Hotel Branding Aim For Intelligence

Posted on October 24th, 2008 in Branding by admin

The concept behind the Holiday Inn Express brand certainly should be “smart.”
Customers are supposed to feel an increased sense of intelligence after staying at
Holiday Inn Express because they have recognized and capitalized upon good
quality for a great price. With the reputation of Holiday Inn’s quality for reasonable
prices backing the brand, Holiday Inn Express should have a win-win status in the
mindset of the consumer and should also boost the efficacy of the Holiday Inn
parent brand. Does the current messaging for Holiday Inn Express accomplish this
status? We think not.

Many brands use messaging that makes the customer feel smart and as though he
has made the right choice. Wal*Mart and Target are examples of brands that ensure
the customer that if he shops at their stores; he is avoiding the embarrassment of
overpaying and not finding what he wants/needs. Customers not only like to know
that their purchases matter; they like to know that their choices matter. Brands that
give customers real affirmation that they have “done the smartest thing” will
succeed. This affirmation must be evident through effective brand execution, which
also includes marketing and advertising. The message must be both clear to the
customer and clearly shown by the brand.

Does Holiday Inn Express have a sure-fire brand message? Yes. Does Holiday Inn
Express convey and execute this message properly? According to our brand model
at Stealing Share, it comes up a short. In fact, if you read how the “Stay Smart”
campaign began, the brand is more superficial than it even appears. According to
customer questionnaires conducted before the campaign, the two reasons why
customers felt more savvy for staying at an HIE were free breakfast and free local
calls. Perhaps these two elements created a little more of an advantage for HIE over
other limited-service establishments, but these kind of table stakes are not what
fuels real brand. Clearly the right questions were not asked. The customer’s
connection to the brand should go deeper than cinnamon rolls.

Furthermore, the commercials for the “Stay Smart” campaign contribute to the
shallow continuum of brand execution for HIE. For example, one commercial opens
on a group of scientists hovering around a microscope, observing a strain of the
Ebola virus. The man standing in front of the microscope explains the
characteristics of the virus and proceeds to knock the sample off of the table,
assuring the group that it was not airborne. When his colleague asks him how long
he has been studying the virus, the man responds, “Well, I’m not actually a scientist.
But I did stay at a Holiday Inn Express last night.”

Several other commercials followed in a similar pattern. One commercial showed a
man who had not graduated past the seventh grade winning Jeopardy because he
stayed in a HIE the night before. While the commercials are humorous and
borderline ridiculous, they demonstrate a rather narrow interpretation of the brand.
Although the commercials are effective for short-term brand awareness and
recognition, this brand execution is overall unsatisfactory because the customer will
not consider the brand a serious option. If anything, the brand has become more of
a joke among consumers because of the blatantly ignorant people portrayed as
customers in the commercials. The brandface, or the customer’s perception of
himself when he uses the brand, is not one of intelligence. In fact this brandface
mocks intelligence rather than reinforcing it. This failure to execute is more at the
fault of brand management than advertising creation. Unfortunately, in all
industries, one directly influences the other.

Humorous commercials are memorable and entertaining, but does the brand
directly reflect the customer and benefit from this type of execution? In the case of
Holiday Inn Express, we argue against this method. The brand execution began with
category benefits rather than the belief systems of the customers. The advertising
had to rely upon a general campaign focus of “Stay Smart” without knowing what
being smart really meant to the target audience. In order to correct this problem,
Holiday Inn Express would need to take a few steps back, observe what their
customers want/need from their brand and challenge their brand to accommodate
these expectations. They would need to get a full outside-in perspective from the
market.

The “Stay Smart” campaign was effective in getting HIE’s name out in the market,
but that is where the effectiveness remains. Real brand success goes beyond the
reiteration of a funny punch line. The “Stay Smart” messaging does not reinforce the
brand as a tangible option for the customer. The humor, in this case, actually
creates distance between the brand and the customer.

Overall, Holiday Inn is all about quality for a sensible price, and Holiday Inn Express
can make that message work as well. Holiday Inn Express needs to convey this
message with a little more honesty and customer perspective in order to own real
estate in the mind of the customer looking for reasonable hotel accommodations. In
short, “smart” needs to be more about intelligence of the customer than the
cleverness of the business and its agency.

Molly Sunderdick
Brand Strategist
Stealing Share, Inc

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Branding Article Pepsi’s Missed Brand Opportunity

Posted on June 29th, 2008 in Branding by admin

I love Pepsi. It’s that slightly sweeter taste and the all-American logo combined with the non-conformist statement that, well, it’s not Coke.

Yet Pepsi has been consistently #2, and there’s nothing wrong with being #2 if that’s your goal. But Pepsi’s goal is to be the #1 preferred brand (notice I didn’t say ‘taste’ - we all took the Pepsi taste test and they’re still #2) with members of the eponymously titled Pepsi Generation - an age group that they seemingly stretch from year to year.

As of late, Pepsi has employed Pop-Culture icons to represent their brand : Britney, Big n’ Rich, AROD and Jeff Gordon to name a few. Yet none of them seem to capture Coke’s ageless, timeless wave of emotion brought on by a 6 year-old boy and Mean Joe Green. That commercial touched all of our senses; the agony of defeat, a fan’s elation with their idol, a friendship being forged between generations and a refreshing beverage that made everything ok. Coke continues to focus on the experience, while Pepsi focuses on taste.

Which is why I cringe every time I go to a restaurant that only carries Pepsi products; Sure, I’m happy, but what of those who prefer Coke? The waiter/waitress always asks if you would like a beverage before ordering, and an overwhelming majority of people reply, “I’ll have a Coke.” The wait staff them replies with the brand kiss of death:

“Is Pepsi ok?”

Is it ok? It’s like saying ‘no we don’t have Coke, but will you settle for this sub-par beverage?” And because they ask this way, the customer always reluctantly answers ‘yeah, I guess.’

For every restaurant, there should be an in-house Pepsi Brand Champion - someone who will train all restaurant employees on Pepsi’s passion, core values, culture and more importantly, how to make it preferred! Instead of making it the red-headed step child on the menu, they should wear buttons that read, ‘We Proudly Serve Pepsi Products’. There should be a branded way to respond to the unavoidable Coke question. There should be Pepsi soda glasses and other branded materials so that it’s no surprise to the customers. People do not choose restaurants because of the soda they carry, so Pepsi needs to step up and educate it’s captured audience on why they should be the choice of every generation.

tandembranding is a nation-wide branding firm, and we work with marketing directors to make their company famous. We specialize in industries that cater to the customer experience.

For more articles on how branding can make you famous, please visit tandembranding.com

Mark Campanale, Brand Expert
tandembranding
tandembranding.com

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