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The Brand Name Bandwagon
By Jo Robinson Printer
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By the year 2005, industry experts predict
that half of all the fresh meat products in the supermarket will
carry a brand name. No more anonymous, shrink-wrapped beef, lamb,
and pork. The reason for the branding is simple: merely adding
a name to a package of steaks can increase sales by thirty percent.
Why do brand names carry such clout? Part
of the answer is "word association." The right brand
name can trick customers into believing that meat that comes straight
from the feedlot is the most wholesome, nutritious product they
can buy. Here's how it works. Imagine that you're the owner
of a large herd of Angus cattle in Iowa, and you're wondering if
jumping onto the branded meat bandwagon will boost your sales.
To find out, you hire a team of marketing consultants. The consultants
inform you that adding a brand name can be very effective as long
as you follow their advice.
First, they say, your brand name should include
the name of a specific farm or person. If you call your meat "Marvin's
Beef," for example, customers are going to assume there's
a Marvin somewhere who cares about his reputation, and, therefore,
his meat. Without having to make any overt claims, you've created
the illusion of quality. (Of course, the fact that the name "Marvin" was
selected by your consultants remains your little secret.)
You will boost sales even more, you are told,
if you add "Iowa" to your label. Most people have a positive
association with their own state. For example, when I was living
in Oregon, I made the point of buying "Oregon fresh chicken,"
assuming that the local chickens were raised more wholesomely than
those in Arkansas. Then I toured a confinement poultry operation
near Corvallis, Oregon and learned the grim truth.
Another way to enhance your brand name, you
are advised, is to add a bucolic term or two. Most consumers are
so estranged from the land that they yearn for anything that suggests
country living. How about "Farmer Marvin's Iowa Beef?" you
ask. They tell you this is an excellent choice of words because "Farmer
Marvin" evokes the past as well as the countryside. ("Old
McMarvin had a farm.") You give your graphic artists the go-ahead
to design a logo with a red barn and haystack to reinforce the
nostalgia.
Great. With just four carefully chosen words,
you've managed to imbue your feedlot meat with integrity, local
pride, wholesome country living, and the nostalgic past. But
just when you're ready to trademark your name, you start reading
newspaper and magazine articles that sing the praises of something
called "grass-fed beef." You begin to worry that this
quaint concept—keeping animals home on the range—might
challenge the superiority of grain-fed beef.
Not to worry, says your marketing team. You
can capitalize on the allure simply by adding words like "meadows,"
"prairie" or "pasture" to your label. These
words conjure up lush fields of grass without saying that your
animals actually graze on the stuff. The name search is over. You
are now the proud owner of "Farmer Marvin's Meadow-Fresh Iowa
Beef." Image is all.
+++++
As you might imagine, this "greening"
of feedlot beef is making life more difficult for grassfarmers
who raise their cattle on pasture from birth to market. The very
qualities these ranchers embody—name accountability; local
production; and a more natural, wholesome, and environmentally
friendly product—are being co-opted by large, conventional
beef producers. What's more, the big guys have far more money
to spend on image development and marketing. How are you going
to tell if cattle from the"Sweet Pastures Beef Company"
eat one lick of grass?
My advice is to call the meat producer's customer
service number and say that you want to come for a visit. Say that
you want to see with your own eyes: 1) where the animals are raised,
2) what they are fed, and 3) how they are being treated. Settle
for nothing less. The producers of Farmer Marvin's Meadow-Fresh
Iowa Beef will not allow you to tour their dusty, odiferous feedlot.
Marketing money can create the illusion, but not the reality.
Jo Robinson is a New York Times bestselling
writer. She is the author or coauthor of 11 nationally published
books including Pasture Perfect, which is a comprehensive overview
of the benefits of choosing products from pasture-raised animals,
and The Omega Diet (with Dr. Artemis Simopoulos) that describes
an omega-3 enriched Mediterranean diet that may be the healthiest
eating program of all. To order her books or learn more about
grassfed products, visit http://eatwild.com.
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