There is a nice ad campaign in London at the moment. It’s for a challenger brand called Brewdog. It compares itself favourably with other beers based on taste, and uses its rivals’ ad lines to mock the contrast between their brand and – according to Brewdog – the unexciting truth about their product. The ad is interesting because it expresses Brewdog’s solidarity with a large and growing number of consumers who think branding means lying. I want to suggest why brand still matters. First, though, some thoughts on why it has made so many enemies.
Sticking it to the man
Brewdog’s strategy is not new. Twenty-five years ago Coca-Cola put its weight behind a large-scale attack on capitalism through “OK”, an anti-corporate soft drink brand that laughed at marketing hyperbole. There was a grand launch in 1993 but two years later the brand was killed off because it did not strike a chord with enough consumers and, more importantly, they didn’t like how it tasted. Start-ups borrow from postmodern thinking to attack the market they plan to disrupt, including its marketing practices. It’s a strategy that allows them to define themselves by declaring “That is not what we are.” This is an obvious thing to say when you’re a new arrival, because indeed few know who you are, and it exploits the recognition other brands have built over many years. Anti-establishment campaigns have been interesting, witty and even successful because they feed off widespread cynicism about brands and branding. But their effect tends to be short-lived because consumers eventually see that all marketers, including the subversive ones, are just looking for ways to differentiate their brands. Your rage against the machine loses some of its edge when you put it in your brand strategy to sell stuff.
The origins of consumer doubt go way back. Two hundred years ago Germany’s most famous export to London was born, and Karl Marx still influences the study of marketing from his grave in Highgate Cemetery. Consumer choice – the range of choices available – is predetermined, say neo-Marxists. Consumers may think they exercise free will when they choose between the iPhone X or Y or between Apple, Samsung and Huawei. But a network of instant, interconnected “circulating content” makes sure that they never (or rarely) hesitate between a smartphone and no phone at all. Data planners created programmatic to cut through all this circulating content and give people what they really want, but they will never win, say Jodi Dean, Dennis Mumby and other scholars, because we’re all caught in a capitalist web. As for activism, postmodernism, irony: they’re just the latest tools of neoliberal capitalism. They change nothing and only make us feel that we’re independent.
There’s a similarly emancipatory tone within the School of Artificial Intelligence. Consumers will no longer need the je-ne-sais-quoi of brand because technology will bring each of us products that are priced just right and proposed at just the right time. Things brought by algorithm will be so relevant that we will soon be freed from the brand myths that trap us.
Brand is necessary
Back in the marketplace of real things bought and sold, purchase decisions still depend on more than the tangible basics of product features, price and distribution. Brand connects the product to a bigger idea. A logo is the symbol (or signifier) that invokes all the meaning vested over time in the brand (the signified). Over the years, brands have created rather more value than would have been the case if consumers had only compared functional benefits. We wouldn’t care if 74% of the brands we now use disappeared, say Havas in a recent report about meaningful brands, but we increasingly buy from brands that offer not just functional benefits but also improve our personal and collective well-being. Nike recently reminded Americans how powerful brand can be when it’s personal. It promoted a football player called Colin Kaepernick who had divided opinion across the country. Many protestors destroyed their Nike gear in public because they view the football player and therefore Nike as unpatriotic. It’s hard to see the human becoming less emotional, and likely that brands will continue to serve these emotions.
Meanwhile it’s surely not a coincidence that the top 3 global brands in the Havas report (meaningful-brands.com) are Google, Paypal and WhatsApp – all digital, all leaders in the fast-growing intangible economy where physical assets are minimal compared to the value of the assets you can’t touch: research & development, expertise, algorithms, services. The devastating consequences for traditional sectors like hotels and taxis show that consumers have no trouble seeing the value of brands like Airbnb and Uber.
Perhaps the best evidence for the value of a brand is what it offers when things go wrong. A crisis represents the greatest distance between reality and what the brand has promised. It is the moment of lowest credibility and the one the brand sceptic most enjoys.
KFC/Kentucky Fried Chicken had a big supply problem earlier this year in the UK. None of its stores had chicken. For 24 hours the marketing team agonised with its ad agency about how to respond. The obvious answer was to say “We’re sorry”. But how? It took over a week to cure the supply problem, and just two days to save the brand. The solution was to rearrange its logo on a press ad so that it read FCK. The result – two Cannes Lions golds this summer. The neo-Marxists were unimpressed. The rest of us just smiled.
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