Manufacturer Brand and Private Brand
“To survive in such a competitive market place, companies must build brands in order to create a strong differentiation in the market, attract customers with a credible value proposition and to constantly engage customers in ways that would endear them to the brand and to the company” said Martin Roll, the brand guru. These words encompass the whole ethos behind investment in branding.
Manufacturers with their financial prowess invest huge amount of money to make their brand name visible to the consumers against its competitors. This huge spending, if successful may ensure a strong brand and a loyal customer base.
Successful retailers became inspired by the success of manufacturers and came up with products using their own brand name. This was ensured by outsourcing production activities of their products to other manufacturers. This naturally left the retailers to concentrate more on marketing their product and developing their brands rather than focusing on production. These retailer made brands were known as private brands.
Retailer’s brands gained prominence after the entry of discount stores like Kmart and Wal-Mart during the 1960’s. Retailer brands improved their market share further during periods of recession when lower priced private brands were sought by consumers. But the 80’s, private brands were a force to reckon with.
Private label brands were traditionally defined as generic product offerings that competed with their national brand counterparts by means of a price-value proposition. Often the lower priced alternative to the “real” thing, private label or store brands carried the stigma of inferior quality and therefore inspired less trust and confidence. Yet, they still grew a ...