Four Marketing Best Practices
Marketers can also derive industry patterns from BAR statistics. BAR
essentially represents a customer's willingness to recommend a brand. In an industry in which the median BAR is low, customers are generally unwilling to recommend competing brands. In this sort of industry, word-of-mouth marketing and social media marketing generally do not work well.
When the median BAR is high, on the other hand, the likelihood that customers will recommend one or more brands is high. In this case, word-of-mouth marketing and social media marketing are very effective.
The BAR range—the gap between the highest and lowest BAR—in an industry also reveals interesting insights. A wide BAR range reflects a word- of-mouth dominance; there are leading brands with high BAR on top of weaker brands with low BAR. Brands with high BAR have an advantage over others since they already have strong brand reputation that places them on a customer's consideration set. A “pull” marketing approach is highly effective for them.
A narrow BAR range, on the other hand, reflects tight competition without BAR dominance. A “push” marketing approach is often the only way to succeed in this situation. It is important to note, however, that market dominance in terms of BAR is not always reflected in the market share dominance, and vice versa.
Using BAR
median and BAR range as axes, we may derive another four major industry groupings. In industries with high BAR median and wide
BAR range, customers are generally willing to recommend several leading brands. In this group, the key success factor is brand management:
developing sound positioning and executing it through marketing communications. Again, CPG categories epitomize this industry group.
Marketers may learn the best practices of brand management from leading
CPG companies such as P&G and L'Oréal.
In industries with a high BAR
median but narrow BAR range, customers are generally willing to recommend certain brands even though there is no player with a dominating BAR score. This group of industries is characterized by either niche local brands or equally strong large players in a highly fragmented market. Success is often determined by channel proximity and accessibility to key markets. Hence, the key success factors are channel
management—developing omnichannel presence and driving customers to buy. The typical example of this group is the retail industry. Department stores, specialty stores, and e-commerce sites are known to have strong recommendations from their patrons. Companies such as Macy's and Amazon are leading examples for marketers to learn about driving customers to their sales channels through traditional and digital media.
In industries where the BAR is
low but the BAR range is wide, customers do not generally recommend brands, although they sometimes advocate leading brands. Customers typically have poor perceptions of most brands in these industries, despite several exceptions. Customer experience is often polarizing with equal numbers of happy and frustrated customers. Leading brands often show their service excellence and customer intimacy over other brands'. An example of this group is the airline industry. Skytrax's list of the top 10 airlines in the world consists of airlines from the Middle East and Asia such as Qatar Airways and Singapore Airlines that have exceptional service attributes. Their key success factor is service management—managing service processes and service people as well as physical evidence.
The final group of industries has low BAR median and narrow BAR range. In these industries, competition is tight and customers are generally unwilling to recommend competing brands. Since there is almost no effect of word-of-
mouth pull in such industries, competing brands have to work hard to push their products and services to the market. Hence, the key success factor is sales-force management—managing productive sales people and driving the right sales activities. (See
Figure 7.4
.)