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Hello Kitty : The Remarkable Story of Sanrio and the Billion Dollar Feline Phenomenon

Hello Kitty : The Remarkable Story of Sanrio and the Billion Dollar Feline Phenomenon

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great concept - poorly written.
Review: I am a huge fan of the Sanrio company and everything it creates and I received this book for Christmas. The writing style is typical of a high school student's book report. The same facts are repeated over and over, making half the book seem like filler. The same numbers and figures and statements are constantly repeated. In short, the book could have been about 30 pages long without the filler.

It backtracks a lot also. It feels like every chapter is written by a new writer who was told to research Hello Kitty (like I said, it repeats). I wish it would have had a more linear style, from beginning to end.

The facts are very interesting though, and learning about the creator was also a nice treat.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Strong introduction, Weak follow-up
Review: In one of the only books I've ever found attacking directly at the marketing and history of Sanrio without the usage of the cute Sanrio graphics, Belson and Bremmer give more than enough information about the roots of Sanrio, the lines, some of the reasoning for the purchasing, but miss in several other areas. They do not cover why say, Chococat is more popular than Pochacco, or where the company is going to go after the 78 year old CEO, Shintaro Tsuji, retires. Belson and Bremner sort of shrug their shoulders and don't even give us guess.

I feel as if this book could've benefitted a great deal from a better editor. In later chapters, the text began to repeat what earlier chapters had said in the same words, the footnoting system was very irritating, appearing at the end of every chapter. Not something that I want to see. The text starts to wander off into an abridged history of manga, anime, video games, Jpop, typical Japanese pop-culture stuff. If I wanted that, I could go get one of the many many Japanese pop culture books that exist. Light social commentary is put in the back, citing the web response to it.

That being said, the earlier chapters are an interesting read and it is at least an interesting read. If only it didn't repeat itself so much...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: HELLO KITTY
Review: It's so easy to trivialize the significance of Hello Kitty's simple iconic image. But here the authors have skillfully drafted a book that deconstructs the appeal of this cross-cultural phenomenon and the behind-the-scenes machinations of its hugely successful marketing and merchandising.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: HELLO KITTY
Review: It?s so easy to trivialize the significance of Hello Kitty?s simple iconic image. But here the authors have skillfully drafted a book that deconstructs the appeal of this cross-cultural phenomenon and the behind-the-scenes machinations of its hugely successful marketing and merchandising.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Corporate Culture of Cute
Review: The book is an interesting account of Kitty's evolution into one of the world's most recognized characters alongside Snoopy and Mickey Mouse -- and of Sanrio, the company that made billions on it. The book tells the story of charismatic founder Shintaro Tsuji and the key people who have promoted and protected Hello Kitty since she was born in 1974. The authors use the character and the company to give a kitten's-eye view of how Japanese companies and culture work. Sanrio's lucky breaks, triumphs and mistakes can help investors better understand what makes Japanese companies sprint and stumble, and for Japan investment novices, Sanrio's history is a great primer on the nation's booms, busts and bubbles over the past 30 years. For Japan experts, Hello Kitty's popularity is a useful model for analyzing other Japanese giants involved in exporting fun. Companies that make videogames and promote cute characters -- including Nintendo Co., Konami Corp., Capcom Co. and Bandai Co. -- are among the hottest stocks in Japan. Other such companies will no doubt emerge, and hints on how to spot them can be gleaned from Sanrio's struggle to understand its pre-teen customers, protect its copyright, and send its kitten around the world.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: comprehensive... almost
Review: This book was recommended by a friend who has extensive experience in the consumer goods industry. It was an interesting read, as I'm a fan of Hello Kitty as well as a business school graduate. The authors do a good job of explaining a lot of the background regarding how Sanrio got to where it is today.

One of the things I hoped this book would answer is the question of why Sanrio would distribute its products through a mass retailer like Target. It never even came close to this issue; I'm still curious to know Sanrio's strategy with Target.

I agree with Tristan Beaulieu that the later chapters begin to repeat content from earlier chapters. I'm not sure if this is because it was written by two authors and simply wasn't integrated well enough. Also, some of the earlier chapters refer to vignettes coming later in the book, but it turns out to be a letdown when most of the story has already been revealed by its earlier reference.


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