The Absolute advertising campaign is successful because it is contemporary.’ How did TBWA maintain the ‘freshness’ of the Absolute campaign
The Absolute advertising campaign is successful because it is contemporary.’ How did TBWA maintain the ‘freshness’ of the Absolute campaign
IIBMS ANSWER SHEETS
IIBMS MBA CASE STUDY ANSWER SHEETS,
IIBMS MBA CASE STUDY SOLUTIONS,
IIBMS EMBA CASE STUDY ANSWER SHEETS,
IIBMS EMBA CASE STUDY SOLUTIONS,
IIBMS DMS CASE STUDY ANSWER SHEETS,
IIBMS DMS CASE STUDY SOLUTIONS,
IIBMS MMS CASE STUDY ANSWER SHEETS,
IIBMS MIB CASE STUDY SOLUTIONS,
MBA IIBMS ANSWER SHEETS,
EMBA IIBMS CASE STUDY SOLUTIONS.
www.answersheets.in
info.answersheets@gmail.com
info@answersheets.in
+91 95030-94040
Marketing
Management
CASE: 1 Absolute Vodka: creating advertising
history
The Absolute advertising campaign was
often regarded by advertising experts as one of the most brilliant, innovative,
successful and long-running campaigns ever. The several prestigious awards that
the campaign has won since its first ad was launched stand as testimony to this
fact (See Table) for details of some of the awards).
Table:
A brief list of awards won by Absolut advertisements
Year
|
Award(s)
|
1989
|
The
Kelly Grand Prize for the ad 'Absolutla'
|
1990
|
Grand
EFFIE Award for Absolut advertising campaign
|
1991
|
The
Kelly Grand Prize for the ad 'Absolut Glasnost'
|
1992
|
Award of
Excellence' for animation on the Internet by the communication Arts magazine
|
1993
|
Absolut
Advertising Campaign introduced in the 'Hall of Fame' by the American
Marketing Association
|
2000
|
Four
Cresta Awards for international Advertising for the ads 'Absolut Accessory',
'Absolut Auckland', 'Absolut Voyeur' and 'Absolut Space' from Creative
Standards International and the International Advertising Association
|
2002
|
Insight
Award for Best online advertising
|
2003
|
EFFIE
Gold Award for sustained success of the Absolut advertising campaign
|
‘Absolut
adventure’: the making of a legend
In early 1979, Absolut vodka launched in
the USA at the liquor trade convention held at Fairmont Hotel in New Orleans.
Initially, the company concentrated its marketing efforts in and around New
York, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Boston because these were the places where
new trends were created, media attention was intense and the bar culture prevailed.
V&S had sold around 25,000 cases of Absolut vodka when advertising agency
TBWA took over its ad account in late 1979. Two at TBWA, Graham Turner and
Geoff Hayes, were assigned the job of creating the ads for the ‘still not so
popular Swedish vodka’. The duo began by getting familiar with the
product’s taste and conducting extensive
research on different liquor ads of the previous 10 years. They found that most
ads were pretentious and pompous, featuring people dressed in expensive attire
and living lavish lifestyles with a small liquor bottle tucked in some corner.
Moreover, none of the ads was targeted at people below 40.
After extensive research and
effort, the admen came up with three different advertisement samples. The first
featured a Russian soldier looking through a pair of binoculars with each lens
reflecting the Absolut vodka bottle, accompanied by a slogan that read ‘Here’s
something that Russians would really love to put behind bars.’ This ad was
aimed at challenging the Russian vodka brand Stolichnaya. The second ad
featured some of the favourite pastimes of Swedes, with a picture of the
bottle; the slogan read ‘There’s nothing the Swedes enjoy more when it’s cold.’
The third ad featured only the Absolut vodka bottle with a halo over it, with a
two-word slogan: ‘Absolut Perfection’ (a modified version of one of the ads
created at NW Ayer). This ad was designed with the intention of humorously
portraying as pure and natural.
The admen had come up with a
dozen designs, which depicted the bottle in different ways accompanied by a
two-word slogan. It was one of the simplest themes anyone associated with
Absolute had created up until then. The ads featured the Absolut bottle, a
description of the product and the two-word slogan with one word describing the
theme and the other the brand name itself. In early 1980, V&S launched the
first advertisement, ‘Absolut Perfection’, along these lines. Since then, the
bottle has been retained as the centerpiece for every advertisement of Absolute
vodka accompanied by a two-word slogan.
All Absolute ads were
published in popular American newspapers and magazines like Newsweek, Time, New York, Los Angeles, New
Yorker, New York Times, Interview and GQ. Carillon decided to continue
using the same ad concept with a variety of themes. Experts felt that by using
the same concept to depict various events, people or things, Absolut ads always
gave people something to think about. Soon the ads had become a topic of
interest among liquor consumers.
People began drinking Absolute
not only because it was a new premium brand available on the market, but also
to experience the image that its advertisement had created—that of simplicity
and purity. Analysts credited the popularity of Absolute to its advertisements
as they involved viewers in a creative process. Within three years, v Absolute
vodka was being exported to 16 different markets worldwide as well as its home
country, Sweden. In 1984, V&S exported six million litres of Absolute
vodka. In the USA, sales were doubling every year (see the table).
Table
V&S: Income statements, 1997-2002 (SEK million)
Particulars/year
|
1997
|
1998
|
1999
|
2000
|
2001
|
2002
|
Net Sales
|
3223.6
|
3,446.9
|
4028.6
|
5711.5
|
6725.1
|
9092.8
|
Other operating revenues
|
(10.3)
|
32.3
|
43.2
|
104.3
|
175.3
|
149.6
|
Operating Expenses
|
(2449.8)
|
(2626.8)
|
(2924.9)
|
(4177.4)
|
(4741.2)
|
(6686.6)
|
Depreciation, amortization and
write-downs
|
(105.7)
|
(130.7)
|
(85.6)
|
(235.0)
|
(394.9)
|
(519.2)
|
Non-recurring items
|
(17.0)
|
287.3
|
(143.3)
|
46.1
|
-
|
-
|
Operating Profit
|
640.8
|
1009.0
|
918.0
|
1449.5
|
1764.3
|
2036.6
|
Financial items, net
|
31.5
|
50.6
|
46.0
|
(16.2)
|
(292.6)
|
(167.6)
|
Profit before taxes
|
672.3
|
1059.6
|
964.0
|
1433.3
|
1471.7
|
1869.0
|
Taxes
|
(175.0)
|
(197.3)
|
(273.5)
|
(437.2)
|
(462.0)
|
(598.5)
|
Minority share
|
(0.4)
|
(0.8)
|
(0.3)
|
(61.9)
|
(0.5)
|
(5.7)
|
Net profit for the period
|
496.9
|
861.5
|
690.2
|
934.2
|
1009.2
|
1264.8
|
In 1985, Michel Roux,
President of Carillon and in charge of US distribution, came up with the idea
of getting Absolut bottle painted and using it as an ad. Initially, there was
opposition to this idea as it was a departure from the central idea of having
the bottle photographed. However, Roux went ahead and commissioned celebrated
artist Andy Warhol to paint the bottle, marking the beginning of Absolut’s
association with art. The painting attracted a lot of accolades and the
celebrity association gave the brand a great deal of mileage.
Thereafter, several artists
painted their own interpretations of the Absolut bottle. Analysts observed that
painting an Absolut bottle had apparently become an issue of pride for many
leading artists. Big names such as Keith Haring, Kenny Scharf, Stephen Sprouse,
Edward Ruscha, Arman and Britto made their own interpretation of the Absolut
bottle (see Table given below for details). The above exercise was not only in
the form of painting, but also in sculpture, glasswork, photography, folk art,
wood work, computer/digital art and many other media. As Absolut’s association
with the world of art gave the brand a lot of media attention and publicity,
the company began regularly publishing these art ads along with the regular
ads. Analysts noted that what began as an advertising campaign to promote an
unknown Swedish vodka brand had become a part of American culture.
Table Absolut’s association with art and
fashion
Year
|
Name
|
Description
|
||
ABSOLUT ART
|
||||
1990
|
Absolut Glasnost
|
This art collection featured paintings
by 26 Russian artists including Alexander Kosolapov, Evgeny Mitta and Leonid
Lamm.
|
||
1993
|
Absolut Latino
|
This collection featured artwork
contributed by 16 artists from South and Central America. This collection
showcased the artist’s interpretations of the Absolut bottle in traditional
and contemporary Latino themes depicting the relationship between reality and
illusion. Some of the artist who contributed to this collection were: Alberto
Icaza, Vik Muniz and Monica Castillo.
|
||
1997
|
Absolut Expressions
|
This collection featured art work
contributed by 14 African and America artists. The artists (including Anita
Philyaw, Maliaka Favorite and Frank Bowling among others) presented their
interpretations of the bottle in traditional African art, early American folk
art and in abstract imagery through mediums like canvas, quilts, and
sculptures.
|
||
1998-99
|
Absolut Originals
|
This included paintings contributed by
16 European artists including Damien Hirst, Maurizio Cattelan and Francesco
Clemente.
|
||
2000
|
Absolut Ego (Paris) Absolut Exhibition
(New York) Absolut Art
|
Collections featured paintings
contributed by famous artists like Damien Hirst and Nam June Paik.
|
||
Absolut FASHION
|
||||
1995
|
Absolut Newton
|
This campaign featured designer wear
created by famous fashion designers John Galliano, Helmut Lang, Anna Molinari
and Martine Sitbon. It was first featured as an eight-page insert in Vogue, a
popular fashion magazine.
|
||
1997
|
Absolut Versace
|
This eight-page insert in Vogue
featured designer wear created by Gianni Versace, the famous Italian
designer. Gianni’s creations were modeled by famous models like Naomi
Campbell, Kate Moss, Mark Findley and Marcus Schenkenberg, and photographed
by famous fashion photographer Herb Ritts.
|
||
1999
|
Absolut Tom Ford/ Absolut Gucci
|
This campaign included designer
collections created by Tom Ford (of Gucci) a famous American fashion
designer. The campaign was shot at a discotheque in Paris and was included as
an eight-page insert in Vogue.
|
||
2000
|
Absolut Gaultier
|
This campaign featured designs by Jean
Paul Gaultier, inspired by Absolut and other Swedish legends. It was included
as an eight-page insert in Vogue and other popular European fashion
magazines.
|
||
Roux now began toying with
the idea of making ads that were ‘stylish, hip and audacious’. With this began
Absolut’s association with the world of fashion. In 1988, Roux commissioned the
famous American fashion designer David Cameron to design an advertisement for
the bottle. Instead of featuring the Absolute bottle, Cameron designed a dress
(with the Absolute Vodka name and the text printed on it) that was modelled by
a famous model of the day, Rachel Williams (she ‘represented’ the bottle). This
print ad, named ‘Absolute Cameron’, was launched in February 1988 and gained
tremendous publicity. On the day of its publication, 5000 women reportedly
called TBWA wanting to buy the dress shown in the ad.
This led to the next phase of
Absolute’s advertising strategy, wherein the bottle began to be represented in
new, innovative ways. By the mid-1990s TBWA ran several ads linked to fashion,
like Absolute Fashion (eight pages of coverage in Vogue), Absolute Style and Absolute
Menswear, in popular fashion magazines like Vogue, Elle and GQ (see Table for
details).
As the themes for the
advertisements became more complicated, the cost of producing them went up
substantially. For instance, some of the Absolute Christmas ads cost more than
US$1 million to produce. Thus, over the years, V&S continually increased
its advertising budget. TBWA spent approximately US$25 million on Absolute ads
in 1990, an increase from US$750,000 in 1981. In 1997, Absolute also became
associated with The Ice Hotel (an entire hotel made from ice) in Jukkasjarvi,
Sweden. An ‘Absolute Ice Bar’ was added to the Ice Hotel, where different kinds
of drinks made from various Absolute brands were served in glasses also made of
ice.
By the end of the 1990s, Absolute
ads began targeting not only the sophisticated, upper-class consumers but also
sports fans, professionals, artists, intellectuals and even those who could not
comprehend subjects like art and literature. Clearly, V&S was now aiming at
a broader set of customers as the ads were featured in almost all kinds of
magazines: sports, entertainment, art and fashion, business, and so on. By now
the company had launched more than 1000 Absolut ads all over the world.
‘Absolut
continuity’: the brand marches strongly ahead
By 2ooo, Absolute
advertisements were recognized the world over for their stylish, humorous and
innovative attributes. As people began collecting the ads, analyst observed
that the brand had become an advertising phenomenon. More importantly, sales of
Absolute were increasing over the years. Apart from the USA, Absolute was now
exported to Russia and many Asian and Latin America countries. The brand
generated most of its sales in the USA, Canada, Sweden, Greece, Spain, Germany
and Mexico. In 2002, total sales stood at 7.5 million cases, making it the
world’s largest premium spirit brands.
In 2002, Absolute was
presented with the international advertising industry’s most prestigious awards
for its online advertising on its website, www. absolut.com, and the Absolutes
fashion campaign. Advertising experts regarded the website as ‘a premier online
brand and lifestyle destination’.
Commenting on the creativity
that Absolute ads stood for, Richard W. Lewis, author of Absolutes book: The Absolute Vodka Advertising Story, says,
‘Readers enjoy a relationship with this advertising that they have with few
other advertising campaigns, especially in the print media. They are
challenged, entertained, tickled, inspired and maybe even befuddled as they try
to figure out what is happening inside an Absolute ad.’
In January 2003, the company
launched Absolut Vanilia. Unlike the previous variants, Absolut Vanilia was
launched in a white bottle. The launch of the new flavour was not only
supported by print advertisements, but also with radio and outdoor ad
campaigns. These ads were launched in a phased manner, beginning with teaser
ads in different magazines in April 2003 followed by interactive online ads.
The online ads were featured on websites like Maxim.com,
EntertainmentWeekly.com, style.com, and Wired.com. These ads were created
specifically to suit the product tag-line ‘a different kind of vanilla’.
In October 2003, in line with
its penchant for creativity/innovation, Absolut ventured into the world of music
with the launch of the Absolut Three Tracks project. This campaign featured
music created by different artists according to their interpretations of the
Absolut bottle. Analysts felt that the Absolut Three Tracks project, had opened
am entirely new chapter in brand communications, as it enabled users to ‘listen
to the Absolut brand.’ Commenting on this, Michael Persson, Director, Market
Communications, ASC, said, ‘For years, our consumers have seen interpretations
of the brand by some of the world’s most prominent artists and designers. With
this new project they will also be able to listen to the brand: this is the
voice of Absolut’.
Advertising experts felt that
even 25 years after its launch, the Absolut advertising campaign was still
going strong, innovatively, without changing the central theme. Even while
creating music for Absolut Three Tracks, the bottle was used as the central
theme. Aril Brikha, one of the artists who created a music track for Absolut
Three Track said, ‘I had scanned the shape into a computer program that turns a
picture into a tone—a futuristic way of including a picture without letting the
listener know. I find it quite similar to previous Absolut projects where the
bottle has been hidden in a picture.’ Industry observers as well as customers
agreed on one issue: whatever the mode of expression—be it art, photography,
technology, fashion or music—Absolut had until now stood for ‘brilliance in
advertising’. Said an analyst, ‘We are surprised each year by the creativity
and innovation of the brand. It is successful because it is contemporary. There
is no end to the campaign.’
Questions:
1.
Discuss
the role advertising plays in increasing brand awareness and brand loyalty
among consumers, especially for products that have very subtle differentiable
attributes. In the above context, examine the impact Absolute advertisements
had on its target audience. Do you think the advertisements fulfilled their
purpose?
2.
‘The
Absolute advertising campaign is successful because it is contemporary.’ How
did TBWA maintain the ‘freshness’ of the Absolute campaign? Discuss with
respect to the brand’s association with different media: art, fashion,
technology and music.
3.
Even
though Absolute ads have been depicted in different media, the central theme of
the campaign has remained unchanged (the bottle and the two-word slogan) over
the years. In light of the above statement, do you think that the campaign will
manage to hold sway or lose in impact in the near future? Give reasons to
support your arguments.
CASE: 2 Tesco: the customer relationship
management champion
Every three months, millions of people in
the UK receive a magazine from the country’s number one retailing company,
Tesco. Nothing exceptional about the concept—almost all leading retailing
companies across the world send out mailers/magazines to their customers. these
initiatives promote the store’s products, introduce promotional schemes and
contain discount coupons. However, what sets Tesco apart from such
run-of-the-mill initiatives is the fact that it has mass-customized these
magazines.
Every magazine has a unique
combination of articles, advertisements related to Tesco’s offerings and
third-party advertisements. Tesco ensured that all its customers received
magazines that contained material suited to their lifestyles. The company had
worked out a mechanism for determining the advertisements and promotional
coupons that would go in each of the over 150,000 variants of the magazine.
This has been made possible by its would-renowned customer relationship
management (CRM) strategy framework.
According to Tesco sources,
the company’s CRM initiative was not limited to the loyalty card scheme; it was
more of a company-wide philosophy. Industry observers felt that Tesco’s CRM
initiatives enabled it to develop highly focused marketing strategies. Thanks
to its CRM initiatives, the company became UK’s number one retailer in 1995,
having struggled at number two behind rival Sainsbury’s for decades. In 2003,
the company’s market share was 26.7 per cent, while Sainsbury’s market share
was just 16.8 per cent.
CRM
the Tesco way
Tesco’s efforts towards offering better
services to its customers and meeting their needs can be traced back to the
days when it positioned itself as a company that offered good-quality products
at extremely competitive prices. Even its decision to offer premium-end
merchandise and services in the 1970s was prompted by growing customer demand
for the same (see Table 2.A for the company’s ‘core purpose’ and ‘values’, which
highlight the importance placed on customer service).
The biggest customer service
initiative (and the first focused CRM drive) came in the form of the loyalty
card scheme that was launched in 1995. This initiative was partly inspired by
the growing popularity of such schemes in other parts of the world and partly
by Tesco’s belief that it would be able to serve its customers in a much better
(and more profitable) manner
Table 2 A Tesco: core purpose and values
Table 2 A Tesco: core purpose and values
CORE
PURPOSE
Creating
value for customers, to earn their lifetime loyalty
Values
1. No one tries harder for customers:
understand customer better than anyone,
be energetic, be innovative and be first for customers, use our strengths to
deliver unbeatable value to our customers look after our people so they can look after
our customers
2. Treat people how we like to be treated:
all retailers, there’s one team—the Tesco
Team trust and respect each other strive to do our very best give support to
each other and praise more than criticize ask more than tell and share
knowledge so that it can be used enjoy work, celebrate success and learn from
experience by using such as scheme.
Tesco knew that, at any of its outlets, the top 100 customers were worth as
much as the bottom 4000 (in terms of sales). While the top 5 per cent of
customers accounted for 20 per cent of sales, the bottom 25 per cent accounted
for only 2 per cent. The company realized that by giving extra attention to the
top customers (measured by the frequency of purchases and the amount spent) it
stood to gain a great deal.
To ensure the programme’s
success, it was essential that all Tesco employees understood the rationale for
it as well as its importance. So, the company distributed over 140,000
educational videos about the programme to its staff at various stores. These
videos explained why the initiative was being undertaken, what the company
expected to gain from it, and why it was important for employees to participate
whole-heartedly in it.
Table
2B: Tesco: classifying customers
EXPENDITURE
|
SHOPPING FREQUENCY
|
|||||
Daily
|
Twice weekly
|
Weekly
|
Stop start
|
Now and then
|
Hardly ever
|
|
High Spend
|
PREMIUM
|
STANDARD
|
POTENTIAL
|
|||
Medium Spend
|
STANDARD
|
POTENTIAL
|
UNCOMMITTED
|
|||
Low Spend
|
POTENTIAL
|
UNCOMMITTED
|
||||
FREQUENT
|
INFREQUENT
|
RARE
|
Impressed with the programme’s results
over six months, the company had introduced the scheme in all its stores by
February 1995. The stores captured every one of the over 8 million transactions
made per week at Tesco stores in a database. All the transactions were linked
to individual customer profiles and generated over 50 gigabytes of data every
week. Dunnhumby used state-of-the-art data-mining techniques to manage and
analyse the database. Initially, it took over a few weeks to analyse the vast
amount of data generated. To overcome
this problem, Dunnhumby put in place new software that reduced this time to
just a few days. As a result, it became possible to come up with useful and
timely insights into customer behaviour in a much faster way.
Table
2C: How Tesco used the information generated by
its Clubcards
Pricing
|
Discounts were offered on goods that
were bought by highly price-conscious customers. While the company kept
prices low on often-bought goods/staples, for less familiar lines it adopted
a premium pricing policy.
|
Merchandising
|
The product portfolio was devised based
on customer profiles and purchasing behaviour records. Depending on the loyalty shown by
customers towards a particular product, the substitute available for the
same, and the seasonality, the product ranges were modified.
|
Promotion
|
Promotions were aimed at giving special
(and more) rewards to loyal customers. Few promotions were targeted at the
other customers.
|
Customer
service
|
Extra attention was given to stocking
those products that were bought by loyal customers.
|
Media
effectiveness
|
The effectiveness of media campaigns
could be evaluated easily by noticing changes in the buying patterns of those
customers whom the said campaign was targeted at.
|
Customer
acquisition
|
The launch of new ventures (such as TPF
and Tesco.com) went smoothly since Tesco targeted the ‘right’ kinds of
customers.
|
Market
research
|
While conducting marketing research,
Tesco was able to tap those customers that fitted accurately into the overall
research plan.
|
Customer
communication
|
It was possible to mass customize
communication campaigns based on individual customer preferences and
characteristics. Tesco began holding ‘customer evenings’ for interacting with
customers, gathering more information, and gaining new customers through
referrals
|
The analysis of the data collected
enabled Tesco to accurately pinpoint the time when purchases were made, the
amount the customer spent, and the kinds of products purchased. Based on the
amount spent and the frequency of shopping, customers were classified into four
broad categories: Premium, Standard, Potential and Uncommitted (see Table 2B).
Further, profiles were created for all the customers on the basis of the types
of products they purchased. Customers were categorized along dimensions such as
Value, Convenience , Frozen, Healthy Eating, Fresh and Kids.
Tesco also identified over
5000 need segments based on the purchasing habits and behaviour patterns of its
customers. Each of these segments could be targeted specifically with
tailor-made campaigns and advertisements. The company also identified eight
‘primary life stage’ need segments based on the profiles of its customers.
These segments included ‘single adults’, ‘pensioners’ and ‘urban
professionals’, among others.
Using the information
regarding customer classification, Tesco’s marketing department devised customized
strategies for each category, Pricing, promotion and product-related decisions
were taken after considering the preferences of customers. Also, customers
received communication s that were tailored to their buying patterns. The data
collected through its Clubcard loyalty card scheme allowed Tesco to modify its
strategies on various fronts such as pricing, inventory management, shopping
analysis, customer acquisition, new product launches, store management, online
customer behaviour and media effectiveness (see Table 2C).
Tesco began giving many
special privileges, such as valet parking and personal attention from the store
manager, to its high-value customers. special cards were created for students
and mothers, discounts were offered on select merchandise, and the financial
service venture was included in the card scheme. The data generated were used
innovatively (e.g. special attention given to expectant mothers in the form of
personal shopping assistants, priority parking and various other facilities).
The company also tied up with airline companies and began offering Frequent
Flyer Miles to customers in return for the points on their Clubcards.
Reaping
the benefits
Commenting on the way the data generated
were used, sources at Dunnhumby said that the data allowed Tesco to target
individual customers (the rifle-shot approach) instead of targeting them as a
group (the carpet-bombing approach). Since the customers received coupons that
matched their buying patterns, over 20 per cent of Tesco’s coupons were
redeemed—as against the industry average of 0.5 per cent. The number of loyal
customers has increased manifold since the loyalty card scheme was launched
(see Figure 2A).
The quarterly magazine Tesco
sent to its customers was customized based on the segments identified.
Customers falling into different categories received magazines that were
compiled specifically for them—the articles covered issues that interested
them, and the advertisements and discount coupons were about those
products/services that they were mostly likely to purchase. This customization
attracted third-party advertisers, since it assured them that their
products/services would be noticed by those very customers they planned to
target. Naturally, Tesco recovered a large part of
Figure
2A: Tesco increasing number of loyal
customers
its investment in this exercise through
revenues generated by outside advertisements.
The data collected through
the cards helped the company enter the financial services business as well. The
company carried out targeted research on the demographic data and zeroed in on
those customers who were the most likely to opt for financial services. Due to
the captive customer base and the cross-selling opportunity, the cost of
acquiring customers for its financial services was 50 per cent less than it
would be for a bank or financial services company.
Reportedly, the data
generated by the Clubcard initiative played a major role in the way the online
grocery retailing business was run. The data helped the company identify the
areas in which customers were positively inclined towards online shopping.
Accordingly, the areas in which online shopping was to be introduced were
decided upon. Since the prospective customers were already favourably disposed,
Tesco.com took off to a good start and soon emerged as one of the few
profitable dotcom ventures worldwide. By 2003, the website was accessible to 95
per cent of the UK population and generated business of £ 15 million per week.
By sharing the data generated
with manufacturers, Tesco was able to offer better services to its customers.
It gave purchasing pattern information to manufacturers, but withheld the
personal information provided by customers (such as names and addresses). The
manufacturers used this information to modify their own product mixes and
promotional strategies. In return for this information, they gave Tesco
customers subsidies and incentives in the form of discount coupons.
The Clubcards also helped Tesco
compete with other retailers. When Tesco found out that around 25 per cent of
its customers who belonged to the high-income bracket were defecting to rival
Marks & Spencer, it developed a totally new product range, ‘Tesco Finest’,
to lure them back. This range was then promoted to affluent customers through
personalized promotions. As planned, the defection of customers from this
segment slowed down considerably.
In February 2003, Tesco
launched a new initiative targeted at its female customers. Named ‘Me Time’, the
new loyalty scheme offered ladies free sessions at leading health spas, luxury
gyms and beauty saloons, and discounts
on designer clothes, perfumes, and cosmetics. This scheme was rather
innovative since it allowed Tesco customers to redeem the points accumulated
through their Clubcards at a large number of third-party outlets. Company
official Crawford Davidson remarked, ‘Up until now, our customers have used
Tesco Clubcard vouchers primarily to buy more shopping for the home. However,
from now on, “Me Time” will give customers the options of spending the rewards
on themselves.’
As a result of the above
strategies, Tesco was able to increase returns even as it reduced promotions.
Dunnhumby prepared a profit and loss statement for the activities of the
marketing department to help assess the performance of the Clubcards
initiative. Dunnhumby claimed that Tesco saved around £300 million every year
through reduction in expenditure on promotions. The money saved thus was
ploughed back into the business to offer more discounts to customers.
By the end of the 1990s, over 10 million households in
the UK owned around 14 million Tesco Clubcards. This explained why as high as
80 per cent of the company’s in-store transactions and 85 per cent of its revenues
were accounted for by the cards. Thanks largely to this initiative, Tesco’s
turnover went up by 52 per cent between 1995 and 2000, while floor space during
the same period increased by only 15 per cent.
The Absolute advertising campaign is successful because it is contemporary.’ How did TBWA maintain the ‘freshness’ of the Absolute campaign |
An invincible company? Not exactly…
Tesco’s customer base and the frequency
with which each customer visited its stores had increased significantly over
the years. However, according to reports, the average purchase per visit had
not gone up as much as Tesco would have liked. Analysts said that this was not
a very positive sign. They also said that, while it was true that Tesco was the
market leader by a wide margin, it was also true Asda and Morrisons were
growing rapidly.
Tesco’s growth was based
largely on its loyalty card scheme. But in recent years, the very concept of
loyalty cards has been criticized on various grounds. Some analysts claimed
that the popularity of loyalty cards would decline in the future as all
retailing companies would begin offering more or less similar schemes. Critics
also commented that the name ‘loyalty card’ as a misnomer since customers were
primarily interested in getting the best price for the goods and services they
wanted to buy.
Research conducted by Black
Sun, a company specializing in loyalty solutions, revealed that though over 50
per cent of UK’s adult population used loyalty cards, over 80 per cent of them
said that they were bothered only about making cheaper purchases. Given the
fact that many companies in the UK, such as HSBC, Egg and Barclaycard had
withdrawn their loyalty cards, industry observers were skeptical of Tesco’s
ability to continue reaping the benefits of its Clubcards scheme. Black Sun’s
Director (Business Development) David Christopherson, said, ‘Most loyalty
companies have a direct marketing background, which is results-driven, and
focuses on the short term. This has led to a “points for prizes” loyalty model,
which does not necessarily build the long-term foundations for a beneficial
relationship with customers.’
Commenting on the philosophy
behind Tesco’s CRM efforts, Edwina Dunn said, ‘Companies should be loyal to
their customers—not the other way round.’ Taking into consideration the
company’s strong performance since these efforts were undertaken, there would
perhaps not be many who would disagree
with Edwina.
Questions:
1.
Analyse
Tesco’s Clubcards scheme in depth and comment on the various customer
segmentation models the company developed after studying the data gathered.
2.
How
did Tesco use the information collected to modify its marketing strategies?
What sort of benefits was the company able to derive as a result of such
modifications?
3.
What
measures did Tesco adopt to support the CRM initiatives on the operational and
strategic front? Is it enough for a company to implement loyalty card schemes
(and CRM tools in general) in isolation? Why?
CASE: III Pret a Manger: passionate about food
Introduction
Pret a Manger (French for ‘ready to eat’)
is a chain of coffee shops that sells a range of upmarket, healthy sandwiches
and desserts as well as a variety o coffees to an increasingly discerning set
of lunchtime customers. Started in London, England, in 1986 by two university
graduates, Pret a Manger has more than 120 stores across the UK. In 2002 it
sold 25 million sandwiches and 14 million cups of coffee, and had a turnover of
over £100 million. Buckingham Palace reportedly orders more than £1000 worth of
sandwiches a week and British Prime Minister Tony Blair has had Pret sandwiches
delivered to number 10 Downing Street
for working lunches. The company also has ambitious plans to expand further—it
already has stores in New York, Hong Kong
and Tokyo, and has set its sights on further international growth.
Background
and company history
In 1986, Pret a Manger was founded with
one shop, in central London, and a £17,000 loan, by two property law graduates,
Julian Metcalf and Sinclair Beecham, who had been students together at the
University of Westminster in the early 1980s. At that time the choice of
lunchtime eating in London and other British cities was more limited than it is
today. Traditionally, some ate in restaurants while many favoured that well-known
British institution, the pub, as a choice for lunchtime eating and drinking.
There was, however, a growing awareness among many people of the benefits of
healthy eating and a healthy lifestyle, and lunchtime habits were changing.
There was a general trend towards taking shorter lunch brakes and, among office
workers, to take lunch at their desks. For those who wanted food to take away,
the choice in fast food was dominated by the large chains such as McDonald’s,
Burger King and Kentucky Fried Chicken (now KFC) while other types of carry-out
food, such as pizzas, were also available.
Sandwiches also played an important part
in British lunchtime eating. Named after its eighteenth-century inventor, the
Earl of Sandwich, the humble sandwich had long been a popular British lunch
choice, especially for those with little time to spare. Prior to Pret’s arrival
on the scene, sandwiches were sold mainly either pre-packed in supermarkets and
high-street variety chain stores such as Marks and Spencer and Boots, or in the
many small sandwich bars that were to be found in the business districts of
large cities like London, Sandwich bars were usually small, independently owned
or family run shops that made sandwiches to order for customers who waited in a
queue, often out on to the pavement outside.
Dissatisfied with the quality of both the
food and service from traditional sandwich bars, Metcalf and Beecham decided
that Pret a Manger should offer something different. They wanted Pret’s food to
be high quality and healthy, and preservative and additive free. In the
beginning, they shopped for the food themselves at local markets and returned
to the store where they made the sandwiches each morning. Pret’s offering was
based around premium-quality sandwiches and other health-orientated lunches
including salads, sushi and a range of desserts, priced higher than at
traditional sandwich bars, and sold pre-packed in attractive and convenient
packaging ready to go. There was also a choice of different coffees, as well as
some healthy alternatives. Service aimed to be fast and friendly go give
customers a minimum of queuing time.
Pret
a Manger: ‘Passionate about What We do’
Pret a Manger strongly emphasizes the
quality of its products. Its promotional material and website claims that it
is:
‘passionate about food, rejecting the use
of obscure chemicals, additives and preservatives common in so much of the
prepared and fast food on the market today…it there’s a secret to our success
so far we like to think its determination to focus continually on quality—not
just our food, but in every aspect of what we do’.
Great importance is also placed on
freshness. Unlike those sold in high-street shops or supermarkets, Pret’s
sandwiches are all hand-made by staff in each shop starting at 6.30 every
morning, rather than being prepared and delivered by a supplier or from a
central location. Metcalf and Beecham believe this gives their sandwiches a
freshness and distinctiveness. All food that hasn’t been sold in the shops by
the end of the day is given away free to local charities.
Careful sourcing of supplies for quality
has also always been important. Genetically modified ingredients are banned and
the tuna Pret buys, for example, must be ‘dolphin friendly’. There is also a
drive for constant product improvement and innovation—the company claims that
its chocolate brownie dessert has been improved 33 times over the last few
years—and, on average, a new product is tried out in the stores every four
days. Aware that some of its customers are increasingly health conscious,
Pret’s website menu carefully lists not only what is available, but also the
ingredients and nutritional values in terms of energy, protein, fats and
dietary fibre for each item.
The level and quality of service from
staff in the shop is a critical factor. The stores are self-service, with
customers helping themselves to sandwiches and other products form the
supermarket-style refrigerated cabinets. Staff at the counter at the back of
the store then serve customers coffee and take payment. Service is friendly,
smiling and efficient, in contrast to many retail and restaurant outlets in
Britain where, historically, service quality has not always been high. Prêt
puts an emphasis on human resource management issues such as effective
recruitment and training so as to have frontline staff who can show the
necessary enthusiasm and also remain fast and courteous under the pressure of a
busy lunchtime sales period. These staff are usually young and enthusiastic,
some are students, many are international. The pay they receive is above the
fast-food industry average and staff turnover is 98 per cent a year, which
sounds high—however, this is against an industry norm of around 150 per cent.
In 2001, Pret had 55,000 applications for 1500 advertised vacancies.
Recently, Fortune magazine voted Pret one of the top 10 companies to work for
in Europe. According to its own promotional recruitment material, Pret is an
attractive and fun place to work: ‘We don’t work nights, we wear jeans, we party!’
Service quality is checked regularly by the use of mystery shoppers: if a shop
receives a good report, then the staff there receive a 75p an hour bonus in the
week of the visit. Head office managers also visit stores on a regular basis
and every three or four months every one of these managers works as a ‘buddy’,
where they spend a day making sandwiches and working on the floor in one of the
shops to help them keep in touch with what is going on. Store employees work in
teams and are briefed daily, often on the basis of customer responses that come
in from in-store reply cards, telephone calls and the company website. The
website, which, lists the names and phone numbers of its senior executives,
actively invites customers to comment or complain about their experience with
Pret, and encourages them to contact the company. Great importance is placed on
this customer feed-back, both positive and negative, which is discussed at
weekly management meetings.
The design of the stores is also
distinctive. Prominently featuring the company logo, they are fitted out in a
high-tech with metal cladding and interiors in Pret’s own corporate dark red
colour. Each store plays music, helping to create a stylish and lively
atmosphere. Although the shops mainly sell carry out food and coffee in the
morning and through the lunchtime period, many also have tables and seating
where customers can drink coffee and eat inside the store or, weather
permitting, on the pavement outside.
Growth
and competition
Three years after the first Pret shop was
launched another was opened and, after that, the chain began to grow so that,
by 1998, there were 65 throughout London. In the late 1990s stores were also
opened in other British cities such as Bristol, Cambridge and Manchester. Although
growth in the UK has been rapid—between 2000 and 2002 the company opened 40 new
outlets and there are over 120 throughout Britain—Pret’s policy has always been
to own and manage all its own stores and not to franchise to other operators.
In 2002, £1 million was spent in launching an Internet service that enables
customers to order sandwiches online.
Plans for international growth have been
more cautious. In 2000 the company made its first move overseas when it opened
a shop near Wall Street in New York. However, there were problems on several
fronts in moving into the USA. Metcalf is quoted saying, ‘As a private company
its very difficult to set up abroad. We didn’t know where to begin in New
York—we ended up having all the equipment for the shop made here and shipped
over.’ There were also staffing and service quality difficulties—Pret
reportedly found it difficult to recruit people in New York who had the
required friendliness to serve in the stores and had to import British staff.
Despite these problems, several other shops in New York have followed and, in
2001, Pret opened its first outlet in Hong Kong.
During the 1990s, coffee shops boomed as
the British developed a growing taste for drinking coffee in pavement cafes,
and competition for Pret grew as other chains entered the fray. Rivals like
Coffee Republic, Caffè Nero, Costa Coffee (now owned by leisure group
Whitbread) Aroma (owned by McDonald’s) and American worldwide operator
Starbucks all came into the market, as well as a number of smaller independents.
All these chains offer a wide range of coffees but with varying product
offerings in terms of food, pricing and style (Starbucks, for example, offers
comfortable arm-chairs around tables, which encourage people to linger or work
in a laptop in the store). In a London shopping street it is not uncommon to
see three or four rival outlets next door to or within a few yards of each
other. However, it quickly became clear that the sector was overcrowded and,
apart from Starbucks, some of the other chains reportedly struggled to make a
profit. In 2002 Coffee Republic was taken over by Caffè Nero, which also
eventually acquired the ailing Aroma chain from McDonald’s. Costa Coffee was
the largest chain overall with over 300 shops throughout Britain, while
Starbucks was expanding aggressively and aimed to have an eventual 4000 stores
worldwide.
The
future
As work and lifestyles get busier, the
demand for convenience and fast foods continues to grow. In 2000, some
estimates put the total value of the fast-food market in Britain, excluding
sandwiches, at over £6 billion and growing about £200-£300 million a year.
While the growth in sales of some types of fast food, like burgers, was showing
signs of slowing down, sandwiches continued to increase in popularity so that
by 2002 sales wee an estimated £3 billion. Customers are also getting more
health conscious and choosy about what they eat and, increasingly, want
nutritional information about food from labelling and packaging.
In January 2001, in a surprise move,
Pret’s two founders sold a 33 per cent stake in the company to fast-food giant
McDonald’s for an estimated £25 million. They claim that McDonald’s will not
have any influence over what Pret does or the products it sells, but that the
investment by McDonald’s will help their plan for future development. According
to Metcalf:
‘We’ll still be in charge—we’ll have the
majority of shares. Pret will continue as it does… The deal wasn’t about
money—we could have sold the shares for much more to other buyers but they
wouldn’t have provided the support we need.’
After a long run of success, Pret has
ambitious plans for the future. It hopes to open at least 20 new stores a year
in the UK. In late 2002 it opened its first store in Tokyo, Japan, in
partnership with McDonald’s. The menu there is described as being 75 per cent
‘classic Pret’ with the remaining 25 per cent designed more to please local
tastes. In other international markets, the plan is to move cautiously—Pret’s
first move will be to open more stores in New York and Hong Kong, where it has
already been successful.
Questions
1.
How
has Pret a Manger positioned its brand?
2.
Explain
how the different elements of the services marketing mix support and contribute
to the positioning of Pret a Manger.
CASE: IV The Sudkurier
The Sudkurier
is a regional daily newspaper in south-western Germany. On average 310,000
people in the area read the newspaper regularly. The great majority of those
readers subscribe to its home delivery service, which puts the paper on their
doorsteps early in the morning. On the market for the last 35 years, the Sudkurier contains editorial sections on
politics, the economy, sports, local news, entertainment and features, as well
as advertising. The newspaper is financially independent and its staff is free
of any political affiliation. Management at the Sudkurier
would like to bring the paper into line with the current needs of its readers.
For this purpose, the management team is considering the use of market
research.
Management would like to have information
about the following.
1.
What
newspaper or other media are the Sudkurier’s
main competitors?
2.
Do
most readers read the Sudkurier
for the local news, sports and classified ads, and should these sections
therefore be expanded at the expense of the sections on politics and the
economy?
3.
Should
the Sudkurier’s layout be
modernized?
4.
Do
mostly lower levels of society read the Sudkurier?
5.
Into
what political category do readers and non-readers the Sudkurier?
6.
Which
suppliers of products and services consider the Sudkurier
especially appropriate for their advertising?
7.
What
advertising or information dot the readers think is missing from the Sudkurier?
You are an employee of the Sudkurier who has been instructed to
obtain the requested information and to prepare your findings for the
decision-makers. You are in the fortunate position of receiving regular reports
about the people’s media use from the Arbeitsgemeinschaft Media-Analyse e.V.
Relevant excerpts from the most recent survey are shown here as Tables 3 and
Table 4
Table
3 Media analysis of readership structure
Range in Circulation Area (1)
|
Readers per edition of SUDKURIER
|
National
average
in %
|
|||
RANGE
|
Total in %
|
||||
in %
|
Absolute
|
||||
Total
|
53.5
|
310,000
|
100.0
|
100.0
|
|
Gender
|
Men
|
55.5
|
150,000
|
49.0
|
47.2
|
Women
|
51.6
|
160,000
|
51.0
|
52.8
|
|
Age Groups
|
14-19 years
|
51.8
|
20,000
|
8.0
|
7.2
|
20-29 years
|
41.0
|
50,000
|
15.0
|
19.1
|
|
30-39 years
|
52.1
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
16.4
|
|
40-49 years
|
61.8
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
15.2
|
|
50-59 years
|
61.1
|
60,000
|
19.0
|
16.5
|
|
60-69 years
|
53.6
|
40,000
|
13.0
|
13.5
|
|
70 years and older
|
57.4
|
40,000
|
13.0
|
12.2
|
|
Educational
Level
|
Secondary school without apprenticeship
|
49.4
|
60,000
|
18.0
|
17.6
|
Secondary school with apprenticeship
|
50.8
|
100,000
|
31.0
|
39.6
|
|
Continuing education without Abitur
|
60.8
|
110,000
|
36.0
|
27.0
|
|
Abitur, university preparation, university/college
|
49.7
|
50,000
|
15.0
|
15.8
|
|
Occupation
|
Trainee, pupil, student
|
44.7
|
40,000
|
11.0
|
11.0
|
Full-time employee
|
54.6
|
160,000
|
50.0
|
51.7
|
|
Retire, pensioner
|
57.3
|
70,000
|
23.0
|
21.8
|
|
Unemployed
|
52.4
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
15.5
|
|
Occupation of main wage earner
|
Self-employed, mid- to large business/Freelancer
|
63.8
|
20,000
|
5.0
|
3.1
|
Self-employed, small business,/Farmer
|
59.9
|
30,000
|
10.0
|
7.1
|
|
Managers and civil servants
|
58.6
|
30,000
|
9.0
|
8.7
|
|
Other employees and civil servants
|
49.3
|
120,000
|
40.0
|
42.9
|
|
Skilled staff
|
57.6
|
100,000
|
32.0
|
32.5
|
|
Unskilled staff
|
38.7
|
10,000
|
4.0
|
5.6
|
|
Net Household Income/month
|
4500 and more
|
62.7
|
100,000
|
31.0
|
23.9
|
3500-4500
|
52.7
|
60,000
|
19.0
|
20.8
|
|
2500-3500
|
54.9
|
80,000
|
26.0
|
25.9
|
|
to 2500
|
44.1
|
70,000
|
23.0
|
29.3
|
|
Number of wage earners
|
1 earner
|
45.4
|
100,000
|
33.0
|
40.4
|
2 earner
|
56.5
|
130,000
|
41.0
|
42.6
|
|
3 earner
|
62.7
|
80,000
|
25.0
|
16.9
|
|
Household Size
|
1 Person
|
41.8
|
50,000
|
14.0
|
17.9
|
2 Persons
|
55.5
|
90,000
|
29.0
|
31.8
|
|
3 Persons
|
59.5
|
70,000
|
22.0
|
22.4
|
|
4 Persons and more
|
54.8
|
110,000
|
35.0
|
27.9
|
|
Children in Household
|
Children less than 2 years of age
|
52.7
|
10,000
|
4.0
|
3.8
|
2 to less than 4 years
|
38.4
|
10,000
|
4.0
|
5.4
|
|
4 to less than 6 years
|
45.8
|
10,000
|
5.0
|
5.2
|
|
6 to less than 10 years
|
43.8
|
20,000
|
8.0
|
8.5
|
|
10 to less than 14 years
|
54.1
|
30,000
|
10.0
|
9.2
|
|
14 to less than 18 years
|
57.7
|
50,000
|
16.0
|
13.7
|
|
No children under 14
|
54.9
|
250,000
|
79.0
|
77.4
|
|
No children under 18
|
53.6
|
210,000
|
67.0
|
68.1
|
|
Driving Licence
|
Yes
|
55.2
|
250,000
|
80.0
|
73.0
|
No
|
47.3
|
60,000
|
20.0
|
27.0
|
|
Private Automobile
|
55.5
|
270,000
|
86.0
|
80.0
|
|
Garden
|
own garden
|
60.4
|
240,000
|
76.0
|
57.0
|
without garden
|
39.8
|
70,000
|
23.0
|
43.0
|
|
Housing
|
own house
|
62.1
|
180,000
|
58.0
|
46.0
|
own apartment
|
45.9
|
10,000
|
3.0
|
3.0
|
|
rent house or apartment
|
44.7
|
120,000
|
38.0
|
49.0
|
|
Electrical Appliances
|
Freezer/Deep freeze
|
59.6
|
200,000
|
62.0
|
51.0
|
Last Holiday Journey
|
Within the last 12 months
|
55.1
|
190,000
|
62.0
|
n.a.
|
1-2 years ago
|
51.0
|
40 ,000
|
14.0
|
n.a.
|
|
More than two years ago
|
48.6
|
50 ,000
|
16.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Never
|
55.4
|
30 ,000
|
9.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Last Holiday Destination
|
Germany
|
57.4
|
70 ,000
|
23.0
|
n.a.
|
Austria, Switzerland, South Tyrol
|
48.7
|
60 ,000
|
20.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Elsewhere in Europe
|
53.4
|
130,000
|
42.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Country outside Europe
|
51.4
|
20 ,000
|
5.0
|
n.a.
|
|
Did not travel
|
56.4
|
30 ,000
|
9.0
|
n.a.
|
|
1) Entire circulation area 310 ,000 readers per edition
Example:
53.5% of people older than 14 years in the circulation of
the Sudkurier daily
55.5% of all men older than 14 years and 51.6% of women
older than 14 read the Sudkurier
daily; that is 150 ,000 men and 160 ,000 women.
|
Table
4 Reader behaviour
What purchasing information is used?
Media purchasing information
for medium and long-term acquisition
(11 product areas; Basis: total
population)
Daily newspaper 61%
Posters on the street 9 %
Leaflets 36 %
Television 24%
Radio 13%
Magazines 27 %
Free newspapers 49%
|
Credibility of advertising in the media
Advertising in… is generally believable
and reliable
(Basis: broadest user group in each
case)
Regional newspaper 49%
Television 30%
Public radio 20%
Privately-owned radio 14 %
Magazines 15%
Free newspaper 23%
|
Advertising in… is most informative
(Basis: broadest reading group)
Regional newspapers (subscription) 62 %
Television
47%
Public Radio 29%
Privately-owned radio 26%
Magazines 27
%
Free newspapers 36 %
|
Time spent reading daily newspaper
(Basis: broadest user group)
less than 15 minutes 7 %
15-24 minutes 21 %
25-34 minutes 28 %
35-65 minutes 34 %
more than 65 minutes 10 %
|
I often consult/depend on advertising
in…
(Basis: broadest user group in each
case)
Regional newspapers (subscription) 27 %
Television
11%
Public Radio
89%
Privately-owned radio 6%
Magazines 7
%
Free newspapers 18 %
|
Source: Regional Press Study,
Gfk-Medienforschung Contest-Census
Questions:
1.
Explain
how you will methodically go about compiling the requested information covered
in the seven questions for management. Include in your explanation an estimate
of the expense involved in obtaining the information.
2.
Develop
a 10-question questionnaire for the purpose of making a survey
CASE: V Marketing Spotlight - Disney
The Walt Disney Company, a $27
billion-a-year global entertainment giant, recognizes what its customer’s value
in the Disney brand: a fun experience and homespun entertainment based on
old-fashioned family values. Disney responds to these consumer markets. Say a
family goes to see a Disney movie together. They have a great time. They want
to continue the experience. Disney Consumer Products, a division of the Walt
Disney Company, lets them do just that through product lines aimed at specific
age groups.
Take
the 2004 Home on the Range movie. In addition to the movie, Disney created an
accompanying soundtrack album, a line of toys and kid’s clothing featuring the
heroine, a theme park attraction, and a series of books. Similarly, Disney’s
2003 Pirates of the Caribbean had a theme park ride, merchandising program,
video game, TV series, and comic books. Disney’s strategy is to build consumer
segment around each of its characters, from classics like Mickey Mouse and Snow
White to new hits like Kim Possible. Each brand is created for a special age
group and distribution channel. Baby Mickey & Co. and Disney Babies both
target infants, but the former is sold through department stores and specialty
gift stores whereas the latter is a lower-priced option sold through
mass-market channels. Disney’s Mickey’s Stuff for Kids targets boys and girls,
while Mickey Unlimited targets teens and adults.
On
TV, the Disney Channel is the top primetime destination for kids age 6 to 14,
and Playhouse Disney is Disney’s preschool programming targeting kids age 2 to
6. Other products, like Disney’s co-branded Visa card, target adults.
Cardholders earn one Disney ``dollar’’ for every $ 100 charged to the card, up
to the card, up to $75,000 annually, then redeem the earnings for Disney
merchandise or services, including Disney’s theme parks and resorts, Disney
Stores, Walt Disney Studios, and Disney stage productions. Disney is even in
Home Depot, with a line of licensed kid’s room paint colors with paint swatches
in the signature mouse-and-ears shape.
Disney
also has licensed food products with character brand tie-ins. For example,
Disney Yo-Pals Yogurt features Winnie the Pooh and Friends. The four-ounce
yogurt cups are aimed at preschoolers and have an illustrated short story under
each lid that encourages reading and discovery. Keebler Disney Holiday Magic
Middles are vanilla sandwich cookies that have an individual image of Mickey,
Donald Duck, and Goofy imprinted in each cookie.
The
integration of all the consumer product lines can be seen with Disney’s ``Kim
Possible’’ TV program. The series follows the action-adventures of a typical
high school girl who, in her spare time, saves the world from evil villains.
The number-one-rated cable program in its time slot has spawned a variety of
merchandise offered by the seven Disney Consumer Product divisions. The
merchandise includes:
- Disney
Hardlines – stationery, lunchboxes, food products, room décor.
- Disney
Softlines – sportswear, sleepwear, daywear, accessories.
- Disney
Toys – action figures, wigglers, beanbags, plush, fashion dolls,
poseables.
- Disney
Publishing – diaries, junior novels, comic books.
- Walt
Disney Records – Kim Possible soundtrack.
- Buena
Vista Home Entertainment – DVD/video.
- Buena
Vista Games – Game Boy Advance.
``The success of Kim Possible is driven
by action – packed storylines which translate well into merchandise in many
categories,’’ said Andy Mooney, chairman, Disney Consumer Products Worldwide.
Rich Ross, president of entertainment, Disney Channel, added: ``Today’s kids
want a deeper experience with their favorite television characters, like Kim
Possible. This line of products extends our viewer’s experience with Kim,
Rufus, Ron and other show characters, allowing (kids) to touch, see and live the
Kim Possible experience.
Walt
Disney created Mickey Mouse in 1928 (Walt wanted to call his creation Mortimer
until his wife convinced him Mickey Mouse was better). Disney’s first
feature-length musical animation, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, debuted in
1973. Today, the pervasiveness of Disney product offerings is staggering – all
in all, there are over 3 billion entertainment-based impressions of Mickey
Mouse received by children every year. But as Walt Disney said. ``I only hope
that we don’t lose sight of one thing – that it was all started by a mouse.’’
Questions
:
1. What have been the key success factors
for Disney?
2. Where is Disney vulnerable? What should
it watch out for?
3. What
recommendations would you make to their senior marketing executives going
forward? What should it be sure to do with its marketing?
www.answersheets.in
info.answersheets@gmail.com
info@answersheets.in
+91 95030-94040
No comments:
Post a Comment