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Evolving Localization and its Brand Extension
Leon Z. Lee
"Frog at the bottom of a well" is an old Asian proverb which states that a frog at the bottom of a well steadfastly believes heaven is only the size of a small circle. Only when one climbs out of the well can heaven's true vastness and magnitude be comprehended. Ageless as this proverb may be, it is also an appropriate description of the current commoditization challenge within the localization industry.
Parties to this debate are dynamic and numerous. Some claim the products
and services among competitors are too close in proximity in price and
performance. Others remark that customers simply do not understand that
localization is a strategic business process for transcending
multi-cultural markets and should not be relegated to mere textual
translations. While still others hold the perception that the industry is
the victim of its own success, that after a decade of consistent corporate
messaging on translational services, translational memory, and
translational outsourcing that this image is exactly what the customers
have been conditioned to narrowly appreciate and accept.
The common
denominator to these industry ailments is the lack of differentiation, be
it the pricing model, product performances, groupthink among professionals
or even corporate personalities. Fortunately, customers are awaiting
persuasion to fundamentally identify the localization industry as a
single-point of specialization encompassing all international business
initiatives including online globalization, international affairs,
localized marketing, global branding, translational services & technology,
virtual team collaboration, etc. Managing bold steps in this paradigm
shift will finally break the cycle of commoditization. In this regard, GALA:
The Globalization and Localization Association, is strategically
positioned to harness, coalesce and propel the localization industry into
this new frontier.
II. Expanding the Horizon
Following
the "frog in the well" analogy, envisioning the industry possibilities is
the first crucial step. However, the devil is in the details on precise
executable phases and incorporating new market specializations, thereby
attracting new customer bases demanding more service offerings beyond the
lowest bid price, translation capabilities or technology suite bundles.
Figure
1: Localization discipline evolving among three inter-locking phases
of industry development
One vision is to divide the market
evolution into three interlocking phases : 1) Technology Solutions, 2)
Marketing Strategies, 3) International Affairs. Although each phase
promotes its own set of specialization for a particular business segment,
all comes under the de facto umbrella branding of the localization
industry. Through these expanded offerings, customers will gradually
reassess this industry in general and individual corporations in
particular.
The current phase of Technology Solutions possesses
characteristics of cost leadership, automated enterprise workflows and
technology integration from corporate consolidations. Nevertheless, its
competitive posture has been undermined by the inability to push customer
relationships beyond the consideration of purchase cost. This situation
has become so dire that some corporate professionals actually toy with the
idea of sharing competitive customer portfolios and technology feature
sets to forestall this commoditization. The harsh reality is that
"sameness" is the quickest means of demise in our discipline.
To
offset this dilemma, Marketing Strategies is the next intermediary phase
to embrace. International marketing is a complementary fit for the
localization industry, by offering both technology suites in delivering
localized information and comprehensive resident knowledge in designing
marketing campaigns for geopolitical and ethnographic regions in areas of
print advertisement, online brand valuation, website usability analysis,
etc. With this repositioning, customers can evolve their appreciation of
localization as a holistic experience in managing multiple points of
refinement, thus shift the brand awareness to the industry favor. Despite
this good momentum, its subtle drawback is overtly emphasizing
"localization" as an industry rather than an "umbrella discipline" capable
of multiple solutions in politics, language and culture.
To achieve
this aim, the final phase is to consolidate International Affairs as an
integral localization qualifier. This natural extension is not only
logical, but self-evident for it finally propels this industry beyond the
traditional customer base into new realms of political liaising, cultural
specialization, transnational corporate diplomacy, global trade relations,
non-government organizational projects, etc. By attracting non-technical
professionals seeking benefits beyond one-off translation services,
associations such as GALA can finally break the commoditization impasse
and serve as a conduit for seamless global knowledge sharing and resource
alignments. To "seed the market" in this manner, one must manage the
customer experience to optimally execute market equities.
III.
Leveraging the Market Equities
The interlocking phases above
project a broader brand reputation across the entire localization realm.
Despite reservations voiced by some in our industry, there is a science
behind this marketing "fluff". In 1999, the University of Pennsylvania
published the marketing strategy paper titled "Brand Beyond Borders : An
analysis of the potential for Brands to extend into entirely different
categories". In a nutshell, this research quantified the ability of
certain established global brands (represented by corporations or
associations) to expand products and services beyond one's original
category (such as Apple Inc. and its iTunes Music Store). Success in this
arena can significantly increase the perceived brand value, hence elevate
related stock prices and strengthen financial coffers (ex. the Dell brand
is estimated by Interbrand.com consultancy to be worth over $13 million).
Figure
2: Conception of Brand Extension via customer psychology of nodes,
links, schemas
This relationship is accomplished by
balancing customer psychology with corporate value propositions via memory
nodes, links and schemas. Memory nodes store individual words and images.
Links forge coherent patterns among these nodes via association or recall.
Finally, customers instill schemas onto collections of nodes and links via
inference or external stimuli. These schemas can be rudimentary (ex.
propensity for price sensitivity) or sophisticated (ex. relating family
values to a particular corporate logo).
Figure
3: GALA super-schema
This interaction among "Nodes" and
"Links" is almost a mirror image of the current localization industry,
with each competitor offering specific price points, technology
consolidation and corporate merger advantages. However, true market
resiliency is provided by associations like GALA which are capable of
installing an industry-level "Schema" in serving as a conduit for resource
& information flow, influence on the evolution of the entire industry, and
harnessing the true global branding potential of localization by extension
beyond traditional product and service offerings. By reinforcing a single
point of accountability to the global customer base, GALA is prepared to
take localization into the next higher order of discipline and evolution.
IV.
Conclusion
Price commoditization exists when customers cannot
differentiate products and services among competitors. One means of
expanding the value proposition is to evolve the localization industry
into three inter-locking phases of Technology Solutions, Marketing
Strategies and International Affairs. In this manner, localization can
extend from being a mere industry to a complete multi-facet international
discipline. Integrating marketing psychology into this equation, GALA is
strategically positioned to serve as a premier partner in this initiative.
Leon Z. Lee has served multiple transnational corporations in his 15-year tenure including Nortel, IBM and Dell. His concentrations include online globalization, localized marketing, global branding strategy and virtual team collaboration. He can be reached at LeonZLee@yahoo.com, 512 / 244-0226.