• Study Resource
  • Explore Categories
    • Arts & Humanities
    • Business
    • Engineering & Technology
    • Foreign Language
    • History
    • Math
    • Science
    • Social Science

    Top subcategories

    • Advanced Math
    • Algebra
    • Basic Math
    • Calculus
    • Geometry
    • Linear Algebra
    • Pre-Algebra
    • Pre-Calculus
    • Statistics And Probability
    • Trigonometry
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Astronomy
    • Astrophysics
    • Biology
    • Chemistry
    • Earth Science
    • Environmental Science
    • Health Science
    • Physics
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Anthropology
    • Law
    • Political Science
    • Psychology
    • Sociology
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Accounting
    • Economics
    • Finance
    • Management
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Aerospace Engineering
    • Bioengineering
    • Chemical Engineering
    • Civil Engineering
    • Computer Science
    • Electrical Engineering
    • Industrial Engineering
    • Mechanical Engineering
    • Web Design
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Architecture
    • Communications
    • English
    • Gender Studies
    • Music
    • Performing Arts
    • Philosophy
    • Religious Studies
    • Writing
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Ancient History
    • European History
    • US History
    • World History
    • other →

    Top subcategories

    • Croatian
    • Czech
    • Finnish
    • Greek
    • Hindi
    • Japanese
    • Korean
    • Persian
    • Swedish
    • Turkish
    • other →
 
Profile Documents Logout
Upload
Chap016
Chap016

... size not specified on the coupon • Salesclerk redemption of coupons for cash • Store managers gathering and redeeming coupons without the accompanying sale • Criminals gather or print coupons and sell them to unethical merchants • Web-source fraud, whereby coupons are produced and distributed online ...
Jennifer Weiderman
Jennifer Weiderman

... Launched K-Swiss apparel globally with advertising, press and trade outreach, and integration into selling process ...
Public Relations, Influencer Marketing, and Corporate Advertising 18
Public Relations, Influencer Marketing, and Corporate Advertising 18

... Influencer Marketing • A series of personalized marketing techniques directed at individuals or groups who have the credibility and capability to drive positive word-of-mouth in a broader and relevant segment of the population. • The idea is to give the influencer something positive to talk about w ...
2013
2013

...  Although branding is important to any business, it’s especially important that a start-up define itself early and consistently in order to create a competitive position in the real world. Why? Because to put it bluntly, no one knows you exist! BrandXten ...
Advertising and Marketing Communications: 266B
Advertising and Marketing Communications: 266B

... Determine the creative strategies • Select measurement method(s) • Set the budget ...
Lecture 2 ppt_15th April16
Lecture 2 ppt_15th April16

...  Market penetration: lower left quadrant, safest of the four options. Focus is on expanding sales of your existing product in your existing market: it is known that the product works in that market and hence lesser surprises.  Product development: the lower right quadrant, is slightly more risky, ...
Product Life Cycle (PLC)
Product Life Cycle (PLC)

... Low, reflecting heavy competition Greater number of channels and more incentives to resellers Messages focus on Aimed at early adopters; Aimed at wider audience; differentiating brand from messages designed to messages focus on its competitors; heavy educate about product type; brand benefits; for u ...
Document
Document

... CPM, CPA, CPC, CTR … Is that measurement ? • Internet gives a lot of tools to measure campaign efficiency • But is that real efficiency ? • The Efficiency formula can be written as follows: – Eff= Brand value x[ROI(CTR,CPC,CPA,CPM)] ...
Specific nature of perception of Consumer Goods` Commercionyms
Specific nature of perception of Consumer Goods` Commercionyms

... consumers. The results of our research show that the majority of the analyzed names are not very imaginative. In this criterion, the values of consumer goods’ commercionyms are not very high (names of cheese take 44%, names of sausages – 40%, names of coffee and chocolate – 30%). And here an observa ...
Brand Consistency Whitepaper_Final.key
Brand Consistency Whitepaper_Final.key

... services, digital video recording, and ad blockers. Advertising costs are rising. The amount of branded content across channels is proliferating, with audiences seeing countless ads per day. As Harvard Business professor Thales S. Teixeira points out, the cost of attention is rising across digital a ...
Mohamed Ismail El-Mahmoudy Doha,QATAR. Mobile: +974
Mohamed Ismail El-Mahmoudy Doha,QATAR. Mobile: +974

... Identifies the required rental area for each brand in client’s outlets. Identifies the targeted market for the brand. Studies the brand, its market position and potential growth. Identifies the brand’s strengths and weaknesses and recommends to the suppliers factors that would strengthen the product ...
Phase I: Preliminary analysis and screening
Phase I: Preliminary analysis and screening

... The same as for home market Adapted products Standardized products New products Define the reasons for each option! ...
most purchase decisions are made at point of sale
most purchase decisions are made at point of sale

... promotions. The essential truth is : Advertising moves the consumer towards the product. It tells them about the benefits, its uses, its price, and where to find it. Sales promotion on the other hand is all those activities that move the product towards the customer. You can’t do one without the oth ...
Public Relations, Influencer Marketing, and Corporate Advertising
Public Relations, Influencer Marketing, and Corporate Advertising

... Publicize a company and its brands Take an offensive rather than defensive posture ...
The Nature of Learning and Memory
The Nature of Learning and Memory

... technique for measuring and developing a product’s position. ...
Custom Marketing Research in Pharmaceuticals - ARMI
Custom Marketing Research in Pharmaceuticals - ARMI

... – Consumers / Patients: Usage and attitude towards a brand/product through representative surveys of consumers/patients; brand awareness, brand knowledge, brand imagery – Doctors: satisfaction and dissatisfaction studies, conference (seminar) surveys ...
Marketing vs. Branding
Marketing vs. Branding

... appropriately priced and are well distributed before investing too much in advertising. In other words, take care of the other three P's before you focus on the promotion (and branding). Some health care organizations have learned the hard (and expensive) way just how valuable Dr. Kotler's advice wa ...
Chapter 2
Chapter 2

... Test Your Knowledge An ad in a publication aimed at veterinarians explains why they should recommend Eukanuba cat food to the owners of the cats they treat. This is an example of: A) Consumer advertising B) A promotional pull strategy C) A harvesting strategy D) A consumer promotion E) A promotiona ...
Developing Marketing Strategies and Plans
Developing Marketing Strategies and Plans

... SAT AT BACK OF THE STORE ...
1. Length of the Product Life Cycle
1. Length of the Product Life Cycle

... * Influence how consumers evaluate products, institutions, retail stores, and advertising ...
Taking a brand online - The Australian Financial Review
Taking a brand online - The Australian Financial Review

... • Brand momentum – to capitalise on the positive experience the brand delivers and turn this into future sales • Sales – to increase market share and future sales. After significant market research, RB decided that an online strategy would best meet the three key business objectives, targeting an ...
marketing fundamentals
marketing fundamentals

... Why marketing is important and where marketing fits in organization ...
PowerPoint Chapter 9
PowerPoint Chapter 9

... not only for their flight schedules and prices but also to build an emotional bond with their customers ...
3.3.1 Product
3.3.1 Product

... this can impact sales and customer loyalty • To be able to appreciate the role of packaging in the success or failure of a product • To understand the stages of the Product Life Cycle and possible extension strategies • To understand how marketing strategies and decisions can differ at each stage of ...
Introduction to Marketing
Introduction to Marketing

... electricity companies whose sales people have used selling tactics with these characteristics. ...
< 1 ... 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 ... 111 >

Brand equity

Brand equity is a phrase used in the marketing industry which describes the value of having a well-known brand name, based on the idea that the owner of a well-known brand name can generate more money from products with that brand name than from products with a less well known name, as consumers believe that a product with a well-known name is better than products with less well-known names.Brand equity refers to the value of a brand. In the research literature, brand equity has been studied from two different perspectives: cognitive psychology and information economics. According to cognitive psychology, brand equity lies in consumer’s awareness of brand features and associations, which drive attribute perceptions. According to information economics, a strong brand name works as a credible signal of product quality for imperfectly informed buyers and generates price premiums as a form of return to branding investments. It has been empirically demonstrated that brand equity plays an important role in the determination of price structure and, in particular, firms are able to charge price premiums that derive from brand equity after controlling for observed product differentiation.Some marketing researchers have concluded that brands are one of the most valuable assets a company has, as brand equity is one of the factors which can increase the financial value of a brand to the brand owner, although not the only one. Elements that can be included in the valuation of brand equity include (but not limited to): changing market share, profit margins, consumer recognition of logos and other visual elements, brand language associations made by consumers, consumers' perceptions of quality and other relevant brand values.Consumers' knowledge about a brand also governs how manufacturers and advertisers market the brand. Brand equity is created through strategic investments in communication channels and market education and appreciates through economic growth in profit margins, market share, prestige value, and critical associations. Generally, these strategic investments appreciate over time to deliver a return on investment. This is directly related to marketing ROI. Brand equity can also appreciate without strategic direction. A Stockholm University study in 2011 documents the case of Jerusalem's city brand. The city organically developed a brand, which experienced tremendous brand equity appreciation over the course of centuries through non-strategic activities. A booming tourism industry in Jerusalem has been the most evident indicator of a strong ROI.While most brand equity research has taken place in consumer markets, the concept of brand equity is also important for understanding competitive dynamics and price structures of business-to-business markets. In industrial markets competition is often based on differences in product performance. It has been suggested however that firms may charge premiums that cannot be solely explained in terms of technological superiority and performance-related advantages. Such price premiums reflect the brand equity of reputable manufacturers.Brand equity is strategically crucial, but famously difficult to quantify. Many experts have developed tools to analyze this asset, but there is no agreed way to measure it. As one of the serial challenges that marketing professionals and academics find with the concept of brand equity, the disconnect between quantitative and qualitative equity values is difficult to reconcile. Quantitative brand equity includes numerical values such as profit margins and market share, but fails to capture qualitative elements such as prestige and associations of interest. Overall, most marketing practitioners take a more qualitative approach to brand equity because of this challenge. In a survey of nearly 200 senior marketing managers, only 26 percent responded that they found the ""brand equity"" metric very useful.
  • studyres.com © 2025
  • DMCA
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Report