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Merton Adams

Brand Management Consulting

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Case: Being the best perceived value: DIY and professional products

Business Issue:

A manufacturer of do-it-yourself and professional products was experiencing declining share, margins and price. Products were positioned using a “good, better, best” price strategy. Distributors were promoting the products on price and seeking continual price reductions from the manufacturer. End customers didn’t understand the product differences so buying the lowest price product was the best value.

Problem Causes:

Expectation—Fuzzy expectations caused by price driven positioning.
The product and brand structure was confusing. The differences between products were not easy to understand and the reasons to buy the right product for the application was lost on the customer.
Experience—Product performance from product to product was erratic because customers didn’t understand which products to use.
Inexpensive, low performance products would disappoint when they underperformed. High performance products seemed expensive when used in less demanding situations.

Figure 1: Overlapping value propositions, fuzzy brand positioning, price focus and confusion

Actions:

The first step was understanding what the customers did with the products and what they wanted the products to do.
The brand promises of the three brands in the category were overlapping, not clearly differentiated. Only two brand promises were necessary to cover the customer needs. Eliminating one brand simplified the product range. The two remaining brands were clearly positioned differently from each other. Any products that may have been sold under two brands were eliminated and placed under just one of the two brands.

Positioning the brands to be the best value, at every price point, from demanding to basic increased the potential market. The same customer saw the value in the different products and bought the right product for the right application.
Changing the focus from lowering price to helping the customer choose the right product revitalized the product category. Clear, relevant and differentiated brand positioning provided the direction to simple, effective messaging, and packages.

Results

Simplifying the product line, eliminating one brand and positioning products for specific applications moved the brand  from average to extraordinary in growth and profit. Changing the direction from being the lowest price to being the best-perceived value created a business and brand strategy that has grown profitably for over fifteen years.
Eliminating one brand reduced inventory requirements and allowed longer production runs.
Understanding how customers used the product and research into their additional needs created a steady pipeline of new products that reinforced the differentiated brand positioning
The retailer/distributors were excited about the strategy, it breathed new life into an old category. Average sale price increased, margins and turns improved generating higher overall sales and profit.
The business has achieved double digit (between 10 and 20% annually) sales and profit growth year over year for 15+ years in addition to growing market share.

 

Figure 2: Clear, differentiated brand positions, best performance for specific applications
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