A product name is the specific name given to a particular item or service, while a brand name is the overall name that represents a company or a range of products. The product name identifies a specific offering, while the brand name encompasses the reputation and values associated with the company as a whole.
Yes, "Cherry Coke" is typically capitalized because it is a specific brand name referring to a product.
Yes, "Blackboard" is a proper noun when referring to the brand name of a specific company or product. If used generically to describe a type of board, then it is a common noun.
The rule for capitalizing nouns are:Capitalize the first letter of the first word in a sentence.Capitalize the name of a person (Nancy), place (Florida), or thing (Macy's).Capitalize the first letter of each word in a title (Sales Manager, The Declaration of Independence, or "Gone With The Wind").
Yes, "Tootsie Roll" is a proper noun because it is a specific brand name of a candy product.
Gumdrops in a plural noun. Gumdrop is a common noun.
The company that sells the product -APEX
An automobile is a product, a Chevrolet is a Brand of automobile. In other words a product is an item's name, while a brand is the name of the company that manufactures the product. Any individual product may have multiple manufacturers or brands.
yes. the brand is the company that invented it. the factory is the place where they make the product
A brand name is the name of a company or organization that represents its overall identity and reputation, while a product name is the specific name given to a particular product or service offered by that company.
The only difference is that the name brand product has been tested and development by a company specializing in that product. After a period of time, the brand name product (with the same ingredients) can be release for other companies making generic products to then make and sell the same product under a different name. In short, no there is essentially no difference.
You're paying for the brand name or not.
The name of the company that manufactures the product. Some generic products, rightly or wrongly, are perceived to be inferior to the Brand name product. The Brand name product is usually made by the company that first made it and either developed a great reputation or had a great reputation. In fact, another company could come along long after the Brand name product was introduced, make a minor dimensional or material change for example, and offer a better version of the same product. Of course they could just as easily produce an inferior product. At that point Brand Image would become a factor.
The name of the company that manufactures the product. Some generic products, rightly or wrongly, are perceived to be inferior to the Brand name product. The Brand name product is usually made by the company that first made it and either developed a great reputation or had a great reputation. In fact, another company could come along long after the Brand name product was introduced, make a minor dimensional or material change for example, and offer a better version of the same product. Of course they could just as easily produce an inferior product. At that point Brand Image would become a factor.
Assuming that Great Value Aluminum Foil is a generic or grocery store brand... there may not be any actual difference between a generic product and a national name-brand product beyond the difference in price. Often the perception that the name-brand product is better is purely subjective, based on the customer's expectations being shaped by advertising. Sometimes the generic product is identical to the name-brand and produced in the same factory. The customer's only true means of determining quality is to purchase and use the generic product and to judge for oneself.
who knows? the difference is that one is a brand (logo,image, perception of the brand etc..) the other a company (wat they do, they name, objectives etc...) peace my friend
no vaseline is brand name of petroleum jelly
Often there is no difference between a brand name hard drive and a generic one. They are often made in the same factories, but have different stickers on them. Sometimes the name brands will include extra software on the drives, but that generally is the only difference.