Lovemark
Author | Kevin Roberts |
---|---|
Language | English |
Subject | Marketing |
Publisher | powerHouse Books |
Publication date | April 2004 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | |
Pages | 224 |
ISBN | 978-1-57687-204-8 |
Followed by | The Lovemarks Effect: Winning in the Consumer Revolution (2006) |
Lovemarks is a marketing concept that is intended to replace the idea of brands. The idea was first widely publicized in a book of the same name written by Kevin Roberts, CEO of the advertising agency Saatchi & Saatchi. In the book Roberts claims, "Brands are running out of juice".[1] He considers that love is what is needed to rescue brands. Roberts asks, "What builds Loyalty that goes Beyond Reason? What makes a truly great love stand out?"[2] Roberts suggests the following are the key ingredients to create lovemarks:[3]
- Mystery:
- Sensuality:
- Sound, sight, smell, touch, and taste
- Intimacy:
- Commitment, empathy, and passion
Roberts explains the relationship between lovemarks and other selling concepts through a simple schema based on respect and love. The full schema is as follows: mere products (commodities) command neither love nor respect. Fads attract love, but without respect this love is just a passing infatuation. Brands attract respect, even lasting respect, but without love. Lovemarks, explains Roberts, command both respect and love. This is achieved through the trinity of mystery, sensuality, and intimacy.
Kevin Duncan describes the concept in more traditional marketing terms, noting that there are "two axes," one of which runs from low to high respect, and the other which runs from low to high love.[4] For a brand to transcend into "lovemark" category, it has to be high on both axes at once. Duncan sums up the concept in one sentence thus: "Creating loyalty beyond reason requires emotional connections that generate the highest levels of love and respect for your brand."[5]
In September 2006, Saatchi & Saatchi won a US$430 million JC Penney contract because of the idea of lovemarks.[6][7]
Examples
In the current world of marketing, there are a plethora of brands that use the concept of lovemarks behind their marketing strategies.[citation needed] One of the biggest examples is The Coca-Cola Company whose marketing campaigns are focused on transmitting emotions to the viewers of their TV advertisements.[citation needed] Another notable example is Cerveza Quilmes, an Argentine beer, who broadcast a commercial titled "#IGUALISMO", which translates as equality in English, and branded a medieval war between modern men and women, showing the differences between the two genders. At the end of the advertisement, they start begging for pardon from each other, and the Cerveza Quilmes' slogan is shown:- (translated from Spanish): "When machism and feminism encounter, equality borns. Quilmes, the flavour of encounter." In this example, the product (a beer) is not shown in the whole advertisement and instead, it is focused on transmitting a certain emotion to their target market (young adults, both male and female).
References
- ^ Lovemarks, p.35
- ^ Lovemarks, p.76
- ^ Lovemarks, p.77
- ^ Duncan, K. Marketing Greatest Hits: A Masterclass in Modern Marketing Ideas. A&C Black, 2010, p68
- ^ Duncan, K. Marketing Greatest Hits: A Masterclass in Modern Marketing Ideas. A&C Black, 2010, p71
- ^ How 'Advertising Age' was wrong about Kevin Roberts
- ^ Kevin and Penney Archived 2006-11-11 at the Wayback Machine
Further reading
- Cho, Eunjoo (2011). Development of a brand image scale and the impact of lovemarks on brand equity (dissertation). Iowa State University. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
- Roberts, Kevin (2005). Lovemarks: The Future Beyond Brands (Expanded ed.). NY: powerHouse Books. ISBN 1-57687-270-X.