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B2B marketing: Connecting people between two businesses

B2B marketing: Rarely does a company see a return on any investment in marketing the company brand among the buyers of those services and products marketed under their own individual names

June 09, 2021 / 12:06 IST
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Rarely does a company see a return on any investment in marketing the company brand among the buyers of those services and products marketed under their own individual names
Rarely does a company see a return on any investment in marketing the company brand among the buyers of those services and products marketed under their own individual names

To many of my clients, branding has become meaningless. It is no longer sufficient to be a good company; you must have a good brand too. Most companies in the B2B marketing space have adopted this logic, which raises the strategic issue of whether there is a need to go beyond what used to be called corporate reputation.

The issue is complex. The threshold question is, "How many (brand) names do you have?"

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If all or most of your products and services use the company name (eg: Intel, LPS or most professional service firms), then a branding strategy is necessary. If not, that is, if your company follows the P&G approach, then while each brand requires a strategy, it is not self-evident that the company name needs to be thought of as a brand more than just a name. Both have merits and problems.

At the very least, marketing a company brand name usually means playing to different target audiences, including shareholders and venture capitalists, than are typically the top targets for the actual B2B products or services. Rarely does a company see a return on any investment in marketing the company brand among the buyers of those services and products marketed under their own individual names; the money is better spent on the product's or service's brand. (Of course, this is debatable, and millions have been spent on corporate reputation.)