What is Brand Equity?
Brand equity is a marketing term that refers to the total value of the brand as a distinct asset. It can be rendered as the aggregate of assets and liabilities that are associated with the brand name and symbol which brings about the relationship customers tend to create with the brand. Brand equity is reflected in a way how consumers think, feel, and act towards a particular brand.
Additionally, the impact of these intangible assets is quite visible with the books of records in terms of market prices, shares, profitability, and demand.
Table of Contents
Components of Brand Equity
Brand equity includes fulfilling the business promise towards its customers along with maintaining the business-customer relationship well. Components of brand equity include:
Brand Awareness
The first step of the brand building process is creating awareness of the brand name in the mind of consumers. This means that customers are aware of the brand and able to associate it with a particular category. Building brand awareness can help marketers to increase brand visibility to the target audience through different advertisement campaigns.
Brand Association
Brand association is anything that a customer relates to their preferred brand. Getting in interaction with brands allows such associations. Having a good brand association is important as it leads to repetitive sales and provides the business word of mouth marketing. Such associations are leveraging the brand and give a tough time to new entrants into the market.
Brand Experience
This is the aggregation of customer experience with the overall brand. When customers have the good brand experience they will consider the brand as superior and will start preferring it over others.
For example, how you feel when eating at McDonald’s? How is the overall inner environment, how the staff behaves and what is the quality of the food? To provide the same experience, the company have to maintain uniform standards all over the outlets in the world.
Perceived Quality
Fulfilling brand promise is the key to strong brand equity. Customer tends to assess brands with other similar brands on the basis of various quantitative and qualitative parameters. Quality perception also impacts the pricing decision of a company. If a company produce quality products, it can avail the luxury of premium pricing.
Brand Loyalty
Brand loyalty is the preference of a brand by the customer over similar products in the market. This results in repetitive sales and is the best way to spread word of mouth. If a company has a higher brand loyalty, it can help to reduce marketing cost. The company can also introduce new products targeting the same customer base.
Brand Preference
This is another component of brand equity and can charge additionally for the same product. However, this requires organizations to assure that customers have good experiences and associations with the brand.
How to Manage Multiple Brands
In today’s competitive market, managing multiple identities are a very difficult and expensive activity. The brand managers should ask the question, is it really important to have multiple brands? Don’t build multiple brands unless and until you have to. There are very few companies that have the consistency and resources to create multiple brands. Keep in mind that there are multiple brand strategies
- Umbrella strategy
- Single brand identity
- Multiple brand categories
- Family of Names Strategy
Why is Brand Equity Important
Brand equity is important for not only increase market share along with increasing its valuation in the marketplace.
Increases Market Share
Good brand equity results in loyal customers who prefer one brand over the other and increases its market share.
Price Premium
Positive brand equity can charge more for its product than the actual market price.
Asset
Brand equity is an intangible asset of an organization and like any other asset; this too can be licensed, leased or sold to others.
Extension of Product Line
Having positive brand equity, it is easier to introduce new product lines. For example, Apple started with Mac operating systems and easily converted its equity with iPhones.
Building and Managing Brand Equity
Building and managing brand equity comprises of the following three stages:
Introduction
Introducing a high-quality product and use it as a strategic platform from which future products can be launched. Making a positive evaluation from the customer’s point of view is very important.
Elaboration
This requires making the brand to develop repetitive usage by making it easy to remember. The brand attitude should be accessible which means that the customer should easily remember their positive evaluation with that particular product.
Fortification
A brand should carry a consistent image so as to reinforce its image in the customer’s mindset. Additionally, brand extensions can also fortify the brand but only through relative products that enjoy a perceived fit within the minds of customers.
Brand Equity Examples
In the bellow paragraphs we are going to explain the positive and negatives example of brand equity.
Examples of Positive Brand Equity
Brand equity refers to the value added to the same product under a particular brand. This makes one product preferable over others. This is brand equity which makes a brand superior or inferior to that of others.
Apple
Apple is the best example of brand equity. Although all product of this brand has similar features, the loyalty, demand and price premium is higher than other similar brands.
Many other social networking websites came and gone; however, Facebook is quite consistent. Facebook has managed to attain brand loyal customers that most of its users do not even look at other social media platforms.
Maggi
Though there was a long ban over the flagship noodle product of Maggi in India, the product had huge demand even after its re-launching in the market. Maggi is the best positive example to represent how strong brand equity can help an organization cope with different market situations.
Examples of Negative Brand Equity
Goldman Sachs an investment bank and financial service company lost its brand value when people realized its role in the 2008 financial crisis and took 10 years to recover its reputation.
From 2009 to 2011 Toyota recalled almost 9 million cars due to unintended acceleration and anti-lock brake software issues.
Oil and gas brand Shell Oil spilled in the Nigeria delta damaged its brand equity.
When a company attains positive brand equity, it is half of overall brand management. The other half is to manage the brand consistently for a lifetime. A brand with negative equity has a short life but a successful brand works hard, addresses the issues, and lives on.