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Reaching the Brand Protection Tipping Point

October 2007
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WASHINGTON, D.C.—All that remains for the brand protection market to take off is for brand owners to start requesting protection solutions. The technology is there, the market is ready to explode, but brand owners aren’t jumping on board yet. Such was the message at PABS07 (Product Authentication and Brand Security), held in Washington, D.C., Oct. 4-5.

The conference brought together almost 100 representatives from government agencies, suppliers, end users, and media to learn about the state of the brand protection market. Operated by Alexander Watson Associates (AWA), the annual event is presented in association with the Brand Protection Alliance (BPA) and featured a day and a half of conference sessions combined with a tabletop exhibition.

According to Lynn Crutchfield, president of the BPA, various brand security issues have been defined and include counterfeiting, piracy, simulation, diversion, supply chain integrity, and warranty fraud. These and other issues have been consolidated into one category called IP (intellectual property) theft. IP theft leads to an estimated $512 billion in lost sales globally per year. Despite that staggering estimate, according to preliminary results from recent AWA research, many brand owners are still not cognizant of the problem of IP theft or the financial implications to their companies. Money spent on brand protection is still spent in defensive and reactionary ways such as on legal fees and investigations. That being said, Crutchfield asserts that the field of product authentication is becoming an industry unto itself and feels that the BPA’s message was heard loud and clear at the conference. “Brand protection is an emerging market, the technology is here, now let’s get going,” he said.

Other results from AWA’s research support his assertion. Companies are now establishing departments with clear owners for ensuring their brands are protected by creating positions like brand protection manager or director, product protection. Also, respondents indicated that there is interest in the entire gamut of solution technologies. One hundred percent of respondents indicated that spending on anti-counterfeiting and/or anti-diversion activities will increase in 2008.

Conclusions derived from the research state that funds invested in these solutions will continue to grow, all solution types are generating interest, and brand owners that understand the problem have begun to invest in personnel and solutions.

While no one at the conference could predict when the brand protection market will reach its tipping point (the point at which a product or idea goes from unusual to common), each attendee left knowing a little more about how to provide protection, employ protection, or what to ask for regarding protection.
 

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Most Recent Comments:
ronny simon - Posted on October 21, 2007
As a security solutions provider we have encountered many times the fact that companies are reluctant to spend money on protecting their brands because of the simple fact that they have no idea of the enormous loss they are experiencing. They know there is a problem but they have not got the faintest idea how to quantify it! One of the ways to do it is to make a trial-protecting one item or one district and see the differences in sales results (if any).From experience we found that most companies (over 80%) discovered an increase in sales sometimes in unbelievable proportions to the amounts invested in brand protection.Do it with our technologies or with one of the other that exist in the marketplace-but just do it. You are most probably in for a big surprise.
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Archived Comments:
ronny simon - Posted on October 21, 2007
As a security solutions provider we have encountered many times the fact that companies are reluctant to spend money on protecting their brands because of the simple fact that they have no idea of the enormous loss they are experiencing. They know there is a problem but they have not got the faintest idea how to quantify it! One of the ways to do it is to make a trial-protecting one item or one district and see the differences in sales results (if any).From experience we found that most companies (over 80%) discovered an increase in sales sometimes in unbelievable proportions to the amounts invested in brand protection.Do it with our technologies or with one of the other that exist in the marketplace-but just do it. You are most probably in for a big surprise.