Monday 8 November 2010

The importance of brand names

A Rolls Royce engine appears to have failed on a Qantas flight from Singapore. As well as the distress caused to passengers and crew, this has resulted, at the time of writing, in an 8% fall in the company’s share price.

The incident was doubly worse for British interests as the engines are part of the Anglo-French Airbus 380, the most advanced aircraft of its kind in the world. This follows on from the fate of another iconic, world-class British company BP, whose value has been decimated by the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, and is only now starting to recover.

Even the quality-conscious Japanese are not immune to these problems, as high-end Lexus cars are recalled for safety defects and the cachet associated with the brand takes a battering.

It only serves to illustrate the importance of brand names to consumers, industry and financial markets. When things don’t go to plan, as in the examples mentioned above, fixing the defect or re-calibrating the engineering process is only half the battle. How many times nowadays do you hear the phrase ‘bad for PR’ in association with all kinds of mishaps? It seems to be applied to gaffe-prone CEOs, greedy bankers, misbehaving footballers and hypocritical politicians.

So what has all this got to do with product finishing? Surely our industry operates below the radar of such high profile incidents?

But perceptions of brand integrity work on every conceivable level. Rolls Royce may be an extreme case, but in the finishing industry, those companies with the vision to employ professional marketing in order to build a strong brand are usually rewarded with lasting success.

For instance, stop any person in the street and ask them to name a brand of surface coating and I guarantee the only name they will come up with is Teflon®. There is nothing remarkable about this process; it is a form of powder or liquid coating with both industrial and domestic applications. And yet, because of clever branding and association with household appliances, it is a name that sticks in peoples’ minds (excuse the pun!)

Three years ago, I had misgivings about re-branding our company as ‘Riley Surface World’, spending a significant amount of money in the process. Now the only regret I have is not doing it earlier, as the investment has paid off handsomely. The key is to make the name synonymous with the products or services. Riley Industries could be any industrial conglomerate. But under our new label, there is no doubt about the business that we are in.

In our industry, it is the chemical companies that do this best. They are able to distil complex formulae into cogent, end-user benefits and communicate them with clarity.
In the equipment field, companies like Wheelabrator, Rosler and Nordson also make a good fist of getting their messages across in clear and simple terms. In all cases the brand names and their associations are enhanced.

Indeed, it is to the credit of Rolls Royce, BP and Toyota that when their brands take a knock, it seems so out of character. Like Arsene Wenger allegedly ‘playing away’ with a Parisian rap artist. But let’s not get carried away!

To summarise, we may all seem to burrow away down in the grimy basement of manufacturing industry; cleaning, polishing, coating, blasting, baking and generally getting our hands dirty for insufficient remuneration. But it is those companies that build brands that are synonymous with excellence that always have and always will be rewarded well in the longer term.