I found an interesting article in the London Financial Times dealing with this subject and I'd like to share a portion of it with you today.
"Would the 'real' brand please stand
up?" That is a complicated question at the best of times. But when the
brand is Cuban, it gets more complex still.
Cuba produced the most charismatic revolution of the 20th century. But,
with the socialist island slowly re-embracing capitalism and seeking
rapprochement with its arch-enemy, the US, the "real Cuba" is in a
state of transition. That transition,
in turn, sets the stage for one of the most colorful marketing clashes of
modern times, the battle for the "soul" of true Cuban rum, a contest
that pits Bacardi, the Bermuda-based company, against Pernod Ricard, the French
distiller. Both drinks groups claim to
purvey the "real" thing. But both, perforce, have taken different
routes to buttress that claim.
Bacardi, which has its roots in 19th
century Cuba and is owned by an exiled family, extols its heritage and Cuba's
pre-revolutionary days. "Bacardi -
untameable since 1862" runs the company slogan, a true enough comment. Bacardi was Cuba's best-selling rum before the
1959 revolution and, in exile, has become the world's largest privately owned
drinks company.
Pernod Ricard, by contrast, is a relative
newcomer. For two decades, it has produced Havana Club rum with its joint
venture partner, state-owned Cuban rum, and sold it around the world, except in
the US. It calls Havana Club "the
genuine, iconic Cuban rum". "The
brand is an icon," says Jérôme Cottin-Bizonne, chief executive of Pernod's
Havana Club. "It is an expression of Cuban
culture."
That is half true. Before the revolution,
Havana Club was only a minor brand. But as it is now actually produced in Cuba,
while Bacardi's rums are largely produced in Puerto Rico, the claim to
authenticity is credible. "In our
experience, consumers are attracted to authentic brands," says Charlie
Rudd, chief operating officer of BBH London, the advertising and creative
agency. "That is why advertisers invest time and energy to demonstrate
where they came from and what makes them special. With this in mind, it looks
as though Pernod Ricard has a trump card."
A further complication lies in the
companies' battle over the "Havana Club" marque - which Pernod owns,
except in the US, where Bacardi has the rights. The contest will surely escalate should the US
embargo finally end, and Pernod can then sell its "Havana Club" in
the US, in competition with Bacardi rum and its own "Havana Club". The brand battle for
"authenticity" goes on, although there is no correct final answer -
just as there is no "real Scotch" - and in the end it boils down to
questions of personal taste and market access. Still, the clash is a measure of changing
times. A revolution that once won
international followers with its global image has now partly resolved down to
the rival marketing strategies of two very capitalist companies.
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