1、Unit 2 Brands Warmer --background information (questions for discussion) brand? marketing? marketing department? --Working in small groups, get SS to think of up to five brands for each product category. --Invite comments and encourage discussion about the above questions. Brand l
2、A brand can be a name, a term or symbol. It is used to differentiate a product from competitor’s products. The brands guarantee a certain quality level. Brands should add value to products. It’s a synergy effect whereby one plus one equals three. But customers must believe they get extra value for m
3、oney. Marketing l Marketing is an important part of the business school curriculum. Marketing courses usually begin with the credo of the marketing orientation, the idea that success and profitability are attained through identification and satisfaction of customer needs. The market orientation i
4、mplies that marketing is not just a set of activities, but an attitude that should permeate the entire company. In this view, marketing is not just about a company selling what it makes, but about knowing what it should make in the first place. Marketing Department l A team of brand managers or pr
5、oducts managers who are responsible for promoting the company’s products in one country or group of countries. l The actual activity of getting sales outlets to order products may be dealt with by sales department and its sales force. l Products team: usually do research, development and selling.
6、 Marketing l Marketing can be approached in terms of the four classic Ps—product, price, place, promotion. Selling the right product, at the right price, through the right channels, with the right support and communications. Questions relate mainly to consumer marketing (bring them in mind) l T
7、he company’s product range? (top-end or upmarket, or mid-range and bottom or downmarket) l Does it have an entry-level product for people buying the type of product for the first time? l Are new products often launched? l What are some of the features of buying behavior? l What are the differen
8、t customer groups or segments? l How are products positioned in relation to competitors’ products? And who are the important competitors in the market, the key players? l What is the company’s policy on prices: how does it set its prices? What is the make-up for distributors? What sort of profit m
9、argins are there for the company? l Are there discounts to distributors and consumers? l Are there price war between competitors? Questions for consumer marketing l How are products distributed to reach the outlets? l Who is involved in the distribution channels? l What is the relationship
10、between wholesalers, distributors, resellers and retailers? l What are the relationship between them? And who has the upper hand? l How are products promoted? l Is there a sales force? If so, how is it organised? l Is there any advertising and/ or direct mail? l Who carried it out? l Is pac
11、kaging important? l Who designs it? Overview Tell SS that they will be studying language associated with marketing and brands. --Read the overview section. --Make up an agenda for the lessons. Quotation l “The most distinctive skill of professional marketers is their ability to create, m
12、aintain, protect and enhance brands.” ---P. Kotler, American marketing guru ---Understand the meaning ---Ask SS whether they agree with or disagree with the quotation Starting up --discussion l Task A :This section gives the Ss an opportunity to discuss the theme of the unit, and p
13、rovide speaking practice. --Ask SS, working individually, to make a list of their five favorite brands. Ask them to think about the brands they have on them (clothes, pens, watches, mobil-phone, spectacles, etc.) and other products (food and drink, cars, computers, etc.) --Ask SS to think individu
14、ally about their answers to the questions in the book. --When they finished, ask a few pairs or group to report back to the class on their discussion. l Task B: --Ask SS into small groups to discuss this question. Ask them to list as many answers and they can --Check the answers with the whole
15、class Advantages for the manufacturer: 1. Instantly recognisable 2. Being able to associate specific qualities with brand (e.g. value for money, safety, prestige) 3. The possibility of launching related products under the same (established) brand Greater customer loyalty Advantages for the con
16、sumer: 1. A reliable product—you know what you’re getting for your money 2. High prestige brands give you an opportunity to enhance your standing l Task C: --Ask SS, in small groups, to decide which is the world’s top brand and to rank them all from one to ten. --When SS have finished, ref
17、er them to the answers in their books P 156. Vocabulary: brand management l Task A: --Dictate the words: awareness, classic, image, leader, loyalty, luxury, manager, stretching. --Match the words. --Get SS to do the exercise individually, comparing their answers in pairs as they finish. 1 l
18、uxury brand, 2 brand manager, 3 brand leader, 4 classic brand, 5 brand image, 6 brand loyalty, 7 brand stretching, 8 brand awareness l Task B: --SS do the exercise individually, then compare. 1. Classic brand, 2 brand awareness, 3 brand image, 4 luxury brand Listening: l This listenin
19、g comes from an authentic interview with a marketing specialist. The exercises focus on predication and listen for information. l Part 1 --Working individually, Ss complete as many of the gaps as they. --SS compare their answers in pair. --SS listen to part 1, play the recording twice and go thr
20、ough the answers with the whole class 1 name, 2 differentiate, 3 competitors’ , 4 quality, 5 synergy, 6 money Part 2: --SS listen to part 2. Play the recording twice. Then get them compare their answers in pairs. --Go through the answers with the whole class. l Part 3 --Work in pairs, ask
21、Ss to guess what might be missing from the summary. --SS listen to part 3 and check their predications Customers want: 1. New brands 2. Choice 3. Different products Customers like to: 1. Rely on the quality levels guaranteed by the company. 2. Trust products. 3. Identify with brands Re
22、ading: fashion piracy l This article, adapted from the Financial Times, looks at Calvin Klein’s attempts to deal with counterfeit products. The comprehension exercises develop reading for information. l Task A: --Put SS into pairs or small group to discuss the questions. --Go through the questi
23、ons briefly with the whole class. l Task B --Get SS to read the title of text and guess what the text is about. --Get SS to list the words that they think may appear in the text—e.g. design clothes, illegal, copy etc. --Get SS to work through task B and go through the answers with the whole clas
24、s. 1 c), 2 d), 3 e), 4 f), 5 g), 6 a), 7 i), 8 b), 9 j), 10 h) l Task C --SS look through the article to find the answers to the three questions. --check the answers with the whole class. 1. T-shirts, jeans & baseball caps. 2. Because Calvin Klein has become a more well-known brand,
25、and is therefore more profitable to copy. 3.By establishing a network of employees and external specialists l Task D --Get SS to read the three further questions before re-reading the article. --check the answers with whole class. 1. It took a passive approach. 2. Because of the increas
26、e in counterfeiting and because it reduces the company’s sales and damages tis brand image. 3. It has expanded its business outside N. America, increased spending on advertising and signed licensing deals with partners for whole regions rather individual countries, the previous practice Language
27、 review: Past simple and present perfect l SS at this level will normally have covered this point in class several times but it can still cause problems. --Revise and practise the tense rules and uses, get the Ss to do the exercises individually. --Go through the answers with the whole class. 1
28、 launched, 2 increased, 3 have fallen, 4 have copied, 5 has become, 6 orgainsed, 7 have found, 8 have seized, 9 contacted, 10 informed, 11 have had, 12 have lost. Discussion: Three promotions l This discussion provides fluency practice and a change of pace. --Divide the class into three grou
29、ps: McDonald’s, Pepsi and Irish Tourist Board --Brief go through the questions together (teacher’s book P21) Skills: Taking part in meetings SS build up a profile of a company, speculate about what may be causing it to lose sales and brainstorm possible solutions. l Task A --suppose you are wor
30、king for a marketing agency representing a well-known chain of book shops. Go to the questionnaire below, inventing the information to build a client profile. l Task B --Ask a representative to give a two-minute presentation of their client profile. Case study: Caferoma l This case study conc
31、erns a company losing market share. SS discuss possible solutions and make a decision. --Ask SS which brands of coffee they drink. If they always buy the same brand or if they change from time to time. --Get SS to discuss what the pictures say about Caferoma’s image, target, marker, etc. Brand
32、Caferoma Owned by Pan European Food and Drink Image Exclusive, ltalian style, coffee for gourmets pricing high Product characteristic Strong full-bodied flovour, slightly bitter taste l Problems --Ask SS to look at the pie charts and decide what problems Caferoma has (25% fall in the mar
33、ket share). --Get them to read the problems section and find out why. l Possible solutions --Ask SS to read through possible solutions. --Set up the situation. Ss are members of PEFD’s marketing team in Europe, attending an informal meeting to discuss Caferoma’s problems and come up with a solu
34、tion. --When SS finish, get groups to report back to the rest of the class on their solutions Internet resources: l Hoover's Directory offers a brief overview of Calvin Klein with links to recent articles. ( l Check out the Coca-Cola site, which has information about Coca-Cola's core brands p
35、lus its other world-wide brands. Also check out the page which has a brief history of its brands. (http://www.coca- l Fast Company,( )an online business magazine, is an excellent source of information on the new economy and workplace. For an interesting article on brand qualities, ( check out an i
36、nterview with Scott Bedbury, Vice President of Marketing at Starbucks Coffee Company, entitled 'What great brands do - an eight point programme for creating great brands.' At the same site you can also read an article on Di-Ann Eisnor, who has succeeded in marketing digital brands in the physical world. l The Harvard Business Review archive is also a valuable source of more academic articles on aspects of brand management.






