Here is
an excerpt on Corporate Branding that I came across as I researched the topic:
“Corporate branding is the practice of using a company's name as
a product brand name. It is an attempt to use corporate brand equity to create product brand recognition.
It is a type of family branding or umbrella brand. Disney, for example, includes the word
"Disney" in the name of many of its products; other examples include IBM and Heinz.
This strategy contrasts with individual
product branding, where each product has a unique brand name and the
corporate name is not promoted to the consumer.
Corporate
branding can result in significant economies
of scope since one advertising campaign can be used for several products. It
also facilitates new
product acceptance because
potential buyers are already familiar with the name. However, this strategy may
hinder the creation of distinct brand images or identities for different
products: an overarching corporate brand reduces the ability to position
a brand with an
individual identity, and may conceal different products' unique
characteristics. (è This is
clearly our dilemma in the Rosewood case).
It has been argued that successful corporate
branding often stems from a strong coherence between what the company’s top
management seek to accomplish (their strategic vision), what the company’s
employees know and believe (lodged in its organizational culture), and how its external stakeholders perceived the company
(their image of it). Misalignments between these three factors, may indicate an
underperforming corporate brand. This type of corporate brand analysis has been
labeled the Vision-Culture-Image (VCI) Alignment Model”
So in the Rosewood case, we have the company’s
current top management seeking to accomplish the strategic vision of a common
corporate brand. But there is clearly a distinct identity that is maintained by
each of the hotels, where the long time mantra and guiding principle of the
company has been the inspiring phrase: “A Sense of Place”. We do see the concerns
in the readiness and willingness of the employees to move to a common brand,
even some customers share the same sentiment. There is also the uniqueness that
is maintained by each of the hotels that has been the major attraction and success
factor of these establishments, which we don’t want to jeopardize or even
threaten with a major rebranding initiative.
At the same time, there are clear advantages
and financial benefits in resorting to common Rosewood branding – It can be
seen that some properties enjoy return visits from guests up to 40%, but only
5% of these guests had stayed in other Rosewood properties. Also, from Exhibit
7, it is very clear that there is
extremely low brand awareness of the Rosewood brand. Also, based on the
Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) calculations, there is incremental value that comes
with branding, even after including the additional marketing expenses that will
be incurred with branding.
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Based on the above, my recommendation is to
introduce corporate branding in a subtle way, where the Rosewood brand does not
overpower the uniqueness of each hotel and destroy the ‘Sense of Place’, but
acts as the unifying factor that ties together the unique elegance, ambience
and experiences that the customer is bound to enjoy and assured of at each of
the Rosewood facilities. The central reservation system is the first right step
in this direction which helps to build the customer profiles and even helps to
shortlist the other hotels in the Rosewood chain that can offer experiences
along the customer’s preference. The customers who are bound to travel to
various destinations will benefit from the knowledge that The Bristol in Panama
City will offer unique experiences, quintessential expression of its location and
a sense of place of its own, while at the same time the customers can be
assured to experience the same unrivaled level of service and attention to
detail that they received at The Carlyle in New York, which is the commitment
that comes with the Rosewood Brand that ties them together with the promises of
Unity in Diversity. So I would not recommend changing the hotel names to
include ‘Rosewood’ in them, but would recommend that the names be followed with
–‘A Rosewood Group’, similar to the sample below, maybe in even smaller fonts,
in a subtle way which is not overpowering the hotel name. This can be reflected
in all the major areas like corporate websites and individual hotel web-sites
and pamphlets so that they get tied back to the brand – but I would not go to
the extent of changing the room amenities and such at each of the individual
hotels to reflect the Rosewood name.

Please explain the calculation: Multiplied by # of Customers to obtain increase in profit of Rosewood from new brand strategy
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