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Building a successful global beer brand: part 4
The first step to building a successful global beer brand is to define the benefits to your organisation. Now Kos Apostolatos, David Atkinson and Joseph Poore from management consultancy firm Marakon, outline the second key consideration.
As we analysed hundreds of beer brands, it was striking to see that for those that had made the transition from local to global, there was no common reason for their success.
What unites the eight global beer brands is that they have a unique customer value proposition to the customer and/or have an advantaged business model.
Through our research we consistently heard that to build a global brand you need great taste, local image and a brand that is currently profitable. We believe these factors were, and remain, critical to building a local but not global beer brand.
Being very good in a number of areas is not enough to give a brand the front running in the global market. The starting point for selecting the right brand to take global is a unique customer value proposition.
Uniqueness means that there is a place in the mind of the consumers where your brand sits alone with clearly identified consumer “benefits”, ultimately driving strong buying behaviour and loyalty.
Why are taste and profitability not as important as a unique customer proposition?
Consumers are embarrassingly poor at differentiating between lagers in blind taste tests. A Carling study found consumers could not identify a significant difference in taste across five of its competitor’s lagers nor could they identify their favourite brand as having superior taste.
Once labelled, the consumers immediately ranked their preferred brand as superior across taste factors. Taste, to a large degree, is all in the eyes rather than the palate.
We also heard brewers should choose which brand to take global based on how profitable the brand currently is in key countries (with the idea being that if you are successful locally, you have a better chance of becoming successful globally).
We believe that this will lead to the wrong brand being promoted on many occasions as profitability is a not a leading but a lagging indicator of the overall success of a brand.
Global brands—uniqueness and value to their owners
Estimated revenue to brewer (€m, 2011) |
Share of group revenue (%, 2011) |
||
Top 10 global beer brands |
|||
Heineken | Footprint and international image |
4,800 |
28% |
Budweiser | Scale and resulting A&P spend |
5,300 |
18% |
Corona | Packaging and experience |
3,300 |
72% |
Carlsberg | Mainstream price point and image |
1,950 |
23% |
Guinness | Irish stout |
1,050 |
8% |
Stella Artois | Sophisticated European image |
1,300 |
4% |
Beck’s | Affordable premium proposition |
1,300 |
4% |
Miller Draft | “American-ness” |
1,000 |
8% |
Amstel | Heritage pilsner proposition |
1,100 |
6% |
Foster’s | Global license and positioning |
1,200 |
n/a |
Brands with potential to enter the top 10 |
|||
Tiger | Definitive Asian beer, youth focus |
250 |
12% |
Peroni | Focus on cities and niche markets |
250–400 |
2%–3% |
Desperados | Unique RTM and taste profile |
150 |
1% |
Kirin | Packaging and image |
3,800 |
62% |
Asahi | Packaging and image |
5,300 |
43% |
Brahma | Packaging and image |
3,400 |
11% |
Kingfisher | Pride of India, professional focus |
450 |
79% |
Snow | Scale and resulting A&P spend |
1,950 |
90% |
Blue Moon | Craft beer at scale |
150 |
6% |
We discovered that brands that fail to identify (and sustain over time) a material point of uniqueness on the global consumer map will fall into a negative cycle, slowly reducing volume and profitability in all markets over time. Unique brands are able to leverage their strengths to increase consumer appeal and grow rapidly.
For further information, contact Kos Apostolatos +44 (0)7825 040 036, kapostolatos@marakon.com or David Atkinson +44(0)7809 779 829, datkinson@marakon.com
Thanks – useful to get the revenue numbers by brand.