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CHAPTER 9:
MEASURING SOURCES OF BRAND EQUITY:
   CAPURING CUSTOMER MINDSET



          Kevin Lane Keller
        Tuck School of Business
          Dartmouth College



                                  9.1
Qualitative Research Techniques
   Free association
     What do you like best about the brand? What are its
      positive aspects?
     What do you dislike? What are its disadvantages?

     What do you find unique about the brand? How is it
      different from other brands? In what ways is it the
      same?




                                           9.2
Free Associations
                                      ATTRIBUTES
                                  User Imagery                 Usage Imagery
                                 Western, American,
    Product-Related                                        Appropriate for outdoor
                              blue collar, hard-working,
 Blue denim, shrink-to-fit        traditional, strong,      work and casual social
 cotton fabric, button-fly,     rugged, and masculine             situations
     two-horse patch,
                                                                            Brand Personality
 and small red pocket tag
                                                                             Honest, classic,
                                        LEVI’S                         Contemporary, approachable,
                                                                        independent, and universal
                                         501
High quality, long lasting,
       and durable                                                 Feelings of self-confidence
                                                                       and self-assurance
        Functional                  Comfortable fitting
                                    and relaxing to wear                   Symbolic
                                         Experiential

                                          BENEFITS
                                                                          9.3
Qualitative Research Techniques
   Projective techniques
       Diagnostic tools to uncover the true opinions and
        feelings of consumers when they are unwilling or
        otherwise unable to express themselves on these
        matters




                                              9.4
Projective Techniques
   Consumers might feel that it would be socially
    unacceptable to express their true feelings
   Projective techniques are diagnostic tools to
    uncover the true opinions and feelings of
    consumers
   Examples:
     Completion and interpretation tasks
     Comparison tasks



                                            9.5
New approach: ZMET
   Zaltman Metaphor Elicitation Technique
    (ZMET)
   ZMET is “a technique for eliciting
    interconnected constructs that influence thought
    and behavior.”




                                       9.6
ZMET
   The guided conversation consists of a series of steps
    that includes some or all of the following:
       Story telling
       Missed images
       Sorting task
       Construct elicitation
       The most representative picture
       Opposite images
       Sensory images
       Mental map
       Summary image
       Vignette

                                              9.7
Brand Personality and Values
   Brand personality refers to the human characteristics
    or traits that can be attributed to a brand.
   The Big Five
     Sincerity (down-to-earth, wholesome, and cheerful)
     Excitement (daring, spirited, imaginative, and up-to-
      date)
     Competence (reliable, intelligent, and successful)

     Sophistication (upper class and charming)

     Ruggedness (outdoorsy and tough)
                                               Jennifer Aaker, 1997

                                               9.8
Identifying Key Brand Personality
               Associations
                                    BUSH                          KERRY
   Coffee                Dunkin’ Donuts                          Starbucks
   Technology            IBM                                     Apple
   Auto                  Ford                                    BMW
   Retail                Kmart                                   Target
   Fast Food             McDonald’s                              Subway

       2004 U.S. presidential election, random sample of undecided voters


                                                              9.9
Experiential Methods
   By tapping more directly into their actual home, work,
    or shopping behaviors, researchers might be able to
    elicit more meaningful responses from consumers.
   Advocates of the experiential approach have sent
    researchers to consumers’ homes in the morning to see
    how they approach their days, given business travelers
    Polaroid cameras and diaries to capture their feelings
    when in hotel rooms, and conducted “beeper studies”
    in which participants are instructed to write down what
    they’re doing when they are paged.
                                             9.10
Quantitative Research Techniques
   Awareness
   Image
   Brand responses
   Brand relationships




                            9.11
Awareness
   Recognition
       Ability of consumers to identify the brand (and its
        elements) under various circumstances
   Recall
     Ability of consumers to retrieve the actual brand
      elements from memory
     Unaided vs. aided recall




                                               9.12
Awareness
   Corrections for guessing
       Any research measure must consider the issue of consumers
        making up responses or guessing.
   Strategic implications
       The advantage of aided recall measures is that they yield
        insight into how brand knowledge is organized in memory
        and what kind of cues or reminders may be necessary for
        consumers to be able to retrieve the brand from memory.
       The important point to note is that the category structure that
        exists in consumers’ minds—as reflected by brand recall
        performance—can have profound implications for consumer
        choice and marketing strategy.

                                                      9.13
Image
   Ask open-ended questions to tap into the
    strength, favorability, and uniqueness of brand
    associations.
   These associations should be rated on scales for
    quantitative analysis.




                                      9.14
Brand Responses

   Research in psychology suggests that purchase
    intentions are most likely to be predictive of actual
    purchase when there is correspondence between the
    two in the following categories:
   Purchase Intentions
       Action (buying for own use or to give as a gift)
       Target (specific type of product and brand)
       Context (in what type of store based on what prices and other
        conditions)
       Time (within a week, month, or year)

                                                   9.15
Brand Relationships
   Behavioral loyalty
   Brand substitutability
   Other brand resonance dimensions
       For example, in terms of engagement, measures
        could explore word-of-mouth behavior, online
        behavior, and so forth in depth




                                            9.16
Comprehensive Models of
      Customer-Based Brand Equity
   Brand dynamics
   Equity engines
   Young & Rubicam’s Brand Asset Valuator
    (BAV)




                                     9.17
Brand Dynamics
   The Brand Dynamics model adopts a
    hierarchical approach to determine the strength
    of relationship a consumer has with a brand.
   The five levels of the model are:
     Presence
     Relevance
     Performance
     Advantage
     Bonding


                                        9.18
Equity Engines
   This model delineates three key dimensions of brand
    affinity—the emotional and intangible benefits of a
    brand—as follows:
       Authority: The reputation of a brand, whether as a long-
        standing leader or as a pioneer in innovation
       Identification: The closeness customers feel for a brand and
        how well they feel the brand matches their personal needs
       Approval: The way a brand fits into the wider social matrix
        and the intangible status it holds for experts and friends



                                                      9.19
Young & Rubicam’s Brand Asset
               Valuator (BAV)
   There are five key components of brand health in BAV
    —the five pillars.
   Each pillar is derived from various measures that relate
    to different aspects of consumers’ brand perceptions
    and that together trace the progression of a brand’s
    development.
       Differentiation
       Energy
       Relevance
       Esteem
       Knowledge

                                              9.20
BrandAsset® Valuator (BAV)

   240,000+ consumers
   Up to 181 categories
   137 studies
   40 countries
   8 years
   56 different brand
    metrics
   Common methodology


                            9.21
How Brands Are Built

                         Four Primary Aspects
                  • The culmination of brand building efforts;
 Knowledge        acquisition of consumer experience

                  • Consumer respect, regard, reputation; a
   Esteem         fulfillment of perceived consumer promise

                  • Relates to usage and subsumes the five Ps of
  Relevance       marketing; relates to sale

Differentiation   • The basis for consumer choice; the essence of
                  the brand, source of margin

                                               9.22
Healthy Brands Have Greater
      Differentiation than Relevance
100     D>R
 90

 80                                  Examples:
 70

 60                                  Harley Davidson
 50
                                     Yahoo!
 40
                                     AOL
 30
                                     Williams-Sonoma
 20
                                     Ikea
 10
                                     Bloomberg Business News
 0
       Differentiation   Relevance

      Room to grow...
      Brand has power to build relevance.
                                                  9.23
Brands with greater Relevance than Differentiation
   Are in Danger of Becoming Commodities

 100

  90
                          R>D
  80                                  Examples:
  70

  60
                                      Exxon
  50
                                      Mott’s
  40
                                      McDonald’s
  30
                                      Crest
  20
                                      Minute Maid
  10
                                      Fruit of the Loom
   0
        Differentiation   Relevance   Peter Pan (peanut butter)

       Uniqueness has faded; price becomes
       dominant reason to buy.
                                                     9.24
More Esteem than Knowledge Means, “I’d
           like to get to know you better”

100

 90
       E>K
 80                                 Examples:
 70

 60                                 Coach leatherwear
 50                                 Tag Heuer
 40                                 Calphalon
 30                                 Movado
 20                                 Blaupunkt
 10
                                    Pella Windows
  0
                                    Palm Pilot
         Esteem      Knowledge
                                    Technics

      Brand is better liked than known.

                                                   9.25
Too Much Knowledge Can Be Dangerous:
      “I know you and you’re nothing special”

100

 90
                    K>E
 80
                                     Examples:
 70

 60                                   Plymouth
 50                                   TV Guide
 40                                   Spam
 30                                   Woolworths
 20                                   Chrysler
 10                                   Maxwell House
  0                                   National
         Esteem       Knowledge       Enquirer
                                      Sanka
      Brand is better known than liked.


                                                      9.26
A Two-Dimensional Framework for Diagnosing
         Brands: The Power Grid


                                BrandAsset® Valuator




            Brand Strength                                 Brand Stature




    Differentiation       Relevance                    Esteem       Knowledge



                Leading                                         Lagging




                                                          9.27
Brand Health Is Captured on the
         PowerGrid
                                                                   Power Leaders
                                                 Niche/
                                           Unrealized Potential


         (Differentiation and Relevance)
                                                                            Declining
                                                                             Leaders
             BRAND STRENGTH




                                                                         Eroded
                                                   New

                                                       Unfocused




                                                        BRAND STATURE
                                                                         9.28
                                                      (Esteem and Knowledge)
     Base: USA Total Adults BAV 2000
USA 1999 PowerGrid Sample
                                            100

                                                       Arizona Iced Tea        Coca-Cola
                                                          Aeropostale         Ocean Spray
                                                        Newman’s Own              Nike
                                             80       Sundance Channel      Pepperidge Farm
                                                         DreamWorks             M&Ms
                           BRAND STRENGTH


                                                      Bloomberg Business         Disney
                                                             News              Jeopardy!
                                             60
                                                           CDnow               Hallmark
                                                            IKEA
                                                        San Pellegrino         Plymouth
                                             40       Sun Microsystems         Bazooka
                                                            Wired             Ivory Snow
                                                       Quest Telecomm             Pert
                                                            Nokia               Rolaids
                                             20
                                                         iVillage.com            Keds
                                                          NetGrocer         Howard Johnson
                                                           Iridium               TWA
                                                                              Greyhound
                                              0
                                                  0       20        40     60      80         100

Base: USA Total Adults BAV 1999                                BRAND STATURE
                                                                                          9.29
Y&R Resonance Research
                               Resonance
                                 ACE
                                (10%)




                          Community Engagement
                                  15%




                           Attachment (30%)




                           Loyalty (60%)




                               Usage

Base: 2001 BAV Data
                                                 9.30
Y&R Resonance Research with BAV
                                                                                                 Resonance

                    100
                                                           Resonance
                                                           Engaged
                                                                         Community
                                                                         Attached
                                                                                               Engaged
                                                                       Loyal
                                         Differentiation

                                                                                        Community
   Brand Strength




                                              Non-Loyals

                    50                                                              Attached




                                                                               Loyal Users




                                                                           Non-Loyal Users



                     0
                         0          50                            100
                              Brand Stature


                                                                         9.31
  Base: BAV USA Adults 2001
Average U.S. Packaged Goods Brand
      Proportion      Consumer
      of Consumers    Loyalty

         7%             38%
        Bonded

         32%            20%
       Advantage

          35%           19%
      Performance

         43%            17%
       Relevance

         76%            13%
       Presence
                         9.32
Commonalty Between the Basic BAV
 Model and the CBBE Framework
   BAV’s knowledge relates to CBBE’s brand awareness
    and familiarity.
   BAV’s esteem relates to CBBE’s favorability of brand
    associations.
   BAV’s relevance relates to CBBE’s strength of brand
    associations (as well as perhaps favorability).
   BAV’s energy relates to CBBE’s favorability of
    associations.
   BAV’s differentiation relates to CBBE’s uniqueness of
    brand associations.

                                            9.33

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Keller sbm3 09

  • 1. CHAPTER 9: MEASURING SOURCES OF BRAND EQUITY: CAPURING CUSTOMER MINDSET Kevin Lane Keller Tuck School of Business Dartmouth College 9.1
  • 2. Qualitative Research Techniques  Free association  What do you like best about the brand? What are its positive aspects?  What do you dislike? What are its disadvantages?  What do you find unique about the brand? How is it different from other brands? In what ways is it the same? 9.2
  • 3. Free Associations ATTRIBUTES User Imagery Usage Imagery Western, American, Product-Related Appropriate for outdoor blue collar, hard-working, Blue denim, shrink-to-fit traditional, strong, work and casual social cotton fabric, button-fly, rugged, and masculine situations two-horse patch, Brand Personality and small red pocket tag Honest, classic, LEVI’S Contemporary, approachable, independent, and universal 501 High quality, long lasting, and durable Feelings of self-confidence and self-assurance Functional Comfortable fitting and relaxing to wear Symbolic Experiential BENEFITS 9.3
  • 4. Qualitative Research Techniques  Projective techniques  Diagnostic tools to uncover the true opinions and feelings of consumers when they are unwilling or otherwise unable to express themselves on these matters 9.4
  • 5. Projective Techniques  Consumers might feel that it would be socially unacceptable to express their true feelings  Projective techniques are diagnostic tools to uncover the true opinions and feelings of consumers  Examples:  Completion and interpretation tasks  Comparison tasks 9.5
  • 6. New approach: ZMET  Zaltman Metaphor Elicitation Technique (ZMET)  ZMET is “a technique for eliciting interconnected constructs that influence thought and behavior.” 9.6
  • 7. ZMET  The guided conversation consists of a series of steps that includes some or all of the following:  Story telling  Missed images  Sorting task  Construct elicitation  The most representative picture  Opposite images  Sensory images  Mental map  Summary image  Vignette 9.7
  • 8. Brand Personality and Values  Brand personality refers to the human characteristics or traits that can be attributed to a brand.  The Big Five  Sincerity (down-to-earth, wholesome, and cheerful)  Excitement (daring, spirited, imaginative, and up-to- date)  Competence (reliable, intelligent, and successful)  Sophistication (upper class and charming)  Ruggedness (outdoorsy and tough) Jennifer Aaker, 1997 9.8
  • 9. Identifying Key Brand Personality Associations BUSH KERRY  Coffee Dunkin’ Donuts Starbucks  Technology IBM Apple  Auto Ford BMW  Retail Kmart Target  Fast Food McDonald’s Subway 2004 U.S. presidential election, random sample of undecided voters 9.9
  • 10. Experiential Methods  By tapping more directly into their actual home, work, or shopping behaviors, researchers might be able to elicit more meaningful responses from consumers.  Advocates of the experiential approach have sent researchers to consumers’ homes in the morning to see how they approach their days, given business travelers Polaroid cameras and diaries to capture their feelings when in hotel rooms, and conducted “beeper studies” in which participants are instructed to write down what they’re doing when they are paged. 9.10
  • 11. Quantitative Research Techniques  Awareness  Image  Brand responses  Brand relationships 9.11
  • 12. Awareness  Recognition  Ability of consumers to identify the brand (and its elements) under various circumstances  Recall  Ability of consumers to retrieve the actual brand elements from memory  Unaided vs. aided recall 9.12
  • 13. Awareness  Corrections for guessing  Any research measure must consider the issue of consumers making up responses or guessing.  Strategic implications  The advantage of aided recall measures is that they yield insight into how brand knowledge is organized in memory and what kind of cues or reminders may be necessary for consumers to be able to retrieve the brand from memory.  The important point to note is that the category structure that exists in consumers’ minds—as reflected by brand recall performance—can have profound implications for consumer choice and marketing strategy. 9.13
  • 14. Image  Ask open-ended questions to tap into the strength, favorability, and uniqueness of brand associations.  These associations should be rated on scales for quantitative analysis. 9.14
  • 15. Brand Responses  Research in psychology suggests that purchase intentions are most likely to be predictive of actual purchase when there is correspondence between the two in the following categories:  Purchase Intentions  Action (buying for own use or to give as a gift)  Target (specific type of product and brand)  Context (in what type of store based on what prices and other conditions)  Time (within a week, month, or year) 9.15
  • 16. Brand Relationships  Behavioral loyalty  Brand substitutability  Other brand resonance dimensions  For example, in terms of engagement, measures could explore word-of-mouth behavior, online behavior, and so forth in depth 9.16
  • 17. Comprehensive Models of Customer-Based Brand Equity  Brand dynamics  Equity engines  Young & Rubicam’s Brand Asset Valuator (BAV) 9.17
  • 18. Brand Dynamics  The Brand Dynamics model adopts a hierarchical approach to determine the strength of relationship a consumer has with a brand.  The five levels of the model are:  Presence  Relevance  Performance  Advantage  Bonding 9.18
  • 19. Equity Engines  This model delineates three key dimensions of brand affinity—the emotional and intangible benefits of a brand—as follows:  Authority: The reputation of a brand, whether as a long- standing leader or as a pioneer in innovation  Identification: The closeness customers feel for a brand and how well they feel the brand matches their personal needs  Approval: The way a brand fits into the wider social matrix and the intangible status it holds for experts and friends 9.19
  • 20. Young & Rubicam’s Brand Asset Valuator (BAV)  There are five key components of brand health in BAV —the five pillars.  Each pillar is derived from various measures that relate to different aspects of consumers’ brand perceptions and that together trace the progression of a brand’s development.  Differentiation  Energy  Relevance  Esteem  Knowledge 9.20
  • 21. BrandAsset® Valuator (BAV)  240,000+ consumers  Up to 181 categories  137 studies  40 countries  8 years  56 different brand metrics  Common methodology 9.21
  • 22. How Brands Are Built Four Primary Aspects • The culmination of brand building efforts; Knowledge acquisition of consumer experience • Consumer respect, regard, reputation; a Esteem fulfillment of perceived consumer promise • Relates to usage and subsumes the five Ps of Relevance marketing; relates to sale Differentiation • The basis for consumer choice; the essence of the brand, source of margin 9.22
  • 23. Healthy Brands Have Greater Differentiation than Relevance 100 D>R 90 80 Examples: 70 60 Harley Davidson 50 Yahoo! 40 AOL 30 Williams-Sonoma 20 Ikea 10 Bloomberg Business News 0 Differentiation Relevance Room to grow... Brand has power to build relevance. 9.23
  • 24. Brands with greater Relevance than Differentiation Are in Danger of Becoming Commodities 100 90 R>D 80 Examples: 70 60 Exxon 50 Mott’s 40 McDonald’s 30 Crest 20 Minute Maid 10 Fruit of the Loom 0 Differentiation Relevance Peter Pan (peanut butter) Uniqueness has faded; price becomes dominant reason to buy. 9.24
  • 25. More Esteem than Knowledge Means, “I’d like to get to know you better” 100 90 E>K 80 Examples: 70 60 Coach leatherwear 50 Tag Heuer 40 Calphalon 30 Movado 20 Blaupunkt 10 Pella Windows 0 Palm Pilot Esteem Knowledge Technics Brand is better liked than known. 9.25
  • 26. Too Much Knowledge Can Be Dangerous: “I know you and you’re nothing special” 100 90 K>E 80 Examples: 70 60 Plymouth 50 TV Guide 40 Spam 30 Woolworths 20 Chrysler 10 Maxwell House 0 National Esteem Knowledge Enquirer Sanka Brand is better known than liked. 9.26
  • 27. A Two-Dimensional Framework for Diagnosing Brands: The Power Grid BrandAsset® Valuator Brand Strength Brand Stature Differentiation Relevance Esteem Knowledge Leading Lagging 9.27
  • 28. Brand Health Is Captured on the PowerGrid Power Leaders Niche/ Unrealized Potential (Differentiation and Relevance) Declining Leaders BRAND STRENGTH Eroded New Unfocused BRAND STATURE 9.28 (Esteem and Knowledge) Base: USA Total Adults BAV 2000
  • 29. USA 1999 PowerGrid Sample 100 Arizona Iced Tea Coca-Cola Aeropostale Ocean Spray Newman’s Own Nike 80 Sundance Channel Pepperidge Farm DreamWorks M&Ms BRAND STRENGTH Bloomberg Business Disney News Jeopardy! 60 CDnow Hallmark IKEA San Pellegrino Plymouth 40 Sun Microsystems Bazooka Wired Ivory Snow Quest Telecomm Pert Nokia Rolaids 20 iVillage.com Keds NetGrocer Howard Johnson Iridium TWA Greyhound 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 Base: USA Total Adults BAV 1999 BRAND STATURE 9.29
  • 30. Y&R Resonance Research Resonance ACE (10%) Community Engagement 15% Attachment (30%) Loyalty (60%) Usage Base: 2001 BAV Data 9.30
  • 31. Y&R Resonance Research with BAV Resonance 100 Resonance Engaged Community Attached Engaged Loyal Differentiation Community Brand Strength Non-Loyals 50 Attached Loyal Users Non-Loyal Users 0 0 50 100 Brand Stature 9.31 Base: BAV USA Adults 2001
  • 32. Average U.S. Packaged Goods Brand Proportion Consumer of Consumers Loyalty 7% 38% Bonded 32% 20% Advantage 35% 19% Performance 43% 17% Relevance 76% 13% Presence 9.32
  • 33. Commonalty Between the Basic BAV Model and the CBBE Framework  BAV’s knowledge relates to CBBE’s brand awareness and familiarity.  BAV’s esteem relates to CBBE’s favorability of brand associations.  BAV’s relevance relates to CBBE’s strength of brand associations (as well as perhaps favorability).  BAV’s energy relates to CBBE’s favorability of associations.  BAV’s differentiation relates to CBBE’s uniqueness of brand associations. 9.33

Editor's Notes

  • #22: 2 The largest worldwide brand study, enabling Y&R to speak to the issue on the agenda, Brands and Financial Performance, but also enabling me to speak about brands the way consumers do. It’s helpful to think about Brands as you think about Relationships-- how brands are built how they progress how they can go sour and how to re-build damaged ones I’m going to talk about the
  • #24: 9 So here’s the first check point. Is this a relationship with a future? If Differentiation, as we say, is greater than Relevance… (refer to the slide) If Relevance is greater than Differentiation...
  • #25: 9 So here’s the first check point. Is this a relationship with a future? If Differentiation, as we say, is greater than Relevance… (refer to the slide) If Relevance is greater than Differentiation...
  • #26: 9 So here’s the first check point. Is this a relationship with a future? If Differentiation, as we say, is greater than Relevance… (refer to the slide) If Relevance is greater than Differentiation...
  • #27: 9 So here’s the first check point. Is this a relationship with a future? If Differentiation, as we say, is greater than Relevance… (refer to the slide) If Relevance is greater than Differentiation...
  • #28: 11 OK, so here’s the cheat sheet. I’m Miss Lonelyhearts and I’m checking out what you’re telling me about the brands. I want to know about Brand Strength and Brand Stature and what they tell me about pursuing the relationship further.
  • #29: 12