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The New Branding
By Michael Alan Hamlin
May 12, 2003

Most branding experts agree that while branding, in its essence, is still branding, that it has changed, at least in terms of how strong brands are built and sustained. Frequently, this evolution is termed the new branding. Among the foremost branding experts seeking to first explain how branding has changed, and then how to leverage branding strategy in this new context, is Nick Wreden.

Wreden is the author of Fusion Branding: How to Forge Your Brand for the Future. The term Fusion Branding must have been coined, it seems to me, to drive home the idea that branding, while elegant in its simplicity, has become a complicated thing to do. In the same way that modern man-made inventions such as cars, airplanes and computers have become much more complex, so have business practices such as branding, supply chain management, and finance.

Ironically, a sophisticated set of equipment, services, and consulting advice - collectively called information technology - has grown up with the objective of taking these very sophisticated tasks and simplifying them, so that their complexity is hidden and their ultimate purpose - making it possible to do business more efficiently, productively, and profitably - looks easy. That's where Wreden comes in.

Wreden believes that the New Branding involves the fusion of emotional, experiential, and functional bonds between a company and its clients. "A Fusion Brand is a long-term bond," he says. "This relationship is based on trust and loyalty, backed by everyday operational excellence, and measured by customer equity." Translated, he refers to fulfilling promises diligently, doing so in a timely way, and confirming that all this has been done by way of feedback, customer loyalty, and increased share of the customer's wallet.

Building a Fusion Brand is a five-step process, Wreden says. The steps can be described as attention, transaction, trust, loyalty, and advocacy. By attention, Wreden is advocating the need for companies to be more focused on recall when a customer has a specific need to fulfill. He believes that companies too often fall into the trap of assuming that awareness will translate into revenue. But that's not the case. "When consumers are exposed to thousands of messages daily, awareness is no longer the issue," Wreden advises. "It's attention."

Attention, or specific recall, provides relevancy. "Without relevancy, awareness is no more than background noise to consumers skilled at blocking messages," Wreden says. The first objective of branding, therefore, is to be top-of-mind for specific needs, desires, and compulsions at just the right time. Other experts agree. David Aaker suggests that awareness without recall is a branding graveyard.

"Fusion Brands start with a single transaction," Wreden cautions, and unless it goes well even the best branding strategy is doomed. This is the Yin and Yang of the branding world, the tension between substance and style. "Companies must have the people, processes, and systems to not only meet customer requirements, but fulfill the expectations raised by marketing efforts. A transaction won't be successful if customers only walk away satisfied after having been promised delight" and instead offered only satisfactory quality and service.

Regularly meeting customer expectations results in the development of trust, which Wreden says "is a powerful, yet fragile, competitive advantage. It cannot be bought; it is only earned over time." Wreden argues that trust is a fundamental requisite to building customer equity. Customer equity encompasses loyalty and increased share of customer, leading to an enhanced reputation for delivering the goods.

The advantages of customer loyalty include lower marketing and communications costs, relatively dependable revenues, insulation from competition, better employee morale, and even lower cost of capital, according to Wreden. "Loyal customers demonstrate brand insistence. If the Fusion Brand is not immediately available, loyal customers will continue searching." That's the bond.

Finally, Wreden argues that "trust and loyalty create advocacy, or the willingness of customers to recommend offerings. Such advocates pass along e-mails, provide testimonials and references, and are always willing to try new offerings from the firm." In short, they become boosters and virtual owners as well as customers to die for. "Apple and Cadillac owners represent classic Fusion Brand advocates." They're the diehards. And in those two companies' cases, advocacy has played a fundamental role in making them survivors when they did lose their way, providing the chance to become resuscitated champions.

But the purpose of Fusion Branding is not survival, it's strategic dominance.

(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian Places, of which he is a co-author (Wiley, 2001), and he is currently at work on High Visibility: Building Strong Personal Brands in Asia. Write him at mahamlin@teamasia.com.).

Copyright © 2003 Michael Alan Hamlin. All Rights Reserved.

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