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This text aims to clarify for brand managers what they must consider when managing their brands across diverse cultures and markets throughout the world. Each brand has its own particular assets and vulnerabilities and this book provides a framework to be used comparatively across markets to reveal how to extend the brand and realize its true value. Topics include: the brand environment; the brand expression; the brand domain; the brand reputation; the brand affinity; the brand recognition; local brand management; harmonizing a global brand; extending a global brand; and creating a new global brand.
"A triumph...the definitive work on the subject. Should be obligatory reading for academics and practitioners alike." Simon Anholt, Chairman, Earthspeak, and author of Brand New Justice "His analyses are accurate and enlightening, explained in a clear concise fashion without being unduly simplified for advanced marketers." Jack Yan, CEO, Jack Yan and Associates "A wonderful piece of work, extremely comprehensive and should provide an invaluable guide for brand management and development." K.N. Tang Emeritus Chairman ACNielsen Asia-Pacific "His contribution to global brand strategy is a considerable one, marrying as he does an in-depth knowledge of how brands work to a keen awareness of cultu...
Understand how branding can benefit employees, customers and investors, encouraging managers to rethink their fundamental assumptions about brands and marketing.
The search for identity is a continuous challenge in the global world: from personal identity to social, national, European or professional identities, each person experiences nowadays a multi-dimensional self-representation. Placing the topic against an intercultural background, with a focus on communication, this book addresses the complicated relationship between self, identity, and society, from an academic perspective. The authors of the chapters in this book offer a complex landscape of professional and scholar approaches and research, in various parts of the world, including Canada, China, Estonia, France, Greece, Israel, Romania, and the United States of America.
It's not just smaller, lesser-known companies that have launched dud brands. On the contrary, most of the world's global giants have launched new products that have flopped - spectacularly and at great cost. Haig organizes these 100 ""failures"" into ten types which include classic failures (e.g., New Coke), idea failures (e.g., R.J.Reynolds' smokeless cigarettes), extension failures (e.g. Harley Davidson perfume), culture failures (e.g., Kellogs in India), and technology failures (e.g., Pets.com).
Services are differentiated from products, based on certain unique characteristics that they posses like intangibility, perishability, inseparability and heterogeneity. Due to these inherent characteristic features, the strategies for marketing services a
The practice of city branding is being adopted by increasing numbers of city authorities around the world and it is having a direct impact on public and private sector practice. The author captures this emerging phenomenon in a way that blends a solid theoretical and conceptual underpinning together with relevant real life cases.
Considers current pressures to expand legal protection given to reputation and brands in the Asia Pacific region and the associated controversies.
This book illustrates the point where theory meets practice in the design studio environment. This book examines design management concepts and methods in real-world applications. Unlike other books on design management, this book is visually stunning, featuring many image-rich case studies to illustrate the fundamentals of design management in a way that speaks to a design audience. The information is not something that is typically taught in design (or business) school—it’s learned on the job, making this an invaluable reference for designers.
In an increasingly cluttered media landscape, an elite group of brands stands out: newspapers, magazines and broadcasters with longevity, power, and instant brand recognition. Over decades - and often centuries - they have consolidated their positions against fierce competition, the rise and fall of the global economy and the emergence of the Internet. How have they succeeded? What marketing strategies have enabled them to thrive and survive in such a spectacular fashion? Can they maintain their seemingly impregnable status in the new century? Journalist and author Mark Tungate takes us behind the scenes, revealing what it takes to be a great media brand. For the first time, we are given a rare insight into this fascinating world, and its key movers and shakers.