Rethinking the Brand ROI

Rethinking the Brand ROI

Monetizing brand marketing is a challenge of measurement. We are not sure how to connect brand marketing with financial results, so we deem it immeasurable. (By the same token, in the false positives scenario, easily measurable things, like performance marketing, can be financially detrimental).

A few metrics used by companies for assessing success of brand marketing come from the previous media and cultural era. A connection between awareness, advocacy, or affinity and sales was once indicated by, for example, TV viewership or newspaper circulation. This isn’t the case anymore, yet the same metrics are still around.

To measure brand marketing, we need to go back to the role that brand marketing has in the first place.

Brand marketing was invented to create a link between a company and culture. It conveys the brand identity that transcends what a company sells. In contributes to cultural conversation through stories about humans, their aspirations, and their life.?

Brand marketing is the strategy of cultural influence. Brands used to influence mainstream culture through their advertising on mass media like TV, print, billboards, or public relations. Today, they influence culture through the cultural products they create: content, merchandising, events, aesthetics, experiences, archives, history, entertainment, fandom. These cultural products are directed to subcultures, taste communities, and consumer niches. Through these cultural products, brands tell their story.

Cultural products, and by proxy, the brand story, are amplified through media. Media amplification inserts a brand’s cultural products in variety of cultural contexts. In some of these contexts, a brand’s cultural products will flourish; in others, they won’t get noticed. Job of the cultural influence strategy is to quickly assess the two: it is a calculated business and brand test, where creative executions live or die in the real world.?

Media amplification also targets a variety of audiences: not just a brand’s current and prospective customers, but also cultural creators, commentators, observes, critics, and curators. All of these groups have a role in sharing and adoption of cultural products. They are critical for their potential success, and consequently, for the brand desirability and affinity.?

Cultural products and media amplification always go together. Without media amplification, cultural products will stay niche; without cultural products, media is blindly increasing click-through rates without augmenting the brand’s influence with its desired audiences.?

Through cultural influence, companies build their brands and grow their business. Brands and businesses with significant cultural influence command higher prices, capture greater market share, avoid commodification, maintain advantage over competition, and enjoy customer loyalty.?

There is a clear and measurable commercial value of cultural influence (in the follow up analysis, I will break down how to measure it), and the job of corporate strategy is to direct investments towards contexts and audiences where a brand’s cultural influence will generate the highest financial returns.

Core tenets of a cultural influence strategy are:

Long-term + short-term. Cultural influence delivers both short-term and long-term results. It manages the immediate and stretched timelines. For some cultural products (like collaborations or content), the results can be delayed; for others, like experiences or events, they can be more immediate. Media amplification works on different timelines with different cultural products - some are easier to amplify than others - and with different cultural audiences. Calvin Klein’s Jeremy Allen White Instagram campaign was a cultural product that had impeccable cultural timing - a few days before the Golden Globes, where White received his reward, and going into the compressed awards season. Media amplification went from an instagram video to a full-blown campaign. In contrast, Desigual’s campaign with Hari Nef has remained in the Instagram videos-seeding stage, and hasn’t been since amplified. CK’s cultural influence was immediate, with 40M views on CK’s Instagram and 86% of YoY brand engagement increase. Sales influence is longer-term. During the period where Calvin Klein exerted the high immediate cultural influence, it’s stock fell 20 percent and sales in North America dropped 8 percent YoY. For the sales to catch up, Calvin Klein has to keep the cultural influence going (and not wait until the next awards season).

Story, story, story. “You can have the best technology, you can have the best business model, but if the storytelling isn’t amazing, it won’t matter. Nobody will watch,” noted Jeff Bezos. A clear and compelling brand story ensures that a brand’s products and advertising cannot be mistaken for anything else. It gives company context and

Read the rest of this analysis on the Sociology of Business.

Karin Plonaitis

C-suite | MD | CCO | CSO | CBO | CMO | CRO - Strategic Management Executive - Board Certified

5 个月

Great summarization an completely true. Brand strenght + cultural community = increased marketshare. Connect and create with the customer.

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Mei Grandell

Fractional Marketing Director/CMO | Hands-on marketing and strategy for indie and startup brands | Ex Susanne Kaufmann, Victoria Beckham + more | Member @ We Are The Board

5 个月

Agree Ana Andjelic; pure brand marketing never did leave the recipe for sustainable success but is easily overlooked. Brands risk capping their true, long term potential if they prioritise investments simply by traditional measurability, or forget the art of sustaining brand relevance (and the healthy risk that comes with) - in culture that is more transient than ever

Jennifer Roebuck

CMO / Innovation & Transformation / Venture Leader / D2C / Web3 / AI / ????

5 个月

Exactly this! Some of us can make the intangible - tangible.

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