(Read an edited version of this article in Campaign magazine here)
Nokia’s plan to get reintroduced into the mobile market places a lot of emphasis on its brand. A 10-year contract means there is a long-term vision set for realising an ambitious plan. Reinventing the brand to drive this ambition is critical as Nokia today lacks the impetus to attract new and younger audiences who are not familiar with its past achievements.
Nokia cannot rely solely on its heritage and nostalgia to win: it has to build momentum for the future, create an aspiration for its experience, and continuously innovate to sustain growth.
Building Momentum
Currently, all the news about Nokia revolve around its past: the rise and fall – the insuperable losses. It is drowning in the technicality of its inner workings. Nokia has to change the narrative and start telling the story of the future. How will it be different? What will its value be beyond ‘connecting people’? The experience it has accumulated over the past couple of decades has to be repurposed to build momentum for its future.
Learnings from Blackberry demonstrate that hanging on to what made the brand once successful is not enough to carry its success into the future. Its equity was diluted after it lost the one thing that made it different. The exclusive community that the Blackberry messenger created was no longer relevant once other messenger services took over. Blackberry eventually failed to become a platform brand, and was only capable of preserving a niche audience.
Creating Aspiration
Nokia needs emblematic actions to further build prestige and stature into its brand. While product performance is instrumental for success, most phone purchases today are image-driven. What does Nokia have to offer to enable its loyal following for feature phones to expand into a younger audience? Amidst the fierce competition from big and small players, identifying a gap in people’s needs today and catering for it is crucial to build relevance again in the phone market.
Learnings from Samsung are compelling. Samsung penetrated the market with advanced products accompanied with good (or maybe great) marketing – the latter being the game Apple has mastered since its inception. Through building its brand image, it managed to poke holes at the Apple fan following, leveraging product superiority to convert users and gain considerable market-share.
Sustaining Growth
Getting back into the market with full force requires a long-term investment. Brand equity needs to be fuelled with a steady supply of new products and services. Unfortunately, brand equity does not hinge on performance – it takes time for people to change perceptions. Only massive and sudden failures cause detrimental losses to brand reputation. Maintaining a steady stream of innovative products and services will keep Nokia ahead, reinforcing its relevance and evolving its equity to sustain long-term growth.
Learnings from Apple prove this. All eyes are focused on Apple’s next iteration of the iPhone. Expectations are high, but scepticism is even higher. The disruptive innovation that Apple had been known for is now incremental. It is the existing brand equity that is protecting the halo of Apple, but without fuelling this equity with credible supply of newness, this equity will erode with time.
Reinventing what is now a heritage brand requires consistency and resilience, challenging the status quo at every step of the way. Nokia doesn’t have to look far to understand what it takes to win. The learnings from the category are telling: the next chapter in Nokia’s history will either be a stellar case-study in brand building, or a lesson of what to avoid. Time will tell.