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MARRIED TO THE BRAND书籍详细信息

  • ISBN:9781595620095
  • 作者:暂无作者
  • 出版社:暂无出版社
  • 出版时间:2005-11
  • 页数:135
  • 价格:72.00元
  • 纸张:暂无纸张
  • 装帧:暂无装帧
  • 开本:暂无开本
  • 语言:未知
  • 丛书:暂无丛书
  • TAG:暂无
  • 豆瓣评分:暂无豆瓣评分

内容简介:

Book Description

Although American companies spend a staggering $500 billion on advertising annually, many fail to establish an emotional connection with consumers. Married to the Brand examines why some companies develop this most desirable consumer connection, and why others don't. Using Gallup's 60 years of global consumer data and tons of consumer stories, William McEwen shows that many marketers are great at wooing a "first date" with consumers, but only the best can create a lasting marriage between buyer and brand. The book explores how emotions such as confidence, integrity, pride, and passion can make consumers want to stand by a brand, and shows how skillful brand management can keep a consumer-brand marriage fresh and satisfying. Tools to rate Engagement Potential and Customer Engagement are also provided, allowing marketers to quickly and objectively rate their own brand's performance.

Amazon.com

How does a brand--a company or one of its products--stand out in an ever-louder and more chaotic marketplace? Why do customers develop intense and lasting bonds with some products they consume, but not others? What do winning brands do better than their competitors? Generations of marketers have pondered these questions, and Married to the Brand offers thought-provoking answers.

Based on 60 years of research from the Gallup Organization, the book combines a thoughtful, data-driven approach with a playful metaphor. Author and Gallup researcher William McEwen sees customers' interactions with brands as markedly similar to the in-depth, extended relationships we see in marriages. From his opening pages, McEwen draws parallels between customers' feelings about brands and romantic relationships. For example, he points to the differences between "dating" and "long-term engagement". He explains how both commercial and romantic relationships require trust to start and build, but passion to flourish and sustain. He describes situations in which people might fall in love, then later seek a "divorce".

Like other recent classics about brand marketing, like Scott Bedbury's A New Brand World and Al and Laura Ries' The 22 Immutable Laws of Branding, McEwen's book makes good use of anecdotal personal examples. He uses stories about individual consumers' interactions with the Starbucks (coffee) or Morton's (salt) brands, for example, to illustrate one of his central points: that brands grow not just from products, but from an overall customer experience which may include the original advertising that first drew attention to the brand, personal memories tied to the product, interactions with sales staff, the appearance and location of the physical store in which the product was purchased, and so on. He summarizes by describing a framework of "5 P's" that drive customers' perceptions of brands: product, place, promotion, price, and people.

Taken as a whole, this book's lessons provide a provocative and interesting rethinking of brand management for marketers in a wide variety of industries. As McEwen himself writes, emotions connected to brands "aren't merely warm and fuzzy, nor should they be relegated to the world of greeting card poetry and Hollywood scripts. Emotions are both powerful and profitable, whether a company is marketing hamburgers or microprocessors." McEwen challenges his readers to build their brands patiently, over time. He attacks the conventional wisdom behind most companies' customer relationship management (CRM) or loyalty-marketing programs. Perhaps most importantly, he is realistic in stating from the book's outset that even the best brands will engage only a minority of their customers in true "marriage"-like relationships. But for the readers willing to invest the effort, in this book and then in the brand building that follows, the payoff appears worthwhile.

                             --Peter Han

From Booklist

Marketers are always searching for the holy grail of brand loyalty--those elusive attributes that cause consumers to bond to a brand for life--and yet up to 95 percent of new products fail to connect with shoppers. McEwen looks into the psychology of the brand experience from the consumer's viewpoint, where it takes a total package of feel-good emotions to create lasting relationships. Whether it's Starbucks, Nike, Wal-Mart, or Kraft, the products themselves may have very little on the competition; but it's the intangibles such as confidence and integrity that count. Using data from 60 years of Gallup Organization research, McEwen establishes a foundation for creating a healthy brand marriage, and shows how companies topple the relationship when they take their base for granted and, in their zeal for growth, try to be all things to all people. This problem is evident today in the identity crises facing companies such as GM, Kmart, and Sears. Although he may not have all the answers, McEwen brings clarity to a subject often filled with cacophonous noise.

                              David Siegfried

Book Dimension :

length: (cm)23                 width:(cm)15

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书籍介绍

Book Description

Although American companies spend a staggering $500 billion on advertising annually, many fail to establish an emotional connection with consumers. Married to the Brand examines why some companies develop this most desirable consumer connection, and why others don't. Using Gallup's 60 years of global consumer data and tons of consumer stories, William McEwen shows that many marketers are great at wooing a "first date" with consumers, but only the best can create a lasting marriage between buyer and brand. The book explores how emotions such as confidence, integrity, pride, and passion can make consumers want to stand by a brand, and shows how skillful brand management can keep a consumer-brand marriage fresh and satisfying. Tools to rate Engagement Potential and Customer Engagement are also provided, allowing marketers to quickly and objectively rate their own brand's performance.

Amazon.com

How does a brand--a company or one of its products--stand out in an ever-louder and more chaotic marketplace? Why do customers develop intense and lasting bonds with some products they consume, but not others? What do winning brands do better than their competitors? Generations of marketers have pondered these questions, and Married to the Brand offers thought-provoking answers.

Based on 60 years of research from the Gallup Organization, the book combines a thoughtful, data-driven approach with a playful metaphor. Author and Gallup researcher William McEwen sees customers' interactions with brands as markedly similar to the in-depth, extended relationships we see in marriages. From his opening pages, McEwen draws parallels between customers' feelings about brands and romantic relationships. For example, he points to the differences between "dating" and "long-term engagement". He explains how both commercial and romantic relationships require trust to start and build, but passion to flourish and sustain. He describes situations in which people might fall in love, then later seek a "divorce".

Like other recent classics about brand marketing, like Scott Bedbury's A New Brand World and Al and Laura Ries' The 22 Immutable Laws of Branding, McEwen's book makes good use of anecdotal personal examples. He uses stories about individual consumers' interactions with the Starbucks (coffee) or Morton's (salt) brands, for example, to illustrate one of his central points: that brands grow not just from products, but from an overall customer experience which may include the original advertising that first drew attention to the brand, personal memories tied to the product, interactions with sales staff, the appearance and location of the physical store in which the product was purchased, and so on. He summarizes by describing a framework of "5 P's" that drive customers' perceptions of brands: product, place, promotion, price, and people.

Taken as a whole, this book's lessons provide a provocative and interesting rethinking of brand management for marketers in a wide variety of industries. As McEwen himself writes, emotions connected to brands "aren't merely warm and fuzzy, nor should they be relegated to the world of greeting card poetry and Hollywood scripts. Emotions are both powerful and profitable, whether a company is marketing hamburgers or microprocessors." McEwen challenges his readers to build their brands patiently, over time. He attacks the conventional wisdom behind most companies' customer relationship management (CRM) or loyalty-marketing programs. Perhaps most importantly, he is realistic in stating from the book's outset that even the best brands will engage only a minority of their customers in true "marriage"-like relationships. But for the readers willing to invest the effort, in this book and then in the brand building that follows, the payoff appears worthwhile.

                             --Peter Han

From Booklist

Marketers are always searching for the holy grail of brand loyalty--those elusive attributes that cause consumers to bond to a brand for life--and yet up to 95 percent of new products fail to connect with shoppers. McEwen looks into the psychology of the brand experience from the consumer's viewpoint, where it takes a total package of feel-good emotions to create lasting relationships. Whether it's Starbucks, Nike, Wal-Mart, or Kraft, the products themselves may have very little on the competition; but it's the intangibles such as confidence and integrity that count. Using data from 60 years of Gallup Organization research, McEwen establishes a foundation for creating a healthy brand marriage, and shows how companies topple the relationship when they take their base for granted and, in their zeal for growth, try to be all things to all people. This problem is evident today in the identity crises facing companies such as GM, Kmart, and Sears. Although he may not have all the answers, McEwen brings clarity to a subject often filled with cacophonous noise.

                              David Siegfried

Book Dimension :

length: (cm)23                 width:(cm)15

书籍真实打分

故事情节:8分

人物塑造:6分

主题深度:5分

文字风格:5分

语言运用:9分

文笔流畅:7分

思想传递:9分

知识深度:3分

知识广度:3分

实用性:4分

章节划分:8分

结构布局:4分

新颖与独特:3分

情感共鸣:9分

引人入胜:3分

现实相关:7分

沉浸感:5分

事实准确性:5分

文化贡献:8分

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下载点评

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  • 值得下载(72+)
  • 盗版少(105+)
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下载评价

网友 芮***枫:有点意思的网站,赞一个真心好好好 哈哈

网友 常***翠:哈哈哈哈哈哈

网友 冯***丽:卡的不行啊

网友 陈***秋:不错,图文清晰,无错版,可以入手。

网友 曾***文:五星好评哦

网友 师***怡:说的好不如用的好,真心很好。越来越完美

网友 瞿***香:非常好就是加载有点儿慢。

网友 融***华:下载速度还可以

网友 晏***媛:够人性化!

网友 曾***玉:直接选择epub/azw3/mobi就可以了,然后导入微信读书,体验百分百!!!

网友 林***艳:很好,能找到很多平常找不到的书。

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