If Brands Are Built over Years, Why Are They Managed over Quarters?
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Publication Date:
July 01, 2007
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Brands are on the wane. Many consumer goods companies blame the big-box discount retailers, but the Wharton School’s Leonard Lodish and the Fuqua School’s Carl Mela have a different explanation. Their research suggests that companies have damaged their brands by investing too much in short-term price promotions and too little in long-term brand building. To rescue their brands and increase profitability, corporate managers must arm themselves with long-term measures of brand performance and use them to make smarter marketing decisions. Several factors explain the shortsightedness of brand management: the increased availability of weekly, or even hourly, scanner data, which show a clear link between discounts and immediate boosts in sales; the relative difficulty of measuring the effects of advertising, new product development, and distribution–all of which can contribute to a brand’s long-term health; the short tenure of most brand managers; and the near-term orientation of Wall Street analysts. Although discounts do increase sales in the short term, they ultimately lower profit margins. If a product is often discounted, consumers learn to buy it only when it’s on sale. Moreover, when one firm increases its discounts, others usually follow suit, lowering everyone’s margins. Executives can monitor a brand’s long-term performance by watching a dashboard of measures. Only after examining such measures, for example, did managers at Clorox discover that the company’s heavy discounting and decreased advertising had caused a steady decline in overall bleach sales and profit margins. In response, Clorox reduced discounting and increased television advertising, moves that ultimately strengthened the brand and reversed the firm’s downward trends.
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If Brands Are Built over Years, Why Are They Managed over Quarters?
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