Corporations Brand Image


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Everything You Really Need To Know About Branding
Discover the number one resource for branding information on the entire Internet! Learn all about projective techniques, rational vs. emotional benefits, the difference between what consumers SAY and how they BEHAVE in the marketplace, positioning, share of mind, and much much more!  If you're involved in marketing in any way, you'll love this amazing resource!

 

Additional resources

Using Projective Techniques In Qualitative Research - 2 Hour Training CD-ROMs

A 2 Hour Training CD-ROM (Video) For Use In Focus Groups And In-Depth Interviews

For decades, the marketing community has been aware that there are emotional and psychodynamic factors that drive brand selection and loyalty. Even in today's price-sensitive economy, the imagery attached to brands goes far beyond product attributes, functional benefits and price to sell products.   All products and brands develop personas in consumers' minds. All products/brands project varying user images, which differ by audience. Members of one audience may buy a product because it makes them feel affluent. Members of another, which values thrift, buy a brand because it makes them feel like smart shoppers.

Taking this another step, consumers buy products with imagery that is either consistent with their positive view of themselves (“I’m sophisticated and therefore buy this type of wine to complete my image”) or which conveys a plausible aspirational model - something they would like to be and believe they could conceivably achieve (“I can be a real ladies’ man if I drive a sports car.”).  The essential component of Brand Character goes far beyond advertising slogans and packaging.  Click the link above to learn more now!

The Art of Focus Group Back Room Effectiveness

Are You Involved In Focus Groups On Either Side of the Mirror?   Would you like to learn a structured method for making the most of the experience?   The "Art of Focus Group Back Room Effectiveness" is a 3.5 hour training CD for market researchers addressing the often asked but rarely answered question of how to create an effective and enjoyable back room experience for focus groups and individual interviews.  Would You like to help your Marketing Team make the most of Backroom Observation?   After receiving many requests from clients to help observers in the backroom learn how to use what they saw, heard and experienced for optimum results, "The Art of Focus Group Back Room Effectiveness" was created by Sharon Livingston, PhD and the professional staff at Executive Solutions, Inc.

The Travel, Salaries and Time Spent at Typical Focus Group Project is Enormous....
But with a little forethought and planning, you can get MUCH more for your money!  As marketers and researchers all of us have seen plenty of back room teams, ... the good, the bad, and the ugly! Some of them are well focused, organized, and able to effectively enhance the research process.  For these teams the take-away is relevant, cohesive, and actionable marketing insights.

On the other hand, there are many teams who unwittingly and unknowingly contaminate the process and interfere with the effectiveness of the entire process. The problem is, it's rare for focus group observers to be given a formal training process to learn how to best utilize the experience. They often don't know what to listen for, how to recognize genuine insights, how to effectively divide their attention between both the front and the back room,  what to discuss during the debriefing session, how to supervise the moderator to meet their goals, what types of insights can be realized immediately vs. those that require a few weeks of analysis, how to encourage an iterative process . . . Couldn't we all go on and on?   In "The Art of Focus Group Back Room Effectiveness", experienced researchers share their observations and findings from both client and supply side experiences.  Click the link above for more information now!

The Name Works® - A Powerful Technique For Crafting The Perfect Name For Your Product, Service, Or Company

Product names need to be meaningful, memorable and ownable - your entire brand in just a word.

Executive Solutions has a 20-year track record of creating names that work.

The Name Works® is a collaborative technique that draws upon the hidden reservoirs of imagination. It distills the product's core attributes and appeal into a memorable and meaningful brand name.

The Name Works® is a conduit for a continuous stream of ideas. From those ideas have come some of the names you know that we were instrumental in developing:

Nextel TEDDY GRAHAMS (Nabisco) Whiskas (Kal Kan Foods, Inc.) The Platinum Card (American Express) Allegra (Aventis)

Some other popular names you may be familiar with include "Promega" fish oil supplement, "Sun Source" vitamins, "Kudos" granola bars, "Zeltser Seltzer" soft drink, & "Whiskas" for Kal Kan.

We believe we are the only full service marketing research firm with such extensive experience in name development and evaluation. In general, our program has had great success in creating unique images through names that are at once memorable, crisp, targeted, easy to read/pronounce and to the point of the organization's distinctive position in its market.

Our client list includes American Express, Exxon, Nabisco, Planters-LifeSavers, Burger King, General Foods, M&M Mars, Kal Kan, Anne Klein, JCPenny, Tommy Hilfiger, Guess, AT&T, NYNEX, Ford Motor Company, Chevrolet, Eastman Kodak, Sandoz, Ciba-Geigy, Mead Johnson & Merck Agvet, Uniroyal Goodrich, Gore, Anheuser Busch, and dozens of others. Executives frequently turn to us after months or even years of frustrating development efforts. We've worked in almost every category.

 

So You're Thinking About A Marketing Career
This site is the cyberspace partner of The Black Collegian Magazine and the ... work in large corporations and small companies, ad and ... Ford. All companies have a brand image of sorts. For us ...

The Meeting Professional
MPIWeb is the meeting industry's business exchange forum on the Internet. ... terminology such as “brand image” (a mental representation ... flavored than the rest. Corporations have been branding for ...

Lippincott Mercer | Speeches | Bringing Brand Image to Life
sense® > speeches > Bringing Brand Image to Life > Suzanne Hogan Employees and Image: Bringing ... and its members' behavior. As most corporations determine their desired image and educate employees ...

Independent Sector | Mission & Market
A coalition of leading nonprofits, foundations, and corporations strengthening not-for-profit ... is designed to enhance Mattel's Barbie brand image while spreading Girls Inc.'s message of ...

Non_prof
... the most important asset it has. Many corporations actually carry the worth of the brand on ... It takes time and effort to create a brand image, and to make it a bankable asset. But that ...

What is a brand image?
What is a brand image? James Webb Young, a famous creative director in the early days of J ... How many times, for instance, do corporations imagine that the solution to some endemic problem ...

Feature
... COSTS ENHANCED BRAND IMAGE AND REPUTATION INCREASED SALES ... and doing no harm to the biosphere. CORPORATIONS PRACTICING CSR ENJOY ENHANCED BRAND IMAGE AND REPUTATION. Customers like brands and ...

Enslaved to Fashion: Corporations, Consumers, and the Campaign for Worker Rights in the Global Economy
... F A R E 29 Enslaved to Fashion: Corporations, Consumers, and the Campaign for Worker Rights in ... and holding a priceless, world- famous brand image—if even this company cannot manage to sustain ...

The Reunion message - corporations
... global market. To improve sales and brand image, it outsources its language and cultural needs ... s up to you. We will honor those corporations who are willing to get involved and address this ...

ATTAC - CETIM - The Activities of Transnational Corporations (Seminar Briefs)
The Activities of Transnational Corporations (Seminar Briefs) Acts and Conclusions of the ... on consumers and cannot ignore their brand image, which influences their stock exchange prices ...

ILAB - II. Codes of Conduct in the U.S. Apparel Industry
... that define ethical standards for companies. Corporations voluntarily develop such codes to ... and whose sales depend heavily on brand image and consumer goodwill are particularly responsive ...

Nonprofit Partnerships With Corporations: Caution Leads to Benefit
Article about nonprofit enterprise ventures businesses ... change organizations and corporations, creating alliances with ... can increase sales; a more positive brand image as a good corporate ...

 


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