Posts Tagged Brand

Kmart: Turning Around a Negative Brand Image

kmart-logo I originally posted this on MyKmart.com, a public forum where customers and employees can talk about Kmart and suggest ideas for improvement, and talk about their general experiences.  I’m reposting it on my blog because Kmart still continues to be my favorite place to shop, but they are a classic example of how a negative brand image can really hurt a company – even after the initial reason for the bad image has past.  You can read the original thread here.


It’s good to see so many people getting involved and telling their stories about Kmart and Sears.  I’d like to give my input using my marketing background a bit to respond to the whole Sears vs. Kmart thing.

Brand name and brand image play an important part in consumer choices.  Kenmore and Diehard are two brand names that most consumers have a positive image of and therefore they tend to be the leaders in their categories.  As a company, many people also have a positive image of Sears.  Almost everyone grew up with Sears and they have a reputation of still being customer-focused (granted, they did slip for about 3 years but I think they have gotten back on track).

On the other hand Kmart’s #1 problem is not what they are doing today.  I think that Kmart is doing everything extremely well from what I can see (I’m a customer, not an employee) and I’ve been very impressed at the turnaround I’ve seen in the stores and in the way they advertise.

Kmart’s problem is an image problem that started back in the late 1980s and continues to this day.  So many people have a negative image of Kmart because of the sad shape the stores got into during the late 80s and 90s.  People think of Kmart as dirty, unorganized and below Wal-Mart in terms of quality (I’m not making this up, numerous marketing textbooks and studies have shown this).  The bankruptcy of Kmart seriously hurt them even further, and until the merger with Sears most stores had not seen a remodel since the early 90s (if that).

Today Kmart is turning its image around, but one of the most difficult things to do in marketing is to take a brand that has a negative image and turn it into a positive one.  From the publicly available data out there, we know more people are returning to Kmart stores and we know that the quality of merchandise has been improving.  It’s now up to Kmart to get those people to become loyal shoppers, and to continue the momentum they built.

I’ve posted it before, and I’ll post it again, but I fully expect Kmart to shutter more stores in the next few years.  There are some stores that just will not be profitable no matter what they do.  They are in a bad location or they are in such bad shape the cost of trying to modernize them is just prohibitive.

I think in 3-5 years we might see the opening of new Kmart’s — but it won’t be a massive expansion.  Select locations, maybe 2-5 a year max; and that might be a generous number.

Kmart had a long rise to the top (in 1986 Kmart was the #1 shopping destination in America) and subsequently their fall to the bottom was hard and painful.  However, I still have faith in the Kmart brand, the people behind Kmart and in Sears Holdings.  I grew up with both Sears and Kmart, and to this day every appliance in our house says Kenmore and every tool in the garage says Craftsman.  I haven’t given up on them yet, and don’t intend to give up on them anytime soon.

Tags: , , , ,

Who is that man behind the curtains?

One of the most powerful things about social media is it lets you find out more about a person or a company than you might want to know.  On the internet, your name and/or your brand live forever.

In the past year, I’ve talked about a lot of things with a lot of people.  I’ve interacted with social and professional networks.  I’ve written in my blog, and commented on others.  What type of digital footprint have I left behind?image

image

 

What will the rest of the world find out about you? What will you find out about the rest of the world?

* World clouds generated by Wordle.

Tags: , , ,

Marketing Words of Wisdom – Demonization

I’m normally not one to copy content, but Seth Godin had an excellent blog article/definition that I just wanted to share.  His word of the day was demonization:

The closer you get to someone, something, some brand, some organization… the harder it is to demonize it, objectify it or hate it.

 

So, if you want to not be hated, open up. Let people in. Engage. Interact.

So many companies are scared to death to let customers interact with them — and then they wonder why they are hated.  Microsoft was all too famous for doing this, for being secretive and closed during a period when the rest of the computing industry was going to open standards.  They finally realized the error of their ways — but after how much damage was done?

Will it really hurt you or your company to develop an API that others can use to help make your product better?  What about hosting a forum or a blog for others to leave comments on.  One-way communications is dead in marketing, and trying to keep that method alive will lead to people finding ways to demonize your product and your brand.

Tags: , ,

Switch to our mobile site

Stats by WP SlimStat