, punctuate, puncture, pyrolyze, quality, quirk, race, radium, reek, reflection, registered
trademark, reprimand,
reproach, riddle, running head, running
title, savor, scald, scar, scarification, scarify, scorch, score, scoria, scotch, scratch, scratching, seal, seam, sear, second-degree burn, shape, sigil, signet, singe, singularity, slag, slubber, slur, smack, smear, smirch, smoke, smouch, smudge, smut, smutch, soil, solder, somatotype, soot, sort, sparker, spatter, specialty, species, speck, speckle, spill, spirit, splash, splatter, splotch, spot, stain, stamp, sticker, stigma, stigmatism, stigmatization, stigmatize, strain, strawberry mark, streak, striate, stripe, stub, style, suchness, sullage, sully, sunburn, sunscald, swinge, system, tab, tag, taint, tally, tang, taper, tarnish, taste, tattoo, tattoo mark, temper, temperament, tendency, tenor, the like of, the likes of,
third-degree burn, tick,
tick off, ticket, title
page, tittle, token, tone, torch, torrefy, trace, trade name, trademark, trademark name,
trait, tribe, trick, type, underline, underscore, variety, vein, vesicate, vilify, vulcanize, watermark, way, weld, windburn