Cadbury Brand

54
The sweetest story ever told… or heard

description

View this to know how Cadbury has evolved as a brand in the last decade. This will give a lot of insight into what it takes to become a powerful brand.

Transcript of Cadbury Brand

Page 1: Cadbury Brand

The sweetest story ever told… or heard

Page 2: Cadbury Brand

What makes a successful brand?

• Carves out a distinct role in the consumer’s life

• Constantly delights the consumer year after year

• Consistent value proposition• Local expressions of universal needs

Elicit a ‘WOW’ at any given time

Page 3: Cadbury Brand

Cadbury Dairy Milk The Real Taste of Success

Page 4: Cadbury Brand

What does CDM stand for world-wide?

Page 5: Cadbury Brand

Brand Promise

Cadbury Dairy Milk is the most delicious, best tasting chocolate.

A moment of pure magic.

CDM is Chocolate

Page 6: Cadbury Brand

Brand Character

Cadbury Dairy Milk encapsulates an enormous breath of emotions, from

shared values such as family togetherness (fun, wholesome,

reliable), to the personal values of individual enjoyment.

It stands for goodness.

Page 7: Cadbury Brand

The Indian Chapter

Page 8: Cadbury Brand

The Challenge

• Get people accustomed to chocolates- primarily seen as a western taste

• Do so by reaching out to the masses in a land where mindsets and preferences are as diverse as the country itself

Page 9: Cadbury Brand

CDM in the 80’s

• Brand was considered as a surrogate of parental affection for their children

• The chocolate goodness (appetite appeal) was being harnessed

Page 10: Cadbury Brand

The Expression

CDM positioned as ‘The perfect expression of parental love’

‘Sometimes a Cadbury can say it better than words’

Page 11: Cadbury Brand

1980 TVC

Page 12: Cadbury Brand

Category audits in early 1990’s

• Chocolate are meant for kids only

• Seen as an indulgence product

• Negative associations– Too much was bad

– Bad for health

Page 13: Cadbury Brand

Key Issue

With communication consciously addressing kids, consumption also got

restricted within the same segment resulting in brand stagnation

Page 14: Cadbury Brand

Marketing Challenge

To expand the consumer base by making CDM aspirational and desirable

to the adult segment

Page 15: Cadbury Brand

The Unshackling of CDM in 1994

Page 16: Cadbury Brand

Communication Task

To increase category relevance, give consumers a taste of life the Cadbury

Dairy Milk way - real, fun and free.

Integrate the "real" chocolate of Cadbury Dairy Milk to "real" feelings.

Page 17: Cadbury Brand

What was the consumer saying??

Extensive brand audits on the consumer pulse revealed that Cadbury Dairy Milk moments were spontaneous, carefree,

special, real moments.

So, what if these ‘moments’ were brought back to life even for adults?

Page 18: Cadbury Brand

The atmosphere at that time…

The new resurgent India.

The era of globalization had sowed the seeds of ‘I wanna break free’ syndrome

Avenues for freedom for expression were more than welcome

Page 19: Cadbury Brand

The BIG idea

Cadbury Dairy Milk-

The chocolate for the kid in all of us.

The Communication

The Real Taste of Life.

Page 20: Cadbury Brand

Brand Positioning

CDM is the perfect expression of spontaneous, happy, joyous feelings.

Eating CDM provides the ‘Real Taste of Life’ experience.

Page 21: Cadbury Brand

RTOL TVC

Page 22: Cadbury Brand

And the result…

‘94 v/s ‘93

Category 12 43

22 52

Brand 31 54

Moulded segment

Parameters ‘95 v/s 94

‘Vol. Gr. ‘Vol. Gr.

Page 23: Cadbury Brand

Legitimising of CDM in 1998

Page 24: Cadbury Brand

In 1997

• Hurdles at a competitive level

– Launch of Kit Kat which was considered as young, trendy, future, exciting, smart

– Threat from imported premium moulded brands like Lindt, Ritter, Van Houten

Page 25: Cadbury Brand

• Hurdles at the communication level– “Real Taste of Life Campaign” cut ice

with the metro audience, – The barriers of Middle/Bottom end

consumers still remained to be addressed

– As a result, brand growth rate was slower than the chocolate market growth

In 1997

Page 26: Cadbury Brand

What next???

The “Indianisation” of the brand

To increase width of consumption by entering

the Indian mind-space -

Make CDM part of Indian customs and mores

Page 27: Cadbury Brand

What next???

CDM to be the Real Taste of

Everyone's Life.

Page 28: Cadbury Brand

For Regular users

Position CDM as the gold standard in taste amongst chocolates

Creative Idea I will do anything to eat my CDM

The twin platforms

Page 29: Cadbury Brand

For Infrequent users

Position CDM as the chocolate meant for everyone

Chocolate = CDM

Creative Idea You don’t need any special reason

to eat CDM

Page 30: Cadbury Brand

For Regular users

The executions

Page 31: Cadbury Brand

Train TVC

Page 32: Cadbury Brand

For Infrequent Users

The executions

Page 33: Cadbury Brand

Cyrus TVC

Page 34: Cadbury Brand

The result...

Vendor TVC’s cut ice among both heavy as well as marginal user

The strategy helped increase brand penetration (specially in smaller towns)

leading to a brand growth of around 40%

Page 35: Cadbury Brand

The result...

Volumes grew by 34% post ad exposure (i.e Jul-Dec ‘00) vis-à-vis

pre ad period (i.e. Jan-Jun ‘00)

Overall CDM volumes of 2000 grew by more than 30% over 1999

Page 36: Cadbury Brand

Parallel initiatives

Beefed up distribution system (grown by over 60% over past 5 years)

Increased points of contact

(Bringing CDM closer to the consumer)

Page 37: Cadbury Brand

The third discontinuity

CDM in 2002

Page 38: Cadbury Brand

Competitive Environment

• Influx of several brands at various price points offering greater perceived value

• While attitudes towards chocolates softened, consumers flirted with options

Page 39: Cadbury Brand

The Challenge

Reinforce pre-eminence of the brand

Page 40: Cadbury Brand

The Execution

Product

Range of new, international pack formats – a CDM for every need

Page 41: Cadbury Brand

CDM for every need

• For chocoholics -

CDM Chunky

• For Connoisseur -

- Bournville

- Fruit & Nut

Page 42: Cadbury Brand

CDM for every need

• Gifting - Gift packs

• In-home consumption

• ‘Muh Meetha Karna’

Page 43: Cadbury Brand

The Execution

Communication

Reinforce relationship of brand in the consumer’s life

Page 44: Cadbury Brand

CDM in 2002

I eat CDM when I am happy, sad

CDM is always there with me

CDM mere mun mein rahata hai

CDM is almost like an ideal companion

Consumer Speak

Insight

The Brand Platform

I need a friend who sees me through all my

emotions

CDM uplifts my spirits like a true

friend

Page 45: Cadbury Brand

Sailor and Tennis TVCs

Page 46: Cadbury Brand

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

450

93 95 97 99

Index sales

The Sweet Taste of Success

Page 47: Cadbury Brand

A brand that captures your mind gains behaviour.

A brand that captures your heart gains commitment.

Scott Falgo

Page 48: Cadbury Brand

100%

89%

85%

84%

68%

99%

84%

77%

64%

8%Bonding

Advantage

Performance

Relevance

Presence

Commitment to the brand - India

CDM Intl. Choc. Brand in India

Source: IMRB U&A Study

Page 49: Cadbury Brand

CDM India – a global benchmark

Today, India is the second largest market for CDM in the world

The Indian case-study has been designated as the "blueprint for success" for all international markets to emulate.

Page 50: Cadbury Brand

But there are newer challenges

Strike a balance between the CDM enlistment (in non-metros) and the

increasing usage in Metros

Drive CDM ‘Ultimate Chocolate Experience’ values across the Mega Brand Range

Make CDM a part of the Indian shopping basket

Page 51: Cadbury Brand

Our goal

Ensure a CDM in very pocket

Page 52: Cadbury Brand

Lesson

A Brand is a Brand is a Brand

Page 53: Cadbury Brand

As long as it connects with the consumer, remains relevant & excites her, it doesn’t matter

whether it’s Indian or not

Page 54: Cadbury Brand

Thank you

Care for some chocolate?