Nine Principles of Branding Supplemental Information for the Branding Essentials Workshop 2 4 6 9 12 14 16 18 20 23 26 29 32 Branding at a Glance Branding: What Is All This About, Anyway? Branding Principle #1: Keep It Simple Branding Principle #2: Mass-Produced Word of Mouth (PR) Builds Brands Branding Principle #3: Focused Brands are More Powerful Branding Principle #4: Differentiation is Key Branding Principle #5: The First Brand Advantage Branding Principle #6: Avoid
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. Tiffany and CO. A case study presented by: Ben Turkia Emna For MGMT 6000: Marketing management Harvard summer term Synopsis Prince charming on his white horse, Cinderella and her glass shoes, princesses, fairy tales…. Are strong definers of pop culture and perception. Those symbols learned and adopted during a girl’s childhood translate into brands and product as that girl becomes a woman some brands have done a very good job capturing these concepts and translating them in a marketing
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Communalities…………………………………………………………………………………….34 6. Component Score coefficient Matrix…………………………………………….……..35 7. Private Label Strategy………………………………………………………………………….36 8. Segmentation Strategy………………………………………………………………….…….37 9. Product Vs Store Branding……………………………………………………………..……37 10. Key
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| (TCOs C, H) Describe customer perceived value, total customer benefit, and total customer cost. How do the total customer benefit and the total customer cost affect the consumer’s perception? Explain. | | | | | *Customer perceived value is the difference between the prospective customer’s evaluation of all the benefits and all the costs of an offering and the perceived alternatives. *Total customer benefit is the perceived monetary value of the bundle of economic, functional, and psychological
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Brand – Appendix Product branding Brand development that Baskin Robbins adopts has been much similar to that of its competitors, where line extensions of product types are used. Extension of its brands to new forms of flavors to its existing product category give rise to the wide variety of flavors, in line with “Baskin-Robbins proposition which has offered over 1,000 flavors of ice cream, including Sugar Free, Fat Free and Light choices. Their menu also includes frozen yogurt, sorbets, sherbets
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Mountain Man Brewing Company Mountain Man Brewing Company (MMBC) also known as “West Virginia’s Beer”. MMBC developed its brand equity as a symbol of toughness, authenticity, quality and uniqueness this with several other factors made MMBC successful. This legacy was started by Guntar Prangel in 1925 when he reformulated an old family recipe with quality ingredients. Brand Equity is defined as the $$$$ value contained in a specific brand. High alcohol content that appealed to the blue collar market
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Luxury Brand Strategy of Louis Vuitton Shin'ya NAGASAWA* * Graduate School of Commerce, Waseda University Tokyo, Japan, nagasawa@waseda.jp Abstract: By systematically breaking down the strategy of the single Louis Vuitton luxury brand into the four Ps (Product, Price, Place, and Promotion), our aim in this paper is to extract the rules or principles of its brand marketing that differ from that of general consumer goods. In other words, the object is to distill the rules and principles of success
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CASE Procter & Gamble, Inc. Scope As Gwen Hearst looked at the year-end report, she was pleased to see that Scope held a 32 percent share of the Canadian mouthwash market for 1990. She had been concerned about the inroads that Plax, a prebrushing rinse, had made in the market. Since its introduction in 1988, Plax had gained a 10 percent share of the product category and posed a threat to Scope. As brand manager, Hearst planned
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4.1 Product innovation P&G can further develop and build the company to greater heights by product innovation which are creation of more unique products and improved on previous products. Product innovation can be achieved by product differentiation and diversification. Both product differentiation and diversification is a corporate marketing strategy to increase sales volume from new products and new markets. Example of differentiation is P&G has different brands of laundry detergent such as Tide
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Through Successful Co- Branding ABSTRACT Today’s market is suffering from a syndrome of sameness where all the products offered to the customers look very similar. This similarity is not only from the sameness in the physical brand element but also in the symbolic value proposition offered to the market. In this situation marketers are searching for alternative method of branding for creating sustainable competitive advantage. Co-branding as an alternative branding proposition is fast making
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