by Juan Ramírez at 4:34 pm 4 September 2009
Filed under: Home Page
As part of our recent Brand Challengers Study, we talked to some of the world’s most influential emerging market brands. Here’s what Carla Schmitzberger of Brazil’s favourite flip flop brand had to say.
by Juan Ramírez at 4:30 pm 4 September 2009
Filed under: Branding
The Alpargatas Group first designed inexpensive cloth shoes for Brazilian coffee farmers in 1907, a design recognizable to the modern public as an espadrille. Continuing the global footwear tradition, the Havaianas brand, owned by Alpargatas S.A, moved to launch its products worldwide, with the Pacific United States and Australia – both areas with a strong beach culture where consumers already wear sandals – becoming the first high volume international markets in 1998. Since that time, Havaianas has become an iconic brand with global reach.
Today more than 13 percent of the company’s sales come from overseas markets. With the set up of offices in New York and Madrid, the company is taking big steps towards dipping its toes into the US and European markets, but while their brand awareness in Brazil is 100% and about 45% in Australia, in the US and Europe it is still a mere 20 to 25%,
For our recently published study 7 Lessons from Brand Challengers, Carla Schmitzberger, International Director of the Havaianas brand shared some of the fundamental lessons that she learned while turning a local brand of rubber sandals into the exciting brand of a Brand Challenger.
Turning a commodity into an object of desire
In 1988 Havaianas was at a crossroads. The brand had only one style and one colour. It was “A commodity that had no emotional appeal” as Carla puts it. New manufacturers came into the market, eroding Havaianas’ market share, and sales started to decline.
Then in 1993, the company started to reposition the brand. “The story of Havaianas is a bit of a Cinderella story” says Carla. New products were introduced – which have produced over 300 shoes of varying colour and style – and a new emotional personality was created for the brand. What the public sees now is the result of a carefully orchestrated brand reinvention strategy that took over 15 years to come to fruition.
The results
Since Havaianas emerged from its reinvention strategy in 1994, sales have been growing by a steady 8 percent each year. In 2008 the company sold 184 million pairs of its now famous rubber sandal, 25 million of which were sold outside Brazil. Inside Brazil, the company has achieved the amazing brand penetration rate of 850 pairs sold per 1000 inhabitants.
These are 9 great branding thoughts that emerged from my conversation with Carla:
Our brand is fundamental for our expansion strategy…
Havaianas have a good product but it is their brand proposition what forms its DNA. “Our brand and the emotional and intangible aspects of it are fundamental in exploring new markets. This is what makes our product so seductive not only in Brazil but also abroad”.
…and successful outside means more successful inside
The interesting thing about Havaianas’ success is that the success of their brand abroad has a positive impact in the local market. In Carla’s words: ”The more successful the product was outside the more proud the Brazilians were of the product in Brazil”.
Own a big idea
Life is full of contradictions and good brands could provide a platform to resolve them. The beauty of Havaianas is that by expressing universal themes – some of them associated to Brazil and its people: optimism, freedom, joy and energy – it resolves some of the country’s innumerable contradictions. Havaianas are simple and sophisticated, for the poor and the rich, traditional and modern, fashionable and casual. In the words of Carla: “a brand of improbable combinations”.
Our brand is our personality
The organisations has a clear understanding of what a brand is and what isn’t. For Havaianas the brand transcends the visual realm, is more than the logo. “For us our brand is the personality and character of the product” Carla tells me.
Understand the brand internally
In Brazil the company has a 120 people working and 60 people on the sales force, 30 people in the USA and 30 in Madrid. They all understand what the brand is about and live it. Carla is very much involved with all the decisions that pertain to the brand.
Establish bold and creative collaborations
The challenge for Havaianas is to grow without losing its edge. Carla believes that new ideas come from establishing a network of inspiring collaborations with people and companies. For example, the creative director of BBDO Brasil – Marcello Serpa, one of the most prestigious advertising men in Brazil – was crucial in repositioning the brand. He has helped to evolve the brand’s communications by adding edge and originality to its advertising. He acts like, and virtually is, the creative director of the brand. As for companies, in 2008 Havaianas approached IDEO for help in creating a new range of accessories that could expand the reach of Havaianas in meaningful ways. The first product to be launched in 2009 is the Havaianas “wearable containers or bags” line.
Feed on the reputation of global brands
As a way to raise its profile globally, the brand has joint distribution and product development efforts with brands like Celine, HStern, The Gap and Swarovski.
Measure efficiency
For Havaianas, measuring all the different variables of the brand’s health is part of their success. More specifically they measure: brand perception, brand tracking studies in all the countries, awareness, trial, personality traits, advertising effectiveness, etc.
The brand in the future
Their ambition is to be bigger both inside and outside Brazil. The potential outside Brazil is enormous given the very high penetration in Brazil: 150 million sandals are sold in a country of 190 million inhabitants.
Finally, this is what Carla recommends to grow and nurture a healthy brand:
pay close attention to customers: understand and observe how they use the product
Be true to the brand essence and to what you stand for
Avoid making quick profits based on decisions that could erode your brand equity. Think in the longer term.
Every touch point reflects the brand essence; make sure you answer the phone in a way that reflects your brand.
Reinforce the brand message internally, We talk about the brand internally, reinforcing the message.
The past weekend was the last opportunity for people in New York to see the Chanel Mobile Art in Central Park. A futuristic nomad art centre imagined by Karl Lagerfeld and designed by Zaha Hadid to celebrate the anniversary of Chanel’s 2.55, the very same iconic quilted bag that warranted a double spread on Wally’s latest book, and so named because it was first issued in February 1955. I took the A train uptown to see what this was about.
Pseudo-anonymous Banksy is one of the few graffiti artists that feels equally comfortable exhibiting his work on a wall in Shoreditch or in a gallery in LA. His work delivers sharp wit loaded with the heavy ammunition of social criticism. Allan, our office manager in NY, has been recording with his iPhone the birth of Banksy’s latest piece of work on our office building on Broadway. The guys daubing the paint claim Phil Collins is the author.