This blog entry is about a brand that transformed the idea of smoking and of Machismo.
Yes I am talking about Marlboro the ultimate advertising dream created by Leo
Burnett. The image of the ruggedly handsome cowboy with chiseled features and the rough
and ready looks went a long way in creating the ultimate male icon. The
image of the cowboy lighting the cigarette with a big block of wood I am sure
would have launched many a youngster into the habit of lifetime smoking.
Readers
would be astonished to know that Marlboro was originally a cigarette that was
created for the women. The dead give away - the red tip filter. The red tip filter
was to protect the women smokers who otherwise would have lost the redness of
the lipstick had the filter been white. That is what the advertisers can
conjure. They can create dreams and built their castles on the sale of dreams.
One brash
American had gone to the headquarters of Philip Morris, the makers of Marlboro
and demanded that he be allowed to see the Chairman of the company. To his
enormous surprise he was allowed to meet the chairman.
The brash
American says with out battling an eye lid “I want to buy Philip Morris, what is the
cost?"
The Chairman of Philip Morris was in
his elements. He wanted to humor this brash American (so what if he is a upstart
and acting silly) . He smiled and said "Well we could strike a deal at 5 Billion
US dollars"
The brash American was taken back by
the figure. He said demurely "That a bit steep, what if I only want the
brand name of Marlboro?"
"oh only the brand name,
Marlboro! Well sir you can have it for 10 billion US dollars",
Needless to say this answer bowled
the brash American and he was speechless.
The lesson from the anecdote – brand
equity. A company is not the buildings, the infra structure, the people and the
products. It is about the image the company occupies in the mind of the customers
and what is its perceived value. The higher the perceived value the higher the
brand equity. Indians have understood this concept very well. The shopkeeper
selling his shop to the new owner demands "Goodwill” Goodwill being the
brand equity of the shop.
Similarly
the customers of Harley Davidson are legendary for their fierce loyalty to the
brand Harley. We all have heard of many examples of their fierce loyalty transcending
into their daily life. Harley users dress differently and are a law to themselves.
They have their own communities, clubs, rules, regulations and rituals. They wear
leather clothes and are heavily muscled and sport tattoos.
A shop floor in charge admonished his subordinate (incidentally a Harley user)
“Look
at you, your dress is awful. If you don’t dress properly I am afraid I will
have to fire you”
The
response from the Harley user? Instead of changing himself he changed the job. This
is the ultimate customer loyalty. Where the
person and the brand have merged. They have become one. An ultimate dream for
any marketer!