Ideas for Marketing

eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
eg: UK or Brides UK or Classical Art or Buy Music or Spirituality
 
Business & Money
Technology
Women
Health
Education
Family
Travel
Cars
Entertainment
SD Editorials
Online Guide and article directory site.
Foodeditorials.com
Over 15,000 recipes & editorials on food.
Lyricadvisor.com
Get 100,000 Lyric & Albums.

Video on List Of Brand Names

    View: 
Similar Videos
 
List Of Brand Names
Burt Alper
What do H'agen-Dazs, Saint Beno't and Clinique have in common? Answer: they're all successful European brand names for stuff manufactured right here in the good old U.S. of A. They're also living proof that one of the most effective ways to telegraph luxury or premium quality is to use a product name or company name that's derived from a European language. And even though many American consumers are hip to this trick by now, most don't mind being seduced with a European come-on if the product lives up to its promise.
The vaguely Scandinavian brand name H'agen-Dazs was coined in 1959'by two Polish immigrants living in the Bronx'to lend Old World flair to their line of ice creams. The strategic naming worked, and the super-premium ice cream soared to success with its incorrectly placed umlaut. Similarly, the product name Clinique adds French cachet to a skincare and makeup line from Est'e Lauder (itself a ?Frenchified? version of Josephine Esther Lauder, one of the company's founders). And on a smaller, local scale, Saint Beno't has created a nice little stir?and is commanding premium prices?with its small-batch, French-style yogurt, even though it's ?crafted? in Sonoma County, California.
Bottom line: when branding products for American audiences, foreign-sounding names can play off stereotypes of other nations and trigger associations we retain on a preconscious level. For instance, French product names can suggest luxury and premium quality; Italian product names, sexiness and high fashion (or at least great espresso); Scandinavian names, superior milk products and icy pure water and vodka; and German names, impeccable automotive engineering.
There's only one catch with foreign branding: you have to make sure your products are in synch with, and can live up to, their European mystique. An ultra-rich ice cream like H'agen-Dazs can easily make good on the promise its name makes. (As can Saint Beno't's creamy yogurt, developed by brothers who grew up in France, where simple local foods like hand-crafted yogurt are more of a tradition.) On the other hand, a mediocre ice cream with a fancy European product name will only come across as pretentious and silly.
Of course if you're really, really clever, there's even a place for ironic foreign branding that plays off the implicit pretension of certain foreign-sounding names. Witness the success of LeSportsac, the iconic American bag company whose bags are ?proudly manufactured in the US.? Its tongue-in-cheek coined name blends Old World panache with New World street smarts, to suggest a brand that's both chic and practical?and sophisticated in a hip kind of way. Which is, perhaps, the best of all worlds.
So could a European-sounding name be right for your brand? Before you proceed down this road ask yourself:
? Do the associations invoked by a European name fit your brand and its personality?
? Are the associations central to your brand's positioning?
? Which language/s are most appropriate? (Italian, for example, tends to be livelier and more masculine in tone than French, which has a softer feel.)
? Are you overlooking another, more direct route to the same message? (If your maple syrup is made in picturesque Vermont, for example, do you really need to go trekking to France for an evocative name?)
? And finally: can your brand deliver on the inherent promise of superior quality or luxury certain European languages evoke?
Next Paragraph..
A Guide to Business | Guide to Technology | Guide to Women | Guide to Health | Family Guide to | Travel & Vacations | Information on Cars

EditorialToday Ideas for Marketing has 4 sub sections. Such as Branding & Identity, Marketing Strategies, Marketing & Communications and Trade Shows & Conferences. With over 20,000 authors and writers, we are a well known online resource and editorial services site in United Kingdom, Canada & America . Here, we cover all the major topics from self help guide to A Guide to Business, Guide to Finance, Ideas for Marketing, Legal Guide, Lettre De Motivation, Guide to Insurance, Guide to Health, Guide to Medical, Military Service, Guide to Women, Pet Guide, Politics and Policy , Guide to Technology, The Travel Guide, Information on Cars, Entertainment Guide, Family Guide to, Hobbies and Interests, Quality Home Improvement, Arts & Humanities and many more.
About Editorial Today | Contact Us | Terms of Use | Submit an Article | Our Authors