Home :: Books :: Business & Investing  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing

Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
What Makes Winning Brands Different: The Hidden Method Behind the World's Most Successful Brands

What Makes Winning Brands Different: The Hidden Method Behind the World's Most Successful Brands

List Price: $50.00
Your Price: $50.00
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One Of The Best Business Books Of The World
Review: A lot of the books that are being sold as "business bestsellers" do not really fulfill the promises they hold. This one is different! The two authors got to the core of the success business and analyze in a comprehensive and profound manner what lies behind a success story. This gives the reader a good look behind the scenes of how success is constructed, i.e. by analyzing the 'pros & cons' of products and how individual traits (which form the basis for market penetration) for a product or service need to be highlighted in order to make it big time! I found it very entertaining and I think most others who will pick this interesting title up will feel the same. One thing's for sure this book will make you rethink how things are really run to get your message across.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One Of The Best Business Books Of The World
Review: A lot of the books that are being sold as "business bestsellers" do not really fulfill the promises they hold. This one is different! The two authors got to the core of the success business and analyze in a comprehensive and profound manner what lies behind a success story. This gives the reader a good look behind the scenes of how success is constructed, i.e. by analyzing the 'pros & cons' of products and how individual traits (which form the basis for market penetration) for a product or service need to be highlighted in order to make it big time! I found it very entertaining and I think most others who will pick this interesting title up will feel the same. One thing's for sure this book will make you rethink how things are really run to get your message across.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Insights, insights, and insights !
Review: A very lucid & insightful book illuminating how to revive and grow brands in the saturated marketplace.You will learn a systematic way of looking at consumers'inner desire and/or perceputual tendencies that provides a simple and powerful approach to brand-building.A must read for account planners & brand builders.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Getting to the top of your market
Review: In business, there is rarely a place for silver medals. You're either at the top or you're moving backwards quickly. Andreas Buchholz and Wolfram Wordemann understand this and show how products get to the top quickly and stay there using laws and principles so clear, straightforward, and simple that the book cannot be put down until read cover to cover. After each chapter I found myself asking - "Why didn't I think of that?" I have read numerous books on marketing and would trade them all for this one. Insightful, clearly thought out, direct and without equal. Read it and prosper.

Robert T. Murray

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Getting to the top of your market
Review: In business, there is rarely a place for silver medals. You're either at the top or you're moving backwards quickly. Andreas Buchholz and Wolfram Wordemann understand this and show how products get to the top quickly and stay there using laws and principles so clear, straightforward, and simple that the book cannot be put down until read cover to cover. After each chapter I found myself asking - "Why didn't I think of that?" I have read numerous books on marketing and would trade them all for this one. Insightful, clearly thought out, direct and without equal. Read it and prosper.

Robert T. Murray

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: A blatent attempt to sell advertising consultancy
Review: Over the past few months I have received several SPAM emails from the book authors' consulting firm say that this book contains newly discovered principles that can be applied like scientific formulas to solve seemingly "hopeless" brand problems. I bought the book and now I'm writing this review in the hope I save others some time and money. This book contains no scientific principles and no trustworthy findings.

The book's marketing principles were apparently discovered after the authors spent a little more than six years studying 1045 brands who were all in the top fifth percentile of their industry in terms of consistent growth. The research was supposed to identify the characteristics that separate these winning brands from others. Yet the authors did not look at non-winning brands.

Oddly, the book gives almost no information on this major "research" programme and how the winning brands were studied. But it alludes to in-depth development of case studies, and the book is littered with little example case studies. This is rather amazing productivity since simple maths tells us that the authors had little more than two days per brand. Just a few days to uncover the reasons behind each brand's success. Reasons that had apparently previously remained secret for many years, certainly at least to all of these brands many many competitors.

The book presents 26 supposedly universal laws that winning brands are said to adhere to. AIncredibily all of these refer to re-positioning the brand through a change in advertising campaign. Apparently, distribution, pricing and product strategies were not responsible for the growth success of any of the brands the authors' studied. Which reminds me of that old joke about how advertising agencies react to marketing problems (the book's authors work for an advertising agency): "I'm not sure what the problem really is, but the solution is definitely advertising".

None of the so called "principles" are extraordinarily new or radical (as the emails promised). These 26 principles are things like:
The magic principle - capture the 'intriguing implausibility' within your brand that makes your competitors look boring.
The spirit principle - add a spirit to your brand that implies superior quality (the 'right' spirit) and polarizes your competitors (the 'wrong' spirit).

In spite of all the talk of universal laws that are easily applied, these "principles" are not expressed in terms of scientific laws, ie, "if this...then this". Nor are they expressed in terms of normative principles, ie, "in this situation a firm should do x". Just how a manager is supposed to use them is not well described - the hint is obvious, employ the authors, they know how.

It is perhaps not surprising that a book which consists largely of anecdotes and marketing "war stories" would contain many contradictions. Folk-lore often does: "many hands make light work" and yet "too many cooks spoil the broth". In addition to such inconsistencies this book contains faulty logic and out-right errors.

On page one the book begins with a humdinger. It attempts to describe the challenges that modern marketers face including that "low or negative birthrates in the United States, Europe and Japan will reduce the number of consumers by half in the next two generations". That half the population of the developed world is about to disappear should be of great concern, and not just to marketers !

On page two the authors claim that generic brands are experiencing the strongest growth worldwide. Yet the book lists no generic brands amongst its 'winners'.

The authors begin by saying you can apply their discovered principles "to any product...in any industry to increase sales and market share reliably". But soon they back away from stating that this book has all the answers: "there are no guarantees in life and none in marketing" (p.13); and yet on the very next page they state that "the growth codes in this book point to sure-fire strategies". The authors seem to have a unique and flexible interpretation of the word "sure-fire".

This book make bold claims and, not surprisingly, it massively under-delivers. At its worst it is nothing more than a blatant attempt to sell the advertising and consulting services of a particular company. It offers no real insight into what makes some brands more successful than others.

What it does offer is a long list, for a short book, of stories about brands that changed their advertising message in an attempt to 'cut through' and/or reposition the brand. How reliable these stories are is anyone's guess. Especially the claims of achieved results. Some of the stories are entertaining, but there are too many and even these short cases begin to bore, and there are a surprising number of anecdotes about the Prussian army. So readers beware.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: So what else is new?
Review: The authors believe that 50% of advertising is wasted. So what else is new???

John Wanamaker, founder of the famous Wanamaker Dept. store in Philadelphia, made that statement in the early part of the 20th Century. He further stated, "the trouble is, I don't know which 50%."

It has been reported for years that 80% of tv commercials have no recall 24 hours after being seen.

If agencies were compensated on results, most would be out of business. Many agency people are more interested in awards and moving up the ladder than getting results for their clients.

In my opinion, most advertising is wasted for the simple reason the people involved in creating advertising have forgotten the very basics...the message, the message, the message.

They forgot, or never learned that every ad should have the opera AIDA in it. Attention, Interest, Desire, Action. Very elementary and very basic. The message and the call to action targeted to the various niche and segmented demographics, psychographics and geographics. Most are still chasing a mass market...a market that hasn't existed for years. And the 50+ market, who have 50% of disposable income and 77% of financial assets are virtually ignored.

The old theory, get them young and they will be loyal. Loyalty went out with the wooden tennis racquet and wooden drivers.

The statement by the authors that 50% of advertising is wasted is old news...really old news.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Breakthrough in behavioral branding!
Review: The whole marketing and advertising world seems to be obsessed by the concept of "benefits", be it rational or emotional.
The authors of this book choose an entirely different approach: the empirical discipline of behavioral science. They show that you come up with compelling and strikingly different kinds of brand strategies, if you forget the "benefit dogma" for a minute and use the broader spectrum of behavioral triggers to drive the sales of your brand. - Simply the best and most scientific book I have ever read on branding.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Breakthrough in behavioral branding!
Review: The whole marketing and advertising world seems to be obsessed by the concept of "benefits", be it rational or emotional.
The authors of this book choose an entirely different approach: the empirical discipline of behavioral science. They show that you come up with compelling and strikingly different kinds of brand strategies, if you forget the "benefit dogma" for a minute and use the broader spectrum of behavioral triggers to drive the sales of your brand. - Simply the best and most scientific book I have ever read on branding.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The science of marketing
Review: When this book was originally published 2 years ago in Germany I wrote a short review on it. I don't think it is outdated, in fact the English version is even improved, so here are my comments again: 'a provocative analysis of the different types of winning strategies with fascinating examples. Useful for all practitioners in the field, particularly the breaking down of what is often lumped together as image advertising'.


<< 1 2 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates