Corporate Brand Value Crashes on the Low Road

Filed under: Brand Development, Corporate Identity — admin @ 2:43 pm

- This was posted on June 22, 2008

When it comes to maintaining a premium corporate identity, Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia has shown us how not to do it. The primary lesson from MSLO: It is easy to lower the value of a brand and much more difficult to raise the value of a brand.

Last week CEO Susan Lyne resigned from the company, having taken over MSLO in 2005 while Martha was preparing to try on the latest in ankle bracelets. During Lyne’s tenure, the stock price lost over 70% of its value. Lyne had had some previous successful ventures at ABC television, as well as launching Premiere Magazine. So what went wrong?

Many would blame Martha Stewart herself. How can you sustain a company brand around one personality, particularly when that personality is convicted on four felony counts of obstructing a feeral securities investigation? And she is a bit passe, no? Today it’s Rachel Ray and iron chefs. Still, Martha had many loyal fans.

A much deeper issue was in the comapny’s merchandising. Much like Harley-Davidson did in the ’80’s, Martha Stewart went for cash gain and cheap marketshare in 1997. They struck a deal with Kmart, who was in bankruptcy at that time. Why, many colleagues have asked me, would someone like Martha Stewart sell her merchandise in Kmart? According to Slate’s James Ledbetter, Kmart agreed to pay a minimum of $40M a year in royalties to MSLO through January 2003. For a while the cash cow concept worked in MSLO’s favor. But the struggling Kmart never got on its feet, merging with Sears in 2005. From 2003-2007, Kmart did not sell enough of Martha merchandise to pay anywhere near that original royalty. So the cash flow dries up and the Martha merchandise is selling next to the end-cap of cheap motor oil. And today, here’s Martha trying to pitch her brand as a premium buy at Macy’s. So which is it? Upscale premium or mass commodity? The market doesn’t like to view a brand with double vision. Hard on the yes, you know? And to make matters worse, MSLO has also cut a merchandising deal with Costco!

The simple rule of thumb is that you cannot extend a brand that far and expect it to retain its value. At best, MSLO should have created a low-end subbrand that could have stood for a price-value without trashing the entire brand (even GAP got that one right!). You need to manage your brand as a portfolio. You need to think long-term and not chase the easy dollars into commodity land.

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