BA Theories (Business Administration & Management)

Global Branding and Glocal Branding Strategies

Glocal Branding Strategies

Branding is about creative a strong perception of a company and its product/services in the minds of the consumers.

A truly global brand:

Often global brands attempt to adapt to local market needs (e.g. Nestle).

All global companies try to increase the visibility of their brands, especially in key markets such as US, China. Truly global brands are rare.

Perspectives of Global Brands

The Traditional Perspective of Global Brands (à la Levitt)

A Financial Perspective of Global Brands

Global Brands are potential assets. According to Interbrand, the prominent Brand Consultancy, “a global brand” has at least a third of its sales outside the firm’s domestic market.

Interbrand annually publishes “Best Global Brands” list by comparing global brands’ “Brand Equity” – takes into account market leadership, stability, growth and global reach, etc.

A Consumer Perspective of Global Brands

Brand Image:

What do consumers associate with global brands?

Holt, Quelch, and Taylor, 2004

Global Customer Segments

Various Global Customer Segments – What type of consumer are you?

The Global Citizen: The Global Citizen relies on success of a global brand to identify products or quality and innovation. But these consumers also expect global companies to behave responsibility on issues such as workers’ rights and the environment.

The Antiglobal: The Antiglobal is sceptical of the quality of global brands as well as of MNCs who own them. He/she prefers to buy local and avoid global brands. He/she dislike brands that preach American values and doesn’t trust global companies to behave responsible.

The Global Dreamer: The Global Dreamer equates global brands with quality and is attracted by the lifestyle they portray. However, these consumers are less concerned with social issues relating to MNCs.

Global Agnostic : This consumer does not base purchase decisions on a brand’s global attributes. He/she is neither impressed or alienated that a brand is global.

“Hijacking” of a global brand: The Case of Kit-Kat in Japan

What makes a Kit-Kat bar?

How did Kit-Kat transform from British chocolate bar to souvenier from Japan?

Read more here.

Global Branding: Dimensions

Global Branding involves two dimensions.

Global Branding

This is the traditional Global Branding. The traditional dualistic and antagonistic battles between dominant iconic brands such as Pepsi and Coca Cola. Brands utilize their global cultural capital on a worldwide field of competition for power.

Global Brands in Local Markets

These brands are leveraging global cultural capital to capture local markets.

Local Globals: Global companies in local markets. Here the allusion to globalness is used in brand positioning strategies, typically by global or foreign companies that seek to capture local markets and fight off local competition.

Global Aura: Often local companies using global cues. For example, by using English sounding names.

Local Cultural Capital

Local cultural capital is a source of competitive advantage and it is leveraged in the global competitive field.

Local Branding

These brand leverage their local cultural capital to compete in the local marketplace.

Local branding: It implies a branding strategy in each marketplace that is localized and inconsistent across market. It often emphasises the amount of years the firm has operated in a marketplace, the use of local workers to make products, or the use of local ingredients.

References

Levitt, T. (1983). The globalization of markets, Harvard Business Review, 63(3), p.92-102

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