Documente Academic
Documente Profesional
Documente Cultură
Semester – IV
BRAND MANAGEMENT
What associations do consumers have for milk? What are the implications of these
associations in terms of building brand equity for and increasing the consumption of milk?
Healthful Drink and Part of Balanced Diet: Prior to GOT MILK campaign, Milk was promoted
as a healthful drink and good source of calcium that promoted bone strength. All the consumers
have known this fact so the advertising the functional benefits of Milk did not yield much
response from the consumers. The proliferation of other beverages effects the consumption of
milk. Lack of portability of milk as 89% was consumed at home and most consumers drank milk
on regular basis in breakfast, at lunch and with dinner but half of the occasions were outside of
home. Lack of flavor variety of milk also precipitated for the low consumption of milk as other
flavored beverages had flooded the market. Lack of consumer mind share and since milk was not
thirst quenching also added to the low consumption of milk. Milk was considered as dull &
boring drink and primarily sold in gallons. So even if the family doesn’t have milk at home it
was never experienced as a lack of food, milk was replaced by other beverages.
So the need for the hour was to promote milk as an essential complements to the cereals and
other food items that can be taken with food. Milk could be promoted in the flavored bases to
increase its consumption. The nutritious part of milk like it is rich in calcium that is an essential
part for the growing children & females can be advertised with a humorous ad.
Evaluate the CMPB marketing program now and back in the early 90's. What do you see
as its strengths and weakness? What changes would you make?
Target Market
Regular / Loyal users of Milk (70%)
Hispanics and Aging Californians
Behavioral Segmentation: When & Where consumers drink Milk
Identify fresh insights of the target consumer
Evaluation:
• Ads - 60% Aided Recall within 3 months – Making Consumers Think about Milk
As the campaign was a very successful marketing campaign and was adopted internationally
also, the objective was to increase the consumer awareness and occupy a distinctive slot in the
consumer’s mind. After such long years now the GOT MILK Campaign should also focus on the
non-milk drinkers and should promote various flavors and strengths of milk through various
distribution channels.
Evaluate their Hispanic marketing initiatives. Does the CMPB risk alienating its current
consumer base?
In 2001 Hispanic population represents 32.5% of California, in 2002 it rose to 33% and in year
2004 it was 34.1%. So the population of the Hispanics was increasing on yearly basis and
Hispanics are the major group who spends more on milk then any other group. In milk
consumption there annual consumption was around $170. Since milk is a commodity item so
even an increase in 1% of consumption would result in huge revenue generation. Hispanics were
an important demographic segment to be targeted for the increase in the consumption of milk,
traditionally also Hispanics were heavy milk drinkers.
Initially when the GOT MILK campaign ads were translated in to Spanish, those did not create
an impact on the Spanish speaking population as due to cultural differences the ads do not
influence the Hispanic population rather not able to get the mind slot in the Hispanic population.
This was due to the cultural differences, the ads were just translated into Spanish and in Spanish
family not having milk or rice is not fun but it shows that a Hispanic household means that you
have failed your family. Also in Spanish GOT MILK means lactating.
So the CMPB in association with Hispanic Ad Agency created a series of ads that focused on the
milk being an sacred ingredient and associated ‘Family, Love & Milk. The Got Milk tagline was
left unchanged so that Hispanics could also associate themselves with the campaign.
This strategy worked out very well as Hispanics feels proud that advertisers understood there
culture and makes genuine efforts to create a ad that is on line with there culture. This
immediately creates a demand and occupies a unique slot in the Hispanic population. So the
punch line of Family, Love & Milk was successful. The deprivation strategy was also focused in
the Hispanic population also. The advertisers design a campaign around Licudas, a smoothe
made of milk, fruit and ice. They show the fruit & ice but no milk and Got Milk logo appears on
the blender.
Since Hispanics consists of 1/3 population of the California & were the largest group that spends
more on milk rather then any other group. So focusing on Hispanics was not the bad strategy
instead it adds in to the more consumption of milk as shown in exhibit – 740 gallons was
consumed in 2002 as compared to 732 gallons in 2001. Moreover other advertisements also were
there to focus on the other groups.
There are several areas of growth that lay ahead of the CMPB -health, cheese, Hispanic
and new channels of distribution. Given the trends, what should they do and how should
they do it?
How long can the CMPB keep running the “got milk” campaign? What can they do to keep
the message and strategy fresh in the consumer's minds? Are there other examples of other
successful campaigns that ran this long?
CMPB campaign had already celebrated its 12th anniversary in 2005 when its impact had started
declining. It could not go any further than 12 years. It needed a new phase of market promotion
campaign which would involve targeting niche market, packaging and targeting new channels of
distribution.
To keep the message fresh in the consumer's mind, they should target milk-made products and
promote their usage. The CMPB should focus on new demographics, fresh creative, new
innovative products and packaging, expanded distribution.
The other example of other successful campaigns that ran this long are:
In a move that would have been unheard of today, DDB's president suggested to Avis that they
start getting their act together, as he saw advertising for the company as "making good
advertising for a bad product." Then DDB went to work studying the ins and outs of Avis'
operations. The art director of DDB, Helmut Krone, in collaboration with copy-writer Paula
Green used a reply during the initial meetings between DDB and Avis. When asked why anyone
rents a car from Avis, the reply received was that "we try harder, because we have to." With this
straightforward and no-punches pulled message, DDB had crystallized the turnaround of Avis.
And a turnaround it was. Within one year, Avis went from being $3.2 million in the red to $1.2
million in the black.
At one point, in fact, the campaign was turned down initially by Life magazine for this very
reason. Polykoff demanded that Life poll, unscientifically, the women of their offices to see what
they thought about the phrasing, and whether or not it was too suggestive. To their surprise, and
to Shirley's lack thereof, the women saw no racy connotation with the phrasing. Polykoff knew,
of course, this would be the result, as she knew no "nice girl ever got an off-color meaning about
anything."
As a result of the campaign, the hair coloring market exploded from a niche activity in the '50s to
a token craze. Revenues blew up by 800 percent, from $25 million annually to $200 million.
Clairol, at the forefront, raked in half this revenue, and continues to dominate this market, even
now.
Miller Lite
McCann-Erickson Worldwide
During the '70s, Miller had invented an entirely new beer that had fewer calories, so guys could
drink more of it (thereby spending more money) and not get fat. Just one problem: guys didn't
really care about lower-calorie beer.
With this dilemma in mind, MEW went to work. Their solution? Sell the beer using the burliest
guys and the manliest men they could find. The result was a series of commercials featuring
sports legends and entertainers in comedic situations, and no shortage of cameo spots.
More importantly, perhaps, was that Miller's beer sales went from 7 million barrels to 31 million,
and is still considered the largest expansion ever recorded by a beer maker.
7 "Absolut _______"
Absolut
TBWAChiatDay
In the late '70s/early '80s, Americans were consuming upwards of 40 million cases of vodka a
year. One percent (about 400,000 cases) of that market was imported vodka, and a mere 2.5
percent of that was Absolut. The rest of the imported brands were Russian, and selling on the
credibility of Russia as the authority on vodka.
In order to gain share, Absolut, a state-run distillery, decided it was going to position itself as a
modern and more hip vodka. And, thus, the great experiment began. The bottle has come to
represent a golf course, a conspiracy, a bridge, and... well you get the picture by now.
But print ads were hardly the extent of their reach. In fact, one year on Father's Day, Absolut
packaged a tie with their ad running in the New York Times, distributing 500,000 of them. The
free publicity alone from the campaign more than made up the cost.
Today, Absolut enjoys a dramatically increased share of the vodka market in the U.S., 4.5
million cases, or half of all imported vodka. Not bad for redrawing a picture of a bottle for 20
years, eh?
DeBeers, a concerned interest in the production and sale of diamonds -- they owned 80% of all
diamond trade at one point -- started pursuing marketing for their product, as the overabundance
of diamonds produced was far outweighing the demand for them. Harry Oppenheimer, the
chairman of DeBeers, met with NWA&S (a funny acronym, now that I'm looking at it) in 1938
to try to turn the market around. And for almost a decade, the two companies worked feverishly,
targeting young men and women with heavy campaigns to associate the idea of a diamond with
love, religious unity and commitment.
For the large part, these targeted campaigns did little to stand out in their customers' minds. What
DeBeers needed was a solid sales line. It wasn't until 1947 that a lowly copywriter at NWA&S,
working late one night in the offices, prayed that she would receive the right line from on high.
She would have history believe that God, should he exist, is a genius marketer, because not too
late after, she scrawled the line "a diamond is forever" on a picture of a honeymooning couple.
The line was incorporated into the campaign, and in less than a year, DeBeers' new slogan was
"A Diamond Is Forever." Now DeBeers, owning only 40% of the market share of diamonds
enjoys yearly revenues in excess of $6 billion, and a top-of-mind product, nay, rite of passage,
that each proposer must complete before they can prove their eternal love.
After shooting the spot, NHS ran into a snag with their "McDonald's as islands" themed
campaign. Lawyers found that a food chain in Nebraska was already using a campaign labeling
themselves as "Islands of Pleasure." Not wanting to paint a target on themselves for lawsuits,
McDonald's requested the nearly-complete campaign be dumped. The NHS creative team went
back to the drawing board.
They decided to create a song-and-dance routine. After it was written, they brought it to the
executives to listen to, who loved it, but felt it was lacking, especially around the ending line
"We're so near yet far away." So, again the creative team took the song back to tweak it. The
team sat in a room and hammered out the line "You deserve a break today," in a very create-by-
committee fashion. And in one more interesting hurdle, the musicians behind the actual
performance of the song deemed the line "un-singable." With little more than a "do it or we'll
find someone who can," the music team figured out how to sing it, and the rest is history.
The bouncy jingle stood out with its flash and show and nailed itself into the minds of consumers
at the time, and, even now, you can still see references to its title line everywhere.
"Just Do It"
Nike
Wieden & Kennedy
In the late-1970s/early-1980s, Reebok's line of sports apparel sold far better and had a much
more robust share of the market, thanks to the explosion of aerobics and general exercise
enthusiasm amongst women. Nike, who at the time had little more than a line of marathoners'
shoes to their name, wanted a piece of the action. So they went for the whole pie.
Late into the '80s, they started to tackle every demographic. They did this on their "Just Do It"
campaign, purportedly coined during a meeting of executives between WK and Nike ("You Nike
guys, you just do it."). The phrasing reflected the corporate culture and advertising approach,
which was a take-no-prisoners assault on the inactive and lethargic.
Furthermore, they tied their brand to smart, humorous and cool advertising, and made sports
apparel cool to wear when, well, you weren't being active. This all culminated into a perfect
storm during the '90s, at which time, their market share jumped from 18% to 43%, and their sales
exploded from $800 million a year in 1988 to upwards of $9.2 billion in 1998. Wanna look cool?
Just do it.
He saw some pictures in a 1949 issue of Life magazine that featured a cowboy doing cowboy
things. Burnett saw tons of masculinity, and a way to advertise a product. With little more than
the word "Marlboro" and a picture of a rough and tumble cowboy smoking a cigarette, the
Marlboro Man campaign was born.
The campaign turned sales on their head, and is still considered one of the most brilliant strokes
in advertising of all time. There is an asterisk to this story, however. While the campaign stood
up the test of time for a solid 50 some-odd years, it also ran into hiccups with all of the Marlboro
Men having died of lung cancer, and one of them even testifying to Congress for regulation on
smoking. Marlboro distanced themselves from the man, claiming he was never in a Marlboro ad,
but then later recanted, saying he just wasn't a Marlboro Man. Nowadays, the Marlboro Man
campaign seems more quaint than brilliant, but its voraciousness in tobacco sales, for a time, can
never be taken away.
In an effort to fluff up some of their seasonal sales, they turned to DC to come up with a
campaign. "Thirst Knows No Season" was their first run at the campaign, and it worked very
well. They actually began selling more Coke during the winter than they did during the summer.
But time passed, and as all companies do, they wanted to further increase their profit and reach.
Aiming to put a Coca Cola into someone's hand every single day, DC stopped looking at the
product, and started simply looking at the behavior of people. The more they observed, the more
they realized that people need breaks in their hustle-bustle lives. And Coke, they deigned, should
be in their hands during that break.
Sales plowed ahead yet again as people saw Coke as a necessary part to maintaining their daily
sanity, and Coca Cola sealed its place in business history.
"Think Small"
Volkswagen
Doyle Dane Bernbach
The same legendary DDB that you saw above helping out poor Avis was also at VW's side
during the most legendary advertising campaign of all time. From then to now, every company
has measured the success of their advertising campaigns against the Think Small campaign.
Volkswagen had plenty of success with the Beetle in Europe, but wanted to bring it to the U.S.
They hired DDB to helm the advertising effort.
And it's not like the German auto company didn't have anything against them going into it. The
car itself wasn't much to look at. Bigger vehicles were much more popular in the U.S., thanks to
the Baby Boomer familes. Not to mention the plant that manufactured the cars was built by
Nazis. So there was that.
The DDB team knew they had to do something different to win over the jaded consumers.
Campaigns at the time were strictly informative in nature, or fantastical in presentation. The VW
ads aimed to sell. Present an emotional connection that the ad's audience could meet.
VW isn't the top auto manufacturer these days, and, frankly, has never really been at the top.
However, the impact of its ad campaigns revolutionized advertising forever, and, even now,
when you see a VW ad on TV or in print, you can't help but be captivated.