Does Your Brand Need to be Born Again?
By Karen
Post
Editor's
comment: Brand relaunches take place all the time. However, often
these are undertaken for the wrong reasons. Karen Post looks the
reasons why a brand may need to be relaunched.
Some brands are timeless: Tiffany’s, Ivory Soap,
even Coca-Cola. They’re classic icons in our minds. They’ve stood
the test of time. We know what they are and what they stand for.
Their brand story is clear and consistent in any day of any decade.
Other brands don’t age as well. Some are born bad and just get
worse. Some start off good and then, over time, get sloppy and lose
their focus. And others are innocent victims of our fast-changing
world. Whatever the case, even shaky brands can become “born-again”:
a brand with a renewed spirit and a relevant connection to the
market.
First let’s define what a born-again brand is and is not. It is the
evolution of brand to better meet the market's needs and desires,
while staying true to its identity. A born-again is not an old brand
with new-color paint job, a redesigned logo, or even a tagline.
Those are mere communication enhancements.
When is a brand due for
true change?
Like most branding ‘principles’ there’s little that’s black and
white on this issue. Re-branding is a judgment call that, far too
often, companies make prematurely or unnecessarily, shooting their
brands in the foot instead of launching them to the new heights
predicted by the change-meisters. In fact, premature re-branding is
a serious disease generally caused by three factors:
-
New executives who
feels the need to justify their being hired by putting their
stamp on a new campaign, regardless of whether the current one
is successfully building brand equity.
-
Brand managers
acting on a short-sighted urge, sparked by impatience, to meddle
with a brand structure that’s not broken--and that would indeed
build equity over time and exposure--because management demands
more instant gratification.
-
The company becomes
“tired” of the brand identity over time and figures the rest of
the world is as tired of it too. Brand boredom is a natural
malaise affecting humans through time, but is not a good reason
to dump all earned equity. Great brands work because of
familiarity and repetition of a great, original idea of
value--not in spite of familiarity and repetition. People love
this familiarity and the trust it builds over time and through
consistent performance.
Here are a few good examples of born-again brands that truly needed
a change and how they’re fairing with their new faces. All had
different reasons for the re-branding.
The market changed
Burberry, the original British luxury brand, has transformed nicely
into a modern and cool classic. The company has a history of good
branding, having introduced its logo in 1900 and later registered
the signature plaid pattern as a trademark in 1920.
As
the brand aged, it became a lot less regal and relevant and sported
a frumpy older guard image. Under new leadership in the late 90s
the brand was born again.
The
focus started with product design. New designers moved the line from
trench coats to trendy pet chic (with items like blinged-out collars
and china dog bowls) and even swimsuits. Advertising, featuring
high-profile young models, was seen at all the right places. Result:
The company is reportedly being served quite well by the new do.
Unexpected disaster
ValuJet was literally flying high the day before it famously crashed
into the Everglades because of faulty operating procedures.
Instantaneously, the brand ValuJet changed from meaning “low cost,
convenient airline” to “death in a swamp.” ValuJet thus renamed
itself, re-building its entire identity. Today it’s doing well as
AirTran.
Returning to their roots
Saab’s current commercials feature their new convertible, Aero,
zooming on the ground, past jet fighters flying above. “Saabs are
built by aircraft engineers,” we hear the announcer say, before we
see the “new” tagline, Born from Jets. This campaign is a
resurrected classic the car-maker departed from many years ago. Saab
is indeed the Swedish jet aircraft manufacturer that also builds
cars—their dashboards even looking and feeling like aircraft
cockpits. But Saab, recently purchased by General Motors, was
losing this identity. So the company brought back their original
Dominant Selling Idea–- The cars built with Jet Plane Standards.
If
you’re considering rebranding your business, make sure it’s for the
right reasons. Listen to the market. And use your best judgment.
-
Confirm all parties
understand that the brand is the sum of what you do. It’s not
just the graphics, a new ad campaign, or the brand language; it
may likely include operational, human resource, and mindset
changes.
-
Secure buy-in from
leadership and key influencers at the get-go along with a
long-term commitment to adequately grow the born-again brand.
-
Find a budget that
will provide needed resources and allow appropriate time for the
introduction as well as maintenance for sustainable brand
equity.
-
Start the brand
change and communications inside your company. This way you’ll
have many owners of the new brand evolution. Then take it to
your best customers and then to the external markets.
-
If you believe in
it, and you’ve done your homework, stick with it. Resistance is
normal. Stay the course. Your original brand took time to get
accepted in your markets and so will a born-again brand. Brain
tattoos take time.
Brand on!