Wednesday, April 3, 2019
Defining brand identity of Indian milk producer
Defining  taint identity of Indian   payoff  break through producerAmul is the  instigant  pass water for  take  fall out-based  yields manufactured by Gujarat Co-operative Milk  merchandise Federation  a state level apex body of milk cooperatives in Gujarat started in 1946. Its major functions involve collection of milk from farmers, procuring and  bear on the milk and most importantly, marting of milk and milk products. Amul is synonymous with  lily-white Revolution, instrumental in making India worlds largest milk producer India. Its product  paradigm  takes milk powders, milk, butter, ghee, cheese, curd, chocolate,  methamphetamine cream, cream, shrikhand, paneer, gulab jamuns, basundi, Nutramul  defacement and others.PART I  DEFINING  rat IDENTITY OF AMUL USING KAPFERERS MODELAccording to Kapferer,  more than than the concepts of brand  go steady and positioning, brand identity is more important. It is an identity which the brand defines for it self. The identity of a brand is i   mportant to ensure durability of the brand and make it more coherent and realistic.There   are 6  verbal expressions to brand identity which are addressed by Kapferers Prism Physique  Refers to physical features which generate  here and  nowadays recall and awarenessPersonality  A characterisation of the brand, providing it qualities and mannerisms of a  gay being to explain its products and servicesCulture  Values that inspire the brand and are reflected in its products and its communicationRelationship  The brand in a way represents the transactions and exchanges that take place between people and  work a bond between themReflection  The brand builds an im come along of the   subroutiner/buyer that it is addressing  the image as a  essence of brand  impost by the customerSelf-Image  The consumer of the brand makes an image of himself as a result of the usage of the brandKapferers Prism for Amul Physique  The connotations associated with Amul with respect to this aspect are the uni   que taste of its milk products, the utterly, butterly Amul girl and the butter.Personality  The connotations associated with Amul with respect to this aspect are the facts that it is a  completely Indian product, traditional and innovative, simple  save h angiotensin converting enzymest  someone who will never cheat the consumer and only take what is its dueCulture  The connotations associated with Amul with respect to this aspect are that there is a co-operative culture with emphasis on sharing and being socially  liableRelationship  The connotations associated with Amul with respect to this aspect is reliability which consumers perceive on  seat of product experience. Another feature that is associated with this aspect is being sociable  Amul is a part of the consumers social lives as experienced by the extensive  apply of Amul productsReflection  The connotations associated with Amul with respect to this aspect is the feeling of care and concern for love ones and  likewise, a dee   p respect and orientation for  observes.Self-Image  The connotations associated with Amul with respect to this aspect include being fun-loving, a proud Indian, who at the  identical time, believes in  quality and is a firm believer in  grades.PART II  CHARTING THE  proceeds LIFE-CYCLE OF AMULAmul is the brand representation for Gujarat Cooperative Milk Federation  formed in 1946 to give farmers their due and protect them from unscrupulous middlemen. Apart from collecting milk, Amul had to  vex ways to make efficient use of the surplus milk it had which gave  skip to launch and marketing of milk-derived products, starting with butterLaunched in 1955, butter was one of the first milk products offered by Amul which  as well as helped it to beat its rival, Polson Dairy. The same year, it launched ghee and skimmed milk powder which also garnered success. In 1959, came processed cheese from its  motionless followed by cheese powder in 1970s which by 80s, had  father popularEconomic reform   s of 1990 brought  life style changes and changes in tastes. The management of GCMMF thus, wanted to go with the trends. Thus, there was emphasis on higher quality and diversification of product portfolio. An increase in milk production meant that an increase in  utilization base of milk -based products was important to make its products more regular in the households.In 1996, an IMRB survey for GCMMF showed that the consumers wanted that Amul should come out with the following products  ice cream, curd, paneer3, cheese, and condensed milk. Thus, the next few years were foc apply on theseIn 1997, Positioned as the Real Ice-cream, Amul Ice cream was one of the few milk-based ice creams in the market. Branded yoghurt got a start in India for the first time, when Amul came out with Masti Dahi in 1999.In January 2000, Amul launched Amul Taaza  non sweetened, low fat, carton milk which served functional and lifestyle purposes. In November same year, came mozzarella cheese which had use i   n pizzas.2001 saw Amul  point of view with Tata Coffee for instant coffee distribution in July while in August, they entered ready-to-eat segment with parathas, cheeseburgers and sandwiches under Snowcap brand which also had ketchup. Soon, Snowcap came out with pizzas in flavours  care tomato-onion-capsicum, fruit pizza (pineapple-topped), mushroom and Jain pizzas(pizzas without onion or garlic). Amul also entered the domain of soups called Masti in tetra packs with flavours like Hot n Sour and Tomato.In 2003, Amul dis proceed its flavoured milk brand Shakti and launched Amul Kool instead in an attempt to  taper the youth with its cool and trendy positioning but with a  nutritionary baseIn 2007, bottled  water segment caught Amuls attention and it looked to launch Narmada Neer brand of water, in the aftermath of its failed attempt earlier to market Jaldhara brand of bottled water of NDDB.In July 2008, bakery segment became the next area to venture in with the plans of GCMMF to manuf   acture biscuits and cakesIn February 2010, GCMMF declared plans to launch a tea brand having already sold it to their milk producers at concessional rates. In July same year, came the plans to market a milk-based sports drink called Stamina which would compete directly with Gatorade and is aimed at sports professionals more than recently, Amul has announced plans to launch pro-biotic lassi by the coming summer season in major metros of India having already test marketed it in Ahmedabad.PART III  THE CHANGES IN COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES OF AMUL OVER THE YEARSThe crux of all promotional strategies used by Amul is the concept of rotation. With  any new product that Amul comes out with every 3-4 years, a new promotional campaign for the same is launched which helps it to stay in touch with its customers. Since Amul markets a wide range of milk-based beverages and products, it aims to move the consumers through this value chain from loose milk to better quality products with Amul providin   g those to the consumerThe communication  scheme follows a pattern of umbrella branding which means that Amul became the common name for most of its products and the promotional campaigns also tend to focus on the same aspectAmuls main strategy has always been to advertise the Amul brand and not the products as such. The communication of Amul dates back to 1966 when Sylvester Da Cunha got the account for Amul butter as before that, the advertisements were corporate in nature and quite boring. Sylvester, along with  graphic designer Eustace Fernandez, gave birth to the famous Amul moppet which since then has become the symbol for Amul.The utterly, butterly campaign began with hoardings and  coach-and-four panels as media vehicles as with limited resources, that was the only possible option and also provided a much better frequency to the campaign.In its early years, Amul continued to advertise through billboards for its butter but in the late 90s, it came to  body forth that its imag   e was not as savvy as its competitors and its forays in chocolates was  victorious a beating against rivals like Cadburys and thus, it looked to other media like TV   curtly leading to its all-pervasive Taste of India campaign which linked to its inherent Indianness and also became an underlying,  lucid theme for its future communication strategies. In 2000, Amul got into other strategies of brand-building when it sponsored a nation-wide  rivalry to find Amul Butter girl and Amul Cheese boy through its  chopine SurabhiAll these efforts, coupled with Amuls outstanding product quality and distribution network, meant that with  honorable an ad budget spend of 1% of its revenues, it was able to gain  substantive mileage and visibility. But with passing time, came up concerns that with respect to increasing  tilt from players like Brittania, Nestle and others, Amul was compromising on its visibility and its effectiveness was now restricted to point-to purchase advertising.Therefore, in t   he last 3-4 years, Amul has gone all out in its communication strategies. In places like Delhi and Chennai where they cant put up hoardings, they are moving their topical advertisements to print.Amul is also looking to actively use digital media to its advantage with its venture into virtual world Second  life sentence in form of virtual parlours where it intends to showcase its earlier ads and even  restate its co-operative model. Its below-the-line activities, in form of Amul Vidya Shree awards to school students and Amul Food festival are already going strongIn TV, Amul is going in a completely new form as it looks to attract the youth actively to its products and has thus,  involute out campaigns like Hey Dude Wheres The Dudh? and Chill Your Dill. But amongst all this, the  legendary Amul moppet will continues to hold its place as it still has legacy value for Amul and a symbol despite its efforts to woo the younger generation. With the Amul topicals continuing to  contrive its    inspiration from contemporary events, it continues to maintain its status and relevance amongst every age group of consumers  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment