
So the results are out. And apparently CBA's gamble on a US ad agency campaign has been a huge success. Well that's according to Mr Buckman at CBA anyway. He touted figures of brand awareness of 90% (peaking at 95%) and perhaps more importantly that media spend had fallen by 30% YOY. Apparently prior to the campaign, brand awareness was at 70%. Personally I find this pretty darn hard to believe. It's like saying that only 7 out of 10; people in Australia know who John Howard is. Putting aside the veracity of the figures for a moment, could perhaps the measure of brand awareness be a red herring? Or as I put rather callously in meeting the other day, brand awareness is completely meaningless, awareness of cancer is around 100% that doesn't mean I want it!
Moving on from awareness figures, the bit I found most intriguing about Mr Buckman's defence of the marketing strategy was this quote, "We set out to achieve three things -- impact, comprehension and likeability. We have achieved two out of three so far and we are well on our way to getting our third."
This idea of likeability I thought was where the real gold is. Think of it this way, awareness is basically the number of friends you have on Facebook, whereas likeability is more like the actual the friends you keep in contact with. Which raises an interesting question... Do we really want to like brands? Does anyone really want to have a relationship with a brand? Firstly brands aren't even real they're a concept, an idea. And secondly who wants to be friends with bank? Or an insurer? Or a biscuit for that matter? I mean really, are we asking a little too much of consumers to be friends with, or have relationships with our brands?
The answer? No we aren't. The fact that brands are just concepts is why consumers form such powerful connections with them. When you buy a Ferrari you don't just buy a fast red car. You buy 100years of racing history. You buy a piece of Italian culture. You buy all sorts of intangible emotions. Girls want to be with you and guys want to be you, and the rest of us just think you're wanker. One of the most powerful brands in the past couple of years is shining example of the fact that consumer want a relationship with brands. Just do a Google search for Apple tattoos and trawl through the 3.3million mentions is serves up. I doubt these people are tattooing themselves with Apple logos purely because they think the iPod is good mp3 player. It's because they see parts of themselves in the brand, and what that brand choice says about them as a person. It's all the intangible, emotive stuff that makes a great brand, not an arbitrary figure about how many people can remember your name.


