Märkesorientering - Utveckling av varumärken som strategiska resurser och skydd mot varumärkesdegeneration
Brand Orientation - Development of brands as strategic resources and protection against trademark degneration
Author
Summary, in English
Trademark degeneration means that a brand loses its distinctiveness, becoming instead a general term forming part of the language. Something happens in the process where values and meanings are created. Words such as dynamite, windsurfer, vespa, insulin and gramophone are examples of successful brands which have eventually degenerated (varies between countries). When a brand degenerates, it ceases to be the exclusive legal property of a certain company. Within the marketing and strategy theory, views are diverging and sometimes even conflicting as to whether the phenomenon of degeneration is a sign of success or a problem. I argue that it is a strategic problem. Ultimately it is a question of what the company wants to achieve by means of their brands, i.e. their aims and objectives. The mind-set prevailing within an organisation with regard to brands influences the preconditions for developing sustainable strategic resources in the form of brands.
The case studies deal with Tetra Pak (Tetra Brik), Nestlé (Nescafé), DuPont (Teflon) and Pharmacia & Upjohn (Nicorette). The investigation of these companies’ brand processes, brand strategies and trademark protection reveals that there is, or at least has been, "an intent to own the category". This mind-set within the organisations is an expression of their attempts to dominate their respective product categories by means of brands which are perceived in generic terms. This type of "categorising brands" has a twofold function; as brands and as generic terms. "Categorising brands" run the risk of becoming generic, and various strategies to prevent degeneration are identified based on the case studies. The most effective strategy is to develop a core value-based brand identity, giving the brands an emotional value as well as a symbolic meaning. This requires both brand competence and a brand oriented mind-set.
Brand competence is defined as the ability to create, develop and protect brands as strategic resources. Brand orientation is a mind-set that focuses the processes of the organisation on brands. The key brands of the company become a strategic platform.
A conceptual framework for the brand oriented company is introduced, bringing together, among other things, the concepts of brand equity and brand identity. The model reflects the semiotic process on which brand development is built. The integration of different legal, semantic and semiotic foundations creates bridges between marketing and resource based strategy theory.
Department/s
Publishing year
1997
Language
Swedish
Publication/Series
Lunds Studies in Economics and Management
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Mats Urde, Möllegatan 7, 263 32 Höganäs, Sweden (Fax: +46-42 34 34 13),
Topic
- Business Administration
Keywords
- brand competence
- resource-based strategy
- trademark protection
- genericness
- trademark degeneration
- brand identity
- Brand strategy
- brand orientation
- management
- Företagsledning
- Management of enterprises
Status
Published
Supervisor
- [unknown] [unknown]
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0284-5075
- ISBN: 91-7966-439-3
- ISRN: LUSADG/SAEK--97/1034--SE
Defence date
3 October 1997
Defence time
11:00
Defence place
Carolinasalen, LUND
Opponent
- Lars-Johan Lindqvist (Prof.)