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Ingredient Branding at DuPont

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Title: Ingredient Branding at DuPont


1
Ingredient Brandingat DuPont
  • Carol Gee
  • Global Brand Manager
  • DuPont Textiles Interiors
  • MSI Conference
  • March, 2002

All rights are reserved. Members of MSI and
academic researchers may make limited copies of
this presentation, electronically or in print,
solely for their internal, non-commercial use.
Any other use of this presentationincluding
reproduction for purposes other than those noted
above, modification, distribution, or
republicationwithout prior written permission of
the Author is strictly prohibited.
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The Powerand the Challenge
  • The Power DuPont makes products that go into
    other products
  • The Challenge We are invisible
  • We overcome this challenge with a two-pronged
    attack
  • Nurturing a strong corporate brandthe DuPont
    name and oval
  • Leveraging successful product or ingredient
    brands throughout the value chain

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Viability
Maturity
Growth
Maturity
Growth
Maturity
Birth
Growth
Chemistry, Biology... knowledge-intensive
solutions
Birth
Chemicals, Energy
Birth
Explosives
1802 1830 1850 1900 1925 1945 1990 2000 2050 2090
  • Operates in 200 countries
  • Markets 2,000 trademarked products in literally
    every existing SIC code

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Branding History
  • 200 years of branding experience, demonstrating
    the interplay
  • between corporate and product branding.
  • Highlights
  • 1808 DuPont becomes company trade name
  • 1909 DuPont superbrand born connects all
    product brands to the DuPont name. Oval finds its
    form.

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Branding History
  • 1934 1936 Shaping image around name/oval
    increasingly important
  • From Merchants of Death to Better Things for
    Better Living through chemistry
  • Trademark or generic issues arises - DUPRENE vs.
    neoprene, cellophane
  • 1939 Nylon introduced at Worlds Fair, not
    trademarked
  • 1946-1960 Post-war boom/burst of product
    innovation
  • Antron nylon, Orlon acrylic (1948), Dacron
    polyester (1950), Nylon carpet fiber (1957),
    LYCRA (1960)

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Branding History
  • Late 1980s/1990s Term ingredient branding
    in vogue, with DuPont widely regarded as the
    pioneer
  • DuPont should be credited as the first
    industrial supplier to promote its inputs as
    recognized brands
  • -Journal of Business and Industrial
    Marketing, 1993
  • 1994 Brand manager hired for TEFLON
  • -Brand licensing starts
  • 1999 The miracles of science created to reflect
    shift from chemicals to science and
    knowledge-intensive processes

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Corporate Branding Today
  • Strong belief that the DuPont name adds value
    acrossbrand portfolio
  • Increases purchase intent for new brands and
    existing brands with low awareness
  • Linking the name to strong brands strengthens
    the corporate reputation without negative impact
    on the brands
  • A product-endorsed, ingredient-branding strategy
    leverages our corporate and product brands for
    mutual benefit is key to our success

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Ingredient branding defined
  • One of a growing number of brand partnership
    options
  • Co-brands complementary products or services
    add value to
  • one another (American Express and an airline)
  • Component brands relates components which have
    identities
  • of their own within larger, more complicated
    product offering
  • (Bose stereo in luxury cars)
  • Manufacturer-initiated ingredient brands
    Manufacturer uses
  • established brands in an effort to communicate
    quality or value
  • in its own products. Inputs are marketed by
    their producers as
  • separate end-products. (Hersheys syrup in Betty
    Crocker)

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Ingredient branding - why?
  • Goal is to build awareness and preference along
    the value chain
  • for the suppliers brand of ingredient - everyone
    benefits.
  • Supplier
  • Better profit margins from large volume,
    non-price differentiation
  • Stability and variety in customer demand
    (TEFLON alternate uses)
  • Longer term supplier-buyer relationships
  • Manufacturer
  • Shared product promotion costs
  • Increased access to distribution channels
  • Competitive advantage - overall quality enhanced
    by ingredient quality
  • Shared production and development costs

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Ingredient branding - why?
  • Retailer
  • Better operating margins (STAINMASTER carpets
    command price premium)
  • Faster-turning inventory/better consumer
    acceptance
  • Additional promotional support
  • Consumer
  • Salient value-added in a readily identifiable way
  • Simplified purchase decision based on brand
    familiarity

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Ingredient branding - when?
  • 1. Ingredient should be a substantial innovation
    and/or advantage over existing alternatives
    (defensible patents a great plus)
  • And the consumer needs to care! (CORFAM)
  • 2. Versatile in current and future use - leverage
    investment across products and categories
    (LYCRA)
  • 3. Sales potential for final product high -
    revolutionize a category (STAINMASTER)

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Ingredient branding - how?
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LYCRA case study - getting it right
  • Based on valid and significant consumer needs
    better comfort and fit in apparel
  • Decades of effective consumer promotion

1959
1980
1974
1997
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LYCRA case study - getting it right
  • Consistent collaboration with manufacturers and
    retailers in promotion
  • ...and collaboration in non-promotional areas
  • Liz Claiborne cut and sew guidelines

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LYCRA case study - getting it right
  • Expansion of manufacturer user base LYCRA
    Assured

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LYCRA case study - getting it right
  • Results LYCRA now among the worlds top ten
    apparel brands
  • alongside heavy hitters such as Armani, HUGO
    BOSS, and Levis.
  • Despite expiration of its patent on spandex
    several years ago,
  • DuPont retains roughly 2/3 worldwide demand

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Success requisites
  • Understanding the dynamics of the market segment
    value chain
  • Identifying where the power is in the value chain
  • Clearly identifying DuPont as the hero, provider
    or supporter at every step in the chain
  • Clearly defining the product brand attributes,
    benefits, and position that will comprise the
    brand franchise
  • Pursuing a marketing and communications plan that
    creates purchase preference
  • Maintaining continuity and consistency of face
    and voice over time

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DTI Business / Strategy Model
Consumers Retail Garment Fabric
Yarn Distribution DuPont Suppliers
Processing
Lycra Teflon Cordura Thermolite Coolmax
Stainmaster Supplex Tactel
Spandex Nylon Nylon Polyester
Other Corporate Capabilities Alliances
Value Chain Alignment - System Cost
Efficiencies - Speed
  • Market Back Approach
  • Opportunity Identification
  • Offering Development
  • Value Capture
  • Branding
  • Benefit Platforms
  • Innovation
  • In - house
  • 3rd Party

11,000 people 10,000 customers 30 plant
locations 10 RD laboratories 15 JVs 3B
revenue
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Market-Back Dynamics
Consumer brand portfolio
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A new model of ingredient branding
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DTI Brand Architecture
Portfolio of Potential Licensed Brands
Enviroreact, High Trek, Metropolis,
Micromattique, SolarMax, Optique, Adoration,
Cool-Loft, Duralife, Eloquence, Microloft,
Sleepsmart, The Huggable Pillow, Thermastat,
Bodycare, Energywear, Skincare, 501, Orlon,
Ballistic, Colorlink, Coloursafe, Duratech,
Grand Luxura, Steamguard, Xtralife,
Cosmetique, Great Feelings, LightSpirit Blend
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Conclusion
  • As our new ATS structure demonstrates, the DuPont
    approach
  • to branding is an evergreen process.
  • De-link brands from specific ingredient products
  • Link to broad market-relevant needs
  • Means of leveraging knowledge portfolio
  • The future is today.
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