Wednesday 5 November 2014

McDonalds vs Dominos

McDonald’s brand which defines itself around magic and happiness is losing that magic in India. I feel that the brand is not walking with the times and the changing Indian consumer. The brand primarily has a hamburger portfolio. Within this, they experiment and innovate but have not done anything outside the hamburgers. The young Indian consumer, who constitutes the biggest target for QSRs, have small interest span. They get bored with the same and hence brand rejuvenation becomes critical. McDonald’s has not rejuvenated brand over all these years, the look& the feel; the portfolio; the communication or the experience. The consumer is bored of the sameness.

Though young people still go to McDonalds as it is a value for money and cheaper option but even to them it is a substitute to meal and not a meal itself. Same is with families who do not prefer McDonalds as it does not offer solutions for everyone in the family.

Also, people are looking for more variety today. How often can you have a burger, especially now when you have so much more options? Also, as a family, I don’t have many options there. Not everybody likes a burger. Another important thing is huge vegetarian population who fear the same kitchen been used at McDonalds for both veg and the non-veg food. Also, with more health awareness, mothers are more sceptical of giving fries, burgers and aerated drinks to their kids as they are more classified as junk food.

McDonald’s have introduced some new products in its premium range but then the premium customer definitely will prefer some other option, why McDonalds then? The brand is about ‘Value for Money’ and ‘Economical’ meal to the consumer and is not associated with premium food experience.

Domino’s as a brand is the most experimenting and innovative in QSR category. Product Innovation and portfolio expansion remains their greatest strength. Domino’s has crafted a very special position among youngsters. They don’t find it ‘Value for Money’ but ‘aspirational’ in terms of its range. Young people do not go to Dominos because it’s the cheapest available option but because it has variety. Moreover, it’s a place where families can enjoy together. There is an option for everyone, including those who do not like pizza. Domino’s also launched the Joy Meal offer to attract the biggest influencer in the family- the kids, who many a times also initiate the need to ‘eat out’. To hit McDonald’s it does not include fries and aerated drinks as a part of box (which are classified as junk food) but the pizza and other healthier options according to mothers. Even the price was kept very low as compared to McDonalds. The distribution expansion coupled with local and customized communication made the brand more appealing to customers.

KFC which was more known for its non-vegetarian, especially chicken burgers and snack has now broken off those perceptions and established itself as a choice for everyone. I would say product innovation (including veg, non veg offers and even meal options like rice) has helped them expand their reach across. Though they currently focus on youngsters and have a very competitive pricing to appeal to them, they have a product portfolio which resonates with everyone in the family. Family can go together and have a meal at KFC and not just a snack. It is seen that women order of rice meals as the kids enjoy their chicken snacks. Clever localization helped KFC find its place in this competitive market. This is also coupled with consumer education. KFC clearly told and showed the consumers that they have a separate veg and a non-veg kitchen and neither the same utensil nor the oil is used to cook both. This instantly addressed some of the cultural issues the brand faced.

Domino’s expanded their targeted segment to the entire family but also made sure that they had something for each of them (in terms of product portfolio). McDonalds used focus strategy in their product portfolio and though they targeted the entire family, they asked them to love burgers. This may have worked initially when QSR formats were not facing a very tough competition and were relatively new options to Indians but today the consumer as a problem of plenty and have multiple options to choose from.  McDonald’s is trying to extend to premium segment with more expensive product options, but perhaps those people do not look at McDonalds for such products. Dominos on the other hand is innovating in the same price range that can appeal to its current target group and as per their willingness to spend. Same is KFC. They looked at ‘youth’ as their core TG and offered them all variety with a price range that made their offers more attractive. And family members who are ‘young at heart’ also like the place!!

The number of restaurants is also important in QSR format as this category is more convenience driven.  One would not drive down 5 Km to hunt for a restaurant but would look for closer home locations or availability in malls, marketplaces, cinema halls etc. (where they go for a larger experience/cause). The fact that Dominos has almost double the number of retail formats as compared to McDonalds or KFC also act to their advantage. They are at ‘arms length of consumer’s desire’.


Finally the business top lines and bottom lines are also a function of investment you make into your brand. KFC and Dominos have invested that money to keep their brand relevant to the evolving and changing TG. They have added freshness by playing with all the 4Ps whereas it looks as if McDonalds is a tortoise in this aspect. They have not invested in brand rejuvenation but leveraging the equity they have build in the past. However, it is to be seen if in this game the rabbits take on the tortoise or stop after few steps!!

Thursday 30 October 2014

The fight over 'broom': Brand symbols and their importance

Broom was the most differentiated weapon of AAP and also gave it a unique character. Has Modi's Swachh Bharat Abhiyan campaign has left AAP broomless?

In the case of BJP and AAP; AAP was a relatively new brand which with its differentiated marketing and values created an instant brand recall and positive associations. They had a strong and clutter breaking brand identity. However, the implementation of brand promise was poor and hence AAP suffered a quick set-up. The intended brand identity is very different from brand image. We live in a transparent world in which customers can easily expose unsatisfactory experiences with brands. This means that companies must absolutely deliver on the promises they make. Denise Lee Yohn in her book- ‘What Great Grand Do’ states that good communication and advertising alone cannot build your brand.  She exhorts that your brand is a verb: and not just the image. It is ‘what’ you do. A brand is more about action, and not about advertising.
That’s where AAP faltered and now BJP is trying to leverage on. They have made ‘broom’ their implementation weapon. BJP is not trying to change on the values of ‘lotus’ or giving broom any strategic place in BJP brand’s core philosophy but using it as a tactic of brand implementation. Yes I can see the strategy of robbing AAP of a strong brand property (read potential brand equity). Over time, people may associate broom more with Modi’s cleanliness drive rather than AAP’s political symbol. But this would depend on implementation efficiency and success of Modi’s Swatch Bharat campaign. Only time will tell whether citizens of India remember broom as a vehicle of ‘clean corruption’ or as a weapon to ‘clean streets of India’. In the context of AAP’s performance in the past, this step of BJP definitely can further dilute AAP brand by redefining the values its symbol stood for.
But there is a word of caution for BJP. They have recently worked on their brand and redefined ‘lotus’ values which worked for them. Leveraging too much on broom or any attempt to include it as strategic brand imagery may dilute its own brand image. It is good only as a tactics to support a campaign.

Another perspective to this entire debate is ‘if there is a reason at all to debate this’. Political parties have all kinds of symbols and so are these symbolic objects forbidden for use by other people. Broom is for cleaning and so had to be a part of cleanliness drive. Would people stop using bow/arrow during Dussehra, or can someone not promote bicycles for cleaner India, or stop using chilies just because they are certain party symbols. Is so much of media attention to this only helping BJP more to leverage on broom!!

The above phenomenon is a kind of indirect ambush marketing which involves the use of certain brand’s imagery or advertising themes by the other brand without making specific reference to the trademark/ symbol. The brand which ambushes other brand’s property either gets benefited from the use of this imagery or dilutes the equity of the latter. Some academicians also may want to term this ‘offline brand hijacking’, an activity whereby one brand acquires or assumes the identity of another brand for the purpose of acquiring/diluting latter’s brand equity. 


Brand symbols can definitely build brand recall and contribute to brand equity but what matters more is brand implementation or fulfillment of brand promise. People remember brand symbols only when implementation is strong not because symbols were different. McDonald arches are recalled and contribute to its brand equity because McDonald has created positive customer experiences over years and not because they write 'M' differently. 

So time will now tell if Modi's Swatch Bharat Campaign could rob and dilute the brand equity from AAP's political symbol. 

Friday 20 June 2014

Bournvita: Managing brands by managing positioning

Bournvita is one of the major players in the Rs 4000 crore (2011) Indian Health Drink market. This market is expected to be Rs 8000 crores by 2016. The brand has a market share of around 16% according to Business Standard whereas Horlicks enjoys 51% share. The brand was favoured by kids who liked the chocolate flavoured drinks. It owns almost 40% share in brown malt health drinks. Cadbury has been nurturing the brand, focusing on kids and their affinity towards good taste. The brand got initial traction in the market by focusing on the chocolate taste. It further reinforced the taste factor. It was launched in 1948 and is one of the oldest brands in malted drink segment.

When the brand was launched, it focused on mother’s problem of providing the healthy and the tasty food. Its initial launch proposition was based on health and taste. In 1970s, the brand focused on upbringing and repositioned on functional benefit of ‘goodness’ with a tagline - “Goodness that grows with you”. In 1980s, the brand changed the focus from upbringing to intelligence and had the tagline “Brought up Right, Bournvita Bright”. 90s saw the brand talking about overall health and development with tagline “Tan ki shakti, Man ki shakti”.

In 1998, Bournvita changed the positioning on nutrition and focused on RDA formulae with proposition of 2 cups of Bournvita for balanced nutrition.  It also set up brand property titled Bournvita Nutritional Center where nutrition experts recommended the right RDA percentage to kids.

Later the brand went for a laddering exercise and brought in the concept of confidence. This was backed the laddering up with the creation of Bournvita Confidence Academy. The brand professed the concept of "Prepare to Win" proposition. The brand adopted the tagline "Tayari Jeet Ki " or Preparing to Win. The proposition focused on physical energy and endurance. Besides the change in positioning, the brand's primary target audience also changed. Rather than focusing on kids, the brand directly began addressing the Mother. Kids began to play the supporting role in the advertisement.

Bournvita is one of the major players in the Rs 4000 crore (2011) Indian Health Drink market. This market is expected to be Rs 8000 crores by 2016. The brand has a market share of around 16% according to Business Standard whereas Horlicks enjoys 51% share. The brand was favoured by kids who liked the chocolate flavoured drinks. It owns almost 40% share in brown malt health drinks. Cadbury has been nurturing the brand, focusing on kids and their affinity towards good taste. The brand got initial traction in the market by focusing on the chocolate taste. It further reinforced the taste factor. It was launched in 1948 and is one of the oldest brands in malted drink segment.

When the brand was launched, it focused on mother’s problem of providing the healthy and the tasty food. Its initial launch proposition was based on health and taste. In 1970s, the brand focused on upbringing and repositioned on functional benefit of ‘goodness’ with a tagline - “Goodness that grows with you”. In 1980s, the brand changed the focus from upbringing to intelligence and had the tagline “Brought up Right, Bournvita Bright”. 90s saw the brand talking about overall health and development with tagline “Tan ki shakti, Man ki shakti”.

In 1998, Bournvita changed the positioning on nutrition and focused on RDA formulae with proposition of 2 cups of Bournvita for balanced nutrition.  It also set up brand property titled Bournvita Nutritional Center where nutrition experts recommended the right RDA percentage to kids.

Later the brand went for a laddering exercise and brought in the concept of confidence. This was backed the laddering up with the creation of Bournvita Confidence Academy. The brand professed the concept of "Prepare to Win" proposition. The brand adopted the tagline "Tayari Jeet Ki " or Preparing to Win. The proposition focused on physical energy and endurance. Besides the change in positioning, the brand's primary target audience also changed. Rather than focusing on kids, the brand directly began addressing the Mother. Kids began to play the supporting role in the advertisement.

2011 saw a marked difference in the positioning of Bournvita. The brand began drifting away from confidence based positioning and laddered down again. The brand discarded everything it did in the past and began talking like Horlicks. In the campaign, the brand began talking about calcium with the tagline "Badhaye Doodh Ki Shakthi" which was strikingly the same as the latest Horlicks campaign. This platform did not find resonance with audience as the brand was totally out of synch with this platform. Bournvita suffered because it ditched its earlier positioning in favor of the Milk based positioning. For the first time, the communication did not have kids, the prime users of the brand. The absence of kids in the ads and focus on ingredients marked a major shift in the marketing strategy of Bournvita.


Again in March 2013 brand went back to the positioning of “Tayyari Jeet ki”, however there was a paradigm shift in the tonality of the advertisement. The communication showed a mother and son racing through the woods with the mom winning this race. This makes the child more determined to win and the mother challenges him by not giving him any leniency. The mother tells the story through the voice over. She says, “Mere bete ko jeet ki aadat tab lagegi jab woh mujhe harayega” The final scene shows the son winning the race against the mother while she looks satisfied. One sees the actual product only in the end which indicates they are selling the idea of the drink as much as the drink itself. The whole concept of progress rather than win was appealing. The distinctiveness of this communication lies with the manner in which the mother has been portrayed in the communication. She is modern and believes in leading by example. She is a woman who is involved in the upbringing of her child in every possible way. The current positioning has found greater acceptance among consumers and brand is yet again on the growth path. 

Wednesday 28 May 2014

Customer- Brand Relationships for building loyalty


Brand loyalty refers to a customer’s emotionally driven motive to purchase and experience the brand again and again. Brand loyalty essentially comes from an emotional involvement between the customer and the brand. Customers feel that brands fulfill their expectations and identify with them personally. They build a relationship with the brand and develop a deep-rooted commitment along with psychological reasoning that encourages them to return more. In this competitive world with a variety of options, the brand loyalty seems to be nonexistent. But is it really so?

Consumers are infidel and love experimenting with wide range of available brands. However, this phenomenon is a result of functional and price difference among the category brands. If customers have emotionally committed themselves to a brand, they would soon return back and if the customer-brand relationship becomes endearing enough, they may not experiment at all.  In the modern day context, brand loyalty is not about buying the same brand every time but allocating the maximum ‘share of wallet’ to a particular brand. To me, the key to building fanatically loyal customer base is to create an endearing customer-brand relationship. The journey starts with finding a metaphor from human relationships and evolving from the ‘casual friendship’ to the ‘marriage’, wherein customers become emotionally and behaviourally committed to the brand. 

Steps to building strong customer brand relationships
1.       Right consumer insight that can inspire the brand essence
To build a deep relationship, it is important to understand the customers and have insights on their attitude and behaviour. Good insights are generally obvious but we keep hunting for them everywhere. Insights cannot be discovered from behind the laptop or through books but by meeting customers, spending time with them, by speaking to retailer and reading reviews.  Insights inspire brands to follow a customer and not a product oriented approach.

Kellogg in India failed to realize that middle-class Indian family did not have breakfast on a regular basis, or consumed milk, bread and regional preparations like idlis, parathas etc. Kellogg wanted to change these breakfast habits and banked heavily on the quality of crispy flakes. However, Indians poured hot milk on the flakes which made them soggy and the taste then did not suit the Indian palette. Kellogg tried to build a relationship placing product at the centre, rather than the customer and their beliefs. Whereas, Maggi noodles soon understood that Indians mothers want a quick solution to their child’s hunger and they introduced the product with a proposition of “2 minute noodles”. This placed consumer at the centre of brand strategy and could create an instant connect with large customer base.
Lesson 1: Discover what you can offer in a relationship; not why others should enter into a relationship.

2.       Mind your positioning
To build endearing customer relationship, brands need to establish a relevant and a differentiated proposition. A strong and focused positioning is one of the strongest brand assets.  Brand positioning is reflected in one single statement which is succinct, focused and compelling. It is able to drive brand design, actions and behaviour intuitively. Brand which promises too many things is not able to perform exceptionally well on either and hence fails to occupy a ‘special’ place in customer’s heart. The core of good brand positioning therefore is ‘sacrifice’.

Titan in 80s & 90s was positioned on ‘gifting’. It was a preferred gift for every occasion, be it a wedding, anniversary, farewell or birthday. With explosion of options in customer’s life, Titan moved away from this proposition in 2009 to ‘Be More’, which denoted the various moods and personality of its wearer. This positioning was very strong but to customers, it was confusing. They felt that the brand was saying a lot of things to them and Titan lost that special place in customer’s mind. Titan is again back with the ‘art of gifting’ proposition.
Lesson 2: Have a clearly defined platform to enter into a relationship. Remember you can either be a wife or a mother, not both.

3.       Discover the emotion to tell your story
Products are built on facts but brands are built on emotions. The right emotion serves as glue to the relationship between customer and their brands. When something impacts a customer’s life at a personal level, they are more likely to share it but they do so only if the story is sharply defined. A story build around the brand emotion can bring the core brand values to life.

Johnson & Johnson is a leading brand of baby skin care products and is preferred by young mothers. The brand could build a strong relationship with its customers as it understood that ‘having a baby changes everything for a woman’. For years, it has been telling a story about the bond between a mother and her child. The brand story weaved around this emotion is so compelling that it resonates with mothers even after generations.
Lesson 3: Facts can find a place in mind but emotions can find a place in heart. Tell your story by choosing the right emotion.

4.       Include employees in your brand story
It’s important to ensure that employees understand the meaning of the brand. They are the ones who are responsible for bringing the brand to life. If they are empowered to create positive relationship moments with the customers, then the brand can surpass the experience offered by competition.  While organizations spend millions on advertising, packaging, etc., they do not include their employees in brand building process. Therefore, millions are spent in making a promise, only to have them broken by uninformed and uninterested employees.

Mahindra before launching its new positioning of ‘Rise’ undertook an internal branding program to ensure that every employee within the organization identified with the new positioning and the underlying principles behind the same.
Lesson 4: Build endearing relationship with internal customers before you do so with external ones.

5.       Creating ‘moments of magic’ at every experience and engagement touch point.
A brand ‘is as a brand does’. Brand idea is brought to life at every customer touch point. To create a superior experience all brand experience points should behave like an orchestra, in complete harmony to get across emotional essence seamlessly. Successful brands are able to identify the touch points along the customer journey to create experiences that can inspire the intended brand associations. Engaging customers with the brand at these points strengthens the relationship as customers see themselves as contributors to brand journey. 

Coke continues to build on its promise of happiness by the way of ‘Coke’ and the ‘smile’ campaigns. Apple is an uncluttered yet sophisticated brand and that is the experience it communicates through products, packaging and the store layout. With a boom in the social media space, it has become easier for brands to engage their customers at regular intervals. 
Lesson 5: Magical experiences can inspire but creative engagements help to retain

A successful brand can transform customer’s perceptions, preferences and priorities. At the core of brand health is the relationship that the brand has built with the customer. If this relationship has been nurtured well, it flowers into an inseparable bond resulting in fanatically loyal customers.

 This article was published in Strategist- Business Standard on May 26, 2014. 

Tuesday 20 May 2014

Communicating Brand 'Namo': Part 2

Marketing as a term has been considered unnecessary with respect to marketing services whose objective is more of a ‘social good’. Political parties and politicians have been a difficult product to brand and communicate. By definition, brands must deliver on a promise, consistently and in the context of politicians these two aspects — delivering on a promise and consistency are a big question mark.

One may have the best product/ service but it is of no use, until the world knows of it. Communication strategy is about getting the marketing message to your target consumer at an optimum cost. A good and well targeted communication was probably the strength of Modi’s campaign. He made a consistent and focused appeal to Indians yet customized his message differently to the micro markets. With political parties having a big overlap between their manifestos, the only significant point of difference seems to be individual leading the party. 

The brand essence & brand positioning
Modi fought the entire campaign on the promise of development and change. He had a team of media and advertising experts who have worked diligently over more than a year to build brand Modi and packaged, communicated and sold it to the public like any other consumer brand. The team understood that the young Indians (almost 60% of India’s population) had angst against the Indian political scenario. The communication campaign reflected the mood of the nation and promised a leadership which will give them good governance and a better future.

BJP wanted to promote as it was keen to change its image from a communal to be more secular party.  This shift in strategy gave Modi an opportunity to build on his developmental image and dull his Hindutva image. Though Modi did not discard the Hindu image completely and described it not as a religion but a ‘way of life’. He still wore his saffron colours with pride or sported it in collateral or backdrop used, but never let it enter the conversations and the actions. He communicated that he may not wear the symbols of other religions but he definitely respects them all. Modi’s delight in dressing also resonated well with a section of the electorate that valued personal growth and progress above politics.

Lesson 1: Incorporate your core brand essence, loudly or subtly, in your communication to build brand equity. Base your campaign on your brand promise or core brand proposition.

 The message strategy
Samit Sinha, managing partner, Alchemist Brand Consulting, said, “Culturally, Indians have always been quite content to be ruled by a powerful king-figure, rather than the more abstract idea of self-rule, so centralized authority (or even a benevolent dictator) is not at all an anathema for most Indians. Centralization of power and determined authoritarianism could well be seen by today’s India as the need of the hour and an attractive antidote against economic stagnation. Hence, this time the pitch was for Modi Sarkar and not BJP Sarkar.”

Modi’s message was strong and the communication was designed to turn people’s attention away from the memories of 2002 to the more recent economic transformation of Gujarat and increasing confidence among the people of this state.

The campaign was planned over three layers. The top layer that spoke to the nation as a whole was controlled by Modi himself through his team of volunteers. The second layer was coordinated by party leaders who organized meetings with concerned groups and the third layer was RSS and party workers who were involved in the last mile messaging. The strategic message laid emphasis on party’s philosophy and was communicated through ‘Saugandh’, the BJP anthem to which Modi lent his voice. The tactical messages were aimed to create momentum and get party the majority in 2014 elections.

The message strategy broadly followed an emotional appeal. Modi tries to connect to diverse Indians through their individual concerns and problems. He would empathize with them and draw a parallel of similar issue in Gujarat scenario and how his development model worked to solve the issue. Messages were tailored for specific villages and target groups. While in urban areas, he projected the imagery of pro-growth reformist leader, in the Indian hinterland he spoke about common problems including corruption, inflation, joblessness and basic health and sanitation. The final reinforcement of brand Modi was facilitated by RSS pracharaks and many other volunteers through door to door campaigning.

Lesson 2: Brand communication needs to follow a consistent message strategy to communicate the same idea every time. It encapsulates the brand positioning and helps in encoding it into a language which is understood by the TG.

The media mix
Brand Modi adopted 360 degree communication to speak their promise. They used advertising through radio, television (particularly during the IPL cricket matches), print, posters, hoardings and bus panels, in addition to traditional nukkad sabhas, street plays, rallies, social events and public speeches. Human banners and placards dominated below-the-line rally promotions, along with off-line activation. Social media and internet was actively deployed to engage the young audience throughout the campaign period. Though the core message was the same- promise of good governance and development- but it was adapted to the media deployed and customized for each state and urban and rural centres.

Modi left no stone un-turned to reach every nook and corner of India. Modi’s brand team leveraged technology for micro-targeting even in media-dark rural areas. BJP found that 30,000 villages of UP and Bihar were media-dark with no TV, print or radio. They deployed hundreds of mobile vans to reach out to these villages and spread Modi’s message.

He complemented the traditional marketing with equally effective direct marketing initiatives. Modi covered 437 physical rallies, took part in 5500 video conferences, 3D rallies and Chai pe Charcha events. Over the period of 6 months, the team covered 6 lakh villages, almost all TV urban and semi-urban household and was present across every TV channel, newspapers, radio, cell phone and internet media. Modi’s campaign reached out to 12 crore first time voters through his integrated media mix. According to media reports, the party is estimated to spend around 400 crores on the entire campaign.

Lesson 3: Integrated Marketing Communication entails not just employing all mediums but coordinating them in a way that they are in synergy with each other. The synergy within mediums helps in maximizing the returns on media investment

The campaign: Creating Experience and Engagement: the reason for all communication

Launch: First PR to build credibility
Modi started his campaign not closer to elections but long back. The campaign did not take off with heavy mass media budgets but chose soft and surrogate route. Modi’s first objective was to build relevance around the chosen positioning. He therefore spoke about his work in Gujarat to increase awareness and build on his image as ‘development and change’ agent.  He promoted Gujarat as a tourist destination and rolled out a well designed and professional campaign with Amitabh Bacchan as a brand ambassador. Gujarat remained at the top of the mind for most Indians.

Modi’s initial communication strategy focused on winning international acclaim through appearances and mentions in TIME, Economist, NYT, WSJ and other leading American publications.  This forced the national media to focus spotlight on him. Modi and his team understood the Indian colonial mindset wherein we acknowledge and reward people once the outside world does. 

Modi started his campaign in February 2013 and accepted invitations to events that catered to key demographics across the country. These included institutions like Sri Ram College of Commerce in New Delhi, FICCI Ladies Organisation, Google Big Tent, India Today Conclave, Pune’s Fergusson College, where he first articulated his 'Gujarat model' in detail. His aim was to create bottom-up pressure on the BJP leadership. Modi was careful about choosing interview opportunities. His appearances in chat shows was timed appropriately. Also, he is the first Indian politician to make effective use of social media and digital space. 

Lesson 4: It is not about PR or Advertising; loud or soft launch; but knowing when and what to say

Social Media: Creating ‘own’ medium
Use of digital media was a strategic decision because Modi wanted to appeal to the young generation of this nation who is frustrated with Indian political scenario and was looking for a change. They are hardworking and hopeful and Modi wanted to hook on to this ‘hope’ in young India. For the same reason, Modi’s campaign also tried to motivate people to cast their votes to enable formation of a stable and strong government.

In 2007, YouTube was the first social platform that Modi embraced. Modi’s Facebook and Twitter journey commenced in the year 2009.  He then befriended blogging and launched his personal website. In 2010, Modi's Twitter follower base increased to one lakh and by December 2011, he had over four lakh followers, and crossing one million mark in October 2012. He is named to be the first Indian politician to use Google Hangout and has an app on his name, 'iModi'. On Facebook, Modi has 7,549,972 likes and 960,914 people talking about him, whereas he has 4.12 million followers on Twitter.

Modi's content strategy changed with changing communication objectives to influence the various stages of voter’s decision making. Initially, he intended to communicate his ‘brand identity’ and hence established his presence on various social platforms. The content revolved around inspirational quotes, quotes from scriptures and his daily activities.

In the second stage of building the ‘brand interest and associations’, Modi’s social media presence focused on his past performance, achievements and the developments in Gujarat. His followers engaged with the brand by liking or commenting on the posts. While he garnered support, he also invited criticism by opposition, media and a few citizens to create curiosity.

In the final stage of building ‘brand preference’, Modi shifted his focus on building emotional connect with his audience. This was the stage where he built his credibility, increased his consideration and amplified his superiority. Also, there was a notable change in the content strategy. Apart from sharing his credentials, he turned more vocal about the opposition and created strong statements to express his opinions.

He is perhaps the only celebrity leader who also followed others including his colleagues in the BJP, international leaders, eminent celebrities and few of his fans and well-wishers. A top public figure's e 'following back' action indicated him to be a ‘people’s person’ and this created an army of advocates.

Sentiments on the social media clearly signalled enthusiasm for the brand Modi. In September 2013, when Modi was declared the PM candidate for BJP, he set on the final stage of building ‘brand resonance’ with active campaigning for elections. They integrated social media with ground level activations and other mediums. The party made extensive use of SMSes, Twitter, Emails and Facebook to garner support from masses. Modi’s comments on social platform were picked up by other mediums for greater discussion and buzz by newspapers, radios and TV channels. Twitter discussed Modi and his accomplishments in 140 words to educate people on the brand ‘Modi’. Many volunteers were entrusted with the tweeting activities across 12 tables.

He used the Youtube to spread his messages. All his speeches and interviews on various platforms including political rallies, industry events, management workshops, university sessions, inauguration ceremonies etc. was uploaded on You-tube. He is also the first Indian politician to reach out to young audience of India and outside through Google Hangout. For the 80 Lok Sabha seats in UP, special web pages like NamoLucknow, NamoBaghpat, etc. were created to start debates and inform young India on BJP volunteers and current controversies. Social media seemed to be the anchor medium for BJP campaign, aimed at every stage of voter decision making. It was integrated with other mediums during various stages of the campaign. It was predicted that social media could influence the election results in 160 constituencies.

Mobile Strategy
India has 205 million web users but a base of 915.9 mn mobile subscribers as per 2013 date of Internet and Mobile Association India. The viral messaged shared through chat platforms, the India 272+ app for Android devices and Modi4PM donation drives increased the visibility and created positive brand associations. Speeches were made available on mobile phones for those who could not connect to the You-tube platform. Mobile and social media strategy helped Modi engage people and think of themselves as contributors to India’s development. This sense of ownership not only helped in bringing more and more people to polling booths but also earn majority for the party.

Lesson 5: Owned Media including Facebook, Twitter, You tube if used well can help the brand ‘earn’ free media platforms. These two together, one with maximum control and other with least control can help the brand fulfil various communications objectives through the decision making process.

Advertising: Leveraging existing mediums for mass reach
To connect with the young audience, Modi campaign used the creative hook “Ache din aane wale hain” which captured the need of the people in bundling hope.  This was a simple expression of the brand story that brought hope and positivism to life and hence resonated well with Indians. In line with this creative idea, the campaign developed advertising tagline ‘ab ki baar modi sarkaar’, created by agency Soho Square (O&M). This was aimed at young generation, many of whom were first time voters who wanted to see India move on a development path.

Modi’s campaign managers took the nation’s problems and connected it with their proposition of change through catchy couplets like “Bahut ho gayi mehengayi ki maar, ab ki baar Modi sarkar; na sahenge naari pe atyachaar, ab ki baar Modi Sarkar”. These became so popular that they were extensively shared over chat and social media platforms.

Punchlines such as “Janta maaf nahin karegi” added further buzz to the campaign and fitted well under the campaign theme of hope and positivism. A hard-hitting series of films and animation-based executions humorously promoted the tagline 'Ab Ki Baar, Modi Sarkar', and a musical titled 'Ache Din Aane Wale Hai, Hum Modi Ji Ko Laane Wale Hai' that positioned Narendra Modi as a harbinger of happiness were created for mass media promotion. However this was targeted at the oppressed common men who were finding it difficult to make both ends meet. Other activation ideas like “Modi aane wale hain”; “chai pe charcha” etc. were customized to communication activities planned around them. All the above propositions bombarded the television space, newspapers, radio, outdoors. The consistent message focusing on brand imagery, saffron background and highlighted key message helped in clutter free and attractive creative.

Lesson 6: The creative hook is the port connecting the brand to the consumer. It helps to bring core brand idea in a language that is resonating with the TG. Coordinated and clear advertising built around this creative anchor helps to generate word of mouth-able message, creating greater awareness and contributing to the campaign buzz.

BTL Activations & Direct Marketing: Building momentum to create Buzz
The creators of Modi Campaign well understood the importance of creating buzz to bring the maximum returns to their communication strategy and fulfil mission 272. This required brand advocates and champions. The first innovative step taken by the managers included building of volunteer army, especially of people under the age of 30 i.e. the group that believed in change. Volunteers were invited through a missed call initiative at a specific number and they took Modi’s vision and promise to each house of this nation. The reports reveal that there were average of 10000 missed calls every day and generated more than 130 million interactions. This initiative was also aimed to recruit volunteers from the interiors and hence build a networked bandwidth of party workers. Meeting voters in their houses helped the party listen to the concerns of real India and remove disconnect between the intellectual debates and the actual conditions. For example, when party thought that delay in releasing manifesto could cost them enormous votes, the party workers found that it was a non-issue for common men as they were more concerned about the future and not written promises.

The campaign taglines were made contemporary, sometimes controversial to initiate viral messaging round. It became a ‘national time pass’ to forward these Modi supporting messages and jingles. The viral spread was so immense that small kids were also heard repeating the campaign taglines.

To take care of urban youth, BJP put up small skits named nukkad natak (street corner play) to reach out to the youth. 1,200 such acts were performed on themes including price rise and corruption. They formed NaMo band which was played in malls, college canteens, barista and Cafe Coffee Day outlets. 

The flash mob idea of Modi Campaign was aimed to create WOM buzz. Music bands were unleashed in public places, which started by singing some popular numbers to collect a crowd and then switched to singing Modi-and BJP-theme songs. All these activities added fuel to the campaign and made it word of mouth-able proposition, which at the last stage was spread by people themselves. The NaMo ‘roti’ branding at Varanasi, in line with Lifebuoy roti branding during Kumbh created media buzz and visibility.

The 3D studio: Reaching out to people
Modi connects to his large audience through 3D appearances during rallies, seminars and other events. With this virtual and hi-tech medium, Modi had flexibility of addressing many more Indians and reach out to greater percentage of population. Modi’s experiment with 3D holograms first happened in 2012 Gujarat assembly elections wherein he delivered a speech to 53 locations simultaneously. These 3D hologram rallies were conducted extensively during the election campaign of 2013-14.

Chai pe Charcha: Connecting People
The ‘chaiwala’ tag given to Modi was soon converted by BJP into a property ‘Chai pe Charcha’ to engage people and plan other outreach campaigns around tea. The campaign was planned based on the insight that tea in India serves as a social binder and people discuss a lot over tea, formally and informally. Modi believed that tea stalls are like footpath parliament and many critical interactions happen here.

Modi connected electronically with lakhs of supporters and citizens of India through this outreach program. He would host the event from a tea stall in Ahmadabad and the event was relayed across 1000 tea stalls in 300 cities. Mosi would appear on a giant screen at these tea stalls...with a cup of tea and discussed with them issues related to good governance and development. People could interact and ask their questions using a combination of satellite, DTH, Internet and mobile technology. Participants were served tea in NaMo branded cups and from a NaMo branded pots. These events were hosted on You tube. This campaign highlighted two aspects of Modi’s personality: Someone who had a humble origin and someone who had aspirations. And that was exactly what young India wanted in their leader.

Lesson 7: While traditional advertising and online activities can spread the message, BTL executions and direct marketing activities helps the brand connect with its customers by engaging them and making them a contributor. Such activities help in building customer-brand relationship and hence generate greater buzz and WOM. And any amount advertising is smaller than WOM because all communication is ultimately aimed at creating WOM.


Brand Modi has been persistent, insistent and consistent, the combination which gives compelling and convincing communication. His communication was simple yet strategic and could find a place in consumer's minds and heart. However, good communication can only work if the product is great. Past performance of Modi added credibility to the communication strategy. However, it remains to be seen how Modi would continue to engage the young population of India and communicate with them consistently and continuously. 

Friday 16 May 2014

Branding Lessons from ‘NaMo’- Part 1

Brand Modi or ‘NaMo’ as he is titled is build over time and is not a sudden phenomenon. A ‘chaiwala’ from a humble background is positioned as a mass brand and enjoys credibility among people because of his developmental work in Gujarat. On the other hand is Brand ‘RaGa,’ who has a family legacy and is definitely not a ‘mass’ brand. He is more recognized for his parentage rather than capability. From a brand perspective, which has a greater salience- Brand NaMo and Brand RaGa? What made ‘NaMo’ a strong brand which was so well accepted by the people of India?

There is a fundamental truth that in today’s fragmented, proliferated and diverse society, no product can succeed without marketing, so if one wants to sell a product with no marketing, it will either die or remain niche and boutique.  This conforms to Drucker’s quote: “Because the purpose of business is to create a customer, the business enterprise has two - and only two - basic functions: marketing and innovation. Marketing and innovation produce results; all the rest are costs”. And this statement clearly comes alive in Modi’s 2014 campaign.

Good product is a backbone of a great brand
A good branding and communication plan is one of the greatest contributors to Modi’s success story, not taking away the credit of a good product and years of experience and developmental output behind him. Modi ensured that each of his accomplishments is spoken about. Many of his projects are known as India’s first, world’s biggest, Asia’s largest etc. Modi has attempted to have attention from media through his noteworthy contributions.
Lesson 1: Good product + Continuous and Consistent Communication = MARKET SHARE

Core Brand Essence
The core brand value of BJP has an element of Hindutva. This posed a danger of being perceived as communal. However, rather than running away from the core of the brand, Modi accepted it gracefully but as ‘developmental Hindutva’. The Hindutva imagery was delivered subliminally through backdrops or references to local temples and deities, and adhered to in attire, speeches, actions and behaviours but was never part of the main storytelling.
Lesson 2: Accept your core brand value and make it your strength rather than weakness as people can’t isolate brands from their core essence.

Brand Personification
One of the prime reasons for BJP victory is personification of its brand image. 8 out of 10 brands fail not because of bad product but because they do not have a clearly defined personality. BJP personified the party image by declaring Modi as their PM candidate. This helped people visualize the face of the party. On the other hand, Congress kept the Indians guessing. There was no ‘one’ face/imagery for the party. Though Rahul seemed to be leading the campaign, he was not officially declared as the PM candidate. Such ambiguity led people to make guesses and define their own imagery for Congress, adding on to the confusion.
Lesson 3:  Give brand a clearly defined personality rather than leaving this task to customers. It’s good to have one single identity rather than multiple imagery perceptions for the brand as human beings interact and build relationship with people and not non-living entities. 

Consumer Insight
Modi repeatedly kept saying that 60% of the Indian population comprises of youth and he made sure that he is reaching out to this segment. His target was the educated and aspirational middle class Indian. BJP understood the pulse of this young India. They knew that their intended segment wants a magnanimous and strong leader who will talk to them and make some tough choices on critical issues.  They prefer a leader who may not be ‘humble’ but can deliver good governance. The BJP campaign reached out to the young generation of this nation who is frustrated of current Indian political scenario and is looking for a change. They are hardworking and hopeful and Modi appealed and touched this ‘hope’ residing in young India.

Also, BJP understood that most young people are not loyalists of a party. They are neutral and would prefer someone who could take the country on growth journey. The current political environment dissuaded this group to vote as they couldn’t find any difference among political parties/ candidates. BJP therefore latched on the opportunity to convert these neutrals to positive. Their campaign ‘ache din aane vale hain’ and ‘abki baar modi sarkaar’ reflected hope and change. However, this also meant that Modi had to persuade these people to ‘vote’ and not be mere spectators.
Lesson 3: Build your brand and communication strategy ‘outside-in’ and not inside-out’. Understand what your customers want, what are their concerns and not what you want them to accept and use.

Single minded proposition
For a brand to succeed, it has to stand for a single minded proposition/ promise. Modi is clearly positioned as a synonym for development. This brand promise was reinforced by Gujarat case study and vociferous support from the industry veterans. Whereas brand RaGa could not find a clear and differentiated positioning for himself, apart from the feel of reassurance and pedigree as a scion of Nehru dynasty. But was Modi’s positioning communicated effectively? Experts believe that Brand Modi was clearly positioned and communicated well, whereas the same was not true for Brand RaGa. A single minded focused proposition helps a brand establish itself strongly with the consumer.
Lesson 4: Positioning is the most important and critical brand asset. It is important to identify the ‘node’ you wish to occupy in consumer’s mind. Do not try to be too many things for your consumer as you may end up being none.

Weave emotion into your brand story
Modi through his speeches appealed to the deepest sentiments of his audience. He began with positive reinforcement and reminded people of their strengths and achievement. He then moved on to talk about local problems and contrasting their condition with the comfort of Gujarat. Modi also used comparative appeal by highlighting the ineffectiveness of Congress governments over 60 years and the promise of a grand future with BJP. Such a storytelling approach connected him with people as it was built on their current concerns and goals.
Lesson 5: Brands are built on emotions and a strong consistent emotion can find you a special place in consumer’s mind.

Brand Reinforcement through brand design and symbols
The lotus on Modi’s shirt was difficult to miss. The brand reinforced its image by incorporating a clearly identifiable logo (lotus) at every touch point.  The moment one thinks of NaMo, saffron colour comes to mind. All brand communication property extensively used the brand colour to break the clutter and stand out tall. The other associations created through brand symbols included achievement orientation, forward looking and a change agent. Modi extensively used brand colour and symbol in his campaign backdrops thus reinforcing brand recall. RaGa on the other brand had no clear and strong association with secularism or white colour except for the ‘hand’ as election symbol. Also, saffron is a stronger colour and sits in consumer’s mind helping to create greater recognition and differentiation. Brand elements if coordinated and reinforced, work sublimely on consumer’s mind to create desired brand associations.  
Lesson 6: All branding efforts need to be coordinated and synergetic in nature. It is essential to invest in building differentiated and well recognized brand properties and assets.


Part 2 would look at brand communication strategy of Modi and the lessons therein

Friday 2 May 2014

Communication Big Idea: From Strategy to Execution

When communication managers design their campaigns, they want to say a lot of things to their consumers. Given a choice, they would like to do mass advertising, and social media and OOH, and BTL activation and ...sponsorship. Is somethings left???? However, one thing that differentiates a successful campaign from a not so successful campaign is that one BIG IDEA.

This big idea is a port that connects a brand to the consumer. It is a platform that helps the brand find a place in consumer's heart. 

A strong Big Idea is media neutral, captures the brand essence or the emotion through which the brand wants to build a relation with its consumers. Taylor and Hatch in their book "rigorous magic" explain the communication strategy funnel including Brand Ideas, Advertising Ideas, Conceptual constructs etc. This note is adapted from the propositions given in their book but is modified to Indian scenario. 

Essentially, a communication plan has the following


Brand Positioning: The brand's POD or a unique value proposition: It is a promise made by a brand to its consumers. 
For example Brand Saffola has positioned its cooking oil on the proposition of "Healthy for the Heart". After re-positioning itself from being a therapeutic oil to a preventive oil, Saffola owned up the consumer insight that "The hopefully health-fuls are aware of health (read heart) issues; but struggle between their awareness and their motivation to act on it fully"

Brand Idea/ Big Communication Idea: The port that connects a brand to  its consumers and helps communicate the core brand value. The brand idea confirms with brand positioning and may even emerge from it. However, the big idea can change even without any change in positioning, to rejuvenate the brand or to own a different emotional space in consumer's mind. 
Saffola knew that the key decision maker for this category is a wife who constantly worries about her husband's health. She may look angry/frustrated with his lethargy but is actually concerned about his health. The brand owned up the 'Heart Space' and the big communication idea for this brand is that a "straight from the heart". 
 
Advertising/Campaign Idea: The taglines, slogans etc. are born out of the big idea and are memorable ways to communicate the brand. They involve emotional context and has a, audio-visual bent. 
The campaigns titled 'Kal Se', 'Abhi to Main Jawaan Hoon' are the advertising ideas for the brand Saffola. Multiple films were aired on these campaigns and were constantly change to keep the brand fresh. 
Activation Ideas: Short term content driven activities under the umbrella of the big idea: Activation ideas help in consumer engagement and allow the brands to marry long-term ambition with the immediate objectives. These can be executed locally and connect global idea to the local life.
Saffola started celebrating The World Heart day every year and conducted events on this day around the nation. They launched initiatives like "Heart age finder" etc. on their online platform to engage consumers. 

Contextual Constructs: “When and Where of the communication”: They do not influence the content but are subtle reinforcement to brand essence, advertising or activation ideas. They help to create engagement and participation from consumers. 
Saffola uses mass media, especially electronic, internet and social media apart from owning the World Heart Day. These are the primary constructs through which the brand comes to life. 
 
This sequence acts like a funnel. Brand positioning is a strategic decision and gives rise to  the brand idea. Brand idea is more strategic in nature whereas advertising ideas, activations and contextual constructs are executional aspects of the communication plan. 

In the above example, the success of brand Saffola, in terms of creating the TOM recall and strong purchase intention is reflective in focused, simple and single minded communication strategy. 

6Es framework of brand building Strong brands are assets to the business as they earn premium and create consumer preference. People t...