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January 26, 2008

Three Questions You Need to Ask About Your Brand - by Keller, Sternthal, and Tybout

Have we established a frame of reference?

 
  • The frame of reference signals to the customers they goal they can achieve through using the brand
  • The frame of reference may change as the product goes through its lifestyle, and as new competitors enter the market
  • Example: Fed Ex as an overnight delivery service, then as a speed and dependable overnight service, now more focused on tracking capabilities (to compete with email and faxes that are often lost)
 

Are we leveraging our points of parity?

 
  • Think through the points of parity your brand needs to have with competitors if it is to be accepted
  • New brands – normally points of parity are thought of new brands
  • Brand extensions – can be dangerous, is your point of differentiation go against the minimum requirements for the consumer to recognize you as a legitimate brand in this business
  • Established brands – over time points of differentiation becomes points of parity
 

Are the points of difference compelling?

 
  • Three types of difference:
    1. Brand performance – how it meets the consumers functional needs based on intrinsic properties of the brand, does the product do what it says?
    2. Brand imagery – when choices are based on experience, who uses the brand and under what circumstances?
    3. Consumer insight associations – when imagery and performance is less attractive, show you know the customer

Don’t:

  • Build awareness before position
  • Talk about what customers don’t care about
  • Invest in differences that are easily copied
  • Focus too much on the competition
  • Reposition unless absolutely needed
 

Must make sure position is internally consistent at any point in time.

 

“Ladder up” – first round describes concrete attributes, second round how those attributes change the users lifestyle, third round how better lifestyles lead to happiness

 

“The big idea” – identify the main idea and over time show a variety of attributes that imply the benefit

January 14, 2008

Chapter 2: Learning about Markets, Using Market Knowledge - George Day

Superior ability to learn about markets has become vital

 

3 Trends explain why

  • Changes in complexity of markets – shorter life cycles, cannot react
  • Exponential growth in amount of market data – realtionship databases
  • Need for share organizational assumptions for strategy development

Core Compentency Laws

    1. It is unattainable by money alone
    2. It takes time to cultivate
    3. It is difficult to imitate
    4. It is capable of multple uses
    5. It is enhanced by repeated use
 

Market Driven Learning Process

 

Must strive to understand what is causing the changes

 

The Learning Organization

  • Is serious about trial-and-error experimentation
  • Needs a “inquiry center” an entity and attitude about how to reconcile the voice of the market
  • Uses informed imitation of competitors by understand why their competitor succeeded and improving upon it
 

One attribute of a company is its customer focus versus competitor focus

 

Fear-of-failure syndrom – subverts trial-and-error experimentation

 

Security blanket reseach studies – studies done after the decision is made

 

Beaware of incomplete mental models and market amnesia

   

 

How to organizationally learn about markets

·        Bring mental models into the open

·        Use information technology to enhance learning

·        Activate sensors at the point of customer contact

·        Facillitate knowledge transfer

·        Value continuity

 

 

July 29, 2007

Contemporary Advertising Chapters 5-9 by William Arens

Part 2: Crafting Marketing and Advertising Strategies

Central route to persuasion - invloves higher involvement with the product or message, focuses on product related information

Peripheral route to persuasion - lower involvement, fun ad, remember the brand ads

Habits - Ads break them, aquire them, or reinforce them

Abraham Maslow - Hierarchy of needs

  • Physiological -example: food
  • Safety - example: breaks on a car
  • Social - example: present for a friend
  • Esteem -example: luxury car
  • Self-actualization -examvple: golf lessons

Rossiter and Percy's Eight Fundamental Purchase and Usage Motives

Negative or informational motives:

  • Problem Removal
  • Problem Avoidance
  • Incomplete Satisfaction
  • Mixed Approach - avoidance
  • Normal Depletion

Positive or transformational motives:

  • Sensory gratification
  • Intellectual Stimulation or mastery
  • Social Approval

Theory of cognative dissonance - holds that people strive justify their behavior by reducing the dissonance between their cognations and reality, - many people read ads about products they've already purchased to satisfy the belief that the purchase was "good"

Marketing segmentation - demographics or psychographics

4 P's of Marketing - Product, Price, Place, Promotion

3 Rs of Marketing - Recruiting new customers, Retaining current, and regaining past customers

Fund Allocation - percentage of sales method or share of market method

Position Strategy - own a word in people's mind that associates with the product example: Levi's owns jeans

Top down marketing - Do a situation analysis, define objectives, create strategy to reach those objectives, determine the marketing tatics

Bottom up Marketing - Choose one tatic, then develop a strategy to support that tatic

5 M's of Media Strategy - Markets, money, media, mechanics, and methodology

Methods for Scheduling media

  • Continuous
  • flighting - periods of no advertising
  • pulsing - low level all year with higher level at specific time
  • Bursting in prime time
  • Roadblock - buying same time on all 3 networks
  • Blinking - flooded for short burst

   

 

Contemporary Advertising Chapters 1-4 by William Arens

Part 1 : Advertising Perspectives

Within the text of the advertisement

  • Persona - who or what is talking to the customer
  • Literary form
  • Implied Customers - what does the advertising say about the implied customers

Message Dimensions Literary forms:

  • autobiographical
  • narrative
  • drama 

Puffery - exaggerated commendation or hype, legal as defined in US, foreign governments have different rules

Ivan Preston's Six Levels of Puffery

  • Best (strongest claim) - "it is the best"
  • Best possible - "nothing does the job better..."
  • Better - "just works better than the rest"
  • Especially good -
  • Good
  • Subjective qualities

Advertising falls under comercialized speech laws in the US.

www.gala-marketlaw.com   - Market Law Site

http://www.caru.org/ - Advertising to Children Website

http://www.ftc.gov/ - Federal Trade Commission - Regulates US Advertising

 

May 24, 2006

Harvard Business Review on Doing Business In China - blog by Karl Janowski

There are eight articles in this book that were published in HBR.

The Great Translation - Phases of Entering China

The Chinese Negotiation - Eight elements of Chinese negotiation

The Hidden Dragons - China's companies that are global powers

Entering China: An Unconventional Approach - EJVs don't always make it

To Reach China's Consumers, Adapt to Guo Qing - the Chinese market

Trouble in Paradise - Case study of EJV problems

The Forgotten Strategy - Four forms of arbitage

All are listed in the China category of this blog.

May 16, 2006

To Reach China’s Customers, Adapt to Guo Qing – article by Rick Yan - blog by Karl Janowski

This article was published in Harvard Business Review.  Guo Qing – “Chinese characteristics”

The Chinese Consumer

Uses consumption as a pleasure

Depend on reputable brands, Are reluctant to pioneer new brands

Have time to browse, “never make a purchase until you have compared three shops”

Don’t like promotional gimmicks, use official media

Like powerful sounding names

Want details about the product

Believe cheap products are never good

Examples of Guo Qing

½ of China’s premium products go to the only child of the family

Prime shelf space is unnecessary, Chinese consumers will hunt for products they've heard of and distrust many western ways of promoting products

 

To start, choose 3 – 5 key cities to market too, then expand.