Telecommunications company, Telstra, is in the middle of a โrebranding campaignโ managed by one of the nationโs best-known chief marketing officers, Mark Buckman.
Buckman joined Telstra 18 months ago from the Commonwealth Bank, at a time when Telstra was in the middle of significant change under chief executive David Thodeyโs leadership.
Buckman has made big changes to Telstraโs marketing activities, and he points to a number of measures in support of his case that the campaign is having a positive effect on consumer perceptions of the brand, according to a report in The Australian Financial Review.
Buckmanโs detailed analysis of Telstraโs efforts offer insights for all leading companies about ways to measure return on investment in branding and marketing, although not all of them stand up to the scrutiny of the experts LeadingCompany spoke to today.
Branding or marketing?
Is Buckman really conducting a rebranding campaign? Not according to Mark Ritson, Melbourne Business Schoolโs associate professor of marketing. โIt is a repositioning, not a rebranding,โ he says. โAnd strictly speaking, it is not even a repositioning.โ
The company did not change its logo, but added a dramatic fan of bright colours around the logo, which are designed to create a greater โemotional connectionโ to the brand, Thodey said at the time of the relaunch, last September. It was created by the DDB Groupโs specialist brand agency, Interbrand.
Independent brand advocate, Michel Hogan, is sceptical. โWhat everyone calls rebranding is remarketing, or repositioning. Sometimes it is โre-logoingโ, or โre-tagliningโ. Even โrealigning the brandโ doesnโt go deep enough for me.
โA brand is built up slowly over time through everything you do. A brand is the result of the promises made and promise kept.โ
Benchmarking
Telstraโs brand value has gone up by $300 million to $5 billion, Buckman says, quoting recent figures from a British company, Brand Finance. Simon Rowell, founder of Brand Intellect, explains: โWhat Telstra is doing with Brand Finance is trying to benchmark themselves. When you are one of a few very large companies you have to use international benchmarks.โ
This is one of the most expensive measures of success: benchmarking consultants charge for their services, Rowell says.
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