Saturday, July 19, 2008

Book review: BrandSimple



"BrandSimple: How the Best Brands Keep it Simple and Succeed" by Allen Adamson is a refreshingly easy read that boils the essence of brands and branding down to, well, their simplest but most important basics. Anyone involved in business management of any kind should read this book.

Adamson reminds us throughout the book that a brand is a very different thing than branding and that marketers cannot be great at branding without first creating a great brand.

The best brands are different. They promise something different and unique and deliver on that promise every time. They also find a way to simplify their brand message so that just about everyone instantly "gets it" and that the "it" resonates and seems obvious after the fact. Getting to that simplicity can require a lot of hard work and thinking, but making it seem so simple, obvious and intuitive is the key.

As Managing Director of Landor Associates, Allen Adamson peppers the book with real-world examples from his work at Landor and from his previous positions. His case studies show how the best brands work tirelessly to emerge with a simple promise and a simple message that is easily communicated in just a few words.

The real examples are brief yet clearly show the challenges and ultimate solutions from brands like Compaq, Visa, Apple, Aquafina, Baby Einstein, BlackBerry, JetBlue, Timberland, Pixar and many more. He uses these brands to show that often a simple insight that makes your product different is the real power in building a great brand -- as long as that difference is important and relevant to your potential customers.

The book is written at an easy reading level so that any business manager will be able to readily breeze through it without tons of technical branding terminology and grasp the important concepts. This in turn will inspire them to reevaluate and transform their own brands. The book is straight-forward, simple and highly insightful and useful.


On my "Professional Marketer Investment Scale";
($-Poor investment, $$$$$-Great investment)

Rating: $$$$$

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Bud goes to InBev



Anheuser-Busch and its flagship brand, Budweiser, have been bought by Belgian brewer, InBev. Not only does this leave us to wonder if a truly American beer brand will play well globally, but it reminds us that distribution (or place) is one of the important "P's" of marketing.

Will InBev be successful getting Bud to be a broader-reaching global brand? Will the purchase by a foreign company hurt Bud's appeal in the U.S.? Will the synergistic savings on the supply and manufacturing side realized by InBev now more than justify the purchase?

Only time will tell, of course, but it will be interesting to watch what effect this has on the A-B and Bud brands.

The question is, will the Budweiser brand still have relevance as a non-U.S. brand or has its essence been fundamentally changed forever?