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Technology marketing and brand
management have undergone a massive transition in
the past decade. The intense competition and
commoditization of technology services have left
companies grappling to find an ideal means to create
effective service differentiators for their
offerings. The onus to create proper service
differentiators and a distinct brand identity is
even more so in the case of Indian companies who are
constrained to create a credible value proposition
and enhanced brand equity in the face of scores of
vendors showcasing similar or even identical
capabilities and value propositions.
The
advent of The Celebrity CEO
In
their quest to hone in on optimal branding
strategies the CEO’s of technology companies have
emerged as brand ambassadors who encapsulate the
moving spirit and soul of a technology brand. This
phenomenon was not wholly unexpected. Technology
companies have always been characterized by the
entrepreneurial drive of their founders and the
spectacular successes and the wealth they have
created for their shareholders and employees have
made their founder’s public figures and consequently
brands as big as the companies they have created.
This affinity to a people led
branding strategy is manifested even more so in the
case of Indian companies as opposed to their western
counterparts. This could partly be attributed to the
fact that most
successful Indian companies with the exception of
say TCS have at some stage or the other been
struggling start up’s which have then gone on to
become success stories way beyond the wildest
expectations of their founders. Such an expansive
creation of wealth naturally caused an arousal in
public interest and willingly or unwillingly these
technology CEO’s found themselves thrust under the
adulation of the public eye.
In sharp contrast to the people
led strategy opted by their Indian peers, western
technology companies have opted for a branding
strategy that is predominantly organization centric.
The reason for this approach could partly be due to
the fact that these companies having been in
existence for far longer periods, the mystique and
the charm of an entrepreneurial start up was largely
lost on them. Additionally the people at the helm of
affairs rarely being the ones who have founded or
nurtured the growth of the organization, there
remained constraints to creating a compelling people
branding strategy. Also the sheer scale and
capabilities that they have built over the years in
themselves proved to be significant branding
differentiators thereby not necessitating the need
for a people led branding strategy
As
far as Indian technology companies are concerned
they have been fast to recognize the enormous brand
equity such a people led branding strategy holds and
are building on strategies to harness their branding
potential by aligning the brand value of the
celebrity CEO in the context of the broader branding
imperatives of the organization itself. The logic
for this move is as simple as it gets. To the
external stakeholders the CEO (usually the
entrepreneur himself) is so very identifiable with
the organization in terms of its values and visions,
thereby enabling the company to tap on the emotional
quotient of the association by providing a humane
face to the organization. Most of Indian IT
companies have been quick to exploit the potential
of such a people led branding strategy. Today people
like. Narayana Moorthy, Azim Premji, Ramalinga Raju
and Jerry Rao are as big brands themselves as they
companies they represent.
While such a celebrity status
and accompanying corporate association might appear
as an inadvertent fall out of being the public face
of the organization the truth remains that such a
status is a result of a concerted effort in image
management, after all the companies in concern only
very well realize how easier it is to sell their CEO
as opposed to the organization itself.
Having a celebrity CEO,
does add a vital punch to a company’s branding
strategy. The celebrity CEO doubles as a human face
of the organization and drives a latent association
of the charisma and the other traits inherent in
himself with the company. This association becomes
even more pronounced in the case of technology
companies where the CEO was also at some stage, the
entrepreneur who was the moving spirit behind the
company’s success. This halo effect of the CEO’s
charisma also has a positive impact while dealing
with prospects and customers. Technology purchases
being significant business decisions are largely
affected by the credibility of the vendor. The
presence of a charismatic CEO leading from the front
reassures customers and prospects as regards the
prospects of the organization and nurtures a feeling
of a mutual “buy in” into each others futures.
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