Strategy and management, the foundations of any successful brand
Santiago Mayorga Escalada
smayorgaes.com@upsa.es
Universidad Pontificia de Salamanca (España)
Recibido: 7 de febrero de 2019
Aceptado: 23 de abril de 2019
Publicado: 24 de junio de 2019
Para citar este artículo
Mayorga Escalada, S. (2019). Estrategia y gestión, los cimientos de cualquier marca exitosa. Correspondencias & Análisis, (9). https://doi.org/10.24265/cian.2019.n9.01
Abstract
When analyzing any branding work we tend to simplify a process that by its nature
is enormously complex and multidisciplinary. There is an important current of opinion that
tends to reduce the creation of a brand to its logo or to the group of elements that will articulate
the visual identity in a sort of cosmetic image, or purely aesthetic. Either by understanding
branding as a superficial expense and not as a strategic investment, due to ignorance of the
discipline, short-sightedness, lack of means and / or professionals or, by a mixture of all these
factors, the brands themselves devalue in many cases from the moment they make the decision
not to face their construction in a studied way, serious and coherent.
Keyword: Brands, Management, Strategy, Brand management, Branding.
Resumen
Al analizar cualquier trabajo de marca tendemos a simplificar un proceso que,
por su naturaleza, es enormemente complejo y multidisciplinar. Existe una corriente de
opinión mayoritaria que se empeña en reducir el proceso de creación de una marca a su
logotipo, o al grupo de elementos que articularán la identidad visual en una especie de
imagen cosmética, puramente estética. Se reduce la concepción del branding a un gasto
superficial, no a una inversión estratégica. Este aspecto evidencia por regla general una
relevante falta de medios, profesionales y planificación de objetivos puestos en el largo
plazo lo que acaba por devaluar, en muchos casos, la propia promesa de la marca. Estas
cuestiones quedan en evidencia cuando no se pone en marcha un proceso profesional de
construcción de marca de una forma estudiada, seria y coherente.
Palabras clave: Marcas, Gestión, Estrategia, Gestión de marcas, Branding.
1. Introduction
The main line of research focuses on the study of brand management, both from the
professional sector and from the academic field, with the aim of offering a series of master
lines that facilitate an increasingly specialized teaching action around the discipline within
the scope of university degrees in advertising, marketing and communication. Improve the
theoretical-practical training of students in everything that has to do with the process of
management of brands that in the future develops more easily in their professional role,
adapting efficiently to the demands of the sector.
To obey the line of research proposed, it is necessary to develop a constant analysis study,
focusing on the main characteristics that shape the brand management process. It is also
relevant for the study to identify the agents that participate in the process, the elements
that compose it, the structure that gives it shape, and the functional methodology that
normalizes the performance of this task. Through this torrent of information, we will be
able to obtain a definition of the discipline and we will know what his true influence is. The
study must always take into account the dichotomy between the reality of the professional
sector and that of the academic field, in the same way that a double perspective is generated
between the local/national level and the accumulation of knowledge produced in a global
way. Last but not least for the correct understanding of the brand management process,
there is the temporal scope, taking into account that it is important to adapt to the future
from an efficient action in the present, knowing very well all the baggage of the past.
The main personal and academic motivation when it comes to advancing in the study of
brand management is that it is currently a process that, in one way or another, is found in all
areas of our society. Brands have become the most important asset that corporations have
(Clifton, 2009), becoming the main element when it comes to connecting with the public
in a relevant way. The leading role that the brand currently occupies is evident both in the
commercial sphere and when observing the different advertising elements that surround us
everywhere and at all times. Everything happens to become a brand, and brands go beyond
the purely commercial field to project their significance and influence towards the social
and cultural domain. The role of symbolic construction exercised by the brand on people,
and the image that is generated from them, becomes a transversal force that reaches any
area of action or decision making that develops within the first Western world.
The current leading role played by brands is established thanks to its historical capacity
for adaptation over the centuries. They conform as an indissoluble agent that is linked to
the development of different human civilizations, chasing people in their need to improve
trade, the exchange of goods or the recognition of business and products. Its importance
suffers a really exponential growth with the Industrial Revolution and the arrival of chain
production. The market grows, production increases and competition reinforce the fact of
incorporating brands that help differentiate themselves from the rest. The twentieth century
is a race forward in the birth and development of commercial techniques that bring the
brand to gain more and more value, generally connected to the offer of a particular product
(Aaker, 2012). Social changes and technological development that exists since the late
twentieth century and that are strengthened with the arrival of the 21st century, bring with
them a series of disruptive changes that end with paradigms that had been consolidated
over decades. Industry 4.0, technological democratization and advances in communication
build new logics of production, consumption or purchase decision making. The acceleration
of time in processes, immediacy or uncertainty are characteristics that put us before a new
way of understanding the world. We find ourselves with a conjuncture where the concept
of liquidity prevails in a general way and in all senses (Bauman, 2007).
Under these new parameters the brand stands as an unquestionable protagonist and as a point
of direct connection with users (empowered agent around which the action of the brand
currently revolves). Its ability to adapt to changes allows it to become an ideal solution
for companies/corporations facing new paradigmatic challenges. The strategic aspect
becomes the star element of differentiation when it comes to establishing a successful
brand management process where it is possible to incorporate multiple elements belonging
to management, communication, marketing, etc.
2. Objectives and methodology
From the present investigation it is intended to make a theoretical review to the main
experts in brand management to verify its strategic nature. To achieve this, we will use
two essential axes: professional sector/academic field and national/international theoretical
production.
Benavides (2017) emphasizes the imperative need to further research on brand management
from the field of strategic communication. The author also adds that brand management
has a strong problem associated with its multidisciplinary nature. On the one hand we find
generic problems linked to any phenomenon studied from the field of Social Sciences and
on the other hand we observe a large number of specific problems resulting from a study
of the subject carried out from different fields and interests. It is very common to find a
bibliography related to brand management where there is no specific unit when describing
the discipline, giving priority to a negative, corporate, personal or reductionist style. This
situation leads us to determine that we are facing a serious problem of terminological and
structural confusion regarding this discipline (Fernández Gómez, 2013).
At an international level, we observe how the main experts in the field also identify the
same problems noticed from the Spanish context, perhaps postulated many times in a more
implicit way. What there is no doubt again is the atmosphere of terminological confusion
that surrounds brand management, both in its definition and when determining its structure
and different elements that make it up (Healey, 2009). It is almost impossible to find a
standardized theoretical definition about what brand management is and what it means;
on the other hand, the different conceptions that exist on the subject are evident: brand
management (Keller, 2008), marketing (Aaker, 2014) or different reductionist views
(Gobé, 2005; Klimchuk & Krasovec, 2012) and/or commercial (Ogilvy, 2013).
The problem of conceptual and structural confusion when approaching brand management
unites the national and international levels, building a global reality. The axis of the
professional sector and the academic field tends to try an approach with the passage of
time, but today, and generally, we can assume that there is a significant gap between both
concepts. Benavides (2017) insists on the idea of working together in the investigation of the
phenomenon of brand strategy and its communication process, in order to seek consensus
between both sides that suppose a transversal benefit and an advance in knowledge.
Publications around brand management that are made from the professional sector tend to a
disclosure from a purely commercial or personalistic perspective. This type of publications
also has a tendency to beautify corporate success cases, hiding in the privacy of the agency
(department or professional) exclusively the true data referring to methodologies, structure
or ways of understanding the discipline. With regard to the academic field, it is usually far
from the professional sector and there are many theoretical approaches without making an
exhaustive contrast with the professional reality (Fernández Gómez, 2013). In any case,
it is necessary to share work, objectives, methods and cases that lead to valuable research
to improve professional efficiency, pedagogical understanding of the discipline, teaching
in brand management, and the training of students who in the future will be specialized
professionals.
According to the above, we will propose a stepped structure of specific objectives that
will ultimately lead us to the resolution of the general objective in the form of working
hypothesis. This means that it is necessary to give content and constant information to solve
small approaches, which means that we will be able to create an amalgam of empirical
arguments that end up constructing a theoretical story capable of refuting or ratifying the
hypothesis. In coherence with the structure of the research (which will be resolved in an
ascending way) we will expose the objectives in a descending way:
To carry out the study empirically, completing each of the staggered stages in which it is structured, we will use as a methodological tool the bibliographic and documentary review. Without forgetting the foregoing, we will seek to obtain first-hand information from various sources, advocating the plurality and multidisciplinary dynamism that a subject such as brand management requires. In this way, we will cover the theoretical production that takes place around the discipline from the two axes mentioned: national bibliographic contribution (Spain) and international (global) both from the academic perspective (researchers and teachers) and from the professional sector (professionals, departments and organizations).
3. Disciplinary theoretical basis
The first step we are going to take when defining the study of brand management is
embedded in its disciplinary concept. There is a huge diversity within the bibliography
consulted about the discipline, outlining multiple points of view and different perspectives.
Three major disciplines stand out in a compositional exercise that, based on scientific
strength, help to shape brand management:
3.1. Management
The corporate reality of an organization requires a constant, transversal to all its elements,
such as planning and administration through a large management process. Within this reality
should be perfectly aligned the different structures of the company, from the economic area
to the commercial one, going through the administrative, computer or organizational areas
(Keller, 2008).
The development of the organization chart of a corporation, choose the necessary
departments, establish the most effective direct relationship channels, choose the best
professionals in each position to develop the activity in an efficient way, or adapting the
activity of managers so that their action filters transversely throughout the daily work
are transcendental issues related to management. We are not talking about a closed and
immobilized work where changes take place in a slow and totally vertical way, but a
composition of planned and orderly work that is dynamic and easily adaptable to change
(Hansmann & Kraakman, 2017).
The work of management extends through all the tentacles of the corporation, connecting
the material, human, economic and computer aspects with more commercial facets that
bring the brand closer to different publics such as public relations, branding, communication
or marketing. The planning of all this work depends on the capacity to establish processes
where the strategy is erected as a fundamental element (Johnson, Scholes & Whittington,
2008). In this sense, it is essential that the organization be aware of the importance of
management and start up a department, human or professional group responsible for the
direction of the brand.
3.2. Communication
Communication becomes another essential disciplinary factor within the bibliography of
experts consulted. A large number of works and theoretical contributions use communication
as a key discipline when analyzing and shaping brand management.
Communication is understood as a transversal element that covers all actions, internal and
external, that are developed by the corporation. It contributes vitally in the creation of a
certain brand image (Pomering, 2017). The relationship between employees, departments
and different suppliers; communication with the public and in all the contact points of
the brand; corporate communication and public relations; the transmission of information
between the different elements of the organization chart of the company; customer service;
relations with public and private institutions; strategic, commercial and / or advertising
communication, etc. All these issues depend on good communication management,
and what is more important, on the fact that communication is given the transcendental
importance it requires.
Steyn (2004) explains that integrated brand communion plans, announcements, promotions
or corporate communication actions must be subject to a well-defined strategy drawn from
the brand management in order to be coherent (in the concept, content and aesthetics) and
efficient (when connecting with the target). Equally important is planning and strategy
when managing communication within the corporation's internal scope (Steyn, 2004).
3.3. Marketing
Marketing is positioned as the third major disciplinary pillar when it comes to tackling
the study and understanding of brand management. We are dealing with a discipline that
organizes and develops all the work previously reviewed in the areas of management and
communication with the aim of, through strategic planning, build an adequate offer with
respect to what the potential target of the brand demands (Baker, 2014).
Integrated Marketing Communications present the development of a comprehensive
program that aims to strategically plan the actions that are going to be carried out from the
corporation in order to project a certain image on the public through the construction of a
commercial brand unique and perfectly differentiated from competitors. In this area, the
relationship between the brand management, or the marketing department, and the rest of
the departments is essential to develop actions successfully (Armstrong, Kotler, Harker &
Brennan, 2015). Once again, we enter the field of integral organization where management,
communication and marketing come together and intertwine.
The marketing discipline introduces in its process the need to have a metrics table extracted
after the realization of a constant measurement, filtered in an index of results of the different
actions carried out by the brand (Farris, Bendle, Pfeifer & Reibstein, 2017). There are a
number of brand measurements that are general and are accepted in some way in the sector
(image, reputation, brand health, etc.) and there are other customized that brands usually
establish for more tactical issues through the implementation of KPIs. In any case, ROI,
return on investment, it is the most searched variable for more purely commercial marketing
actions and investments. This systematization of metrics becomes a fundamental element
when establishing an eminently strategic process (Cerviño & Baena, 2014).
4. History of brands
Taking management, communication and marketing as a disciplinary basis for analysis,
we will approach brand management in the first place from a historical perspective. To
understand the present and adapt to the future, it is necessary to know the past of brands.
We are going to do a bibliographic review that puts us in a chronological perspective.
4.1. Prehistory of the brand
Brands have been able to adapt to the human needs civilization after civilization throughout
the centuries. While in the beginning brands do not have a purely commercial sense as we
understand them today, it is true that from that beginning they are linked to a functional
utility of identification and differentiation. Joan Costa points out that the original birth of
the brand is historically linked to the use of the marking technique as a physical fact of
marking by incision, or by exerting pressure on moldable surfaces (Costa, 2004).
In Ancient Egypt there are numerous objects marked with different signs of identity
associated both to the religious sphere and to an incipient commercial growth around the
Nile River. The market activity that is generated manages to spread throughout the territory
thanks to the persistence to open new roads that will facilitate the communication of people
and the transport of merchandise (Saravia & Amorim, 2009).
The Phoenicians are also capable of deploying a strong commercial traffic, giving an
important qualitative leap in the development and technification of maritime transport.
Thanks to their progress in techniques for the construction of ships they will master the
art of navigation with skill, which will allow them to connect by sea with other towns,
initiating an intense commercial relationship. In these circumstances, the Phoenicians
will begin to develop, in parallel with the art of navigation, a whole series of new
communication techniques aimed at improving the relationship and understanding with
their new friends / clients. In this way, they create a kind of primitive alphabet that the
Greeks will perfect in the future. If something is going to stand out from the Phoenicians
in terms of communication techniques, that is going to be their art linked to fire. Through
these actions they are refining numerous notices that will serve the other towns to know
their arrival and the possibility of starting different commercial exchanges.
The Classical Antiquity is going to verify the development of the transport and the
communications between different countries, which provokes a very powerful boom of the
commercial exchanges. Stable and lasting ties are established between different peoples,
a question that helps to intensify existing traffic. Both Checa (2007) and Keller (2008)
agree in attributing to the prosperity of the period the development experienced by the use
of stamping as a trademark technique for merchandise. Such is the commercial implosion
that begins to use the metallic pattern as currency of exchange in transactions. This reality
accelerates the need for sellers to mark the goods in order to be identified and recognized
by their buyers. We are at the birth of the trademark. We must bear in mind that this was not
based on the product, which is the true object of economic exchange, but on its packaging.
What was marked in antiquity was not the good, but its container (Costa, 2004). The work
related to the trademark techniques affects mainly the amphoras, considered the most used
containers to transport goods during this time.
After the birth of the first form of trademark, its expansion comes thanks to the conjuncture
that arose in Ancient Greece. The polis is formed as a massive social space where a large
number of people are concentrated, launching a series of businesses related to the food
market, raw materials and an expanding sector dedicated to handwork. Within the polis
appears the agora, understood as the public square that is located in the center of the city as
the central nucleus of social, cultural, political and commercial activity. The polis facilitates
the settlement of a whole series of primitive techniques directly related to advertising and
propaganda whose objective is, in addition to publicizing different products or small craft
businesses, to offer notoriety to new neighborhoods that have a recognized commercial
activity (Madrigal, 2009).
Rome and the constitution of its Empire become the transmission belt of all commercial and
communication advances experienced by brands up to that time. The main characteristic
of this new structure is its ability to successfully implement a process of political and
administrative unity: establishes a common language, Latin; a spectacular communications
system is constructed with thousands of kilometers of roadways, in addition to frequented
sea routes; legislative unification is gestated around the emergence of Roman law that leads
to another unification, which occurs in the religious sphere (Checa, 2007). The principles
of commercial law developed in Rome will try to guarantee the validity of identification
marks in amphorae or in any other type of container object whose purpose is the commercial
transport of goods between different places (Keller, 2008). More than six centuries of
unification provide the metropolis an endless number of new products and goods with
which to trade. The extension of the empire also creates different strategic points where
important population centers are formed, creating a kind of network or system where
transport and commercial activity will have a frenetic activity. This situation facilitates
a notable advance in terms of different commercial and advertising communication
techniques (signage, product packaging, nomenclature, use of small slogans, etc.), and
improves those taken from the Greek polis (López, 2001).
After the fall of the Roman Empire, the commercial system that had been established over
time thanks to the close relations between the peoples of the Mediterranean, and many
others of the interior Europe, was cracking to reach an obvious state of involution. In spite
of this unflattering reality that is beginning to take shape, trademark techniques are going
to be preserved, reduced in this case to an eminently local trade environment. We enter
fully into the Middle Ages. Parallel to the crisis experienced by the trade, an alarming
loss of importance of the cities is generated. We are faced with centuries of isolation and
poverty where the castle replaces the forum (Checa, 2007). The consequences that come
from this conjuncture cause a return to a subsistence economy where the exchange of
products through barter returns to consolidate. A tight and absolutely hierarchical political
system is imposed. The church and its governing bodies appear as new agents that control
the public, cultural and commercial life of society. For a moral issue, the High Middle Ages
relegate to ostracism all those jobs connected to trade, especially those activities related to
advertising and propaganda. Ostentation and the enrichment are persecuted, reason why
the commerce is going to be very affected by these circumstances.
The Late Middle Ages will bring with it a remarkable change that occurs gradually. The
city in Europe reappears, becoming the perfect breeding ground for the emergence of civil
institutions of undeniable historical relevance such as the university or banking (Pirenne,
2015). Associated with this new urban fervor is a corporate system, that of the guilds,
which will lead the defense of property rights and the revitalization of commercial activity.
There is a disruption that transports us from a feudal and decadent society to a new guild
society that gives life to cities again. The conditions prevailing in this period (noble, feudal,
armies and guilds) lead to heraldic art to an unusual relevance in the activity of marking,
signage, visual identity and recognition. Joan Costa identifies these characteristics as the
second birth of the brand.
4.2. Modern Age
The balance between the new corporate trades, which make up the structure of the guilds, and
the classic feudal power is complicated. The relations between both agents is increasingly
tense and they are moving towards armed confrontation due to the countless situations in
which grievances and reproaches are exchanged. What is at stake is the acquisition of a
new status of power against those who maintain their privileges. It reaches a point where
institutions do not find their place in the new society that springs up against the withering
medieval power. All this tension leads to confrontation and combat. The Middle Ages will
come to an end after an irrepressible popular upheaval that culminates in an uprising. This
conflict erupts in several French, Belgian and German regions that were dominated by the
armed insurrection of the trades (Costa, 2004). The uprising puts an end, to a great extent,
to the prevailing socio-political and economic status quo within this historical context in
order to give way to a new way of understanding the world.
In the middle of the 15th century, the use of the Gutenberg printing press expanded, which
meant an authentic revolution. A new stage is set in motion. In the XVII century, with
the Modern Age settled, the freedom of commerce is proclaimed and with it the boom
of the industry. Economic liberalism emerges with strength (Hobsbawm, 2009). The
characteristics of the new socio-economic context cause that the medieval corporations
were dismantled along with their distinctive signs. A conjunctural transformation takes
place that changes the system from its structural base generating a very remarkable
economic success where the agrarian and artisan economy, with the Industrial Revolution,
gave way to the production economy (Costa, 2004). These important changes take us to
a context where the third birth of the brand arises, which becomes an optional property
and its owner is responsible for its exploitation provided that it does not fall into any type
of illegal behaviour. Mass production and chain processes are extended. Together with
this situation, cities and urban centers grow around industries. A new class emerges, the
worker, who has a salary to devote to consumption associated with improvements in living
conditions.
The implantation and development of the written press, understood as a mass commercial
media, is key to understand the incessant advertising activity that is going to be generated
within this period. In any case, the editorial or argumentative announcements, which are
the primary basis of the activity, will not arrive until the beginning of the 20th century. In
the United States, a utilitarian economic model is imposed in the press until the newspaper's
directors, Benjamin H. Day and James Gordon Bennett, decide to reduce the price of the
newspaper according to a study that leads them to deduce that the number of readers will
be what finally ends up attracting publicity to the media (Checa, 2008).
Following with this renovating business model, B. H. Day creates The New York Sun where,
in addition to lowering the price of the newspaper, he innovates through the street vending
technique which gives him a large number of traffic and prestige. A new business model
is implemented that guarantees the viability of the mass media (reaches a large number
of readers/consumers) through advertising (Gomis, 2008). The discipline is consolidated
as a new rising professional sector that manages to respond to the demand generated. We
are facing the starting point of a frenetic advertising activity that is consolidated with the
appearance of various agencies at the service of creating great brands.
At the end of the 19th century, the economy underwent a remarkable process of expansion
that led to its internationalization, without ever being globalized. The end of the Civil
War raises a series of political and socioeconomic consequences that will be present
until well into the twentieth century in the United States. This situation causes important
business forces to unite to ensure that products with a manufacturer’s brand and a broad
distribution capacity are transformed into profitable national companies that reactivate the
market (Keller, 2008). With the arrival of the 20th century, and thanks to the economic
and industrial situation, advertising tends to become more sophisticated. Psychology goes
on to play an essential role as a basis for the construction of a discipline with empirical
packaging, scientific advertising. The psychologist Walter Dill Scott is one of the pioneers
in the development of this trend to which many professionals from other branches of
knowledge will add.
From the early twentieth century and until the great crisis of 1929, when the Crash of
the New York Stock Exchange exploded, there are three decades of meteoric rise of
advertising on the back of the American economic and commercial boom. Job conditions
are very favorable for the American population and their purchasing power is increased.
The manufacture of mass products and the advertising claim lubricate the consumer belt
generating a significant progress in sales volume (García Uceda, 2011). In this context,
advertising agencies will experience great growth, not only in their national dimension
and activity, but also as important multinational companies opening branches in the main
European countries. This situation favors both the recognition and the prominence of
the products within the market, establishing themselves as the reference brands of the
companies where they are produced.
After the Great Crash of 1929 the American economy suffers a great depression,
accompanied by the decadent international post-war situation. Advertising tries to recover
from this situation through investment in research that provides relevant improvements
in the sales results of its customers. The agencies and the corporations themselves create
research departments where the work of expert psychologists stands out. All the effort of
the sector to endow the publicity of a scientific framework serves so that the discipline
achieves a professional prestige that until then did not have. An example of this activity
is the conformation of the technique known as the sales argument of Albert D. Lasker, on
which both Claude C. Hopkins and John E. Kennedy investigate and develop their studies.
Forged inside the Lord & Thomas Agency, the sales argument will become popular within
the sector thanks to Hopkins throughout the 1930s with the name “Reason why” (Checa,
2007). Try to give prominence to the product with an advantage or argument that makes it
unique and different from competitors.
The scientific activity attached to what to do of the advertising sector, strengthened by the
research departments, begin to provide professional work of a high strategic level. From
the union of all these elements emerges, also at the beginning of the decade of the thirties
of the last century, brand management. Neil McElroy, responsible for the advertising of
Camay soap, belonging to Procter & Gamble’s product portfolio, elaborates a set of rules
in the form of a memorandum in which he formulated the concept of brand management
understood as a system of control and organization of the brand that will become an
essential reference for all companies until today (Keller, 2008).
The decade of the forties brings with it an unfortunate international memory due to the
outbreak and development of World War II (1939-1945), especially for Europe that is
mired in a serious social, economic and political crisis. The other side of this inhuman
contest is placed on the level of communication and propaganda, areas that will suffer a
level of development and improvement never seen before, managing to apply an influence
on the masses unthinkable until that date. Once the war ended, in the mid-1940s, the United
States used its position to boost the revitalization of its national economy and establish
a chain production based on multiple military-type techniques. The development of the
field of communication and advertising is also taken advantage of by the North Americans
to strengthen a very powerful sector that will live golden decades, full of changes and
successful growth. New uses and functions associated with the advertising business are
launched. This restates the nature of the discipline and directs us towards the birth of
the so-called rationalist advertising, through a new technique called the Unique Selling
Proposition (Reeves, 1997). As we expose, the end of the decade of the forties is especially
productive in the United States for the birth of new advertising techniques that focus on
the functional role of the product, and the technification of processes, such as the case of
copy strategy: it arises in Procter & Gamble with the intention of joining the objective of
the advertiser with the work of the agency to achieve it in a strategic way and registered in
a working document (Fernández Gómez, 2013).
The fifties bring with them a dualism between rationalist advertising and the use of the
Unique Selling Proposition (Rosser Reeves and Al Rise) as a clearly dominant position
on the one hand and the emerging and still very minor theories of the image (Cheskin
and Martineau) by the other, all within an expanding sector. Television ends up being
confirmed throughout this decade as the communication media most consumed by the vast
majority of citizens. This fact causes that a specific advertising style has to be created for
the television, the spot that abandons the detailed reasoning, the explanations of use and the
abundant data to look for the simplicity, the concretion and in a gradual way the suggestion
(Uceda, 2011). The agencies are in a golden age, forming a very powerful sector where
large expansions are made both in the national market and globally (especially in Europe).
The decade of the sixties is going to be known as the era of products, establishing a strong
North American middle class with economic capacity to consume and improve their
standard of living. The economy works well and that affects the market through all the
agents that are part of it. In the same way this decade is going to bring evolutions and notable
changes in different areas such as cultural, social, political and economic. Throughout this
decade, the theories about the image will gain greater strength, managing to pose a battle
against rationalist advertising for the status quo of the way to understand the advertising
discipline. Theodore Levitt states that rational sales arguments are saturated and fail to
differentiate some products from others. The image manages to endow them with a power
of differentiation and originality that goes beyond even the aesthetic, reaching the level of
intangibles. Television greatly affects this paradigm shift when it comes to understanding
brands. Under the demands of the industry, progress is made in the methodological and
strategic aspect of the processes thanks, mainly, to the activity generated through the field
of research.
At this juncture, Edmund Jerome McCarthy raises marketing as a discipline. Commercial
management begins to demand that experts take charge of drawing up efficient sales strategies
with the aim of improving the marketing of their products in all possible ways (including
advertising). It also seeks to control the relationship between expenses and investments in order
to be viable ensuring the profitability of the company. This specialization generates an increase
in the knowledge of society and its modes of consumption. The technique will be refined with
the emergence of the marketing 4Ps (product, price, place, promotion) that will later become the
marketing mix process (Armstrong, Kotler, Harker & Brennan, 2015). The hippie movement,
of strong anti-war and counter-cultural convictions, which was generated at the end of the
1960s, shows a strong discontent with the system in general and with advertising in particular.
The theory of the image, and especially the creative revolution of William Bernbach, also uses
criticism, the desire for change and adaptation to a new world that was flourishing. The image
and the intangible power that transmits its aesthetic wins the game to rational advertising.
The paradigmatic change becomes really effective in the seventies, when the sector adopts
the techniques developed from a conception of image theories, adapting them to reality
and existing media. The middle class, the consumer society and television (mass media
communication) are consolidated. The problem of competition and saturation appears. This
situation forces the departments and agencies to go one step further in their research works,
developing different techniques that help to improve the knowledge of their target: the
focus and the consumer profiles (primitive and basic at the beginning, more extensive and
exhaustive with the passage of time). A new technique, strategic audit or SWOT analysis is
added to this procedure, which seeks to detect the main forces, weaknesses, opportunities
and threats of the corporation in order to make the most appropriate strategic decisions to
successfully meet the objectives established (Chapman, 2004).
The strategic action that the sector applies to their professional work reaches a symbolic
milestone thanks to the publicists Jack Trout and Al Rise, who create the technique of
positioning. They focus on establishing a symbolic place for the product / brand within
the consumers' brain; strategic messages are constructed with the aim that they become
a certain series of perceptions to create a certain positioning (Trout & Rise, 1986). This
technique is so relevant that it will be able to adapt itself to the circumstances until it
becomes fully valid to our days. It unites a functional and rationalist tendency to enter the
psychological and strategic terrain of the intangibles (theories of the image).
The conjunctural circumstances and the development of increasingly complex strategic
techniques evidence the aforementioned paradigm shift; the action of rationalist publicity
fades before the psychological and aesthetic power of image theories that go beyond the
purely rational plane to inquire into intangible planes such as feelings and perceptions.
The technique that takes all this baggage and becomes the vanguard within the sector
when developing professional work is the brand image. The product/brand is endowed
with a very specific aesthetic that provokes a series of perceptions to its target; the public
associates the received information with a certain image (Ogilvy, 2013).
The decade of the eighties is based on the welfare society. Technology begins to have
an increasingly relevant role. The concept of the image is imposed on the rational idea
associated with the product. The marketing and advertising specialists of many corporations
are aware of the enormous strategic value that the brand has as an entity that goes beyond
the logic associated with the product. Television becomes the great mass media to which
the highest percentage of advertising investment is destined. The brand image achieves
the greatest role as a star technique within the sector, knowing how to adapt in any of the
cases to the conjunctural changes that are taking place. Corporate policies evolve in order
to adapt to the new reality. The management will raise a technique of British origin that
had been born more than two decades ago with the aim of improving the processes of
administration and decision making. It is about strategic planning, a tool that takes into
account the vital importance of strategy within organizations through a methodology that
achieves a coherent alignment of both the organization and its offer around a common goal
towards to launch the brand.
In the nineties, media and information society is consolidated. Television enlarges its role
and develops different business models in order to adapt its offer to the general public as well
as to different niche audiences. Since the late eighties, the growth of large corporations has
led to strong purchase, merger and acquisition operations. In this context appears a global
economic crisis that forces many other corporations to close. The crisis has a great impact on
the advertising sector, from the economic sphere to the techniques and methodologies used.
Added to this situation is the problem of competition, technological development and, above
all, saturation. Under these circumstances, companies will make a significant commitment
to enhance the brand and its intangible characteristics, while developing strategic techniques
related to the field of advertising and marketing: planning, identity and brand value, integrated
marketing communications and BTL actions (in addition to the classic ATL). This sum of
techniques and elements delves into the strategic and professionalized approach towards
which any management process of a brand should aim.
The end of the nineties, and the beginning of the 21st century, presents a series of really rapid
disruptive changes that lead us towards a new paradigm. The technological advance and the
democratization of the Internet are key to understanding the new context. Users are increasingly
trained and reject intrusive commercial communication while establishing new modes of
information, communication, consumption and purchasing decisions that greatly influence their
way of life. This conjuncture gives full powers to consumers, a new center of action towards
which corporate policies are directed; the brand becomes an undoubtedly protagonist that, in
addition to being the most important tangible / intangible asset of the companies, it becomes
the main communication / connection tool with its public generating unique and relevant
experiences that add value and move away of intrusive actions (Ortegón, 2017).
We are entering the field of big data and almost individualized micro-segmentation. Those
brands that fail to adapt their communication and strategy to this new paradigmatic reality
tend to lose their contact with reality and its relationship with the target. In their undeniably
leading role, brands manage to transcend the corporate and commercial scope to establish
themselves as authentic social, cultural, economic and global icons charged with identity,
personality, symbolism, values and representation of very different lifestyles that build us
as a social collective (Alameda, 2016). Faced with this new paradigmatic reality, which
increases the number of possible elements of administration and communication, the
strategic and professionalized process of brand management reaches a totally decisive
relevance. Likewise, it is necessary to adapt the most traditional advertising to reach
certain niches, using new techniques based on engagement, leisure, and relevant content,
especially branded content and story doing.
5. Characteristics and definition of brand management
It is essential to know the past, and be aware of the present conditions, to be able to adapt
successfully to what comes in the future. This strategic idea pursued by management in
their professional work is fundamental when it comes to managing a brand. The historical
and bibliographic review done previously puts us in background, giving perspective when
carrying out an analysis of the brand management process. In the first place, we must take
into account the global problem that exists around the study, delimitation and definition of
the concept of brand management, indicated by the main experts in the field. The confusion
extends throughout the professional sector, in the academic field and through published
bibliographic production. Precisely because of these circumstances, it becomes even more
essential to approach the discipline from an open and plural position where it is easier to
identify a series of common characteristics, above reductionist or individualistic positions.
5.1. Integral process of multidisciplinary nature
Abraham Maslow affirmed that human beings perceive things better integrated into
categories than as isolated elements. This idea is what allows us to understand the need to
start a management process that accomplishes to integrate all the elements that make up
the brand, giving them a coherent alignment with each other so that the brand is perceived
correctly as a whole full of meaning (Ellwood, 2009). Both, the elements that are part of the
management process and the disciplines that shape it, are complex and diverse. This fact
confirms that we are facing a multidisciplinary process that must be managed in an integrated
manner. For that reason, it is so important to make the process a harmonious, coherent and
unifying system. The theoretical development that promotes brand management from an
integrated perspective is based on the construction of a holistic system. Pascal alluded to
the impossibility of knowing the parts without knowing the whole, and it was not possible
to know the whole without knowing the parts previously. Costa affirms that holism, or the
psychological theory of perception (Gestalt), denies the Cartesian duality of the whole
and the parts, and proclaims that the whole is more than the sum of its parts. And that the
whole is not possible to reduce it to parts because they are all interdependent and that is
how they make sense when forming the whole (Costa, 2013). These ideas fit perfectly
with the process of strategic brand management that, based on the integration of multiple
elements, forms a unique and recognizable offer through the brand. The essence of holism
is that it progressively integrates levels of interaction and leads to global ideas; a holism
that involves transversality and overcoming reductionism.
Culleré (2013) unites all the characteristics reviewed and puts them in common through an
integration exercise. He points out that the imaginary of the brand is a single, inseparable
and immaterial whole, according to the holistic nature that shapes and defines it, and in
which, at the same time, the brand is the whole and the parts. In order for this integrated
concatenation of elements to be harmonious, it is vital that brand management be truly
established in the internal processes of the company and involve all the people in the
organization. Therefore, the exercise of branding requires a global vision and capacity to
articulate actions and disciplines of a diverse nature.
The holistic vision of the process is constructed through a systemic approach, understood
as a network strategy where each element of a system is defined by its relationship with the
elements of the same system and the system with other systems forming a network (a series
of points linked by a series of relationships that meet certain properties) (Benavides, 2017).
5.2. Specialized professional discipline
The need for a strategic approach to ensure the efficiency of the management process of
a given brand forces managers to look for a professional or team of specific professionals
exclusively in charge of creating a firm, clear and rich identity, as well as achieving that,
both inside and outside the company, understand that identity (Aaker & Joachimsthaler,
2012). These professionals must meet a profile of a specialist who manages to extract, study
and disseminate relevant information, in addition to making important decisions regarding
the implementation of the strategy within the organization. For this, the brand director is
presupposed by a series of extensive knowledge that will allow him to make leadership
decisions and direct conflicts, people, projects, strategies, implementation actions and the
uncertainty associated with the change.
It is necessary to have the possibility of knowing and managing all the elements, channels,
resources and agents that are part of the offer, which means that, in one way or another, they
are an essential part of the brand management process (system holistic). This fact represents
a step forward in the professionalization of the brand, abandoning completely fragmented
ways of acting. The specific professional activity in charge of brand management must
maintain the continuity of the work and remain coherent in order to sustain the strategic
concept over time, which implies assuming that this work begins with the brand's own
conception and is extended cyclically through its existence (Crainer & Dearlove, 2004).
The complexity that surrounds the process of brand management represents a challenge
for the professionalization of the discipline, and for the specialized training of its
professionals. For this reason, work teams are increasingly multidisciplinary in order to
lead to a methodology of collaborative work away from both improvisation and confusion.
This vision is common to the vast majority of experts in brand management, the only thing
that changes is the perspective from which the discipline is approached.
5.3. Provide value to the brand
The brand has multiple dimensions (corporate, economic, symbolic, social, commercial, etc.)
but in all of them it is the most important asset of the organization, which gives it great value.
The strategy and the management actions have to be directed towards a good administration
of this variable in order to increase as much as possible, and over time, the perception of value
that consumers have about the brand. Aaker affirms that the value of the brand constitutes a
group of strengths or assets such as the recognition of the brand, customer loyalty, perceived
quality and associations that link the brand and incorporate value to the product or service
offered. It is important to bear in mind that the development of a value system for the brand
creates associations that lead to market positioning, are maintained for long periods of time
and are capable of resisting aggressive competitors (Aaker, 2012).
In any case, the value of the brand is associated with a measure of analysis that concludes that the
extra money consumers are willing to pay for a brand, compared to the offers of their competitors,
is what determines the value. The added value that a brand achieves is the consequence of a
brilliant strategic management work. The fact that brands, through their management process,
must add value in each and every one of the operations they carry out and transform this into a
higher value for consumers, must be taken into account at all times (Crainer & Dearlove, 2004).
In relation to this idea, Fazio Maruca (2005) denounces the little effort that many companies
dedicate to the endowment of added value to the brand. Brand management can not underestimate
the strategic importance of generating added value as essential power of the brand.
5.4. Adaptation to the paradigmatic reality
The brand management process must be proactive and dynamic at all times. This fact
facilitates its intrinsic function of adaptation to the ever-changing conjuncture, assuming
the paradigmatic reality of each moment. According to this principle, and as already
mentioned in the previous point of this research, brand management process today.
5.5. Puts the consumer at the center of the action of the brand
The consumer becomes the protagonist agent that triggers the subsequent strategic decision
making. This quality requires a deep knowledge of the target to which we direct our actions.
The marketing research work concludes that the power of a brand is not in the products, in
the category or in the market, but in the minds of its potential consumers (Keller, 2008). We
are facing a paradigmatic reality in which, thanks to technological development, consumers
have control in their hands and this requires a new approach to the way brands act.
5.6. Connects the brand with its audiences in a relevant way through relationships
based on unique experiences
The new paradigmatic reality requires brand management to establish contact points
that invite active participation in a comfortable and direct way, and in a relationship of
equals. New technologies, to a large extent, are the consequence and solution to this new
paradigmatic conception. Taking this reality into account, brand management must know
how to apply strategic solutions and tactical implementations so that the brand adapts and
does not lose its direct relationship with the public.
Brand management aims to go a step further in building connections with users by directly
involving them in their process as agents of active content production, or elements of cocreation, through new techniques such as co-branding and the story doing. The process has
to adapt constantly to the paradigmatic reality with the purpose that the brand can endure
successfully over time.
5.7. Coherence, perseverance and consistency
The strategic management process gives the brand, through its multiple elements of
connection with the target, with a series of symbolic and emotional meanings that
constitute a specific personality in charge of transmitting identity. The main effort
facing the discipline is to align all the elements of identity that are part of the brand
to transmit a specific offer that is unique to the target and, subsequently, satisfy the
promise made through the experience lived by the consumer.
Brand management must trace an identity, a concept, a personality, an image and a form
of communication that is recognizable, unique to its target, and different from what is
proposed by competitors. This requires a firm strategy where coherence, perseverance and
consistency become essential elements (Clifton, 2009).
Among the characteristics associated with the process of brand management, identified
through the bibliographic review of experts, stands out one that is transversal and
complementary to all others:
5.8. Strategic process (long-term vision)
Brand management has gone from being a set of techniques and autonomous elements of
tactical nature within the organization, or of its commercial communication process, to
become a purely strategic and integrated issue. The professionalization of the discipline
pursues the objective of adapting to the paradigmatic reality. Along with its nature of
holistic type is intended to perpetuate an aligned view of the brand over time, making
the strategy permeate across the entire activity. Crainer & Dearlove (2004) point out, in
relation to this idea, that it is essential to develop a long-term strategic vision so that the
company can use its assets to manage the identity of the brand in the mind of the consumer
(Crainer, 1997, p. 152).
It is evident that the management of a brand, and the perception that its public will have,
is not something that can be solved successfully in the short term. This discipline requires
strategy and long-term vision, both concepts are indissoluble and are linked to the very
nature of the process. Depending on the characteristics of each brand, the management
process will develop a specific strategy with a succession of ad hoc actions to implement
it successfully over time around a series of objectives. In this regard, Kotler (2011) adds
that there is no optimal strategy for all companies. Each one must decide what is best for
them, taking into account their position in the sector and their objectives, opportunities and
resources.
Ollé & Ríu brilliantly condense the strategic nature of brand management associated with
a vision set in the long term. In conclusion, they affirm that a strategy is nothing more than
to locate economic, intellectual and time resources, pursuing a certain vision of the world
(Ollé & Ríu, 2009). This idea of strategy associated in an essential and transversal way to
the brand management process is what makes it possible to link all the actions, elements
and dimensions available to the brand, coherently aligning them under a common objective
previously established.
Since we have a series of key features associated with the brand management process,
which helps us to delimitate the discipline, we will also propose a theoretical definition
of it. Pursuing the aim of advancing in the knowledge of the subject, and clarifying what
we refer to when using the concept of brand management, we propose the approach made
by the Spanish Association of Branding Companies (AEBRAND) which includes the
main international / multinational agencies of the sector: It is the intelligent, strategic and
creative management of all those elements that differentiate the identity of a brand (tangible
or intangible) and that contribute to the construction of a promise and an advantageous,
distinctive, relevant, complete and sustainable in time brand experience.
6. Conclusions
According to the presentation made throughout the research, supported by the
bibliographic review of experts in the field, we obtain a series of certainties on which
to elaborate an empirical argument that succeeds in responding to the objectives and
hypotheses initially proposed. Taking into account the hypothetical-deductive logic of
step type, we will go from the most specific to the most general:
6.1. Specific objectives
6.2. General objective
The stepped structure that permeates the methodological development of this research,
allows us to have gathered enough information in the specific objectives part to have
complied empirically with the general objective. We have achieved to delimit the process
of brand management thanks to the knowledge of its historical evolution, the current
paradigmatic reality on which it has to adapt, the main characteristics that give it shape and
a definition that helps us to understand more clearly what we refer to when we talk about
brand management. In any case, we observe how all the structural dimensions, elements,
actions and variables that are part of the brand management process are influenced in a
transversal way by the strategic action.
6.3. Hypothesis
Continuing with the step structure established by this research, we finally approach
the hypothesis with information from the general objective, which in turn comes from
responding to the different specific objectives. According to the information obtained, we
can conclude that the work hypothesis proposed in this research is perfectly validated since
it is completely true and correct to affirm that brand management must be formed as an
eminently strategic process. Without strategy there is no successful brand management
process. The strategy becomes the key transversal element that manages to coherently
unite and align all the dimensions, elements and actions that shape the brand through its
management process.