DC
 Entertainment is the largest and most diverse English language 
publisher of comic books in the world. Founded in1934, the company that 
would one day become DC Entertainment was actually born as National 
Allied Publications. It virtually created the comic book, publishing the
 first comic of all original material. Then, in the spring of 1938, the 
first super hero story appeared in ActionComics #1,
 introducing Superman. Other soon-to-be icons would follow, including 
Batman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern, The Flash and many others. Today, 
DC Entertainment publishes more than 80 titles a month and close to 1000
 issues a year. Since DC brands and trademarks directly stem from 
fictional characters they naturally acquired some of their 
characteristics that are soappealing to the targeted audience of each 
character and manage to display them in a wide range of official 
merchandise positioning itself as part of a specific fictional universe.
 In this context, it seems obvious that Batman qualifies as a 
personality brand.
Over the past decades, a considerable amount of attention has been given in consumer behavio r  research
 to the construct of “brand personality” which is formally defined as 
“the set of human characteristics associated with a brand”. In her 
article “Dimensions of brand personality” (Journal Marketing Research, 
August 1997), Jennifer Lynn Aaker shows that researchers have focused on
 how the 
personality of a brand enables a consumer to express his or her own self
 (Belk, 1988), an ideal self (Malhotra, 1988), or specific dimensions of
 the self (Kleine, Kleine, and Kernan, 1993) through the use of a brand.
 Practitioners view it as a key way to differentiate a brand in a 
product category (Halliday, 1996), as a centraldriver of consumer 
preference and usage (Biel, 1993), and as a common denominator that can 
be used to market a brand across cultures (Plummer, 1985).
 
At
 this point you are most likely wondering what on earth the link between
 the two first paragraphs might be.Well here we go.  Using
 Jennifer L. Aaker’s work about brand personality, one can identify 
Batman as an effective personality brand that relies on excitement 
because it is daring, spirited and it belongs to a whole – fictional – 
universe in consumers’ minds. 
Aaker’s
 analysis provides us with a useful tool to assess Batman’s brand 
identity. Indeed, as a well-managed, personality-driven brand, Batman is
 branded and therefore positioned through a tri-dimensional strategy:
- Communication (to make the brand recognizable and visible), 
- Competitive Advantage (to make the brand unique),
- Relationship (to create emotional bonds between the brand and the consumers).
The
 three aforementioned dimensions are present in all Batman products and 
because they are consistent with the values of the brand Batman (see 
article “An Overview Of Batman’s Values”),
 they make it possible to build equity at different hierarchy levels: 
company brand level, family brand level and individual brand level.
In
 other words, to try and make it simple, Batman as a brand can be 
applied to a wide range of product categories simultaneously and still 
be consistent with its identity and its values. This ability is a 
“personal trait” of Batman Trademark. At the same time, each new movie 
can be marketed as an individual brand which makes it possible to 
customize the brand at the individual level as well as all its 
supporting marketing activities to meet the needs of a specific customer
 group. For instance, The Dark Knight uses a different logo, different 
gadgets and has a different style from the ones featured in previous 
Batman movies.
Batman
 has developed such a strong personality as a brand that consistency 
between brand values, products and marketing activities can no longer be
 a problem. The personal traits of Batman make him a likeable character 
and a likeable brand for a growing audience,thanks to a wise brand 
management through communication (presence of the logo on everything), 
competitive advantage (he is the only super hero who has no other power 
than his human intelligence and physical force, which allows the public 
to identify to him) and relationship (organization of events at 
comicon). Since Batman has such a key positioning via his brand 
identity, he is like no other character and his uniqueness attracts more
 customers who, otherwise, would be interested in another character if 
at all.




For further information about Batman's official merchandise:
http://www.wbshop.com/Batman/bat,default,sc.html
For further reading about Jennifer Lynn Aaker's work on Brand Personality:
http://faculty.bus.olemiss.edu/cnoble/650readings/Aaker%20Brand%20personality.pdf
I definitely need that coffee mug.
I've always considered coffee as some kind of superhero ...