I love hearing from my former Brand Mangement students.
A few weeks ago, a one of them, Charlie, sent me a blog post
that he came across:
“The Corporate States of America”. He wrote,
“Bob, I hope your summer is going well. I was on my company’s
internal branding page this morning, and I came across this posting which I
thought was kind of fun! It’s not official in any way, but I want to believe
the guy who made this put SOME thought into it. Then I realized I wouldn’t even
know where to begin with making this map for Canada. Do the Territories even
have brands??”
Well Charlie, this is your lucky day. Working with the team
at Integrated Brands, we developed a distinctly Oh Canada map we call “The
Canadian Brand Map: The Branded Provinces and Territories of Canada”. But
before we get there, let’s make a few observations on the American version.
The Corporate States of America
Lovelace, blogger and creator of the Corporate States of America
used the following criteria: a brand that a) has ties to that state and b) is
still in business.
Some of his selections
are controversial, as is evidenced by many the 295 comments at the end of the blog
post. A quick study reveals that some heavy-weight brands like Disney,
McDonalds, Exxon, KFC, and Microsoft have been shunned for Hooters,
Caterpillar, Dr.Pepper, Lexmark and Starbucks in Florida, Illinois, Texas, Kentucky
and Washington respectively. As the author readily admits, it’s a subjective
map not a scientific one. But, these brands have real social and economic
impact where they operate. Each brand represents thousands (sometimes hundreds
of thousands) of reliable jobs, stable investments, and millions in tax
revenues.
The Canadian Brand Map
For our Canadian Brand Map, we took a little different
approach and brand-mapped the key
national and regional Canadian brands. And just like Lovelace, who struggled to
find strong brands in certain regions in the USA, we struggled to find representing
brands in parts of Canada. But in the end, our Canadian Brand Map showcases over
70 Canadian brands.
So what made the list? Brands that satisfied these
criteria.
1. The brand needed its head office to be in a
Canadian province/territory. As a result, Thompson-Reuters (which has deep
Canadian roots) was cut because its head office sailed off to New York. Molson-Coors,
on the other hand, made the map.
2. The brand required a business-to-consumer orientation.
So, heavy-industry brands like Resolute Forest Products and Potash Corp weren’t
eligible. Some decisions got a little murkier so we teased out relevant
sub-brands from the corporate parent. For example, we excluded the Bombardier
brand (oriented towards planes and trains) but included their consumer-marketed
sub-brands (e.g. Sea-Doo). CN also made the cut because of its ongoing branding
related to consumers (e.g. CN Tower).
3. The brand needed significant brand awareness
nationally, regionally, or both- and be in the collective consciousness of the
region. Obviously, this has subjectivity
to it- but talking about the blog post to residents of various provinces and
territories returned the same brands over and over. In a way this was a
quick-and-dirty awareness recall test.
Our final list also passed the sniff-test of a team of a 5 Canadian
branding/advertising professionals and marketing professors.
4. The brand required distribution of
goods/services beyond that of its home province/territory.
Certain brands including non-profits (e.g. RCMP,World Vision
Canada, War Amps etc),media brands (e.g. CTV, Globe and Mail, National Post,
TSN, Much Music, Shaw, Videotron etc.), sports brands (e.g. CFL, Edmonton
Oilers, Winnipeg Jets, Toronto Maple Leafs etc), and universities (e.g. UBC, Brandon
University, Dalhousie University, University of Western Ontario etc.) were
excluded from presentation to keep the map cleaner. The one exception was the
CBC, given its iconic standing in Canadian heritage.
When all the brands are plotted on a map like this, there
are lots of insights to be had. There’s the “ohhhh I didn’t know that brand was
a Canadian brand.” I’d be curious to know what percentage of the population
knew that Sabian Symbols or Harlequin Romance stories were brand babies from
north of the 49th parallel.
The map also tells a richer story about regional values. Take
a look at the Brand Map again. The brands tend to reflect the values of the
regions that they come from. British
Columbia is stereotypically Canada’s balanced-lifestyle, rugged environmental,
and hippy meets granola province. Not surprisingly, then it homes one of the
world’s premiere well-being brands (Lululemon) and two of Canada’s rugged outdoorsy
nature brands (Arc’teryx, Mountain Equipment Co-Op).
At the other end of the country, the province
of Quebec inherited a lot of associations from its parent country (France).
France’s imagery relates to hedonic
pleasures. The French are synonymous with good times rather than work. Passionate
l’amour, fashion and fine alcohols are staples in stereotype Frenchland. It
make sense then, that Canada’s sexiest brand (La Senza), major cheese player
(Saputo),and “good times” recreational brands Sea Doo, Ski Doo, Just for
Laughs, Cirque du Soleil, and Seagrams come from la belle province.
Let’s shift to Saskatchewan. Saskatchewan is Canada’s collectivist province. It is the
birthplace of Medicare in Canada and housed the first openly socialist regional
government in Canada. No surprise here that the values spawn coop
organizations.
There is one final point I’d like to make before signing off
today. While the brands draw values from the region, they also give back. As
the thousands of Canadians (sometimes tens of thousands) who work for these
brands have reliable jobs, they are being inundated with the values of the
brand on a daily basis. As the brand expands, so too do the ideals from the
brand. You might say, Canada’s gotten a little more
"well-being" thanks to Lulu’s out there- and is a little more connected thanks to
Air Canada’s and Tim’s.
What happened to Saskatchewan?? Just two brands?
ReplyDeleteYes... the map is a clever way of demonstrating just how much brands add to our lives and help define our identity.
ReplyDeleteTom Beakbane
It shows how Ontario-centered this country is. Add the media...dominant dominant province
ReplyDeleteBoston Pizza is Canadian?
ReplyDeleteOld Dutch?
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of the exercise "the national brand of..." that we did in Global Brands class. I saw you had a survey out on that. Results coming up?
ReplyDeleteAlso JILL, Boston Pizza was started by that guy on Dragon's Den. I guess they pick Boston Pizza as a brand name to you know, get the "its American it must be big" vibe out of their branding.
Boston Pizza was actually started in Edmonton, Alberta. Jim Treliving started by buying a franchise in B.C. and then eventually bought the company... The original BP's is actually still standing and is still a BP's.
ReplyDeleteWhat? Saks is from Mississippi? When I think Saks, I think Saks fifth avenue, as in NYC.
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