Showing posts with label branding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label branding. Show all posts

Monday, January 12, 2009

«Portuguese Brands: Why the Past is the Future»

12 de Janeiro de 2009

Tucked down the Rua Anchieta is A Vida Portuguesa, a boutique filled with a huge selection of Portugal’s historic and still-thriving brands. For anyone interested in a brand-wise archaeological dig of this country’s last century (even more time than that, actually) and a study on how to take age-old brands and turn them into luxury goods, this is the place. The store’s brochure indirectly boasts that it is full of Proust-worthy madeleines, which would be a painfully dumb claim if it weren’t true.

Owner Caterina Portas started the digging several years before the store opened in May 2007. As such, she’s an expert on the country’s best brands and what makes them tick.

“I started looking for products that were at least 40 years old,” she says, “where the quality of the product was important and the packaging was beautiful.”

Her shop is a shrine to the past, but curiously and cleverly in tune with the present. It exalts everything from ceramic swallows, which are a national symbol, to a soap that Oprah can't get enough of, to Coração metal polish, which still uses its original 1928 logo of a heart pierced by an arrow.

“Brands spend millions to create a history for themselves. Normally items that are 60 to 80 years old won’t be bad things,” she says with a touch of irony. “If they’ve lasted this long, they’re bound to have a certain quality.”

The objects Portas stocks are iconic brands and part of the greater "national brand”—each one having reached a hallowed status where it can be equated with what it means to be Portuguese—each possessing little bits of the country’s collective soul and the reverence that brand managers around the world would die for. The products trace the arc of the 20th century, including the 42-year reign of dictator Antonio de Oliveira Salazar, up to the country’s 1986 inclusion in the European Union and the rapid modernization that followed.

Now many say the country is going through a reflective period where people are weeding out the globalized products they don’t want and keeping what they’ve been doing right the whole time.
"My feeling was that with globalization, we were all starting to be alike, to dress alike, to use the same products. It was clear that we'd see a resurgence of the local," Portas says.
“A chocolate manufacturer told me the other day, ‘We’re successful today for the same reasons we had trouble ten years ago: we’re small, local, have a tiny production, are artisanal and have an old-time image and packaging.”

Portas is conscious of the blooming nostalgia of older Portuguese citizens for the good products from their past and of a younger generation’s newfound appreciation of them.

Some of A Vida Portuguesa’s clients are of the generation that grew up with these products and sees them as practical, nostalgic and part of something good that came from a tough time. Younger clients seek a connection to the past and often use the products simply because they work well.

“Our clients are old, young, rich, poor, people from Lisbon, Portuguese, foreigners and old ladies who still want their favorite hand cream,” Portas recounts. After the better part of a century, her brands are still expanding. “Couto toothpaste is 75 years old and still finding new clients,” she says, citing one example: “Now vegans like it because it was never tested on animals.

“When you get to investigate products from daily life, you touch on a lot of subjects,” she says, explaining that many of her products are still in production thanks to their quality and connection to the Portuguese past. “It’s quite possible to tell the story of a country from the products they use.”
Para ler o artigo completo, Portuguese Brands: Why the Past is the Future, visite:

http://www.brandchannel.com/start1.asp?fa_id=459

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

LISBON: «a stark difference between image and reality»



Num artigo do Financial Times publicado no passado dia 18 de Agosto é divulgada a classificação do "branding" das 72 maiores cidades da Europa. O estudo, elaborado pela Saffron Brand Consultants, alerta para o facto de várias cidades se terem promovido internacionalmente como marcas fortes apesar de não terem "assets" e "attractions" de qualidade correspondente. É dado o exemplo de Edinburgh, Glasgow e Liverpool que apesar de surgirem no grupo das 30 cidades mais atraentes para visitar são fracas em atracções turísticas quando comparadas com outras cidades ainda pouco "excitantes" como Sofia e Hamburg.

Lisboa foi classificada nº 16 em "assets" e "attractions" mas não passa da posição 27 no que toca a "glamour"... Esta contradição não é nenhuma novidade para quem vive e trabalha em Lisboa. Sabemos que Lisboa tem todos os ingredientes para ser uma "world-class city" - o problema é que temos também quase tudo desleixado, abandonado, em mau estado de conservação ou em vias de ser destruído, seja património natural ou construído. Estamos, literalmente, a destruir os ingredientes essenciais para contar a história e carácter únicos de Lisboa. Estamos a deitar fora o "branding" de Lisboa!

Londres, Paris e Barcelona surgem no topo da lista - continuam a ser os modelos a seguir:

«Saffron Brand Consultants warned that while many of the British cities had created strong brands internationally, other European cities that were underselling their attractions could quickly catch up once they started to promote their strengths. Conversely, British cities such as Manchester, Bristol and Newcastle, which had marketed their revival aggressively, were in danger of overplaying their attractions. “A number of Britain’s regional cities have talked a lot of their efforts to regenerate in the last decade,” said Jeremy Hildreth, head of place branding. “However, achieving a better brand requires more than building a new shopping mall, which is the approach some cities seem to have taken.”

It described the likes of Poland’s historic Krakow as “undervalued stocks” that could become a real threat to UK counterparts once they became better at selling their brands. “There is a bunch of new European cities that need to get out there and tell their story, and in so doing they can forge ahead of their bland British counterparts,” said Mr Hildreth.

The study was based on a poll of 2,000 consumers to find out what people most wanted from a city. World-class cities such as Paris, London and Barcelona scored highly on both brand and assets, but others revealed a stark difference between image and reality. Berlin was seen as Europe’s third most exciting city, but was ranked 16th in its assets and attractions. Lisbon, Portugal’s capital, was rated equal to Berlin on assets, but only 21st in the glamour stakes.»

What makes a place truly great?
● Pride and personality
● Distinctive environment – landmark buildings, facilities, public transport
● Ambitious vision, with good leadership and buoyant economy
● Worth going out of the way to see
● Easy access and good public transport
● Conversational value – it is fun to talk about Edinburgh but not Bradford
● Location – it is somewhere special or a centre for an interesting area


FOTO: O Terreiro do Paço aos Domingos, uma imagem bem esclarecedora da falta de glamour da capital portuguesa.