Friday 1 August 2014

What the face!


Tell me what you think of when you hear these brands...

Amul, Parle - G biscuit, Manchester United FC, Ferrari & F1 racing, Kingfisher Beer & Airlines, Infosys, Virgin Airlines

Let me share what comes to my mind
Amul - Butter & the Utterly Butterly Delicious Girl & the quirky cartoons
Parle - G Biscuit - the chubby kid on the yellow packing
Manchester United FC - Wayne Rooney, Sir Alex Fergusson & Beckham
Ferrari & F1 racing - Michael Schumaker, Ayrton Senna
Kingfisher Beer & Airlines - Beer, Beautiful fit airhostesses & Vijay Mallya
Infosys - Narayan Murthy
Virgin Airlines - Virgins ;-p  & Richard Branson

I am sure that you too would have similar recollections / associations with these brands. The common thread running amongst all is the association of faces with each of these brands. Brands or products by its very nature are often inanimate objects that provide services or complete a need for us. But the association of faces /  individuals, who in our eyes embody the brand, make the brand more believable & more personal.

As humans we exhibit a need for community, a feel of being one amongst cohorts. Intelligent brands hence maximise the activity to make themselves seem human to the consuming populace. Celebrity marketing is something that you may realise is a classic example of this. While celebrity marketing - Ranbir promoting Pepsi for example, is generally used to create greater brand recall, break advertising clutter - it also puts a human face to the product, complete with normal aspirations & positivity - something that we can identify with.

The concept of organisations & branding as a science is generally assumed to have originated from the West where purchase decisions are supposed to be based on evaluation & rational decision making based on parameters. However in the East - decision making & influencing has always been about people. The networks of family, school, college, work,  the relationships that we build in our day to day life - with the neighbourhood kirana wala (shop keeper) for that matter, influences our decision making (& purchases) greatly .

The rise of the Social Network both in the West & here stresses the importance of people to people bonding. A no brainer then that people connect to people; not just to bright concepts or snazzy marketing ideas. So if you are someone with a killer idea / product, when marketing don’t forget to look human.


Based on ideas espoused in an article by Madhukar Sabnavis (VP Ogilvy & Mather-India) in Business Standard; pg 13, 1st Aug 14

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