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Protecting Trade Marks & Designs: business related aspects. Etienne Sanz de Acedo OHIM-General Affairs & External Relations Department. www.oami.eu.int. Index:. Basic Marketing concepts The Marketing Mix Brands - Definition - Functions - Classes
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Protecting Trade Marks & Designs: business related aspects Etienne Sanz de Acedo OHIM-General Affairs & External Relations Department www.oami.eu.int
Index: • Basic Marketing concepts • The Marketing Mix • Brands • - Definition • - Functions • - Classes • The weight of Brands in business strategy • Branding challenges • CTM vs. national marks • The registration of CTMs-OHIM
Basic marketing concepts • “Marketing is the art of selling”. It implies goods, services, experiences, events, persons, places, information, ideas ... • Marketers are skilled in stimulating demand for a company’s products. • Core marketing concepts: • - target markets and segmentation, • - customers needs, wants and demands, • customer value and satisfaction (value is the ratio • between what the customer gets and what he gives), • - marketing channels.
The marketing mix • Marketing mix is the set of tools that a marketer and its firm uses to pursue the marketing objectives in the target market. • - The 4 Ps: • 1. Product • 2. Price • 3. Place • 4. Promotion • - The 4 Cs: • 1. Customer solution • 2. Customer cost • 3. Convenience • 4. Communication
Brand Definition • A brand is a name, term, sign, symbol, or design or combination of them, intended to identify the G&S of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate them from those of competitors. • A brand is an intangible but critical component of what a company stands for. • A consumer generally does not have a relationship with a product or a service but with a brand • - 3M invokes innovation • - Hallmark stands for caring • - FedEx means guaranteed delivery
Functions of a brand • A Brand is essentially a seller’s promise to deliver a specific set of features, benefits and services consistently to the buyers. • A Brand is even a more complex symbol • Business identifier • Warranty of quality • “Goodwill” • Marketing function
Categories of brands 1.- According to the object 2.- According to their recognition Product mark Service mark Ordinary mark Notorious mark Reknown mark
CATEGORIES OF BRANDS • 3.- According to their extension • National trademarks (USPTO, INPI, UKPTO) • International trademarks (WIPO) • CTM (OHIM) • 4.- According to their nature Word marks 3D marks Figurative marks Fortuna Colour marks Sound marks Others Olfativas “The smell of fresh cut grass
THE WEIGHT OF BRANDS IN BUSINESS STRATEGY • Astrong brandprovides the Cy with severalbenefits: • loyalty drives repeat business • - brand-based price premiums allow for higher margins • strong brands lend immediate credibility to new products • introductions • strong brands allow for greater shareholder returns • brands embody a clear, valuable and sustainable point of • differentiationrelative to the competition • strong brands mandate clarity in internal focus and brand execution • the more loyal the customer is and the stronger the brand, the more • likely customers will be forgiving the company’s mistakes • - brand strength is a lever for attracting the best employees.
THE WEIGHT OF BRANDS IN BUSINESS STRATEGY • The5 levelsofcustomer attitudetowards a brand: • (from the lowest to the highest) • - customer will change brands (price reasons) • = no loyalty, • - customer satisfied. No reason to change the brand, • - customer satisfied & would incur in costs by changing brand, • - customer values the brand and sees it as a friend, • - customer devoted to the brand. • Brand equity = positions 3, 4 and 5.
THE WEIGHT OF BRANDS IN BUSINESS STRATEGY • Brand equityprovidescompetitive advantages: • the company will enjoy reduced marketing costs because of brand • awareness • the company will have more trade leverage in bargaining with • distributors and retailers (PUSH & PULL strategies) • the company can charge higher price because the brand has higher • perceived quality • the company can more easily launch extensions (the brand name • carries high credibility) • the brand offers the company some defense against price • competition.
BRANDING CHALLENGES • Managing brands requires to take several decisions: • - To brand or not to brand? • - Brand name decision • - Brand strategy decision • - Brand repositioning, packaging and labeling.
BRANDING CHALLENGES • To brand or not to brand? • - In the past most products were unbranded. • - Today hardly anything goes unbranded. • - However there has been a return to “no branding” • - consumer goods • - pharmaceuticals • Generics are unbranded, plainly packaged, less expensive • versions of common products. • Generics offer standard or lower quality at a price between 20 • and 40% lower than nationally advertised products.
BRANDING CHALLENGES • Brand name decision: 4 available strategies • Individual name. The company does not tie its reputation to the • product’s. (Seiko introduces lower quality watches under Pulsar without • diluting the Seiko name). • Blanket family names. Development cost is less because of absence of • name research (Heinz, General Electric introduce all their products under • the same family name). • Separate family names for all products. Companies invent different • family names for different quality lines within the same product class • (Mead Johnson uses Nutriment for gaining weight products, and Metrecal • for weight reduction products). • Company trade name combined with individual product names. The • company name legitimizes and the product name individualizes (Kellog’s • Rice Krispies, Kellog’s Corn Flakes).
BRANDING CHALLENGES • Brand name decision • Options • - name of a person (Honda, Esthée Lauder) • - location (Kentucky Fried Chicken) • - quality (Safeway, Duracell) • - lifestyle (Weight watchers, Healthy choice) • artificial name (Exxon, Kodak) • Tips • - Suggest something about the product’s benefits • - Suggest product qualities such as action or color • - Easy to pronounce, recognize and remember • - Distinctive • Should not carry poor meanings in other countries and • languages
BRANDING CHALLENGES • Brand repositioning • Even if a brand is well positioned, the Cy might have to • reposition it because of • - competitors • - changing customer preferences. • - 7-Up • Packaging • - Packaging has become a powerful marketing tool. • Well designed packages creat convenience and promotional • value • Self-service, consumer affluence, Cy & brand image, • Innovation opportunities. • Labeling