Thursday, December 16, 2010

A pleasant marketing problem



Mergers and acquisitions were the order of the day during the pre 2008 days. It took a break after the fall of Lehman Bros and the ensuing recession. They are back again in town with the buying out of Paras Pharma by FMCG giant Reckitt Benckiser. Paras Pharma owns over-the-counter brands (OTC) such as Moov which is a pain relief ointment, Krack, a heel care lotion, and D'Cold, a cold remedy among others. RB adds these brands to its already established brands such as Dettol, Disprin, Clearasil, Veet and Durex.

This acquisition would leave RB marketers in a bit of a quandary. What sould they do about Dispirin and D’cold which almost are used for similar purposes. Headache, cold, clear throat. Although not a direct competitor with each others, it begs the question that what would be the solution when two competitor brands merge or are taken over for inorganic growth. Should they continue with the existing own brand and the newly taken over brand or should the new brand be killed to make way for a stronger home brand. To make it clear, consider this very hypothetical example. What if P&G takes over HUL? Or visa versa. Would P&G kill the powerful brand Surf Excel to further its own Ariel brand? Would it kill the powerful Sunsilk and Clinic for making Pantene and Head & Shoulders the favourite?

In this uncertain world with flexibility being the buzzword, can there be an obvious way for this problem to be solved. I know that the answer for this cannot be an absolute one but would depend on the type of companies involved and the power of brands taken over. For Arcelor steel merging with Mittal Steel or Tata with Corus, there isn’t much to think. Commodity market as such doesn’t give marketers sleepless nights as does consumer goods. But what about a Ranbaxy which is so ingrained in the Indian mind after it being bought out by Daiichi Sankyo? Would they kill the Ranbaxy brand to make DS a global brand?

A bigger dilemma would be when a ‘House of Brands’ takes over a ‘Branded House or a ‘Branded House’ taking over a ‘House of Brands’. What if Tatas take over P&G or HUL? Would we have Tata Pantene and Tata Clinic or would the brands retain their identity? What if P&G takes over Mahindra & Mahindra? Would Mahindra Tractors be replaced by an individual brand name without the family brand?

One thing is certain that creating a brand and an appeal requires a lot of resources. Maintaining requires even more resources and is difficult as well. Thus it seems at least that when two power brands come together under one roof, its better to pursue both separately and let them cannibalize the market as it would be a win-win situation even then.

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