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admired brand increases customer loyalty and attracts new customers. These twin outcomes enhance a brand’s revenue. Although producing a soft drink is not rocket science, new entrants find it incredibly hard to compete in this market, since most customers have a strong and long-standing preference for a particular soft drink brand. And this holds true worldwide! A strong brand also increases revenue by making customers less price sensitive, allowing companies to charge a higher per-unit price. Think about the price premium brands such as McKinsey and Goldman Sachs can charge in the marketplace.

      Cost-Efficiency Enhancer

      An admired brand is in demand, which allows the company to take advantage of economies of scale. Strong brands also create favorable word of mouth (WOM) and customer evangelists who further contribute to marketing efficiency by lowering marketing costs. In fact, some brands became marketplace successes purely through WOM. Trader Joe’s is an example. Think about the stories customers relate about the unique products they can get only at Trader Joe’s. China’s Xiaomi, a tech company, relies entirely on brand communities and WOM from its fans for publicity and brand-promoting activities. Or consider the pride customers take in their durable Patagonia jackets and the stories they share about them. Since advertising and promotion costs often eat up a substantial portion of companies’ budgets, enormous cost efficiencies are realized by fan-based WOM.

      Growth Facilitator

      An admired brand can be leveraged and extended, creating growth (and revenue) from new product or market categories. An admired brand makes it easier for companies to grow and grow efficiently, through product and brand extensions that use the brand name. Such extensions help the company’s overall growth. Oracle grew by extending its brand to a portfolio of cloud and mobile solutions. Apple’s extensions have allowed it to grow from $19.3 billion in 2006 to $234 billion in December of 2015.4

      Human-Capital Builder

      An admired brand helps recruit and retain talented people who will ultimately determine the company’s marketplace success. Talent is the most difficult core competency for competitors to copy. Think about Google and Tesla’s abilities to attract top talent. Admired brands attract top talent at all levels of the organization.

      Employee-Morale Booster

      An admired brand also motivates employees to protect and strengthen the brand. Employees of admired brands are more committed to nurturing customers than are employees working for brands with no discernable equity. Why? Because they believe in the brand and are proud of what they do to help it flourish.5 Costco, which can be called an admired brand, has higher employee morale than competitor companies in the same industry. Employees who work for companies ranked as most admired in their industries take pride in the company’s success, and they work harder to protect and strengthen the company’s reputation. Executives who manage admired brands are even willing to accept lower pay for the opportunity to work for the brand.6

      Second-Chance Provider

      An admired brand also enhances customers’ willingness to forgive unfortunate mistakes made by a company, giving it another chance to redeem itself.7 Martha Stewart, Paula Deen, Toyota, Nike, and Harley-Davidson, to name just a few, have all fallen victim to brand gaffes and disasters. Yet the strength of their brands, the loyalty of their customer bases, and their customers’ willingness to see brand mistakes as rare and unusual events have helped them to recover.

      Market Protector

      An admired brand protects companies by serving as a barrier to competitive brand entry. Customers are reluctant to switch from an admired brand to a new one unless the benefits of the new brand are sufficiently compelling to motivate switching. Customers’ familiarity with admired brands provides comfort via what they know and have experienced. Their affection for a brand they know and admire makes them unwilling to invest in a new and untried brand. History shows that while many companies can produce athletic clothing, toys, and databases, they can’t simply compete with the likes of Nike, Lego, and IBM.

      Alliance Facilitator

      An admired brand can facilitate alliances with desirable and powerful external partners. Such alliances can both leverage brand admiration and enhance it further. Alliances allow companies to build additional revenue and markets without making costly investments in areas in which they lack expertise. The ability of Apple and Samsung to attract partners serves as a testament to how much other companies admire these brands. Recent alliances between BMW and Louis Vuitton, Apple Pay and MasterCard, and Spotify and Uber also illustrate this point.8

      Asset Builder

      Finally, an admired brand generates greater shareholder return because investors take notice of admired brands when making their investment decisions.9 This in turn makes a company’s marketplace value substantially higher than its book value. That explains why Wanda Group paid $650 million to acquire the Ironman brand, which organizes, promotes, and licenses triathlons around the world, including the signature Ironman event that consists of a 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bicycle ride, and a 26.2-mile (a full marathon) run. As a sign of “having made it”, some participants tattoo the Ironman logo on their bodies upon completing this hellish and grueling event.

      The critical question is this: If an admired brand offers value to companies on so many dimensions, how can companies develop an admired brand? The answer to this question is both simple and deceptively complex. The simple answer is that companies can’t reap the benefits of these myriad and significant sources of value unless they also provide value to customers. The deceptively complex answer is that the field of marketing has yet to develop a compelling perspective on what customers actually do value. Our brand admiration framework aims to provide this perspective.

Value to Customers

      In order to provide value to companies, brands must first provide value to customers. But how do companies make their brands valuable to customers?

      Value from Product Innovations?

      Several scholars claim that brand success hinges on creating an uncontested market space. Or sometime we hear people say it is all about creating a “killer application”. But what is a killer application? The argument goes that in today’s information-rich economy, customers have full access to information about products. As such, brands can only compete on product quality and price. Accordingly, customers’ relationships with brands are based on an economic calculus where what one gets (brand quality) is commensurate with what is given (the price paid). The idea goes that due to this excessive product quality and price comparison trend, companies must focus on product innovations that reshape industry boundaries and create new competitive opportunities.10 This argument has merit. Clearly product innovations are crucial to a brand’s success in today’s markets.

      Value from Benefits That Provide Happiness (the 3Es)

      However, having an innovative product is just part of the solution for achieving competitive success. Decades of research on customer behavior show that a buying decision is not based purely on an economic calculus. Brand choices are largely driven by perceptions of what brands do for customers. In other words, rather than competing on purely economic terms, brands compete based on the degree to which their benefits make customers happy. Clearly, customers will not invest in brands that are not worth the money. But what they are looking for, more than a quality product at the right price, is a brand whose benefits help them to do what they need and want to do, in a way that is experientially gratifying to them and that makes them feel good about themselves as people. Whether it’s in a personal or a professional context, brands that provide these benefits make customers happy.

Brand benefits refer not to the features the product has, but rather the outcomes from brand acquisition or use that meet customers’ needs, wants, and goals, as human beings. This holds true regardless

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<p>4</p>

“Apple Reports Record Fourth Quarter Results,” Apple Press Info, accessed April 9, 2016, www.apple.com/pr/library/2015/10/27Apple-Reports-Record-Fourth-Quarter-Results.html.

<p>5</p>

Douglas E. Hughes and Michael Ahearne, “Energizing the Reseller’s Sales Force: The Power of Brand Identification,” Journal of Marketing 74, no. 4 (2010): 81–96; Fortune.com, “100 Best Companies to Work For,” Fortune, http://fortune.com/best-companies.

<p>6</p>

Nader T. Tavassoli, Alina Sorescu, and Rajesh Chandy, “Employee-Based Brand Equity: Why Firms with Strong Brands Pay Their Executives Less,” Journal of Marketing Research 51, no. 6 (2014): 676–690.

<p>7</p>

Jenny Van Doorn and Peter C. Verhoef, “Critical Incidents and the Impact of Satisfaction on Customer Share,” Journal of Marketing 72, no. 4 (2008): 123–142; Leigh Anne Novak Donovan, Joseph Priester, Deborah J. MacInnis, and C. Whan Park, “Brand Forgiveness: How Close Brand Relationships Influence Forgiveness,” in Customer-Brand Relationships: Theories and Applications, eds. Susan Fournier, Michael Braezeale, and Marc Fetscherin (New York: Routledge, 2012), 184–203; Rohini Ahluwalia, Robert E. Burnkrant, and H. Rao Unnava, “Consumer Response to Negative Publicity: The Moderating Role of Commitment,” Journal of Marketing Research 37, no. 2 (2000): 203–214.

<p>8</p>

Michelle Greenwald, “11 of the Best Strategic Brand Partnerships in 2014,” Forbes, December 11, 2014, www.forbes.com/sites/michellegreenwald/2014/12/11/11-of-the-bestsmartestmost-interesting-strategic-brand-partnerships-of-2014/#5c8d73041d52.

<p>9</p>

Sundar G. Bharadwaj, Kapil R. Tuli, and Andre Bonfrer, “The Impact of Brand Quality on Shareholder Wealth,” Journal of Marketing 75, no. 5 (2011): 88–104; Christian Schulze, Bernd Skiera, and Thorsten Wiesel, “Linking Customer and Financial Metrics to Shareholder Value: The Leverage Effect in Customer-Based Evaluation,” Journal of Marketing 76, no. 2 (2004): 7–32.

<p>10</p>

Chan W. Kim and Renée Mauborgne, Blue Ocean Strategy: How to Create Uncontested Market Space and Make Competition Irrelevant (Boston: HBS Publishing, 2005).