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Writer's pictureHinton Magazine

What it Takes to Have a Loved Food & Drinks Brand

Love for a food and drinks brand has a massive impact on customer loyalty and recommendations according to a new study. People who love a brand are three times more likely to recommend it to others and will tolerate it making twice as many mistakes as any other, before taking their custom elsewhere. Indeed, according to the Brand Love report, such a food and drinks brand can mess up almost five times and people will still stay loyal to it.

The research, which was carried out by Energy PR among over 100 top marketers, identifies what it takes to create a great brand of any type and what more is needed if it’s to be loved. According to the marketing experts, contrary to popular opinion, being original isn’t that important when it comes to greatness. Despite the success of brands such as Apple and Tesla, only 17 percent of marketers think that uniqueness is important, and just 1 in 10 (11 percent) believe a brand’s greatness is determined by its level of innovation. Instead, they argue the key ingredients for greatness are trust (60 percent) and how a brand makes a consumer feel (58 percent), two factors that food and drinks brands have complete control over. These out-perform even practical considerations such as customer support (34 percent) and value for money (33 percent).


Even if a food and drinks brand achieves greatness, this is no guarantee that it will be loved according to the Brand Love report. To be loved involves a greater level of intimacy; over half of the marketers studied suggest a loved brand is aligned to the customer’s values (55 percent), indeed it must be part of their life according to 42 percent. Over a third (38 percent) went further, adding that such a brand needs to be closely tied with the customer’s identity. Food and drink retail brands that are already getting it right include Tesco and Asda, who were namechecked in the report’s top 10 most loved brands. Morrisons, Domino’s, Yorkshire Tea and Naked Wines also get honourable mentions in the report, with articles devoted to their product quality, delivery/service records, emotional connection with consumers or commitment to making a difference.


The Brand Love report also identifies intriguing quirks of consumer behaviour which brand owners in the food and drinks industry must consider. Firstly, many could be mistaking apathy for loyalty as according to the study on average consumers are incredibly apathetic - willing to tolerate an average of two mistakes from even an ordinary brand before being compelled to shop around. This passivity could be enabling a lot of inferior customer service to go unpunished. The flip side is that once such passive customers are eventually lost, winning them back will be incredibly difficult.


Brand Love also identifies a ‘recommender gene’ which some people simply do or don’t have, and which will overrule how they feel about a brand; for instance, even among the consumers who love a brand, 10 percent will still not recommend it (or any other). Contrarily 30 percent of people who are not that committed to any brand will still happily recommend brands to others.


When it comes to the most common mistakes brands make on the path to greatness and love, these centre around neglecting the feelings of customers by focussing solely on new customers (58 percent), forgetting current customers (54 percent), being inconsistent with messaging (28 percent), failing to understand customers properly (28 percent) and not being authentic (27 percent).


Louise Findlay-Wilson, managing director of Energy PR, which conducted the study comments: “A key take away from our research is that the best brands aren’t necessarily great innovators, but, if you read between the lines, they are all great communicators. Without communications you will struggle to demonstrate your values or become part of someone’s life and identity. Communications are an effective way to show customers you ‘get them’, you care and to make them feel good. And once the customer loves you, those communications are still crucial. As our research shows, a consumer may tolerate a brand they love messing up, but they won’t tolerate it neglecting them in favour of new customers. That’s a massive betrayal of that all-important trust. That’s why great communications remain key.”


The brands the 100 top marketers love the most are:

  1. Apple

  2. Nike

  3. Adidas

  4. Sky

  5. Samsung

  6. L’Oréal

  7. Amazon

  8. E.on

  9. Tesco

  10. Asda

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