Brand valued : how socially valued brands hold the key to a sustainable future and business success

著者

    • Champniss, Guy
    • Rodés Vilà, Fernando

書誌事項

Brand valued : how socially valued brands hold the key to a sustainable future and business success

Guy Champniss and Fernando Rodés Vilà

John Wiley & Sons, 2011

  • : hardback

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

New techniques to refresh and recharge your brands How do you establish and maintain a strong long-term relationship between your brand and your consumers? Successful brand managers know that it is all about trust and keeping the consumers engaged. The success of recent "green" campaigns as a means of connecting with, satisfying, and attracting new consumers is just the tip of the iceberg. As the international playing field continues to be leveled, in order to sustain and expand their success, brand owners must interact with their customers more than ever before, forging new and stronger links, and increasing their stock of social capital. At last, there is a book that addresses the growing significance of social capital in the business world. Brand Valued explores how as the strength, depth, and quality of interactions between a brand and its customers improve, increased opportunities to demonstrate trustworthiness arise. This in turn creates a self-fulfilling cycle, wherein trust begets social capital, which begets more trust-and even shared thinking-not to mention better sales. Brand Valued will receive the full support of Havas, the fifth largest global communication and marketing services group in the world. In easy to understand terms, and using concrete examples, Brand Valued provides: The tools necessary to stimulate dialogue-and new ways of thinking-between a brand and its intended audience Methods for extending brand messaging to wider audiences Ideas on how to make brands the engines of social capital, getting rid of unsustainable practices to foster more sustainable patterns of consumer behaviour Suggestions for the development of a new brand strategy that reduces costs through innovative and lasting solutions to problems Unpublished data on the role of consumer trust in new products based on research carried out by the Havas Group across over 150 brands in nine different markets A wiki component to the book in an accompanying website. Designed to forge stronger channels of dialogue and communication with customers and consumers, the book is a must-read for anyone committed to keeping their brand relevant in the twenty-first century.

目次

Acknowledgements xi List of Figures xii Introduction xvi PART I Setting the Scene - The Tangled Worlds of Brands and Social Capital 1 CHAPTER 1 Congratulations - It's a beautiful baby brand . . . 3 Efficient and rational - adjectives of an era 9 From utilitarian to hedonic - when needs explode 11 CHAPTER 2 Innocent bystanders or calculating protagonists? 18 Consume! Consume! Consume! 20 Which came first - brands or demand? 26 CHAPTER 3 The public gets what the public wants 32 Whatever you do, don't panic . . . 33 The good guys and the bad guys 38 Devotees, Hostages and Critics 39 Concluding remarks 44 PART II The 'Unsustainability' of Sustainability and our Need to Understand the Era of Social Capital Rising 47 CHAPTER 4 Charge! 49 Once upon a time, everything happened 53 The wisdom of crowds 56 Symptoms and causes 66 CHAPTER 5 Water, water everywhere - How brands help us choose 70 Maximisers and satisficers 71 We can't have it all 74 Frames 78 Opportunity costs and trade-offs 80 Why encouraging satisficing would be so much better - for everyone 82 CHAPTER 6 It's been emotional 87 Wanting versus liking 92 Where have we ended up? 94 Concluding remarks 98 PART III The Elixir of Life - Literally. Why We Depend on Social Capital 103 CHAPTER 7 The 'what' of social capital 107 Social capital defined 109 Forms of social capital 112 Strands of social capital 119 CHAPTER 8 Trust - Small word, big impact 124 What, then, is trust? 127 Brands and trust 134 CHAPTER 9 The 'why' of social capital 141 Social capital, brands and society 142 Internal and external audiences 145 Education 147 Neighbourhoods 148 Democracy 149 Health and wellbeing 150 Harmony and social capital 154 Concluding remarks 158 PART IV Towards Social Equity Brands, and How a Social Capital Strategy Gets Us There 161 CHAPTER 10 Stand up Social Equity Brands 167 Social Equity Trait #1: Compelling narratives 169 Social Equity Trait #2: The power of emotion 175 Social Equity Trait #3: From consumer to citizen (who consumes) 178 Social Equity Trait #4: Value-in-use 180 Social Equity Trait #5: Dialogue 183 Social Equity Trait #6: Shared understanding 186 Social Equity Trait #7: Balanced social capital 187 Social Equity Trait #8: From 'accessibility' to 'assessability' 189 Social Equity Trait #9: Intrinsic trumps extrinsic 190 Social Equity Trait #10: It's the experience that counts 192 CHAPTER 11 From the 4Ps to the 5Is - Social Capital Strategy 195 Interconnectedness 201 Inclusiveness 205 Ignition 209 Interest 212 Imagination 215 Inside and out 218 CHAPTER 12 Apples today, with oranges tomorrow - Measuring social capital 222 Measuring the structural component - Dialogue 225 Measuring the cognitive component - Shared thinking 227 Measuring the relational component - Trust 228 The Sustainable Futures Quotient - SFQ 229 Bringing talk, thought and trust together 232 Social capital and brand locus 236 Concluding remarks 243 PART V Broadcast Off, Dialogue On - Invitation to Form Bonding, Bridging and Linking Capital (Apply Online) 253 Ten brands heading towards becoming Social Equity Brands - a primer for conversation 256 Danone 257 Unilever 258 Pepsi 260 Walmart 261 Equity Bank 262 Vodafone 263 Toyota 264 GE 265 IBM 266 Starbucks 268 End Notes 271 Index 282

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