Marketing Communications

(Ron) #1
68 CHAPTER 2 BRANDING

it was not just Barco who was announcing a new digital
cinema projector, but the whole industry. Third and
most importantly, Barco managed to get a new category
inserted in the Guinness Book of World Records : the brightest
projector. Barco set a new record in this category with
43 000 lumens of light (as compared with 20 000 lumens
for competitive brands), which is comparable with the
combined light output of about 1700 regular flashlights.
From then on, Barco started advertising with the slogan
‘brightest projector on the planet’. Christie and Sony did
not respond.
What about the results? Firstly, in terms of sales, the
campaign supported Barco’s rapid market expansion and
boosted the company’s image in the cinema market. Barco
became industry leader with a 40% market share and
25 000 projectors installed by the end of 2011. Importantly,
Barco obtained these spectacular results with a modest
budget of about €400 000. Approximately half of the
budget was spent on tradeshow participation, 35% on
advertising and a modest 15% on campaign creation and
collateral. Further recognition of the campaign was the
LACP Spotlight Award Barco received (LACP is a global com-
munications competition) and inclusion by MLC (Marketing
Leadership Council) in its top 50 of B2B campaigns.
Secondly, Barco displayed one consistent and recog-
nisable brand image in the digital cinema sector (and not
different images for the different types of projectors the
company has for this industry). According to a customer
loyalty study conducted by an independent research firm in
2011, Barco’s secured loyalists in the digital cinema indus-
try grew from 33% in 2009 to 55% in 2011, a customer
loyalty mark that is 12 points above the industry bench-
mark. Barco’s image proved to be the most impactful
loyalty driver in the digital cinema market with products

achieving third place (in other industries served by Barco,
products consistently form the top loyalty driver) (see also
Figure 2.7 ). Nevertheless, Barco needs to keep on improv-
ing its projectors and that is exactly what it does. Right
now, it already has a projector that produces 55 000
lumens of light. Barco also incorporated laser technology
into the light engines and integrated media servers and
theatre management systems software to offer its custom-
ers the capability of integrated systems. By consistently
putting customers’ needs first, Barco has become a more
customer-oriented (and less a mere product-oriented)
company.
Thirdly, in terms of in-house confidence the campaign
was also a big success. ‘Projecting the magic’ was the first
campaign for a specific product that Barco launched after
the new branding strategy was installed. The smooth
co-operation between the different divisional, regional and
corporate Barco teams was seen as one of the success fac-
tors of the campaign. The spectacular results reinforced
the company’s belief that ‘to be one’ was the right way to
go and recognised the new Corporate Marketing organisa-
tion as an important sparring partner for other divisions.
In this sense, the campaign also resulted in a significant
motivational boost for all Barco’s employees.
To conclude, in a couple of years Barco managed to move
from a merely technology-focused to a more customer-
focused organisation. Technology remains important,
but, unlike in the past, one face for the whole organisa-
tion and one brand image in terms of providing the right
customer solution in all its markets have become important
as well. By following the ‘one brand’, ‘one company’,
‘customer centred’ and ‘focus on Barco’s mid-term and
long-term strategy’, the ‘Projecting the magic’ campaign
for digital cinema became a big success.

Figure 2.7 Drivers of performance and impact

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