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THIS GROUND-BREAKING BOOK
clearly defines the concept of brand relevance and shows what it takes to channel innovation and manage the competitive arena so that competition is reduced or eliminated.
Throughout the book, branding guru David Aaker explains how brand relevance drives market dynamics using dozens of illustrative case studies involving brands such as Asahi Beer, Prius, Whole Foods Market, Hyundai, Zappos, Wheaties Fuel, Zipcar, Muji, Cafe Steamers, GE, [...], and Apple. He reveals how brand teams have turned away from destructive brand preference competition by making other brands irrelevant.
Adopting Aaker's brand relevance model?in which innovative offerings form categories and subcategories?provides dramatic opportunities for brand teams with insight and the ability to lead the market. As Aaker explains, successful brand relevance competition involves four vital tasks: concept generation, concept evaluation, creating barriers to the competition and, critically, actively defining and managing the new category or subcategory. It also involves being on top of the market, the competition, and the technology so that they get the timing right, a crucial element of a successful brand relevance strategy.
Brand relevance is a threat as well as an opportunity to firms facing dynamic markets. Aaker shows how to avoid having a brand go into decline because people no longer consider it relevant.
Brands that can create and manage new categories or subcategories making competitors irrelevant will prosper while others will be mired in debilitating marketplace battles or will be losing relevance and market position.
THIS GROUND-BREAKING BOOK
clearly defines the concept of brand relevance and shows what it takes to channel innovation and manage the competitive arena so that competition is reduced or eliminated.
Throughout the book, branding guru David Aaker explains how brand relevance drives market dynamics using dozens of illustrative case studies involving brands such as Asahi Beer, Prius, Whole Foods Market, Hyundai, Zappos, Wheaties Fuel, Zipcar, Muji, Cafe Steamers, GE, [...], and Apple. He reveals how brand teams have turned away from destructive brand preference competition by making other brands irrelevant.
Adopting Aaker's brand relevance model?in which innovative offerings form categories and subcategories?provides dramatic opportunities for brand teams with insight and the ability to lead the market. As Aaker explains, successful brand relevance competition involves four vital tasks: concept generation, concept evaluation, creating barriers to the competition and, critically, actively defining and managing the new category or subcategory. It also involves being on top of the market, the competition, and the technology so that they get the timing right, a crucial element of a successful brand relevance strategy.
Brand relevance is a threat as well as an opportunity to firms facing dynamic markets. Aaker shows how to avoid having a brand go into decline because people no longer consider it relevant.
Brands that can create and manage new categories or subcategories making competitors irrelevant will prosper while others will be mired in debilitating marketplace battles or will be losing relevance and market position.
DAVID A. AAKER is vice chairman of Prophet Brand Strategy, an executive advisor to Dentsu Inc., and Professor Emeritus of Marketing Strategy at the Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley.
Preface xiii
1. Winning the Brand Relevance Battle 1
Cases: The Japanese Beer Industry and the U.S. Computer Industry 1
Gaining Brand Preference 9
The Brand Relevance Model 13
Creating New Categories or Subcategories 17
Levels of Relevance 25
The New Brand Challenge 26
The First-Mover Advantage 30
The Payoff 34
Creating New Categories or Subcategories-Four Challenges 39
The Brand Relevance Model Versus Others 41
2. Understanding Brand Relevance: Categorizing, Framing, Consideration, and Measurement 47
Categorization 48
It's All About Framing 53
Consideration Set as a Screening Step 62
Measuring Relevance 64
3. Changing the Retail Landscape 69
Cases:
Muji 71
IKEA 73
Zara 74
H&M 76
Best Buy 77
Whole Foods Market 81
The Subway Story 86
Zappos 88
4. Market Dynamics in the Automobile Industry 97
Cases:
Toyota's Prius Hybrid 98
The Saturn Story 106
The Chrysler Minivan 110
Tata's Nano 115
Yugo 118
Enterprise Rent-A-Car 119
Zipcar 122
5. The Food Industry Adapts 127
Cases:
Fighting the Fat Battle 129
Nabisco Cookies 134
Dreyer's Slow Churned Ice Cream 136
P&G's Olestra 139
From Fat to Health 141
General Mills and the Health Trends 142
Healthy Choice 148
6. Finding New Concepts 157
Case: Apple 157
Concept Generation 165
Sourcing Concepts 169
Prioritizing the Analysis 192
7. Evaluation 197
Case: Segway's Human Transporter 197
Evaluation: Picking the Winners 200
Is There a Market-Is the Opportunity Real? 202
Can We Compete and Win? 215
Does the Offering Have Legs? 220
Beyond Go or No-Go-A Portfolio of Concepts 223
8. Defining and Managing the Category or Subcategory 227
Case: [...] 227
Defining a New Category or Subcategory 234
Functional Benefits Delivered by the Offering 239
Customer-Brand Relationship-Beyond the Offering 254
Categories and Subcategories: Complex and Dynamic 260
Managing the Category or Subcategory 261
9. Creating Barriers: Sustaining the Differentiation 269
Case: Yamaha Disklavier 269
Creating Barriers to Competition 275
Investment Barriers 276
Owning a Compelling Benefit or Benefits 283
Relationship with Customers 290
Link the Brand to the Category or Subcategory 294
10. Gaining and Maintaining Relevance in the Face of Market Dynamics 297
Case: Walmart 298
Avoiding the Loss of Relevance 301
Product Category or Subcategory Relevance 302
Category or Subcategory Relevance Strategies 304
Energy Relevance 311
Gaining Relevance-The Hyundai Case 320
11. The Innovative Organization 327
Case: GE Story 327
The Innovative Organization 332
Selective Opportunism 334
Dynamic Strategic Commitment 339
Organization-Wide Resource Allocation 344
Epilogue: The Yin and Yang of the Relevance Battle 355
Notes 359
Index 371
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2011 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Management |
Genre: | Wirtschaft |
Rubrik: | Recht & Wirtschaft |
Medium: | Buch |
Inhalt: | Preface1. Winning the Brand Relevance Battle.Cases: The Japanese Beer Industry and The U.S. Computer Industry.Gaining Brand Preference.The Brand Relevance Model.Creating New Categories or Subcategories.Levels of Relevance.The New Brand Challenge.The Firs |
ISBN-13: | 9780470613580 |
ISBN-10: | 0470613580 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Einband: | Gebunden |
Autor: | Aaker, David A |
Hersteller: |
Wiley
John Wiley & Sons |
Maße: | 235 x 157 x 26 mm |
Von/Mit: | David A Aaker |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 25.01.2011 |
Gewicht: | 0,744 kg |
DAVID A. AAKER is vice chairman of Prophet Brand Strategy, an executive advisor to Dentsu Inc., and Professor Emeritus of Marketing Strategy at the Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley.
Preface xiii
1. Winning the Brand Relevance Battle 1
Cases: The Japanese Beer Industry and the U.S. Computer Industry 1
Gaining Brand Preference 9
The Brand Relevance Model 13
Creating New Categories or Subcategories 17
Levels of Relevance 25
The New Brand Challenge 26
The First-Mover Advantage 30
The Payoff 34
Creating New Categories or Subcategories-Four Challenges 39
The Brand Relevance Model Versus Others 41
2. Understanding Brand Relevance: Categorizing, Framing, Consideration, and Measurement 47
Categorization 48
It's All About Framing 53
Consideration Set as a Screening Step 62
Measuring Relevance 64
3. Changing the Retail Landscape 69
Cases:
Muji 71
IKEA 73
Zara 74
H&M 76
Best Buy 77
Whole Foods Market 81
The Subway Story 86
Zappos 88
4. Market Dynamics in the Automobile Industry 97
Cases:
Toyota's Prius Hybrid 98
The Saturn Story 106
The Chrysler Minivan 110
Tata's Nano 115
Yugo 118
Enterprise Rent-A-Car 119
Zipcar 122
5. The Food Industry Adapts 127
Cases:
Fighting the Fat Battle 129
Nabisco Cookies 134
Dreyer's Slow Churned Ice Cream 136
P&G's Olestra 139
From Fat to Health 141
General Mills and the Health Trends 142
Healthy Choice 148
6. Finding New Concepts 157
Case: Apple 157
Concept Generation 165
Sourcing Concepts 169
Prioritizing the Analysis 192
7. Evaluation 197
Case: Segway's Human Transporter 197
Evaluation: Picking the Winners 200
Is There a Market-Is the Opportunity Real? 202
Can We Compete and Win? 215
Does the Offering Have Legs? 220
Beyond Go or No-Go-A Portfolio of Concepts 223
8. Defining and Managing the Category or Subcategory 227
Case: [...] 227
Defining a New Category or Subcategory 234
Functional Benefits Delivered by the Offering 239
Customer-Brand Relationship-Beyond the Offering 254
Categories and Subcategories: Complex and Dynamic 260
Managing the Category or Subcategory 261
9. Creating Barriers: Sustaining the Differentiation 269
Case: Yamaha Disklavier 269
Creating Barriers to Competition 275
Investment Barriers 276
Owning a Compelling Benefit or Benefits 283
Relationship with Customers 290
Link the Brand to the Category or Subcategory 294
10. Gaining and Maintaining Relevance in the Face of Market Dynamics 297
Case: Walmart 298
Avoiding the Loss of Relevance 301
Product Category or Subcategory Relevance 302
Category or Subcategory Relevance Strategies 304
Energy Relevance 311
Gaining Relevance-The Hyundai Case 320
11. The Innovative Organization 327
Case: GE Story 327
The Innovative Organization 332
Selective Opportunism 334
Dynamic Strategic Commitment 339
Organization-Wide Resource Allocation 344
Epilogue: The Yin and Yang of the Relevance Battle 355
Notes 359
Index 371
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2011 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Management |
Genre: | Wirtschaft |
Rubrik: | Recht & Wirtschaft |
Medium: | Buch |
Inhalt: | Preface1. Winning the Brand Relevance Battle.Cases: The Japanese Beer Industry and The U.S. Computer Industry.Gaining Brand Preference.The Brand Relevance Model.Creating New Categories or Subcategories.Levels of Relevance.The New Brand Challenge.The Firs |
ISBN-13: | 9780470613580 |
ISBN-10: | 0470613580 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Einband: | Gebunden |
Autor: | Aaker, David A |
Hersteller: |
Wiley
John Wiley & Sons |
Maße: | 235 x 157 x 26 mm |
Von/Mit: | David A Aaker |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 25.01.2011 |
Gewicht: | 0,744 kg |