This MCQ module is based on: Branding, Packaging, Labelling & Exercises
Branding, Packaging, Labelling & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: Branding, Packaging, Labelling & Exercises
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Branding, Packaging, Labelling & Marketing Exercises
Branding class 12 NCERT — brand name vs brand mark vs trademark, qualities of a good brand name, three levels of packaging and its functions, labelling functions, plus full chapter-end NCERT exercise model answers.
2.14 Branding — Giving the Product a Name and an Identity
One of the most important decisions a marketer takes in the area of product is whether to sell it under a brand name or a generic name. A generic name refers to the name of the whole class of the product — a book, a wristwatch, a tyre, a camera, a toilet soap. All cameras share the same generic features (a lens with a flash gun and a body); all books are bound papers carrying useful information. If products were sold by generic name alone, it would be very difficult for marketers to distinguish their offerings from competitors'.
Therefore, marketers give a name, sign or symbol to their product. This process of giving a name to a product is called branding?. NCERT defines four key terms relating to branding:
2.14.1 Four NCERT Terms in the Branding Family
2.14.2 Characteristics of a Good Brand Name (NCERT — Seven Criteria)
Choosing the right brand name is not easy — once chosen and launched, it is very difficult to change. Getting it right the first time is essential. NCERT lists seven considerations:
| # | Criterion | NCERT Example / Insight |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Short, easy to pronounce, spell, recognise & remember | Ponds, VIP, Rin, Vim |
| 2 | Suggests product's benefits and qualities; appropriate to the function | "Promise" toothpaste · "Boost" energy drink |
| 3 | Distinctive — stands apart from competitors | Avoid generic-sounding names; pick a unique sound or coinage |
| 4 | Adaptable to packing, labelling, advertising media and different languages | "Maggi" works in Hindi, English & Bengali alike |
| 5 | Versatile — can accommodate new products added to the line | "Amul" extends to milk, butter, cheese, ice cream, chocolates |
| 6 | Capable of being registered and protected legally | Should not infringe an existing trademark |
| 7 | Has staying power — does not get out of date | Avoid trendy slang that may sound stale in 10 years |
2.15 Packaging — From Product Container to Marketing Tool
One of the most important developments in business in recent years has been in packaging. Many products that we once thought could never be packed — pulses, ghee, milk, salt, cold drinks — have been successfully packaged. NCERT defines packaging as "the act of designing and producing the container or wrapper of a product." It plays a critical role in the marketing success or failure of products, especially consumer non-durables. The success of brands like Maggi noodles, Uncle Chips and Crax wafers owes much to packaging.
2.15.1 Three Levels of Packaging (NCERT)
| Level | Definition | NCERT Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Primary Package | Product's immediate container. Sometimes kept until consumer is ready to use (plastic packet for socks); sometimes kept throughout entire product life (toothpaste tube, match box). | Toothpaste tube; match box; plastic packet for socks |
| 2. Secondary Packaging | Additional layers of protection kept till the product is ready for use. When consumers start using the product, they discard the secondary pack but retain the primary. | Cardboard box around a tube of shaving cream |
| 3. Transportation Packaging | Further packaging needed for storage, identification or transportation. | Corrugated box of 10, 20 or 100 units of toothpaste sent to retailers |
2.15.2 Importance of Packaging — Why It Matters Today
2.15.3 Four Functions of Packaging
| Function | What It Does | NCERT Example |
|---|---|---|
| (i) Product Identification | Helps customers identify the product instantly | Colgate's red colour · Pond's cream jar |
| (ii) Product Protection | Protects against spoilage, breakage, leakage, pilferage, damage, climatic effects — during storing, distribution and transportation | Glass jars; vacuum packs; tetra-pak |
| (iii) Facilitating Use of the Product | Size and shape should be convenient to open, handle and use | Cosmetics, medicines, toothpaste tubes |
| (iv) Product Promotion | Startling colour scheme, photograph or typeface attracts attention at the point of purchase — often more effective than advertising in self-service stores | Lay's bright yellow pack; Coca-Cola's signature red |
2.16 Labelling — The Information Carrier on the Pack
A label is a simple-looking but very important part of packaging — the tag, sticker or graphic that carries information about the product. Labels can vary from a simple tag attached to local unbranded products like sugar, wheat or pulses (showing only quality or price) to complex graphics that are part of the packaging on branded products. NCERT lists five major functions of labels.
2.16.1 Five Functions of Labels
| Function | What It Carries | NCERT Example |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Describe the Product & Specify Its Contents | Name of company, product description, claims, instructions for use, cautions | "Mohini Tea Company — ISO 9001:200C Certified"; prickly heat powder describes relief and forbids use on cuts; toothpaste lists "Ten Teeth and Gum Problems"; coconut oil describes "Heena, Amla, Lemon — good for hair" |
| 2. Identification of the Product or Brand | Brand name, address of manufacturer, net weight when packed, manufacturing date, MRP, batch number | Picking your favourite biscuit pack by its label among many similar packs |
| 3. Grading of Products | Different grades / categories of the same product | Hair conditioner for "normal hair" vs "damaged hair"; tea sold under Yellow, Red and Green Label categories |
| 4. Helps in Promotion of Products | Promotional message, sales-promotion offers | Amla hair-oil pack: "Baalon mein Dum, Life mein Fun"; detergent: "Keeps cloth looking good and your machine in top condition"; "40% Extra Free"; "Free Toothbrush Inside"; "Save ₹15" |
| 5. Providing Information Required by Law | Statutory disclosures — list of ingredients, vegetarian/non-vegetarian declaration, additives, manufacturing/packing date, MRP, expiry date, safety warnings on hazardous goods | Packaged food, drugs, tobacco products and hazardous/poisonous materials must carry legally mandated information |
NCERT Short-Answer Q11: "What information is generally placed on the package of a food product? Design a label for one of the food products of your choice." Pick a packet of biscuits and list every piece of information your label should carry.
- Brand identification: Brand name, brand mark/logo, net weight, batch number.
- Product description: Product name, type (cream / glucose / cookie), key ingredients.
- Statutory disclosures: List of ingredients in descending order, additives, allergens, vegetarian/non-vegetarian symbol, nutritional facts (per 100 g), MRP, manufacturing date, expiry / "best before", FSSAI licence number.
- Promotional content: Key claim ("rich in fibre"), serving suggestion, free-gift announcement.
- Use & storage: Storage instructions ("store in a cool, dry place"), customer-care number, recyclable / waste-segregation symbol.
2.17 Conclusion — Marketing as a Bridge Between Producer and Consumer
From the opening question — "Where do companies do their business: in the markets or in the society?" — to the closing detail of a green dot on a biscuit packet, this chapter has shown that marketing is far more than selling. It is a social process by which firms identify needs, design value, set price, deliver the product through distribution channels, and communicate it through promotion — all while remaining accountable to society.
Modern Indian companies — Tata, Amul, Hindustan Unilever, P&G, Maggi, Lay's — succeed because they orchestrate the Four Ps as a coherent marketing mix. They choose target markets carefully, identify and satisfy needs better than competitors, build trust through brands, protect and promote through packaging and labelling, price for value, distribute widely, and communicate continuously. This is the heart of marketing — and the foundation on which every business management student must build.
2.18 NCERT Exercises — Full Model Answers
A. Very Short Answer Type
(ii) Customer Loyalty & Repeat Sales: A trusted brand secures customer loyalty, which enables repeat purchase and easier introduction of new line extensions under the same brand umbrella (e.g., Amul extending from milk to butter, cheese and chocolates).
B. Short Answer Type
Product Concept assumes customers favour products that are superior in quality, performance and features. The focus shifts from quantity to quality. Profit comes through continuous product improvement.
Key differences: (i) Focus — quantity vs quality. (ii) Means — availability & affordability vs product improvement. (iii) Era — production concept dominated early industrial revolution; product concept emerged when supply caught up with demand. (iv) End — profit through volume vs profit through product quality.
Differences from consumer products: (a) End user — industrial buyers are firms; consumer buyers are individuals/households. (b) Number of buyers — industrial buyers are few; consumer buyers are many. (c) Order size — industrial orders are large; consumer orders are small. (d) Channel — industrial uses direct or short channels; consumer uses long channels. (e) Promotion — industrial uses personal selling; consumer uses advertising. (f) Buying process — industrial is technical and rational; consumer is often emotional.
Shopping products are those where buyers spend considerable time comparing quality, price, style and suitability across stores before purchase — clothes, shoes, jewellery, furniture, radio, television. They have higher unit value, are bought less frequently, command higher margins and need more personal-selling effort.
Three key bases of difference: (i) buying effort, (ii) frequency of purchase, (iii) margin and channel intensity.
Role / merits: (i) Attention value — incentives draw attention; (ii) Useful in new-product launch — induces people to break regular buying habits; (iii) Synergy — supplements personal selling and advertising and lifts overall promotional effectiveness; (iv) Quick demand boost when sales are slack.
Limitations: (a) Reflects crisis — frequent reliance signals weak product or weak management; (b) Spoils image — buyers may feel the product is poor or overpriced. Hence sales promotion must supplement — not replace — the other promotion tools.
Steps under the societal-marketing concept: (a) Adopt LEED-certified building design and rainwater harvesting; (b) Eliminate single-use plastic and partner with local NGOs for waste management; (c) Source 60%+ of food and labour locally to fund the local economy; (d) Run "responsible tourism" briefings for guests; (e) Cap room occupancy on peak days to protect heritage sites; (f) Donate a fixed % of revenue to local schools and women-empowerment groups; (g) Train staff in heritage conservation. The hotel thus serves customers and the long-term well-being of the host society.
Sample design — "Crunchy Coast Cookies, 200 g": Top — brand name "CrunchyCoast" with wave-mark; Front — "Crunchy Coast Coconut Cookies, 200 g, Vegetarian (green dot)"; Strap — "Made with real coconut, no palm oil"; Side — Ingredients (wheat flour, sugar, refined sunflower oil, dessicated coconut, milk solids, salt, raising agents); Nutrition (energy 480 kcal, fat 22 g, protein 6 g, carbs 62 g per 100 g); Back — manufacturing date, best before, MRP, batch number, FSSAI no., manufacturer address, customer care; Bottom — recyclability symbol.
C. Long Answer Type
Five pillars (NCERT): (i) Identification of the target market; (ii) Understanding needs and wants of customers in the target market; (iii) Development of products/services that satisfy those needs; (iv) Satisfying needs better than competitors; (v) Doing all this at a profit.
How it helps effective marketing: (a) Customer-orientation — every marketing decision (product, price, place, promotion) is taken from the customer's point of view, reducing the risk of producing what nobody wants. (b) Coordinated effort — marketing, R&D, production and finance work together for a single goal: customer satisfaction. (c) Profit through satisfaction — selling becomes automatic when needs are satisfied, lowering selling cost and raising loyalty. (d) Long-term relationships — repeat purchases, word-of-mouth and brand loyalty replace one-shot deals. (e) Flexibility — listening to customers helps the firm adapt as needs evolve. Thus, the marketing concept turns marketing from a post-production activity into a strategic, integrated, customer-centric philosophy.
(1) Product: Anything of value offered to the market for sale — goods, services, ideas. Decisions cover product mix, quality, design, packaging, labelling, branding and the extended product (after-sales service, spare parts).
(2) Price: Amount of money paid by the buyer (or received by the seller). Decisions cover price level, margins, pricing policy, pricing strategies, discounts and credit terms. Pricing is the single most important factor affecting revenue and profits.
(3) Place / Physical Distribution: Activities that make the firm's product available to the target customer. Decisions cover channel strategy, channel selection, channel cooperation, inventory, warehousing and transportation.
(4) Promotion: Communication that informs and persuades target customers. Decisions cover the promotion mix — advertising, personal selling, sales promotion and publicity / public relations — and the promotion budget.
The mix succeeds when the four Ps are integrated: a premium-priced luxury car needs premium product features, exclusive distribution and image-building promotion. The skill lies in finding the most effective combination for the firm's chosen target market and objectives.
Yes, branding helps marketing because: (a) it commands customer loyalty and repeat purchase; (b) supports differential pricing, allowing premium positioning; (c) eases new-product launches via line and brand extensions (Amul milk → butter → cheese → ice-cream); (d) reduces the cost of promotion per unit because the brand name itself communicates; (e) provides shelf prominence in self-service stores; (f) helps consumers identify and select quickly. Branding therefore turns a generic commodity into a meaningful market offering — the very purpose of marketing.
(1) Product Cost: Includes producing, distributing and selling cost. Sets the floor price. Three sub-types — fixed costs (rent, manager's salary), variable costs (raw material, labour, power, in direct proportion to activity) and semi-variable costs (a base salary plus commission per unit). All costs must be covered in the long run, plus a profit margin.
(2) Utility & Demand: Sets the upper limit. Buyers pay up to the point where utility from the product equals the price paid. Law of demand — at a lower price more units are bought.
(3) Extent of Competition: Less competition pushes price toward the upper limit; intense competition pushes it toward the lower limit. Competitors' prices, quality and features must be examined before setting one's own price.
(4) Government and Legal Regulations: Government can declare a product 'essential' and cap its price — protecting buyers from monopoly extortion (NCERT example: a drug whose cost is ₹20 but whose seller demands ₹200 is regulated).
(5) Pricing Objectives: Profit maximisation differs in short and long run; firms may also aim at (a) market-share leadership through low prices, (b) survival against competition through discounts and promotions, (c) product-quality leadership through premium pricing.
(6) Marketing Methods Used: Other 4P elements influence price — distribution system, salesperson quality, advertising, sales promotion, packaging, product differentiation, credit terms, customer services. Free home delivery or unique product features give the firm flexibility to charge more.
(1) Order Processing: The first step of any buyer-seller relationship. Goods flow from manufacturer to customer through channel members; orders flow in reverse. A good order-processing system provides accurate and speedy processing — late or wrong-quantity delivery damages goodwill and risks losing business.
(2) Transportation: Means of carrying goods and raw materials from production point to point of sale. Without physical availability the sale cannot be completed. Choice depends on nature of product, distance, urgency and cost — road, rail, air, sea or pipeline.
(3) Warehousing: Storing and assorting products to create time utility, bridging the gap between when a product is produced and when it is consumed. Larger the number of warehouses, lower the time to serve customers but higher the cost. Warehouses for agricultural produce sit near production sites; for bulky items (machinery, automobiles) and perishables (bakery, meat, vegetables) they sit near markets.
(4) Inventory Control: Linked to warehousing. Higher inventory → better service but more capital tied up. The firm must balance carrying cost against customer-service level. Modern techniques like Just-in-Time (JIT) reduce inventory while preserving service.
Together, these four components ensure the right product reaches the right customer at the right place, in the right quantity and at the right time.
(1) Adds to cost — millions spent on TV/print/digital ads are passed to buyers as higher prices. Counter: advertising lifts demand, scaling production and lowering per-unit cost; advertising thus reduces — not raises — the unit-cost burden on consumers.
(2) Undermines social values — advertising promotes materialism, breeds discontent, glamourises new lifestyles. Counter: advertising informs buyers of better products that improve their welfare; the final purchase decision rests with the buyer, not the advertiser; some lifestyle aspiration motivates effort and progress.
(3) Confuses buyers — competing toothpastes claim the same whiteness or freshness, leaving buyers bewildered. Counter: rational buyers can compare information across ads and use price, size and style to decide; this criticism cannot be entirely dismissed but is partly a consumer-education problem.
(4) Encourages sale of inferior products — ads do not distinguish superior from inferior. Counter: 'inferior' and 'superior' are relative — the desired quality depends on the customer's status and preferences; firms making false claims can be prosecuted under consumer-protection laws.
Conclusion: Most criticisms are not entirely true. Advertising increases reach, brings down per-unit cost, and adds to economic growth. It is therefore not a social waste but an essential function of marketing — provided it is honest, regulated and respectful of consumer welfare. I therefore disagree with the statement.
(1) Form — Advertising is impersonal; personal selling is personal.
(2) Message — Advertising sends a standardised message to all customers; personal selling adjusts the sales talk to each customer's background and needs.
(3) Flexibility — Advertising is inflexible; personal selling is highly flexible.
(4) Reach — Advertising reaches the masses; personal selling reaches a limited number of people due to time and cost constraints.
(5) Cost per person — Very low in advertising; quite high in personal selling.
(6) Coverage time — Advertising can cover the market in a short time; personal selling takes a long time.
(7) Media — Advertising uses mass media (TV, radio, newspapers, magazines); personal selling uses sales staff with limited reach.
(8) Feedback — Advertising lacks direct feedback (needs marketing research); personal selling provides direct, immediate feedback.
(9) Stage in buying — Advertising creates and builds interest; personal selling closes the sale at the awareness/decision stage.
(10) Best suited for — Advertising is ideal for ultimate consumers (large numbers); personal selling is ideal for industrial buyers and intermediaries (few in number).
(1) Product Factors: (a) Unit value — high unit-value products (machinery, jewellery) use direct/short channels; low-unit-value FMCG uses long channels. (b) Perishability — perishables (vegetables, dairy) need short, fast channels. (c) Technical complexity — complex products (industrial equipment) need direct selling so technicians can demonstrate. (d) Bulk and weight — bulky products use direct/short channels to cut handling cost.
(2) Market Factors: (a) Number of buyers — many small buyers → long channel; few large buyers → direct. (b) Geographical spread — widely dispersed buyers need intermediaries; concentrated buyers can be served direct. (c) Size of order — small orders → long channel; large orders → direct. (d) Buying habits — frequent small purchases → long channel.
(3) Company Factors: (a) Financial strength — financially strong firms can sell direct; weaker firms rely on intermediaries who finance the channel. (b) Desired control — firms wanting tight control over how their products are sold (Apple, luxury brands) use exclusive direct outlets. (c) Management expertise — companies new to a market lean on experienced intermediaries.
(4) Environmental Factors: (a) Economic conditions — recession favours cheaper, shorter channels. (b) Legal regulations — some products (alcohol, drugs) must use authorised channels. (c) Competitor channels — firms often follow industry conventions to be available where the buyer expects them.
The optimal channel is the one that balances reach, cost and control for the chosen target market.
D. Project Work (NCERT)
(a) Advertisement: A 30-second TV spot showing a busy young mother packing her child's tiffin; voice-over — "Iron, vitamins, fibre — sab kuchh ek roti mein. Aarogya Atta — chhoti roti, badi sehat." End-frame: pack shot, "Now in 1 kg, 5 kg and 10 kg packs." Print version with the same headline runs in The Hindu, Times of India and regional dailies. Digital version runs as 6-second pre-roll on YouTube and as carousel ads on Instagram.
(b) Press Release:
"FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE — Mumbai, [Date] — AarogyaFoods Pvt. Ltd. today announced the launch of Aarogya Atta, India's first multi-grain flour fortified with iron, folic acid and Vitamin B12, in line with FSSAI's '+F' fortification standard. The product blends wheat, jowar, bajra, ragi and oats and is targeted at urban families seeking nutrition without compromising taste. Available across 50,000 retail outlets and online from 1 [Month]. Pricing: ₹95 for 1 kg, ₹460 for 5 kg, ₹890 for 10 kg. Launch supported by a nation-wide TV, print, outdoor and digital campaign. Media contact: [Name, e-mail, phone]."
(c) Publicity / PR Plan: (i) Tie-up with leading nutritionists for guest articles in 'Femina', 'Saras Salil' and YouTube channels; (ii) Sample distribution to mommy-blogger network; (iii) Sponsor a "Fortified-Food Awareness Day" with FSSAI; (iv) Present at a trade-association meet of grocers; (v) CSR partnership with an anaemia-prevention NGO — donate 1 kg per 100 packs sold to government primary schools; (vi) Speeches by the company's nutrition scientist at industry conferences. The combined effect: visibility, credibility and goodwill — at a cost much lower than equivalent advertising spend.
2.19 Chapter Summary
📌 Marketing — Concept & Scope
In the traditional sense, market is the place where buyers and sellers gather; in the modern sense, it is the set of actual and potential buyers of a product or service. Marketing is the performance of business activities that direct the flow of goods and services from producers to consumers — and includes activities before production (need analysis, design) and after sale (relationship management).
📌 Marketing Functions
Twelve functions: gathering & analysing market information; marketing planning; product designing & development; standardisation & grading; packaging & labelling; branding; customer-support services; pricing; promotion; physical distribution; transportation; storage / warehousing.
📌 Marketing-Management Philosophies
Five philosophies in evolutionary order — Production, Product, Selling, Marketing, Societal. The Marketing Concept focuses on customer satisfaction; the Societal Concept extends focus to the long-term well-being of consumers and society.
📌 Marketing Mix — Four Ps
Product — bundle of utilities; classified as consumer (convenience, shopping, speciality; durable, non-durable, services) and industrial (materials & parts, capital items, supplies & services). Price — six factors: cost, utility & demand, competition, government regulation, pricing objectives, marketing methods. Place — four components: order processing, transportation, warehousing, inventory control. Promotion — four tools: advertising, personal selling, sales promotion, publicity / PR.
📌 Branding, Packaging, Labelling
Brand = name + sign + symbol + design; brand name = spoken part; brand mark = visual part; trademark = legally protected. Packaging has three levels (primary, secondary, transportation) and four functions (identification, protection, facilitating use, promotion). Labels serve five functions: describe product; identify product/brand; grade products; help promotion; provide statutory information.
2.20 Key Terms — Vocabulary at a Glance
Pick three FMCG brands from your kitchen shelf (e.g., Tata Salt, Maggi, Amul Butter). For each, list (i) brand name, (ii) brand mark/logo, (iii) trademark (™ or ®) presence, (iv) primary, secondary & transportation packaging, (v) five distinct pieces of label information.
- Sample — Tata Salt: name "Tata Salt"; mark — Tata wordmark + crystals graphic; ® registered; primary — plastic pouch; secondary — none typically; transport — corrugated box of 24 packs; label info — net weight, ingredients (iodised salt), iodine content, MRP, batch + expiry, manufacturer, FSSAI no., recyclable symbol.
- Sample — Maggi: name "Maggi 2-Minute Noodles"; mark — yellow-and-red pack design; ® registered; primary — sealed sachet of noodles + masala packet; secondary — outer pack with tagline; transport — corrugated box; label info — flavour variant, ingredients (wheat flour, palm oil, edible salt, tastemaker), allergens, MRP, expiry.
- Discussion: Note how each label has both statutory elements (FSSAI, MRP, expiry) and promotional elements (taglines, claims, sales-promotion banners).
📝 Competency-Based Questions — Branding, Packaging & Labelling
Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.
Frequently Asked Questions — Branding, Packaging & Labelling
What is branding in Class 12 Business Studies?
Branding is the process of giving a name, sign, symbol or design (or a combination of these) to a product so that it can be identified and distinguished from competitors. NCERT defines four related terms — brand (the umbrella concept), brand name (the verbal part that can be spoken, e.g., Maggi), brand mark (the visual symbol, e.g., the bitten apple of Apple) and trademark (a brand or part of a brand legally registered for exclusive use). Branding helps marketers in product identification, differentiation, demand creation and customer loyalty.
What are the qualities of a good brand name?
A good brand name has the following qualities according to NCERT: it should be short, easy to pronounce, spell and remember; it should suggest the product's benefits and qualities; it should be distinctive (Liril, Vim); it should be adaptable to packaging and labelling needs and to different languages; it should be sufficiently versatile to accommodate new products added to the line; it should be capable of being registered and protected legally; and it should have staying power — it should not become outdated quickly. A well-chosen brand name builds long-term brand equity.
What are the three levels of packaging?
NCERT identifies three levels of packaging. Primary packaging is the immediate container that holds the product — for example, the toothpaste tube or the foil sleeve of a chocolate bar. Secondary packaging is the additional layer that protects the primary package and aids handling — for example, the cardboard carton around the toothpaste tube. Transportation (or shipping) packaging is the bulk packaging used for storage, identification and transportation — for example, a corrugated box of 144 toothpastes shipped to a wholesaler. Each level has its own function and design considerations.
What are the functions of packaging in marketing?
Packaging performs five major functions according to NCERT: product identification (the unique pack helps consumers spot the brand), product protection (against breakage, leakage, spoilage), facilitating use (a screw cap, a pump dispenser), product promotion (the pack acts as a silent salesman on the shelf) and convenience in handling and storage. NCERT also lists factors that have raised the importance of packaging — self-service retailing, rising consumer affluence, company and brand image, and innovational opportunities such as easy-pour bottles and tetra packs.
What are the functions of labelling?
NCERT lists five functions of labelling. First, it describes the product and specifies its contents — ingredients, manufacturer, expiry date, batch number, MRP. Second, it identifies the product or brand — the Maggi label tells you the noodle inside is Maggi. Third, it helps in grading by indicating the quality grade (Grade A milk, Grade 1 oil). Fourth, it helps in promotion by carrying eye-catching graphics and offers (Free 20% extra). Fifth, it provides information required by law — statutory warnings on cigarettes and food, MRP, net quantity, country of origin and consumer-helpline numbers.
What is the difference between a brand name, brand mark and trademark?
A brand name is the verbal part of a brand that can be spoken — Pepsi, Maggi or Apple. A brand mark is the non-verbal part that can be recognised but not spoken — Pepsi's red-blue-white globe, Apple's bitten-apple icon. A trademark is a brand or part of a brand (the brand name, brand mark or both) that has been given legal protection through registration, granting exclusive right of use to its owner. NCERT therefore distinguishes between the spoken element (brand name), the visual element (brand mark) and the legally protected element (trademark).