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Building Strong Brands | 
enlarge | Author: David A. Aaker Publisher: Free Press Category: Book
List Price: $30.00 Buy Used: $0.88 You Save: $29.12 (97%)
New (42) Used (69) Collectible (2) from $0.88
Rating: 17 reviews Sales Rank: 67727
Media: Hardcover Pages: 400 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.3 x 1.3
ISBN: 002900151X Dewey Decimal Number: 658.827 EAN: 9780029001516 ASIN: 002900151X
Publication Date: December 12, 1995 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Used Condition - GOOD can be a well cared for Book (including Audio) that is in great condition to a Book that may show some signs of wear. GOOD Books may be marked; have some spine or page creases; exibit signs of aging or an ExLibrary copy. ** Possible marking on cover. 100% Satisfaction guaranteed on all purchases. Delivery is 7-14 days for standard mail. **
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description As industries turn increasingly hostile, it is clear that strong brand-building skills are needed to survive and prosper. In David Aaker's pathbreaking book, Managing Brand Equity, managers discovered the value of a brand as a strategic asset and a company's primary source of competitive advantage. Now, in this compelling new work, Aaker uses real brand-building cases from Saturn, General Electric, Kodak, Healthy Choice, McDonald's, and others to demonstrate how strong brands have been created and managed.A common pitfall of brand strategists is to focus on brand attributes. Aaker shows how to break out of the box by considering emotional and self-expressive benefits and by introducing the brand-as-person, brand-as-organization, and brand-as-symbol perspectives. The twin concepts of brand identity (the brand image that brand strategists aspire to create or maintain) and brand position (that part of the brand identity that is to be actively communicated) play a key role in managing the "out-of-the-box" brand. A second pitfall is to ignore the fact that individual brands are part of a larger system consisting of many intertwined and overlapping brands and subbrands. Aaker shows how to manage the "brand system" to achieve clarity and synergy, to adapt to a changing environment, and to leverage brand assets into new markets and products. Aaker also addresses practical management issues, introducing a set of brand equity measures, termed the brand equity ten, to help those who measure and track brand equity across products and markets. He presents and analyzes brand-nurturing organizational forms that are responsive to the challenges of coordinated brands across markets, products, roles, and contexts. Potentially destructive organizational pressures to change a brand's identity and position are also discussed. As executives in a wide range of industries seek to prevent their products and services from becoming commodities, they are recommitting themselves to brands as a foundation of business strategy. This new work will be essential reading for the battle-ready.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 12 more reviews...
Great June 2, 2008 T. D. Lanier (Akron,OH) This book was very interesting. I got many ideas while reading it. i wish I had read it before starting my businesses.
Brand Management July 3, 2006 Courtney A. Lanute (Fort Myers, FL USA) 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
It was a course textbook, but it was a rather nice read. Not too technical.
A Classic February 24, 2006 Tomas Hrivnak (Roztoky u Prahy, Czech Republic) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
One of the few substabtial texts about brand building. More often than not you'll find little more than rethoric in books about assessing and planning your brand. The line between actual brand management knowledge and shameless PR has become so thin that one has to be thankful for Aaker's orthodoxy. In the post-whatever era it is reassuring to hear that brand is still a relatively graspable albeit complex concept and that marketers still can hope for planning the identities of their brands. You may disagree with Aaker but not before you've read this classic.
Rehashed, Recycled. Nothing new here. November 12, 2004 jojo (Chicago, IL) 19 out of 23 found this review helpful
This book is more of the same rehashed, recycled, repurposed content from the authors. Much of this material is available in any basic marketing text. In fact, this book reads strikingly similar to just about any training manual on the basics of branding. If you've worked at any of the big agencies: McCann, JWT, Y&R, you learn the contents of this book on your first day in about a hour. All the cases cited in this book are stale and extremely weak. The "editorial reviews" listed above are shill quotes from clients who are cited as "cases" in the book. Remember this before you buy: the author, and the firm for whom he works, use this book as nothing more than a lead-generation tool--it's called "thought leadership", a nebulous term used by company to propagate its own way of thinking. Save your money. Don't become a victim of Prophet's propoganda. Buy something with substance like Jean Noel Kapferer.
A good brand classic! September 14, 2003 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This book is a comprehensive and holistic approach to brand , although a but out-dated. For more updated concepts I reccommend 60-Minute Brand Strategist by Idris Mootee. The author presents an expanded view of the meaning and role of brands and gives a new dimension, deeper than the single, limited conceptualization of a brand as a product. The role of the organizational associations, of the culture values and the emotional imput is very well integrated to understand the multidimensional meaning of a brand. Both books will help brand, marketing and/or commercialization managers to best leverage their corporate, range and product brands. Additionally, the insights presented to understand brand and company valuations are very well explained.
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