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Chapter 10 Measuring outcomes of brand equity

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Title: Chapter 10 Measuring outcomes of brand equity


1
Chapter 10Measuring outcomes of brand equity
  • Bradley Kingston
  • Vassili Zachariou

2
How to market yourself
3
Utilize public relations resources
4
Advertise remind and persuade
5
Result Brand Equity
6
Outline of Presentation
  • REVIEW
  • CONTEXT
  • MEASUREMENT APPROACHES 2 main ways to measure
    the benefits or outcomes of brand equity
  • Comparative methods
  • Brand-based comparative approaches
  • Marketing-based comparative approaches
  • Conjoint analysis
  • Holistic methods
  • Residual approach

7
Review
  • Brand Equity (BE)
  • the Brand Knowledge Structure (BKS) that permits
    a branded product to earn incremental, premium
    profits over and above those earned by a product
    without a brand name.
  • Strategic Brand Management
  • design and implementation of marketing programs
    and activities to build, measure, and manage
    brand equity.
  • Process (Step 3) CH 10 Measuring and
    interpreting brand performance

8
Review
  • CH 2 product with positive BE, enjoys 7 NB
    customer-related benefits
  • Perceived differently different interpretations
    of product performance.
  • Loyalty less vulnerable to competitive
    marketing actions.
  • Command larger margins more inelastic responses
    to price increases elastic responses to price
    decreases.
  • Greater trade cooperation support.
  • Increase marketing communications effectiveness.
  • Yield licensing opportunities
  • Support brand extensions
  • CH 9 We can measure these individual components
    (qualitative and quantitative techniques).
    However, to provide more direct estimates, we
    still must assess their resulting value in some
    way.
  • CH 10 Examines measurement procedures to assess
    the effects of brand knowledge structures on
    these and other measures that capture market
    performance for the brand.

9
Context
  • TREND affecting modern marketers
  • Need to quantify activities in financial terms
  • Branding and Finance 10.0 (pg 427)
  • Research (Stock Market Reactions)
  • Stock market reacts to BE for companies and
    products
  • (Aaker Jacobson, 1989-92)
  • Stock market return has positively related to
    changes in ROI.
  • Strong relationship btw BE and stock return.
  • Changes in brand attitude were associated
    contemporaneously with stock return and led
    accounting financial performance.
  • (Lane and Jacobson, 1995)
  • Stock market participants response to brand
    extension announcements depend interactively on
    brand attitude and familiarity

10
Context
  • Accounting Evolution WHY?
  • (Investors need) better information about
    intangible assets because those assets are an
    increasingly important economic resource for many
    entities and are an increasing proportion of the
    assets acquired in many business combinations.
    FAS 141, 2001.

11
Context
  • Changes in International Accounting
  • Standards and Statements (2001-2005)
  • SFAS 141/142 (US)
  • IFRS 3/38 (Rest of World)
  • Historic Cost to Fair Value
  • How Fair Value is Measured
  • Branding and Finance 10.0 (pg 428) Accounting
    Perspectives on Brands (Roger Sinclair)
  • The new standards require accountants to account
    for the costs of the intangibles that make up
    goodwill portion.
  • They must describe the premium price paid over
    net asset value (Assets Liabilities).
  • Identify and value as many intangibles as the
    standards permit. E.g. trademarks, tradenames,
    service marks, etc.

12
Context
  • Intangible Assets must be valued at Fair Value at
    the time of purchase.
  • FV the price that would be received for the
    asset in a current transaction between market
    participants in the reference market (FASB,
    2005).
  • Pending Issue Internally generated brand assets
  • SFAS 142 and IAS 38 (Intangible Assets).
  • Addressed and resolved next two years.

13
Comparative Methods
  • Comparative methods approximate specific benefits
    of brand equity.
  • Use experiments that examine consumer attitudes
    and behaviour toward a brand, to more directly
    assess the benefits arising from having a high
    level of awareness and strong, favourable, and
    unique brand associations.
  • Brand-based comparative approaches (BBCA)
  • Marketing-based comparative approaches (MBCA)
  • Conjoint analysis (CA)

14
Comparative Methods
  • Brand-based comparative approaches
  • Experiments in which one group of consumers
    responds to an element of the marketing program
    when it is attributed to the brand and another
    group responds to that same element when it is
    attributed to a competitive or fictitiously named
    brand.
  • This approach holds marketing program fixed
  • Examines consumer response based on brand
    identification

15
Comparative Methods - BBCA
  • Competitive brands can be useful benchmarks.
  • Consumers may make inferences to supply any
    missing information based on their knowledge of
    particular brand (most preferred or leading
    brand).
  • Examine how consumers evaluate a proposed new ad
    campaign, new promotion offerings, or a new
    product when it is also attributed to one or more
    major competitors.
  • Example

16
Comparative Methods - BBCA
  • Applications
  • Product purchase or consumption research for new
    or existing products
  • Only if brand identification can be hidden.
  • Blind taste testing Consumers examine or use a
    product with or without brand identification.
  • General evaluations dramatically different
    perceptions depending on presence/absence of brand

17
BBCA blind taste testing Pepsi Taste Test
commercial 1983
  • 1980s, generally, Pepsi was voted as having
    better, sweeter taste.
  • 1985 New Coke debacle
  • 2008 the60secondmarketer.com
  • Andy Goldsmith, Vice President, Creative and
    Brand Strategy, American Cancer Society
  • Science is updating the classic "taste test."
  • Your brain connects brand imagery with brand
    preference, resulting in increased sales.

18
BBCA Taste testing with technology
  • Research, Baylor College of Medicine.
  • Using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
    (fMRI) technology to monitor brain activity
  • Blind taste test among 67 subjects, preference
    (Coke and Pepsi) split down the middle.
  • Brain scans showed that the ventrolateral
    prefrontal cortex lights up when either brand was
    consumed. Since that part of the brain responds
    to rewards, and people were being asked to drink
    sugar water, no surprise.
  • But when researchers then told people which cola
    they were drinking, interesting results.
  • In those branded taste tests, while still
    hooked up to the fMRI, Coke was preferred by
  • 75 25
  • Why? BRAND IMAGERY.
  • Turns out that when people knew they were
    drinking Coke, things like the "dorsolateral
    prefrontal cortex" and the hippocampus both got
    excited. So Coke is more likely to light up the
    brain parts related to things like memory and
    cognitive control. In most cases Pepsi did not
    have the same effect.

19
Comparative Methods - BBCA
  • Holds all aspects of the marketing program fixed
    for the brand isolates the value of the brand
    in a very real sense
  • Understanding exactly how knowledge of the brand
    affects consumer responses to prices, advertising
    and so for this extremely useful in developing
    strategies in these different areas.
  • NOTE Cases - difficult for consumers to
    examine/experience some element of the marketing
    program without being aware of the brand we can
    use detailed concepts statements of that element
    instead.
  • Consumers judge proposed new product introduced
    as brand extension or by an unnamed firm in that
    product market.
  • Ask about acceptable price ranges and store
    locations for the brand named product or
    hypothetical unnamed version.
  • Concern
  • Simulations and concept statements may highlight
    the particular product characteristics enough to
    make them more salient than they would otherwise
    be, distorting results.

20
Comparative Methods
  • Marketing-based comparative approaches
  • Experiments in which consumers respond to changes
    in elements of the marketing program for the
    brand or competitive brands.
  • Hold the brand fixed
  • Examines consumer response based to changes in
    the marketing program
  • Applications
  • Researching price premium and increase strategy
    to reveal brand-switching
  • and loyalty patterns.
  • Assess price sensitivity and thresholds for
    different brands - example Intel

21
Comparative Methods - MBCA
  • Applications (cont.)
  • Assessing consumer response to different
    advertising strategies, executions, or media
    plans through multiple test markets.
  • Explore potential brand extensions through
    consumer evaluations of potential extensions
    candidates.
  • Example

22
Kulula.com brand extensions
23
Comparative Methods - MBCA
  • Advantages
  • Ease of implementation.
  • Compare virtually any proposed set of marketing
    actions for the brand.
  • Drawbacks
  • Difficult to tell whether consumer responses to
    changes in marketing stimuli are caused by brand
    knowledge or by more generic product knowledge.
  • I.e. it may be that for any brand in the product
    category, consumers are willing to pay certain
    prices, accept a particular brand extension, etc.
  • Suggested solution
  • Determine whether the response is specific to
    the brand by
  • Conducting similar tests of consumer response
    with competitive brands.

24
Comparative Methods
  • Conjoint analysis
  • A survey-based multivariate technique that
    enables marketers to profile the consumer buying
    decision process with respect to products and
    brands.
  • Ask consumers to express their preferences or to
    choose among a number of carefully designed
    product profiles.
  • Goal
  • Determine the trade-offs consumers are making
    between various brand attributes, and thus the
    importance they are attaching to them.

25
Comparative Methods - CA
  • Each profile consumers see is made up of a set of
    attribute levels chosen on the basis of
    experimental design principles to satisfy certain
    mathematical properties.
  • The value consumers attach to each attribute
    level, as statistically derived by the conjoint
    formula, is called a part worth.
  • We use the part worths in various ways to
    estimate how consumers would value a new
    combination of the attribute levels.
  • For example one attribute is the brand name.
  • The part worth for the brand name attribute
    reflects its value.

26
Comparative Methods - CA
  • Applications
  • Brand/price tradeoff methodology (simplified
    version of conjoint analysis) with 2 variables
    brand and price.
  • Consumers make a series of stimulated purchase
    choices between different combinations of brands
    and prices. Each chose between buying a preferred
    brand and paying less. In this way consumers
    reveal how much their brand loyalty is worth.
  • Each choice triggers an increase in price of the
    selected brand, forcing the consumer to choose
    between buying a preferred brand and paying less.
    In this way, consumers reveal how much their
    brand loyalty is worth and, conversely, which
    brands they would relinquish for a lower price.

27
CA Brand/price trade-offWhich jeans would you
buy
  • R200
  • R300
  • R400
  • R500
  • R600
  • R1000
  • R1500
  • R500

28
CA Brand/price trade-off
29
CA Brand/price trade-off
30
Comparative Methods - CA
  • Advantage
  • Allows marketer to study different brands and
    different aspects of the product or marketing
    program simultaneously)
  • Product composition, price, distribution
    outlets, etc
  •  
  • Uncover information about consumers responses to
    different marketing activities for both the focal
    and competing brands.
  • Disadvantage
  • Marketing profiles may violate consumers
    expectations based on what they already know
    about brands.
  • Thus care must be taken not to evaluate
    unrealistic product profiles or scenarios.
  • Can also be difficult to specify and interpret
    brand attribute levels.

31
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32
Holistic Methods
  • Holistic methods place an overall value on the
    brand in either an abstract utility terms or in
    concrete financial terms
  • Therefore holistic methods attempt to assess the
    unique contribution of the brand to
  • (over all product equity)

33
Two Approaches
  • 1. The residual approach which examines the value
    of the brand by subtracting consumers
    preference for the brand (based on physical
    product attributes alone) from the over all brand
    preference.
  • Overall brand preference
  • consumer preference
  • residual value

34
Critique for Residual Approach
  • Residual approaches provide a useful benchmark
    for interpreting brand equity, especially when
    approximations of brand equity or financially
    orientated perspectives are required.
  • The disadvantage of residual approaches is that
    they are most appropriate for brands with a lot
    of product related attribute associations.
  • E.G. Natasha Chapter 9 Nokia

35
Valuation Approaches
  • The valuation approach places a financial value
    on brand equity for accounting purposes
  • Putting a specific value on brands may be useful
    for
  • Mergers and acquisitions
  • Branding licensing internally for tax reasons,
    and to third parties
  • Fund raising e.g. looking for more sponsorship
    can have a brand like coca cola as a backer.
  • Brand management decisions such as preparing
    financial reports

36
Historical Perspective
  • Grand Metropolitan
  • Grand Met used two different methods,
  • If a company consisted of one brand, it was said
    that the brand value was 75 of the purchase
    price.
  • Whereas if the company consisted of many brands,
    a multiple of an income figure was used.

37
Accounting firms in favour of valuing brands say
that it is a way to
  • Strengthen the presentation of a companies
    accounts
  • Record hidden assets so as to reveal them to the
    companies shareholders
  • Enhance a companies shareholder funds so as to
    improve its earnings ratios
  • Provide a basis for management and investors to
    measure a companies performance
  • And reveal brand strengths so that management can
    formulate appropriate brand strategies

38
General Approaches
  • When firms need to determine the value of a brand
    in an acquisition or merger, they can choose from
    three main approaches.
  • Cost approach
  • Market approach
  • Income approach

39
The Cost Approach
  • The cost approach maintains that brand equity is
    the amount of money that would be required to
    reproduce or replace the brand which include all
    costs for research and development, test
    marketing, advertising and so on.
  • One criticism however is that this approach,
    rewards past performance in a way that may play
    no role in future profitability.
  • E.G. Gizmondo Kellogg's

40
The Market Approach
  • According to the market approach, we can think of
    brand equity as the present value of the future
    economic benefits to be derived by the owner of
    the asset.
  • In other words, brand equity is the amount an
    active market would allow for the asset to be
    exchanged between a willing buyer and seller.
  • McDonalds vs. Gillette vs. BMW

41
The Income Approach
  • Argues that brand equity is the future discounted
    cash flow from the future earnings stream for the
    brand.
  • Three such income approaches are as follows.
  • Capitalizing royalty earnings from a brand name
  • Capitalizing the premium profits that are earned
    by a branded product (by comparing its
    performance against an unbranded product)
  • Capitalizing the actual profitability of a brand
    after allowing for the costs of maintaining it
    and the effects of taxation.

42
What is a Brand Worth
  • Brand Metrics
  • The model is based on the accounting definition
    of an asset.
  • Resources under control of an enterprise that
    will generate future economic benefits for the
    enterprise Applies to brands as well
  • The researchers conventionalized brand equity as
    incremental cash flows that accrue to a branded
    as compared to a non branded product

43
What is a Brand Worth Cont
  • Economic Profit is the amount after tax
    operating profit a company earns that exceeds the
    cost of the capital the company has employed in
    operating the business.
  • The Band Metrics approach therefore starts with a
    calculation of the economic profit
  • The excess profit over and above the cost of
    capital is attributed to resources that must be
    identified
  • Among these are the brand and its customers
  • Actuarial sciences techniques are then used to
    determine how much of this profit is attributed
    to brands

44
What is a Brand Worth Cont
  • The resource recognition procedure (RRP)
  • Firstly the group generates a list of possible
    resources that might drive economic profit.
  • By means of voting and ranking, the list is
    reduced usually to about 5-8 items.
  • The members then allocate 100 across the list,
    thereafter the scores are averaged to give a
    weighting to each item.
  • Finally each member allocates a score from 0 and
    10 to indicate the extent to which brand equity
    influences each resource.

45
What is a Brand Worth Cont
  • The mean, weighted scores are then summed to
    produce a percentage that, when applied to the
    economic profit, produces the brand premium
    profit, which is the portion attributed to the
    brand.

46
Simon and Sullivans Brand Equity Value
  • Assume that the market value of a firm is based
    on the earning power of both tangible and
    intangible assets
  • They also make the assumption that the financial
    markets valuation of the firm incorporates the
    expected value of future cash flows and returns
  • A study conducted by Simon and Sullivan during
    the 1980s whereby tracing the brand equity of
    Pepsi and Coca Cola showed that the introduction
    of diet Coke, increased the equity of Coca Cola
    and decreased the equity of Pepsi

47
Interbrands Brand Valuation Methodology
  • Interbrand approached the problem of brand
    valuation, by assuming that the value of a brand,
    just like the value of any other economic asset,
    was the present worth of the benefits of future
    ownership
  • I.e. what the brand value is today, of the
    earnings or cash flow that the brand can be
    expected to generate in the future.
  • Interbrand largely follows a methodology based on
    an income approach.

48
Interbrands Brand Valuation Methodology
  • To capture the complex value creation of a brand,
    Interbrand recommends the following 5 valuation
    steps.
  • Market segmentation
  • Financial analysis (role of branding)
  • Demand analysis (brand strength)
  • Competitive benchmarking
  • Brand value calculation

49
Summary
  • Comparative methods
  • Use experiments that examine consumer attitudes
    and behaviour toward a brand, to more directly
    assess the benefits arising from having a high
    level of awareness and strong, favourable, and
    unique brand associations.
  • Brand-based comparative approaches Experiments
    in which one group of consumers responds to an
    element of the marketing program when it is
    attributed to the brand and another group
    responds to that same element when it is
    attributed to a competitive or fictitiously named
    brand.
  • Marketing-based comparative approaches
    Experiments in which consumers respond to changes
    in elements of the marketing program for the
    brand or competitive brands.
  • Conjoint analysis A survey-based multivariate
    technique that enables marketers to profile the
    consumer buying decision process with respect to
    products and brands.
  • Holistic methods
  • Attempt to place an overall value on the brand in
    either abstract utility terms or concrete
    financial terms. Thus, holistic methods attempt
    to "net out" various considerations to determine
    the unique contribution of the brand.
  • Residual approach Examines the value of the
    brand by subtracting out from overall brand
    preferences consumers' preferences for the brand
    based on physical product attributes alone.
  • Valuation approach Places a financial value on
    the brand for accounting purposes, mergers and
    acquisitions, or other such reasons.

50
Conclusion
  • NO single measure that fully captures BRAND
    EQUITY.
  • Brand Equity is multidimensional concept.
  • Depends - knowledge structures in consumers
    minds
  • - actions firms take to capitalize on the
    potential offered by these knowledge structures
  • (CH 2) Customer Based Brand Equity
  • the differential effect that brand knowledge has
    on consumer response to the marketing of that
    brand.
  • CBBE model emphasizes employing a range of
    research measures and methods to fully capture
    the multiple potential sources and outcomes of
    brand equity.
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