While attending Licensing Expo 2012 this year in Las Vegas, I moderated a
panel on “How to Work Effectively with Licensing Agents and
Consultants?” One of the questions
from the audience was “How do you define Success in Brand Licensing.” My answer may surprise you. To me the ultimate signal of success is the
number of long-term licensing partnerships an agent, consultant, licensor or
licensee has. Why do I say this and not
the number of deals we signed this year or the amount of royalty revenue we are
earning. The reason I say this is
because the real hard work in licensing starts after the deal is signed. While finding a licensee, negotiating the
deal terms and drafting a licensing contract seem like hard work, it pales in
comparison to having the drive and expending the effort to make a licensing
deal successful in the long term. That’s
where real brand-building occurs in your licensing program and making your licensing
relationships build equity in your brand is the ultimate success in this
business. Too often people in our
industry sign a deal and then are off chasing the next licensing deal vs.
expending the hard effort of making their existing licensing deals long-term
successes. The real money to be earned
in licensing is in cultivating long-tenured licensing success stories.
When I was running AT&T’s licensing program, one of the
things I was most proud of is that our agent, The Beanstalk Group and our most
valuable licensees (VTech for telephones and Citibank for the AT&T Universal
Credit Card) were with us for the whole time I managed the program and all
those relationships still exist today over a dozen years later. Unfortunately, this is the rarity in the
licensing industry. But if you want to
generate real value in trademark licensing you need balance your time in
chasing new deals with expending the necessary energy to make your current
deals long-term successes.
What’s the recipe for long-term success? Well it starts with taking the time to give
your licensee a brand immersion presentation so they come to learn the essence
of your brand as well as you do and, most importantly, understand how to work
within your brand management processes.
You see the only hope you have of achieving the ultimate goal in
licensing, “the customer never ever suspecting that a licensed product is not
coming from the mother company”, is to make sure your licensee understands your
brand well enough to fully replicate your branded product experience. What follows is a list of important steps to
making a licensee a long-tenured successful partner.
·
Engage in brand immersion with your licensee
·
Participate in the licensee’s Product
Development Process
·
Support your licensee’s Sales efforts with retailers
·
Assure that the licensee’s marketing materials
and packaging are consistent with your style guides
·
Monitor the licensee’s customer service center
to make sure the service experience is consistent with your brand and service
metrics
·
Test and approve all products with a defined
process before they are released in the marketplace
·
Continue to test products bought at retailers to
make sure they are maintaining quality over time
·
Inspect the factories where the product is being
made
·
Keep close tabs on the licensee’s Sales results
over time
·
Cross-market licensee product with other
licensees and your core business
·
Participate in your licensee’s annual product
and market planning processes
If you work hard at all these things you will have a chance
at having long-term successful licensing relationships.
One of my mentors in the industry was down on Licensing as a
profession when he retired. He felt that
licensing was just a “grand ruse” on the consumer; deceiving them into believing that a licensed
product was legitimately being produced by the branded company itself and that
was really not a fun way to make a living in his mind. I take a different view. If you take the time to really do brand
licensing well, you the licensor are actually providing a service to the licensed
product consumer because you are extending your branded product experience to
well-managed licensees delivering that same experience to the marketplace in
wider product categories. You see the Licensor’s
core competency is really that branded product experience and successful licensing
is all about extending your already popular branded product experience to your
licensees’ products over the long term.
Look out for my next post coming this Fall on: Licensing:
Brand Building or Brand Busting?
Mike Slusar
Managing Director & Owner
Brandar Consulting, LLC
“Helping Brands Reach for The Stars”
email: mike@brandar.com
http://www.brandar.com/
copyright © 2012 Brandar Consulting, LLC All Rights Reserved
Managing Director & Owner
Brandar Consulting, LLC
“Helping Brands Reach for The Stars”
email: mike@brandar.com
http://www.brandar.com/
copyright © 2012 Brandar Consulting, LLC All Rights Reserved
With brand licensing, one has to make sure that what he’s licensing is a product worth of his name. Licensing helps a company increases its market share, maximize its exposure and gain more consumer preferences and trust. But still, a company must continue to promote or market its brand on the web.
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