Mengenal pasti peluang-peluang perniagaan

Mengenal pasti peluang-peluang perniagaan

Pertanyaan yang sering timbul apabila ingin memulakan perniagaan ialah peluang-peluang perniagaan yang ada dan boleh dilaksanakan. Pertanyaan ini sukar untuk dijawab kerana pelbagai pertimbangan harus difikirkan. Walau bagaimanapun bagi seorang usahawan yang kreatif dan inovatif, peluang-peluang perniagaan akan wujud jika kebolehan semula jadi yang ada pada dirinya digunakan dengan sebaik mungkin dan akan menyiapkan kaedah menyediakan rancangan perniagaan dengan terlebih dahulu.

Peluang perniagaan ialah suatu keadaan atau situasi dalam perniagaan yang memberi kesempatan kepada seseorang individu untuk mendapatkan sesuatu manfaat. Peluang perniagaan wujud dan boleh dicari jika usahawan peka dan bertindak dengan segera. Sekiranya lambat bertindak maka terlepaslah peluang tersebut.

Peluang perniagaan bermula apabila wujudnya permintaan terhadap sesuatu barang atau perkhidmatan. Oleh itu untuk menentukan serta mengenal pasti peluang-peluang perniagaan yang bersesuaian, kita perlu memadankan peluang-peluang tersebut dengan kebolehan dan kemampuan diri serta sumber-sumber yang ada pada diri kita.

Secara amnya, analisis peluang-peluang perniagaan boleh dibuat berdasarkan faktor-faktor berikut:

Isi kandungan

Pengalaman

Bagi yang pernah bekerja, peluang-peluang yang didapati ialah dalam bentuk pengalaman kerja yang berkaitan dengan sesuatu kemahiran atau pengetahuan menyeluruh yang berorientasikan perniagaan. Contohnya Encik Ramly, seorang pengusaha burger yang pada mulanya mendapat pengalaman bekerja sebagai pekerja pemasaran, jualan dan hubungan dengan pelanggan dan pembekal. Kini dia dikenali sebagai seorang usahawan berjaya yang mengasaskan perusahaan Ramly Burger.

Persekitaran

Disamping itu juga, faktor persekitaran turut memainkan peranan penting di dalam menyediakan peluang-peluang perniagaan. Pengamatan dan pemerhatian tentang persekitaran akan memberi ilham kepada usahawan untuk mencipta keluaran atau perkhidmatan baru yang bertujuan memberikan kepuasan yang lebih baik kepada pengguna.

Pemerhatian terhadap fungsi dan faedah sesuatu barang dan perkhidmatan akan membolehkan usahawan memikirkan bagaimana dapat memperbaikinya dari segi kos, penjenisan, reka bentuk, cita rasa, saiz dan juga prestasi. Contohnya, pembotolan atau pembungkusan minuman diubahsuaikan dan diperlbagaikan untuk cara pengunaan yang berlainan sama ada untuk dirumah, hidangan di restoran, berkelah atau ketika dalam perjalan menuju ke sesuatu tempat.

Perkembangan Dan Perubahan Ekonomi

Perkembangan dan perubahan ekonomi dan sosial boleh menimbulkan peluang-peluang perniagaan yang baru. Perubahan keadaan ekonomi daripada keadaan meleset kepada keadaan yang baik, boleh membuka banyak peluang perniagaan sejajar dengan perkembangan di dalam sektor ekonomi seperti kewujudan industri pembuatan, pembinaan, perkhidmatan, peruncitan dan pertanian. Contohnya, kesan daripada Perang Teluk yang berlaku sedikit masa dahulu membuka peluang-peluang perniagaan dalam industri membuat topeng gas dan alatan untuk memadam kebakaran minyak yang berlaku di negara-negara seperti Iran, Syria dan Kuwait.

Perubahan Dan Perkembangan Teknologi

Perubahan teknologi juga boleh mewujudkan peluang-peluang perniagaan dimana pengenalan teknologi baru membolehkan pengeluaran dihasilkan pada kos yang lebih rendah dan membuka pasaran yang lebih luas.

Selain daripada itu, maklumat formal juga dapat memainkan peranan penting dalam menyediakan maklumat-maklumat mengenai peluang-peluang perniagaan. Dalam konteks ini media massa memainkan peranan memberikan maklumat mengenai peluang-peluang perniagaan sama ada secara langsung ataupun tidak langsung. Kebiasaannya media massa, sama ada media cetak atau elektronik, mempunyai ruangan khusus untuk menyiarkan maklumat mengenai dunia perniagaan yang membolehkan kita, secara tidak langsung, mengikuti perkembangan pelbagai bidang usaha niaga. Melalui maklumat ini kita boleh memilih bidang perniagaan yang bersesuaian dengan diri sendiri.

Masalah Semasa Pengguna

Pengguna, pengeluar dan pembekal juga boleh memberi maklumat untuk mengenali peluang-peluang perniagaan. Pengguna boleh menyumbangkan cadangan tentang keperluan-keperluan mereka dan seterusnya maklum balas daripada penggunaan ini boleh dijadikan asas untuk mengkaji peluang yang baru. Pengeluar dan pembekal pula boleh memberikan pandangan tentang peluang-peluang perniagaan berasaskan barang-barang yang mereka keluarkaan ataupun yang diedarkan.

Kreativiti dan Daya Cipta (Kebolehan Diri)

Penciptaan dan pembaharuan juga merupakan kemahiran penting yang harus dimiliki oleh usahawan untuk menghasilkan peluang-peluang perniagaan. Walau bagaimanapun bukan semua pencipta adalah usahawan. Pencipta mungkin mempunyai kebolehan menghasilkan idea penciptaan tetapi tidak mempunyai kemahiran keusahawanan dan pengurusan. Sebaliknya orang lain yang mempunyai kemahiran keusahawanan menguruskan idea penciptaan tersebut. Oleh itu, gabungan antara kemahiran teknikal dengan kemahiran keusahawanan untuk menghasilkan ciptaan baru akan melahirkan satu peluang perniagaan yang menguntungkan.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Mengenalpasti Peluang Perniagaan

E-mail Print PDF
PERNIAGAAN bergantung kepada manusia dan aktivitinya. Selagi ada aktiviti-aktiviti ini, selagi itulah ada peluang-peluang perniagaan. Bukannya mudah untuk mengenal pasti peluang perniagaan, semua jenis perniagaan yang hendak kita lakukan, kebanyakannya telah dijalankan oleh orang lain.

Oleh yang demikian, kita takut menceburkan diri dalam dunia perniagaan, kerana kita tidak dapat mengenal pasti peluang perniagaan. Tetapi peluang ini terdapat pada seseorang yang mempunyai sifat-sifat keusahawanan. Semua jenis perniagaan yang ada sekarang berpunca daripada DAYA PEMIKIRAN.

Berikut disenaraikan beberapa cara yang usahawan-usahawan gunakan untuk mengenal pasti peluang perniagaan.

DAYA FIKIRAN
GUNAKAN daya fikiran untuk berfikir setiap masa, tumpukan fikiran terhadap perniagaan, cuba ubahkan apa yang dilihat, supaya ia dijadikan barang perniagaan. Berfikir selalu. Gunakan daya pemikiran untuk membayangkan sesuatu yang boleh menimbulkan keuntungan. Dengan lain perkataan, kebolehan imaginasi untuk menimbulkan perkara atau barang baru di pasaran. Jika kebolehan berfikir kurang, berkumpulah berramai-ramai dan adakan brainstorming. Perbincangan begini selalu berhasil mengeluarkan idea baru.

MELALUI MASALAH YANG ADA
SEGALA aktiviti-aktiviti manusia mesti menempuhi masalah. Baik urusan di rumah, di pejabat dan lain-lain hal berkenaan dengan kehidupan manusia mesti menempuhi masalah. Walaupun sekarang zaman sains dan teknologi moden, manusia tetap mempunyai masalah, tidak ada perkara yang tidak mempunyai masalah. Jadi dengan masalah-masalah ini kita boleh menukarnya menjadi punca masalah. Penyelesaian kepada masalah merupakan peluang perniagaan, gunakan daya pemikiran untuk menyelesaikan masalah-masalah yang ada, dan fikirkan cara perniagaan yang bersesuaian sebagai penyelesaian masalah. Kebanyakan daripada perniagaan yang ada sekarang berpunca daripada masalah-masalah yang dihadapi oleh manusia dulu kala.

MELALUI KEPERLUAN MANUSIA
Sememangnya kehidupan manusia, tidak kira apa bangsa memerlukan sesuatu untuk memenuhi kehendaknya. Manusia perlu makan dan minum, perlukan keselamatan, perlukan kesenangan dan kemewahan dan keselamatan. Keperluan-keperluan ini biasanya berterusan tanpa berhenti selagi seseorang itu masih hidup. Dengan adanya keperluan-keperluan asas semulajadi manusia, usahawan terpaksa memikirkan barangan-barangan dan perkhidmatan yang baru untuk mememuaskan hati manusia. Keperluan kepuasan hidup memang luas, boleh dikatakan di segi makanan, keselamatan, kewangan, hiburan, pakaian dan lain-lain. Keperluan semulajadi manusia telah menimbulkan beberapa jenis barangan seperti radio, televisyen dan telefon.

MENGKAJI SELIDIK BARANG YANG ADA
Barang-barang dan perkhidmatan-perkhidmatan yang ada sekarang merupakan daya cipta, dan ubahan usahawan dahulu supaya bersesuaian dengan keadaan sekarang. Tetapi oleh kerana aktiviti penghidupan manusia terus berubah, barangan yang ada sekarang juga perlu diubah dan dikaji selidik. Pengubahan kepada barangan yang ada dan rekaan barang-barang baru untuk barang-barang yang ada akan menampakkan bahawa barang itu barangan baru dan akan mendapat perhatian pengguna dan akan memberi peluang perniagaan kepada sesiapa yang mengubah atau merekanya.

MENELITI PERMINTAAN PASARAN
Kehendak dan keperluan pasaran berubah dari semasa ke semasa. Misalnya, pisang emas dan manggis untuk dieksport ke Jepun. Pucuk asparagus untuk dieksport ke Amerika Syarikat. Dalam segi perkhidmatan perniagaan, permintaan pengguna mewujudkan pasar tani dan pasar-pasar malam di beberapa tempat di Malaysia. Bakal usahawan terpaksa meneliti permintaan pasaran yang baru jika mahu mendapat peluang perniagaan.

MENELITI PERKEMBANGAN EKONOMI DAN PEMBANGUNAN NEGARA
Ekonomi negara juga berubah dari semasa ke semasa. Projek-projek pembangunan juga ada dari semasa ke semasa. Dengan adanya aktiviti ini, usahawan dapat mengenal pasti di mana projek-projek ini akan diadakan dan bagaimana kita boleh menceburkan diri dalam pembangunan tersebut. Misalnya apabila ada rancangan Pembangunan Bandar Sungai Buluh, tuan punya tanah menaikkan harga tanahnya, dan peniaga-peniaga lain berebut-rebut membeli tanah di Sungai Buluh. Sehubungan dengan rancangan ini, banyak projek-projek perumahan telah didirikan sebagai mengambil langkah merebut peluang perniagaan. Jika ada pembangunan dan projek baru, akan ada juga peluang pembangunan yang baru.

MELALUI PERGAULAN HARIAN
Perhubungan dan pergaulan hariankita dapat memberi peluang perniagaan kepada kita. Dengan cara mengumpulkan maklumat-maklumat yang diberi, mungkin ia dapat diubah kepada satu perniagaan, dan kadangkala tawaran terus kepada kita sebagai peluang perniagaan. Misalnya jika kita bergaul dengan pengurus bank, sedikit sebanyak maklumat-maklumat yang kita bincangkan bersama dapat dijadikan perniagaan. Lihat apa yang diusahakan oleh rakan-rakan kita. Dengar apa yang dicakapkan oleh orang-orang disekeliling kita, proseskan, maklumat ini sebagai sumber perniagaan.

MELALUI BACAAN
Segala idea-idea baru yang dketahui oleh orang ramai melalui bacaan. Segala teknologi baru yang akan dikeluarkan biasanya disiarkan di suratkhabar atau di majalah. Jadi sebagai bakal usahawan, seseorang itu mestilah cepat mendapat maklumat-maklumat ini dan bertindak segera sebelum diketahui oleh orang lain. peluang-peluang perniagaan banyak terdapat di suratkhabar tetapi orang ramai tidak dapat mengenal pastinya sama ada ianya peluang perniagaan. Hanya orang yang mempunyai sifat-sifat usahawan dapat mengetahui yang mana peluang perniagaan dan yang mana bukan. Misalnya, suratkhabar dan majalah selalu mengeluarkan iklan mencari pengedar, mencari rakan kongsi, menjual perniagaan dan sebagainya. Bacaan-bacaan harian dapat membawa kita kepada peredaran pasaran, pembangunan negara dan mengetahui teknologi-teknologi yang baru di pasaran.

MELALUI KEMAHIRAN YANG ADA
Kemahiran seseorang merupakan punca perniagaan, di mana kemahiran ini boleh dijual sebagai perkhidmatan atau kemahiran ini boleh mereka jadikan barang-barang baru untuk dijual. Contohnya, tukang-tukang besi yang membuat pagar-pagar besi dan rekabentuk daripada besi. Ahli senireka yang membuat barang seni yang dijualkan di pasaran dan pelukis-pelukis yang menjual lukisannya. Seseorang yang pakar dalam bidang pendawaian elektrik sesuai untuknya berniaga sebagai juruelektrik dan pemasangannya. Sesiapa yang banyak pengetahuannya untuk ceramah, seminar dan lain-lain kursus. Banyak lagi kemahiran yang boleh digunakan sebagai peluang perniagaan.

Peluang Perniagaan

Malaysia menyediakan peluang perniagaan dan pelaburan yang begitu luas dalam pelbagai sektor, seperti pertanian, pembuatan dan perkhidmatan.

Peluang-peluang perniagaan juga terdapat dalam sektor awam. Anda boleh mencari peluang-peluang seumpama itu melalui laman-laman web di bawah:

  • Perbadanan Kemajuan Ekonomi Negeri
  • Tender Kerajaan
  • Atau pun, anda juga boleh mencari tender-tender mengikut industri, lokasi atau jenis kerja menerusi sistem pengurusan tender yang dikenali sebagai Tender2U.

    Peluang-peluang juga boleh dikenal pasti menerusi pameran perdagangan, konvensyen dan rombongan perniagaan yang dianjurkan Kerajaan.

    Klik pada pautan-pautan berikut untuk maklumat lanjut:

  • Perbadanan Pembangunan Perdagangan Luar Malaysia (MATRADE) (Bahasa Inggeris sahaja)

  • Kementerian Sains, Teknologi dan Inovasi
  • Kementerian Perdagangan Dalam Negeri dan Hal Ehwal Pengguna
  • Kementerian Pelancongan

  • Peluang-Peluang Perniagaan


    Pengenalan

    Program Pembangunan perniagaan adalah bertujuan untuk memperkukuhkan perniagaan/ aktiviti koperasi dan meningkatkan amalan dan nilai keusahawanan dalam koperasi.

    Ingin mendapatkan maklumat lanjut mengenai peluang-peluang perniagaan terkini?

    Sila hubungi:

    Bahagian Pembangunan Perniagaan
    Suruhanjaya Koperasi Malaysia

    Tingkat 6, Blok J (Utara),
    Pusat Bandar Damansara,
    50608 Kuala Lumpur
    Tel: 03-2093 5098


    atau berhubung terus dengan pegawai-pegawai kami:

    Nama Pegawai
    dan Jawatan

    No. Tel.
    (Samb.)

    (03-2081 2400)

    E-mel
    Tn. Hj. Abdulah b. Dohat
    Pengarah Bahagian
    Pembangunan Perniagaan
    7019 abdullahd@skm.gov.my
    Hjh. Sa'adah bt. Sirat
    Timbalan Pengarah Bahagian
    6003 saadah@skm.gov.my
    En. Efendee O.P. Andu
    Ketua Penolong Pengarah
    6004 efendee@skm.gov.my
    En. Fadzir b. Kamaruddin
    Ketua Penolong Pengarah
    6408 fadzir@skm.gov.my
    En. Rosdeen b. Hj. Mohd Jaafar
    Penolong Pengarah
    7007 rozdeen@skm.gov.my
    En. Nasarudin b. Manan
    Penolong Pengarah
    6414 nasarudin@skm.gov.my
    En. Syazan Afifi b. Harun
    Penolong Pengarah
    7612 syazan@skm.gov.my
    En. Mhd Ramzam b. Che Hasan
    Penolong Pegawai Ehwal Ekonomi
    7674 ramzam@skm.gov.my


    Pengenalan Kepada Rancangan Perniagaan (RP)

    Rancangan Perniagaan atau RP ialah dokumen yang menerangkan secara terperinci berkenaan dengan selok belok sesebuah perniagaan termasuk pelan awal, keperluan modal, rancangan pemasaran, jualan dan unjuran keuntungan. Selain daripada merekodkan informasi penting yang berkaitan dengan sesebuah syarikat dan perniagaan, rancangan perniagaan juga penting dalam usaha untuk mendapatkan pinjaman daripada institusi institusi kewangan.

    Antara kegunaan rancangan perniagaan:

    * Membolehkan usahawan membuat penilaian terhadap perniagaan yang bakal atau sedang dijalankan dari pelbagai sudut teknikal dan kewangan
    * Menjadi blue print atau panduan selepas operasi perniagaan dilancarkan
    * Membuat kajian pasaran serta menilai sama ada perniagaan mempunyai prospek atau potensi untuk maju atau sebaliknya
    * Meyakinkan institusi kewangan atau pihak yang mampu memberikan pinjaman perniagaan menerusi dokumentasi yang lengkap

    Kandungan Dalam Rancangan Perniagaan

    Isi kandungan yang penting dan perlu ada dalam sebuah rancangan perniagaan adalah seperti berikut:

    1. Jadual kandungan

    Menerangkan apakah intipati serta aspek aspek utama yang bakal ditonjolkan dalam sesebuah rancangan perniagaan. Ini untuk memudahkan usahawan dan pembaca untuk mengetahui serta melangkau terus ke topik yang dikehendaki dengan mudah.

    2. Ringkasan Eksekutif/Sinopsis

    Menerangkan secara ringkas tentang kandungan rancangan perniagaan dan serba sedikit tentang perniagaan yang bakal/sedang diceburi dan juga tujuan penghasilan rancangan perniagaan.

    3. Pengenalan

    Mengandungi maklumat maklumat penting syarikat, produk, servis dan sebagainya. Maklumat yang perlu ialah: Nama Syarikat, Jenis Perniagaan Yang Diceburi, Barangan/Perkhidmatan Yang Ditawarkan, Lokasi Premis, Tarikh Mula Perniagaan, Latar Belakang Industri, Trend Pasaran Kini dan Masa Hadapan.

    4. Tujuan Penyediaan RP

    Perlu nyatakan dengan jelas apakah tujuan utama penghasilan rancangan perniagaan tersebut. Adakah ia untuk memohon pinjaman atau pembiayaan kewangan dari pihak tertentu? Atau rancangan untuk melaksakan projek terbaru/mengembangkan perniagaan? Atau ianya sebagai sumber rujukan usahawan dalam menguruskan perniagaan? Atau tujuan tujuan lain?

    5. Latar Belakang Perniagaan/Syarikat

    Apakah nama perniagaan tersebut? Di manakah alamat operasi serta nombor telefon yang boleh dihubungi? Apakah bentuk perniagaan yang dijalankan? Apakah kegiatan utama dalam perniagaan? Bilakah tarikh mula perniagaan? Apakah nombor pendaftaran syarikat/perniagaan? Berapakah jumlah modal perniagaan/modal benar? Siapakah pemegang saham syarikat/perniagaan?

    6. Latar Belakang Pemilik/Pemegang Saham

    Butir butir pemilik dan pemegang saham seperti nama, nombor telefon, kelulusan akademik serta pengalaman & kemahiran perlu dijelaskan di sini.

    7. Maklumat Pengurusan dan juga Organisasi

    Apakah visi dan misi syarikat? Bagaimanakah struktur organisasi syarikat (sertakan carta) serta senaraikan kakitangan dan pekerja yang bakal terlibat secara langsung dalam pengurusan syarikat dan perniagaan. Untuk senarai kakitangan, nyatakan jawatan mereka serta tugas dan peranan. Gaji dan imbuhan yang bakal diberikan kepada pekerja juga hendaklah dinyatakan sekali. Manakala kos yang terlibat dalam pembelian alatan pejabat juga tidak harus ditinggalkan.

    8. Rancangan & Strategi Pemasaran

    Antara kandungan yang amat penting dalam sesebuah perniagaan. Analisis terhadap pasaran perlu dibuat untuk membolehkan unjuran jualan serta analisis saingan hampir kepada ramalan. Rancangan pemasaran yang baik akan meneliti produk/servis yang bakal diberikan, prospek pelanggan dan pasaran am. Saiz pasaran perlu diukur dalam usaha mendapatkan jumlah potensi pelanggan dalam masa yang tertentu (seperti dalam setahun dan sebagainya).

    Apakah kelebihan dan ciri ciri yang anda pada produk/perkhidmatan perniagaan kita? Adakah ia mudah diperolehi menerusi pesaing pesaing perniagaan yang lain? Apakah faktor faktor yang bakal menarik minat pelanggan? Bagaimana penentuan harga dibuat – adakah ia lebih tinggi dari pasangan, lebih rendah atau sama sahaja? Bagaimana pula dengan strategi pengedaran. Adakah sebilangan pengedar akan dilantik atau pengedaran akan dilakukan secara terus? Berapakah anggaran kos yang terlibat dalam proses pemasaran produk dan perkhidmatan? Apakah teknik teknik promosi yang bakal dijalankan, dan bagaimana?

    9. Rancangan Pengeluaran/Operasi

    Jika perniagaan adalah berasaskan produk, berapa kuantiti yang bakal dihasilkan dalam tempoh yang tertentu? Jika ianya adalah perniagaan pembuatan, bagaimanakah proses pembuatan/pengilangan produk? Sertakan carta alirnya. Bagaimana dengan strategi penyimpanan stok. Apa akan berlaku kepada stok berlebihan?

    Bagaimanakah penyimpanan bahan mentah (jika ada) dibuat? Berapa ramaikah senarai buruh/pekerja yang terlibat dalam pengeluaran/perkhidmatan? Bagaimana pengendalian mesin/alatan operasi dibuat?

    10. Rancangan Kewangan

    Rancangan kewangan adalah satu lagi aspek yang amat penting dan kritikal dalam penghasilan rancangan perniagaan. Ia penting untuk memastikan analisis dan andaian andaian yang dibuat berkaitan dengan pasaran, jualan dan kos kos yang terlibat adalah realistik.

    Rancangan kewangan mengandungi aspek: kos dan modal perlaksanaan perniagaan, sumber pembiayaan kewangan (sama ada modal sendiri, pinjaman bank, sewa beli atau lain lain sumber), aliran tunai (bulanan dan tahunan, untuk jangka masa 3 tahun), penyata pendapatan (tahunan, untuk jangka masa 3 tahun) dan analisis pulangan modal (break-even analysis).

    Friday, July 2, 2010

    Branding...

    Branding....what,why,when,where,who.....how?

    Brand

    A brand is the identity of a specific product, service, or business. A brand can take many forms, including a name, sign, symbol, color combination or slogan. The word brand began simply as a way to tell one person's cattle from another by means of a hot iron stamp. A legally protected brand name is called a trademark. The word brand has continued to evolve to encompass identity - it affects the personality of a product, company or service.

    Concepts

    A brand is the personality of a product, service or company and how it relates to key constituencies: Customers, Staff, Partners, Investors etc. Some people distinguish the psychological aspect of a brand from the experiential aspect. The experiential aspect consists of the sum of all points of contact with the brand and is known as the brand experience. The psychological aspect, sometimes referred to as the brand image, is a symbolic construct created within the minds of people and consists of all the information and expectations associated with a product or service.

    People engaged in branding seek to develop or align the expectations behind the brand experience, creating the impression that a brand associated with a product or service has certain qualities or characteristics that make it special or unique. A brand is therefore one of the most valuable elements in an advertising theme, as it demonstrates what the brand owner is able to offer in the marketplace. The art of creating and maintaining a brand is called brand management. Orientation of the whole organization towards its brand is called brand orientation.

    Careful brand management seeks to make the product or services relevant to the target audience. Brands should be seen as more than the difference between the actual cost of a product and its selling price - they represent the sum of all valuable qualities of a product to the consumer. There are many intangibles involved in business, intangibles left wholly from the income statement and balance sheet which determine how a business is perceived. The learned skill of a knowledge worker, the type of mental working, the type of stitch: all may be without an 'accounting cost' but for those who truly know the product, for it is these people the company should wish to find and keep, the difference is incomparable.

    A brand which is widely known in the marketplace acquires brand recognition. When brand recognition builds up to a point where a brand enjoys a critical mass of positive sentiment in the marketplace, it is said to have achieved brand franchise. One goal in brand recognition is the identification of a brand without the name of the company present. For example, Disney has been successful at branding with their particular script font (originally created for Walt Disney's "signature" logo), which it used in the logo for go.com.

    Consumers may look on branding as an important value added aspect of products or services, as it often serves to denote a certain attractive quality or characteristic (see also brand promise). From the perspective of brand owners, branded products or services also command higher prices. Where two products resemble each other, but one of the products has no associated branding (such as a generic, store-branded product), people may often select the more expensive branded product on the basis of the quality of the brand or the reputation of the brand owner.



    Brand Awareness

    Brand awareness refers to customers' ability to recall and recognize the brand under different conditions and link to the brand name, logo, jingles and so on to certain associations in memory. It helps the customers to understand to which product or service category the particular brand belongs to and what products and services are sold under the brand name. It also ensures that customers know which of their needs are satisfied by the brand through its products.(Keller) 'Brand love', or love of a brand, is an emerging term encompassing the perceived value of the brand image. Brand love levels are measured through social media posts about a brand, or tweets of a brand on sites such as Twitter. Becoming a Facebook fan of a particular brand is also a measurement of the level of 'brand love'.

    Global Brand

    A global brand is one which is perceived to reflect the same set of values around the world. Global brands transcend their origins and creates strong, enduring relationships with consumers across countries and cultures.

    Global brands are brands sold to international markets. Examples of global brands include Coca-Cola, McDonald's, Marlboro, Levi's etc.. These brands are used to sell the same product across multiple markets, and could be considered successful to the extent that the associated products are easily recognizable by the diverse set of consumers.

    Benefits of Global Branding

    In addition to taking advantage of the outstanding growth opportunities, the following drives the increasing interest in taking brands global:

    • Economies of scale (production and distribution)
    • Lower marketing costs
    • Laying the groundwork for future extensions worldwide
    • Maintaining consistent brand imagery
    • Quicker identification and integration of innovations (discovered worldwide)
    • Preempting international competitors from entering domestic markets or locking you out of other geographic markets
    • Increasing international media reach (especially with the explosion of the Internet) is an enabler
    • Increases in international business and tourism are also enablers

    Global Brand Variables

    The following elements may differ from country to country:

    • Corporate slogan
    • Products and services
    • Product names
    • Product features
    • Positionings
    • Marketing mixes (including pricing, distribution, media and advertising execution)

    These differences will depend upon:

    • Language differences
    • Different styles of communication
    • Other cultural differences
    • Differences in category and brand development
    • Different consumption patterns
    • Different competitive sets and marketplace conditions
    • Different legal and regulatory environments
    • Different national approaches to marketing (media, pricing, distribution, etc.)

    Local Brand

    A brand that is sold and marketed (distributed and promoted) in a relatively small and restricted geographical area. A local brand is a brand that can be found in only one country or region. It may be called a regional brand if the area encompasses more than one metropolitan market. It may also be a brand that is developed for a specific national market, however an interesting thing about local brand is that the local branding is mostly done by consumers then by the producers. Examples of Local Brands in Sweden are Stomatol, Mijerierna etc..

    Brand name

    Relationship between trade marks and brand

    The brand name is quite often used interchangeably within "brand", although it is more correctly used to specifically denote written or spoken linguistic elements of any product. In this context a "brand name" constitutes a type of trademark, if the brand name exclusively identifies the brand owner as the commercial source of products or services. A brand owner may seek to protect proprietary rights in relation to a brand name through trademark registration. Advertising spokespersons have also become part of some brands, for example: Mr. Whipple of Charmin toilet tissue and Tony the Tiger of Kellogg's. Local Branding is usually done by the consumers rather than the producers.

    Types of brand names

    Brand names come in many styles. A few include:
    Acronym: A name made of initials such as UPS or IBM
    Descriptive: Names that describe a product benefit or function like Whole Foods or Airbus
    Alliteration and rhyme: Names that are fun to say and stick in the mind like Reese's Pieces or Dunkin' Donuts
    Evocative: Names that evoke a relevant vivid image like Amazon or Crest
    Neologisms: Completely made-up words like Wii or Kodak
    Foreign word: Adoption of a word from another language like Volvo or Samsung
    Founders' names: Using the names of real people like Hewlett-Packard or Disney
    Geography: Many brands are named for regions and landmarks like Cisco and Fuji Film
    Personification: Many brands take their names from myth like Nike or from the minds of ad execs like Betty Crocker

    The act of associating a product or service with a brand has become part of pop culture. Most products have some kind of brand identity, from common table salt to designer jeans. A brandnomer is a brand name that has colloquially become a generic term for a product or service, such as Band-Aid or Kleenex, which are often used to describe any kind of adhesive bandage or any kind of facial tissue respectively.

    Brand identity

    A product identity, or brand image are typically the attributes one associates with a brand, how the brand owner wants the consumer to perceive the brand - and by extension the branded company, organization, product or service. The brand owner will seek to bridge the gap between the brand image and the brand identity. Effective brand names build a connection between the brand personality as it is perceived by the target audience and the actual product/service. The brand name should be conceptually on target with the product/service (what the company stands for). Furthermore, the brand name should be on target with the brand demographic. Typically, sustainable brand names are easy to remember, transcend trends and have positive connotations. Brand identity is fundamental to consumer recognition and symbolizes the brand's differentiation from competitors.

    Brand identity is what the owner wants to communicate to its potential consumers. However, over time, a product's brand identity may acquire (evolve), gaining new attributes from consumer perspective but not necessarily from the marketing communications an owner percolates to targeted consumers. Therefore, brand associations become handy to check the consumer's perception of the brand.

    Brand identity needs to focus on authentic qualities - real characteristics of the value and brand promise being provided and sustained by organisational and/or production characteristics.

    Visual Brand Identity

    The visual brand identity manual for Mobil Oil (developed by Chermayeff & Geismar), one of the first visual identities to integrate logotype, icon, alphabet, color palette, and station architecture to create a comprehensive consumer brand experience.

    The recognition and perception of a brand is highly influenced by its visual presentation. A brand’s visual identity is the overall look of its communications. Effective visual brand identity is achieved by the consistent use of particular visual elements to create distinction, such as specific fonts, colors, and graphic elements. At the core of every brand identity is a brand mark, or logo. In the United States, brand identity and logo design naturally grew out of the Modernist movement in the 1950’s and greatly drew on the principles of that movement – simplicity (Mies van der Rohe’s principle of "Less is more") and geometric abstraction. These principles can be observed in the work of the pioneers of the practice of visual brand identity design, such as Paul Rand, Chermayeff & Geismar and Saul Bass.

    Brand parity

    Brand parity is the perception of the customers that all brands are equivalent.

    Branding approaches

    Company name

    Often, especially IN the industrial sector, it is just the company's name which is promoted (leading to one of the most powerful statements of "branding"; the saying, before the company's downgrading, "No one ever got fired for buying IBM").

    In this case a very strong brand name (or company name) is made the vehicle for a range of products (for example, Mercedes-Benz or Black & Decker) or even a range of subsidiary brands (such as Cadbury Dairy Milk, Cadbury Flake or Cadbury Fingers in the United States).

    Individual branding

    Each brand has a separate name (such as Seven-Up, Kool-Aid or Nivea Sun (Beiersdorf)), which may even compete against other brands from the same company (for example, Persil, Omo, Surf and Lynx are all owned by Unilever).

    Attitude branding and Iconic brands

    Attitude branding is the choice to represent a larger feeling, which is not necessarily connected with the product or consumption of the product at all. Marketing labeled as attitude branding include that of Nike, Starbucks, The Body Shop, Safeway, and Apple Inc.. In the 2000 book No Logo, Naomi Klein describes attitude branding as a "fetish strategy".

    "A great brand raises the bar -- it adds a greater sense of purpose to the experience, whether it's the challenge to do your best in sports and fitness, or the affirmation that the cup of coffee you're drinking really matters." - Howard Schultz (president, CEO, and chairman of Starbucks)

    Iconic brands are defined as having aspects that contribute to consumer's self-expression and personal identity. Brands whose value to consumers comes primarily from having identity value comes are said to be "identity brands". Some of these brands have such a strong identity that they become more or less "cultural icons" which makes them iconic brands. Examples of iconic brands are: Apple Inc., Nike and Harley Davidson. Many iconic brands include almost ritual-like behaviour when buying and consuming the products.

    There are four key elements to creating iconic brands (Holt 2004):

    1. "Necessary conditions" - The performance of the product must at least be ok preferably with a reputation of having good quality.
    2. "Myth-making" - A meaningful story-telling fabricated by cultural "insiders". These must be seen as legitimate and respected by consumers for stories to be accepted ((See Brand Anthropology)
    3. "Cultural contradictions" - Some kind of mismatch between prevailing ideology and emergent undercurrents in society. In other words a difference with the way consumers are and how they some times wish they were.
    4. "The cultural brand management process" - Actively engaging in the myth-making process making sure the brand maintains its position as an icon.

    "No-brand" branding

    Recently a number of companies have successfully pursued "No-Brand" strategies by creating packaging that imitates generic brand simplicity. Examples include the Japanese company Muji, which means "No label" in English (from 無印良品 – "Mujirushi Ryohin" – literally, "No brand quality goods"), and the Florida company No-Ad Sunscreen. Although there is a distinct Muji brand, Muji products are not branded. This no-brand strategy means that little is spent on advertisement or classical marketing and Muji's success is attributed to the word-of-mouth, a simple shopping experience and the anti-brand movement. "No brand" branding may be construed as a type of branding as the product is made conspicuous through the absence of a brand name.

    Derived brands

    In this case the supplier of a key component, used by a number of suppliers of the end-product, may wish to guarantee its own position by promoting that component as a brand in its own right. The most frequently quoted example is Intel, which secures its position in the PC market with the slogan "Intel Inside".

    Brand extension

    The existing strong brand name can be used as a vehicle for new or modified products; for example, many fashion and designer companies extended brands into fragrances, shoes and accessories, home textile, home decor, luggage, (sun-) glasses, furniture, hotels, etc.

    Mars extended its brand to ice cream, Caterpillar to shoes and watches, Michelin to a restaurant guide, Adidas and Puma to personal hygiene. Dunlop extended its brand from tires to other rubber products such as shoes, golf balls, tennis racquets and adhesives.

    There is a difference between brand extension and line extension. A line extension is when a current brand name is used to enter a new market segment in the existing product class, with new varieties or flavors or sizes. When Coca-Cola launched "Diet Coke" and "Cherry Coke" they stayed within the originating product category: non-alcoholic carbonated beverages. Procter & Gamble (P&G) did likewise extending its strong lines (such as Fairy Soap) into neighboring products (Fairy Liquid and Fairy Automatic) within the same category, dish washing detergents.

    Multi-brands

    Alternatively, in a market that is fragmented amongst a number of brands a supplier can choose deliberately to launch totally new brands in apparent competition with its own existing strong brand (and often with identical product characteristics); simply to soak up some of the share of the market which will in any case go to minor brands. The rationale is that having 3 out of 12 brands in such a market will give a greater overall share than having 1 out of 10 (even if much of the share of these new brands is taken from the existing one). In its most extreme manifestation, a supplier pioneering a new market which it believes will be particularly attractive may choose immediately to launch a second brand in competition with its first, in order to pre-empt others entering the market.

    Individual brand names naturally allow greater flexibility by permitting a variety of different products, of differing quality, to be sold without confusing the consumer's perception of what business the company is in or diluting higher quality products.

    Once again, Procter & Gamble is a leading exponent of this philosophy, running as many as ten detergent brands in the US market. This also increases the total number of "facings" it receives on supermarket shelves. Sara Lee, on the other hand, uses it to keep the very different parts of the business separate — from Sara Lee cakes through Kiwi polishes to L'Eggs pantyhose. In the hotel business, Marriott uses the name Fairfield Inns for its budget chain (and Ramada uses Rodeway for its own cheaper hotels).

    Cannibalization is a particular problem of a "multibrand" approach, in which the new brand takes business away from an established one which the organization also owns. This may be acceptable (indeed to be expected) if there is a net gain overall. Alternatively, it may be the price the organization is willing to pay for shifting its position in the market; the new product being one stage in this process.

    Private labels

    With the emergence of strong retailers, private label brands, also called own brands, or store brands, also emerged as a major factor in the marketplace. Where the retailer has a particularly strong identity (such as Marks & Spencer in the UK clothing sector) this "own brand" may be able to compete against even the strongest brand leaders, and may outperform those products that are not otherwise strongly branded.

    Individual and Organizational Brands

    There are kinds of branding that treat individuals and organizations as the "products" to be branded. Personal branding treats persons and their careers as brands. The term is thought to have been first used in a 1997 article by Tom Peters. Faith branding treats religious figures and organizations as brands. Religious media expert Phil Cooke has written that faith branding handles the question of how to express faith in a media-dominated culture. Nation branding works with the perception and reputation of countries as brands.

    History

    The word "brand" is derived from the Old Norse brandr, meaning "to burn." It refers to the practice of producers burning their mark (or brand) onto their products.

    Although connected with the history of trademarks and including earlier examples which could be deemed "protobrands" (such as the marketing puns of the "Vesuvinum" wine jars found at Pompeii), brands in the field of mass-marketing originated in the 19th century with the advent of packaged goods. Industrialization moved the production of many household items, such as soap, from local communities to centralized factories. When shipping their items, the factories would literally brand their logo or insignia on the barrels used, extending the meaning of "brand" to that of trademark.

    Bass & Company, the British brewery, claims their red triangle brand was the world's first trademark. Lyle’s Golden Syrup makes a similar claim, having been named as Britain's oldest brand, with its green and gold packaging having remained almost unchanged since 1885. Another example comes from Antiche Fornaci Giorgi in Italy, whose bricks are stamped or carved with the same proto-logo since 1731, as found in Saint Peter's Basilica in Vatican City.

    Cattle were branded long before this; the term "maverick", originally meaning an unbranded calf, comes from Texas rancher Samuel Augustus Maverick who, following the American Civil War, decided that since all other cattle were branded, his would be identified by having no markings at all. Even the signatures on paintings of famous artists like Leonardo Da Vinci can be viewed as an early branding tool.

    Factories established during the Industrial Revolution introduced mass-produced goods and needed to sell their products to a wider market, to customers previously familiar only with locally-produced goods. It quickly became apparent that a generic package of soap had difficulty competing with familiar, local products. The packaged goods manufacturers needed to convince the market that the public could place just as much trust in the non-local product. Campbell soup, Coca-Cola, Juicy Fruit gum, Aunt Jemima, and Quaker Oats were among the first products to be 'branded', in an effort to increase the consumer's familiarity with their products. Many brands of that era, such as Uncle Ben's rice and Kellogg's breakfast cereal furnish illustrations of the problem.

    Around 1900, James Walter Thompson published a house ad explaining trademark advertising. This was an early commercial explanation of what we now know as branding. Companies soon adopted slogans, mascots, and jingles that began to appear on radio and early television. By the 1940s,[19] manufacturers began to recognize the way in which consumers were developing relationships with their brands in a social/psychological/anthropological sense.

    From there, manufacturers quickly learned to build their brand's identity and personality (see brand identity and brand personality), such as youthfulness, fun or luxury. This began the practice we now know as "branding" today, where the consumers buy "the brand" instead of the product. This trend continued to the 1980s, and is now quantified in concepts such as brand value and brand equity. Naomi Klein has described this development as "brand equity mania". In 1988, for example, Philip Morris purchased Kraft for six times what the company was worth on paper; it was felt that what they really purchased was its brand name.

    Marlboro Friday: April 2, 1993 - marked by some as the death of the brand - the day Philip Morris declared that they were to cut the price of Marlboro cigarettes by 20%, in order to compete with bargain cigarettes. Marlboro cigarettes were notorious at the time for their heavy advertising campaigns, and well-nuanced brand image. In response to the announcement Wall street stocks nose-dived for a large number of 'branded' companies: Heinz, Coca Cola, Quaker Oats, PepsiCo. Many thought the event signalled the beginning of a trend towards "brand blindness" (Klein 13), questioning the power of "brand value".

    Thursday, July 1, 2010

    Kenapa Jenama dan produk yang unik?

    Didalam sesebuah negara, organisasi , kampung, keluarga , "hanya seorang" akan di iktiraf sebagai "ketua". Ketua itu pula akan menjadikan negara, organisasi, kampung atau keluarga mengikut wawasan dan acuan yang ingin diterapkan. Kalau "ketua" itu "unik" maka akan lahirlah sebuah negara yang akan menjadi contoh kerana kejayaan, sistem dan pencapaian yang luarbiasa. Kalau 'ketua" hanyalah mengikut sahaja seperti apa yang sedia ada dan tidak membawa apa apa perubahan atau pembaharuan maka, negara itu hanya akan menjadi negara yang 'biasa-biasa' atau "seperti yang lain" atau cuma "follower".

    Begitulah juga Jenama. Adakah kita hanya akan membuat produk seperti orang lain buat atau kita lihat sekeliling dan bina produk yang berlainan. Sebab itu Jenama tergolong dalam definasi 'harta intelek". Ianya adalah khazanah MINDA . Semakin kreatif, semakin unik semakin baguslah Jenama itu. Ianya mestilah baru , tidak ujud dizaman itu, misalnya apabila komputer diperkenalkan, bagaimana di waktu itu dan dizaman itu kita nak explain maksud "komputer". Cuba bayangkan susahnya nak bentangkan satu kertas kerja untuk membina sebuah produk "komputer" , sedangkan di masa itu orang tidak tahu apa itu "komputer?".

    Kemudian ujud pula Handphone yang besar . Padahal masa itu hanya ada talipon yang diletakkan dirumah atau pejabat. Bagaimana kita hendak yakinkan dimasa itu talipon itu boleh dibawa kemana-mana? Makin susah kita nak explain bermakna makin tinggi nilai "harta intelek' itu. Yang tidak tercapai oleh minda dimasa dan zaman itu , itulah namanya "harta intelek". Minda terus berfikir dan semakin kreatif, semakin tinggi nilainya. Hanya orang yang rajin berfikir, menggunakan sepenuhnya otak kiri dan otak kanan , akan dapat menjadi semakin unik dan kreatif. Golongan ini tidak ramai kerana mereka adalah otak otak "market leader". Otak inilah yang akan menguasai dunia "Harta Intelek" kerana mereka melihat sekeliling tapi mereka tidak mahu produk mereka seperti yang sedia ada apatah lagi meniru produk seperti orang lain. Mereka ini mahu jadi "unik" . Mereka mahu jadi "market leader" dan tercabar keegoan mereka kalau cuma menjadi "follower".

    Cubalah ubah, pelbagaikan, pakejkan dengan cara berbeza supaya anda juga akan jadi 'market leader" . Semua orang mempunyai resources atau sumber yang sama , misalnya menjual ayam goreng, membuat kuih, membuat baju, membuat kraftangan tapi BAGAIMANA untuk menjadikan produk saya "bukan seperti produk orang lain".

    Jadi seorang yang kreatif dan innovatif.

    Cubalah, makin orang pelik dan tidak tahu ...semakin orang hendak tahu...

    berfikirlah....