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Sarah Worsham / Mar 25, 2009

Advantages & Disadvantages of Different Branding Strategies

brandingsarahjaneOn Monday, we talked a bit about various branding strategies and why you should consider picking one to help your business and marketing strategies. With each branding strategy comes both advantages and disadvantages that you should be aware of.

  • Corporate Brand – For companies that only offer one benefit to a customer, they usually use a corporate brand (unless they have an overall holding company).
    • Advantages: Everything the company does is attributed to its brand.
    • Disadvantages: Everything the company does is attributed to its brand.
  • Distinct Brand – Some companies choose to release each product or service as its own brand (ex. Proctor & Gamble).
    • Advantages: Each product stands alone so failures do not affect the entire company or other products.  Distinct benefits for each product can be directly attributed to a specific brand.
    • Disadvantages: Each product will require its own marketing strategy and budget, with no synergy possible between products.  Successes will not be directly attributed to the company’s brand.
  • Hybrid Brand – When a product extends the benefit of an overall brand or company, some companies use a hybrid branding strategy.
    • Advantages: Marketing and branding can take advantage of the overall brand for budgets and reputation.
    • Disadvantages: Any problems or negative press for either the product or the overall brand will affect both brands.
  • Umbrella Brand – If a company offers different products with different benefits, but they all extend the same value to the customer, sometimes they are all offered under an overall brand (ex. Nike – athletic gear).
    • Advantages: Each product contributes to the shared value offered to the customer.  Marketing and branding strategies can be at the shared value level, touting all the specific benefits.
    • Disadvantages: Any product can negatively affect the overall brand and specific benefits may be muddled in the overall shared value.

Whichever branding strategy you choose, once you are aware of the advantages and disadvantages of each, you can take those into account when preparing your marketing strategies.

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(photo by Sarah Jane @ Flickr CC)

Technorati tags: brand, branding, branding strategy, business, marketing strategy, marketing

Sarah Worsham / Mar 25, 2009

Morning Edition – Mar 25, 2009

Happy Wednesday to you!  Today is rainy here in Michigan, but a bit warmer.

  • The services of the ’semantic web’ (Online Journalism Blog)
  • People Complaining About Your Biz On Twitter? Salesforce.com Has An App For That (CRM) (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Poll: Integrating SEO & Social Media Marketing (Online Marketing Blog)
  • ExecTweets (John Battelle’s Searchblog)
  • Social Media Marketing Storyboard #1: Fish Where The Fish Are (Web Strategy by Jeremiah)
  • Using Behavioral Analytics to Understand Web Traffic (Web Analytics World)
  • Content worth sharing (Jim’s Marketing Blog)
  • Where do most online retailers fail? (Retail eCommerce Blog)
  • Analysis of a wiki of social media marketing examples (Being Peter Kim)
  • The Quest to Inspire Action (Chris Brogan)
  • A Lead Nurturing Technology (Duct Tape Marketing)
  • The Truth About Linkbuilding: Good vs Crappy Links (Positive Vibes SEO)
  • 10 women in technology you should be following (Ada Lovelace Day) (Online Journalism Blog)
  • iPhone Makes Up 50 Percent of Smartphone Web Traffic In U.S., Android Already 5 Percent (TechCrunch)
  • A Control Freak’s Guide to Social Media Influence (Mashable)
  • Google Tweaks Search, Keeps Getting Better (GOOG) (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Twitter Tweaks Its Title Tags For Better Google Juice (TechCrunch)
  • What Is Platform as a Service (PaaS)? (KeeneView Blog)
  • Operators’ and Media Companies’ Survival Depends on Monetizing Web 2.0, Says In-Stat (Ad Ops Online)

We post links to stories about how to use the web effectively throughout the day on Twitter or Delicious.  Also, if you have a post or link you think is worth sharing, please let us know!

Sarah Worsham / Mar 24, 2009

Want to Think More Creatively? Try Reading Something Different

creativitybohmanIf you’re like me, you have a stack of books about business and marketing lined up to read.  But when it comes to before-bed reading, I usually reach for something a bit different.  I’ve found that if I read a book for pleasure before bed instead of for work or school, I have better dreams and feel more energized and creative the next day.  My genres of choice are sci-fi, fantasy and historical fiction. My sister, who is a PhD candidate at Johns Hopkins has the same experience.

I imagine that doing anything creative – that allows the brain to focus on something other than work – can be energizing. I think that too often we get caught up in all the work we do, in the rat-race, and forget to slow down and give ourselves some freedom.  I still get great ideas from reading books for work or school, but I think that I get the energy and motivation to do that by allowing myself to indulge in more personal pursuits from time to time.

How do you stimulate your creative juices?

(photo by Bohman @ Flickr CC)

Technorati tags: business, creativity, design, innovation

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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