Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Branding and Licensing Click here. The Importance of Branding Example of branding-Top 100 Global BrandsTop 100 Global Brands.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Branding and Licensing Click here. The Importance of Branding Example of branding-Top 100 Global BrandsTop 100 Global Brands."— Presentation transcript:

1 Branding and Licensing Click here

2 The Importance of Branding Example of branding-Top 100 Global BrandsTop 100 Global Brands

3 What’s in a Name?

4 Brand Personality

5

6 Brand Equity Click here

7 Brand Equity

8 Brand Equity involving Sports Teams

9 Brand Equity Involving Financial Value

10 Types of Brands and Strategies Lets take the brand quiz!!

11 Manufacture Brands

12 Multi Product Branding

13 Multi Branding Proctor and Gamble

14 Co-Branding

15 Intermediary Brands

16 Generic Brands

17 Developing Brand Names

18 Offer a Benefit

19 Top 5 Athletic Shoe Brands RANKBRANDRETAIL DOLLAR SHARE 1NIKE34% 2REEBOK13% 3ADIDAS6% 4NEW BALANCE 5% 5EASY SPIRIT 2%

20 Be Simple

21 Be Different and Positive

22 Reflect an Image…

23 Be previously Unregistered

24 Make it Last

25 Ronald Wayne designed Apple's original logo in 1976 when the company was still operating out of a garage. It shows Isaac Newton sitting beneath a tree with an apple dangling precariously above his head. Rob Janoff used the same apple in his redesign a year later. "You can almost feel the '70s and '80s taking place when you take a look at that rainbow apple," says Bill Gardner, principal of Gardner Design.

26 Former CEO Lord John Browne was the first oil executive to acknowledge the threat of global warming. The bursting green, yellow, and white Greek mythology-inspired "Helios" symbol that replaced BP's shield is meant to imply a shift toward alternative, environmentally- friendly sources of energy like solar and biofuels, and relentless advertising has made the company's initials synonymous with "beyond petroleum." But a series of oil spills and accidents suggested that BP wasn't walking the walk, leading some to consider its wildly successful mark more a mask than its true face. "If the story doesn't hold up, the mark and the brand start to lose their luster," says Brendán Murphy,

27 In 1972, IBM ditched its original logo in favor of the symbol it has used ever since. In an attempt to update its antiquated look -- the old logo wrapped the words "International Business Machines" around an image of the globe -- IBM tried two different block-letter logos before legendary branding designer Paul Rand created the current version. In this modern design, the lines that make up the letters represent "speed and dynamism," according to the company. "They owned the lines going through it before everyone started using lines," Gardner says. And because of its simplicity and originality, "you have a hard time desiring to mess with it."

28 The association with fattening products like Kraft Macaroni & Cheese -- and negative connotations stemming from its connection to tobacco conglomerate Philip Morris -- tainted both Kraft's corporate history and its logo. So it made sense that just under two years after Altria (formerly Philip Morris) spun off shares of Kraft to form a distinct company called Kraft Foods, the food giant would want to revamp its image. But it wasn't necessarily a success: While the slimmer styling suggests healthier products, many analysts consider the new logo, by Nitro design agency, a disaster. Introduced in February, it's already been altered, with changes to both the location and shape of the ambiguous "flavor burst," which evokes both butterflies and flowers.

29 At first glance, Pepsi's 2008 redesign may not look like a significant transformation, but it didn't take long for it to become a hot topic. This February, after the logo hit products, "BREATHTAKING Design Strategy" -- a 27- page justification of the new logo attributed to the Arnell Group, the marketing agency that created it -- leaked over the Internet, raising lots of questions. In this "crazy brand manifesto," as Belk calls it, Arnell explained the redesign and even likened the new symbol to the "Mona Lisa" and the Parthenon. While some, like Belk, appreciated the simplicity of the new logo, many analysts argued that -- in addition to the disastrous treatise -- Pepsi had abandoned valuable equity in transforming its famous "wave" into the "smile." "By taking away the wave, they just stole the legs out from under Pepsi," Gardner says. "My sense is that in five years, they will go back to the wave."

30 Here's one Starbucks concoction many hoped had disappeared a long time ago. The brown logo featuring a nude siren had been the company's icon since 1971, when it was developed by Starbucks co-founder Terry Heckler. In 1992, it was updated to the green logo used today, picturing a less exposed siren. But in May of last year, the brown logo -- with the breasts covered -- made a comeback for several months during a promotion. Even with the minor touch-up, the flashback was not met with much enthusiasm.The retro logo "goes from embarrassing to crude," says Belk, whose opinion was shared by many. Called "Slutbucks" by consumers because of the siren's seductive stance with spread tailfins and naked torso, Starbucks re- shelved the controversial siren within months, and today its green logo is back.

31 Branding has always been an issue at Tropicana: In its original logo, the company featured small, plump "Tropic Ana," an ambiguously ethnic topless girl with a grass skirt and balancing a bowl of oranges atop her head. And while its more recent logo -- an orange with a straw -- wasn't criticized for being racially offensive, the company's attempts to make it over earlier this year still met with serious opposition. Tropicana spent a reported $35 million on what consumers and analysts called an unoriginal and bland redesign, replacing its signature straw-in-orange with a glass of orange juice. While the company appeared to be aiming for a more modern style, it prompted an uproar from consumers, who found it generic.

32 In 2003, as UPS moved into the digital age -- from packaging and shipping. The company outgrew its 42-year-old iconic logo. Celebrated in the design community for its connection to legendary designer Rand, the original logo and its old-fashioned bow gestured to the company's roots in neighborhood package delivery. "It had a humor and a humanity to it," Murphy says. But, the new logo represents a strategic decision to emphasize UPS's expanded business operations, and analysts also praised the company's FutureBrand designers for nodding to UPS's heritage by preserving the shield, keeping it lighthearted, and leveraging the color brown. "You would never think [brown] would be an asset, but in their case, it is."

33 Licensing

34 Licensed Products

35 The Products

36 Sponsorships and Endorsements

37 Sponsorships

38 Importance of Sponsorships

39

40 THE PRICE OF A NAME Venue, CityTotalNo. yearsAnnualExp. 1. * Barclays Center, Brooklyn, N.Y. Sponsor: Barclays PLC $400 million 20 $20.0 million 2029 2. * Citi Field, Queens, N.Y. Sponsor: Citibank N.A. $400 million 20 $20.0 million 2028 3. ** Reliant Stadium, Houston Sponsor: Reliant Energy Inc. $310 million 31 $10.0 million 2032 4. FedEx Field, Landover, Md. Sponsor: FedEx Corp. $205 million 27 $7.59 million 2025 5. American Airlines Center, Dallas Sponsor: AMR Corp. $195 million 30 $6.5 million 2030 6. Philips Arena, Atlanta Sponsor: Royal Philips Electronics N.V. $185 million 20 $9.25 million 2019 7. Minute Maid Park, Houston Sponsor: The Coca-Cola Co. $178 million 28 $6.36 million 2029 8. University of Phoenix Stadium, Glendale, Ariz. Sponsor: Apollo Group Inc. $154.5 million 20 $7.72 million 2025 9. Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, N.C. Sponsor: Bank of America $140 million 20 $7.0 million 2023 10. Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia Sponsor: Lincoln National Corp. $139.6 million 20 $6.98 million 2022

41

42 Graph of funding sources

43 Types of Sponsorships

44 Premium Sponsors

45 Entitlements

46 Facility Entitlements

47 Product Exclusivity

48 Endorsements

49 Association

50 Demographic Match

51 Successful Careers

52 Image

53 Sports Appeal

54 Color Psychology and Marketing Color is a meaningful constant for sighted people and is a powerful psychological tool. By using color psychology, you can send a positive or negative message, encourage sales, calm a crowd, or make an athlete pump iron harder ROY G BIV ?

55 Psychology of Color: Black Black is the color of authority and power, stability and strength. It’s also the color associated with intelligence (doctor in black robe; black horn rimmed glasses, etc.) Black clothes make people appear thinner. It's a somber color sometimes associated with evil (the cowboy in the black hat was almost always the "bad guy"). In the western hemisphere black is associated with grieving. Black is a serious color that evokes strong emotions; it is easy to overwhelm people with too much black.

56 Psychology of Color: White For most of the world this is the color associated with purity (wedding dresses); cleanliness (doctors in white coats) and the safety of bright lights. It’s also used to project the absence of color, or neutrality. In some eastern parts of the world, white is associated with mourning. White is also associated with creativity (white boards, blank slates).

57 Psychology of Color: Gray Gray is most associated with the practical, timeless, middle-of-the-road, solid things in life. Too much gray leads to feeling mostly nothing; Some shades of gray are associated with old age, death, taxes, depression (winter time and grey skies). Silver is an off-shoot of gray and often associated with giving a helping hand.

58 Psychology of Color: Red If you want to draw attention, use red. It is often where the eye looks first. Red is the color of energy. It's associated with movement and excitement. People surrounded by red find their heart beating a little faster and often report feeling a bit out of breath. It's absolutely the wrong color for a baby's room, but perfect to get people excited. Wearing red clothes will make you appear a bit heavier and certainly more noticeable.

59 Psychology of Color: Blue Ask people their favorite color and a clear majority will say blue. Much of the world is blue (skies, seas). Seeing the color blue actually causes the body to produce chemicals that are calming; but that isn't true of all shades of blue. Some shades (or too much blue) can send a cold and uncaring message. Many bedrooms are blue because of it's calm, restful color. Over the ages, blue has become associated with dependability, wisdom and loyalty (note how many uniforms are blue). People tend to be more productive in a blue room because they are calm and focused on the task at hand. Some studies are showing that weight lifters can lift more weight in a blue gym - in fact, nearly all sports are enhanced in blue surroundings

60 Psychology of Color: Green The color of growth, nature, and money. A calming color also that's very pleasing to the senses. Dark forest green is associated with terms like conservative, masculine and wealth. Hospitals use light green rooms because they too are found to be calming to patients. It is also the color associated with envy, good luck, generosity and fertility. It is the traditional color of peace, harmony, comfortable nurturing and support.

61 Psychology of Color: Yellow Cheerful yellow the color of the sun, associated with laughter, happiness and good times. A person surrounded by yellow feels optimistic because the brain actually releases more seratonin (feel good chemical in the brain) when around this color. It is the color associated with optimism but be careful with yellow, when intense, it is the color of flames and studies show babies cry more in (bright) yellow rooms and tempers flare more around that color too. It has the power to speed up our metabolism and bring out some creative thoughts (legal tablets are yellow for good reason!). Yellow can be quickly overpowering if over-used, but used sparingly in just the right place it can be an effective tool in marketing to greater sales.

62 Psychology of Color: Orange It's the color tied most to fun times, happy and energetic days, warmth and organic products. It is also associated with ambition. There is nothing even remotely calming associated with this color. Orange is associated with a new dawn in attitude.

63 Psychology of Color: Purple What color were the robes of kings and queens? Yes, they were purple, our most royal color that is associated with wealth, prosperity, riches and sophistication. This color stimulates the brain activity used in problem solving. However, when overused in a common setting it is associated with putting on airs and being artificial. People use purple most carefully to lend an air of mystery, wisdom, and respect. Young adolescent girls are most likely to select nearly all shades of purple as their favorite color because of this.

64 Psychology of Color: Brown This color is most associated with reliability, stability, and friendship. People are likely to select this as their favorite color. It's the color of the earth itself "terra firma" and what could represent stability better. It too is associated with things being natural or organic. Caution however, in India it is the color of mourning.

65 Guess What? -30pts for late assignments HOMEWORK (answer in full sentences) Pg 144, 151 Key terms Pg 150,158 Quick Check Read Chapter Summary


Download ppt "Branding and Licensing Click here. The Importance of Branding Example of branding-Top 100 Global BrandsTop 100 Global Brands."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google