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Added for You - How to Win when you are Outspent
Fashion Tips For Urban Wear Sellers
mix, the “recipe,” for your brand definition and resulting permissions, consists of
both left-brain and right-brain elements. For the left-brain, your brand must
include the logic and reasoning that conveys importance. It must be built upon a
foundation of believable truths. But, oddly enough, truth is most often a right-brain
perception and PERMISSION comes from a belief in a truth. As a result, your brand
recipe must include the ingredients of motivation and esthetics, and they must all
be mixed together into something that “tastes” satisfying and substantial.The urban market is unique in the sense that the customer base buys out of a sense of popular appeal, as opposed to practical considerations.While the business attire market buys based on practical considerations such as corporate dress codes and client interactions, the urban market buys based on other criteria.Customers buying urban clothing will opt for extra large sized clothing, even if their regular size is smaller.To maximize your urban wear sales you need to use these urban fashion tips.Urban Fashion Tip #1Concentrate on large sizes.Large sizes sell well because the style is to wear baggy and extra large looking clothing. While the customer may only need a medium sized shirt, he will often prefer a 2X or larger sized shirt.Urban Fashion Tip #2Bright col If your brand is build upon such a foundation and its permissions are persuasive, Touring for Dollars We Are All Outspent
Most brands face daunting tasks in preparing marketing communications to steal
market share. If you have unlimited budgets and are capable of out-spending the
competitive set, your job is that much easier. For the rest of us, we have to learn
how to win without the largest ad budgets and without dominating share of voice
(SOV).What impression do you give you want your visitors to get when they tour your facilities? Are all visitors treated the same? Is a funder treated the same as a potential client? Does any thought what-so-ever go into planning the outcome of a tour? What do you want your visitor to do when they leave your agency? My husband often recounts the story of the young man who gave the tour of Earlham College. He clearly knew who the decision maker was, Frank’s parents. Everything was pitched to them. Frank and his parent’s were so impressed with this young man, that not only did Frank go to Earlham College, but Frank also followed this young man to Washington University to Medical School. That was a guy who knew how to give a tour!I started to think about this whole subject of tours when I visited a site last year. I know a te There are some rules that Stealing Share has discovered in our quest to be the authority in stealing market share. In marketing, advertising, brand development, and the rest of one’s life, focus and clarity always lead to better results. How do you know when you have such focus? That is the subject of this short article. More Than The Category First, you must make sure that your brand was built, not just for clarity and simplicity (both are vital) but also for persuasion. If your brand symbols and brand equity markers are clear but static, you have some serious and immediate work to do (take our Evaluate You Brand test (www.stealingshare.com/brand_quiz.asp). When we ask companies to tell us what their brand means, more often then not we hear a litany of category descriptors like convenient, effective and value. Even Nordstrom could claim those brand values in the department store category. So could TIDE detergent and Apple Computer. In order to persuade, your brand must have, within its definition, the core “life” beliefs that propel your customer to choose — not just products and services, but life choices as well. They need to see your brand as an important touchstone for people who define themselves as they do. You want them to look at your brand and see it as such a powerful self-descriptor that to choose a competitor would be akin to emotional suicide. What Is Your Brand’s Permission? In addition, brand is the permission that your advertising and marketing of your product or service is built upon. If your brand does not foster that permission, if in its woven fibers your customer does not find an illumination of their own self- description and the language of personal importance, your advertising and marketing is wasting most of its budget. A great adman once told me that the enemy of great advertising is not bad advertising, anyone can spot bad advertising. No, he told me, the enemy of great advertising is good advertising — and he was right! The same is true for brands and the underlying permission that forms their foundation. Customers Have Choices All choices in this world are attempts to self-define, even B2B choices. The brand mix, the “recipe,” for your brand definition and resulting permissions, consists of both left-brain and right-brain elements. For the left-brain, your brand must include the logic and reasoning that conveys importance. It must be built upon a foundation of believable truths. But, oddly enough, truth is most often a right-brain perception and PERMISSION comes from a belief in a truth. As a result, your brand recipe must include the ingredients of motivation and esthetics, and they must all be mixed together into something that “tastes” satisfying and substantial. If your brand is build upon such a foundation and its permissions are persuasive, The Important Function of Remote Security Cameras t is the subject of this short article.Used primarily in the beginning as a traffic-monitoring device, remote security cameras are becoming the weapon of choice in the war against terrorism and crime around the world. A trained technician can sit in a control booth and monitor cameras placed in many locations around the city and using his remote equipment, he can pan and tilt, turning the cameras at will to view an even larger area than would be possible with stationary security cameras.The latest spy programs on TV use these cameras to monitor good guys and bad guys having clandestine meetings in downtown areas. They can pan and follow two people who are walking and talking and when they’ve reached the outermost edges of the camera’s field of vision, they merely switch to the next camera and pan and tilt all over again.While it seems far-fetched a More Than The Category First, you must make sure that your brand was built, not just for clarity and simplicity (both are vital) but also for persuasion. If your brand symbols and brand equity markers are clear but static, you have some serious and immediate work to do (take our Evaluate You Brand test (www.stealingshare.com/brand_quiz.asp). When we ask companies to tell us what their brand means, more often then not we hear a litany of category descriptors like convenient, effective and value. Even Nordstrom could claim those brand values in the department store category. So could TIDE detergent and Apple Computer. In order to persuade, your brand must have, within its definition, the core “life” beliefs that propel your customer to choose — not just products and services, but life choices as well. They need to see your brand as an important touchstone for people who define themselves as they do. You want them to look at your brand and see it as such a powerful self-descriptor that to choose a competitor would be akin to emotional suicide. What Is Your Brand’s Permission? In addition, brand is the permission that your advertising and marketing of your product or service is built upon. If your brand does not foster that permission, if in its woven fibers your customer does not find an illumination of their own self- description and the language of personal importance, your advertising and marketing is wasting most of its budget. A great adman once told me that the enemy of great advertising is not bad advertising, anyone can spot bad advertising. No, he told me, the enemy of great advertising is good advertising — and he was right! The same is true for brands and the underlying permission that forms their foundation. Customers Have Choices All choices in this world are attempts to self-define, even B2B choices. The brand mix, the “recipe,” for your brand definition and resulting permissions, consists of both left-brain and right-brain elements. For the left-brain, your brand must include the logic and reasoning that conveys importance. It must be built upon a foundation of believable truths. But, oddly enough, truth is most often a right-brain perception and PERMISSION comes from a belief in a truth. As a result, your brand recipe must include the ingredients of motivation and esthetics, and they must all be mixed together into something that “tastes” satisfying and substantial. If your brand is build upon such a foundation and its permissions are persuasive, A Tale Of Two Companies IDE detergent and Apple Computer. In order to persuade, your brand must
have, within its definition, the core “life” beliefs that propel your customer to choose
— not just products and services, but life choices as well. They need to see your
brand as an important touchstone for people who define themselves as they do.
You want them to look at your brand and see it as such a powerful self-descriptor
that to choose a competitor would be akin to emotional suicide.Yesterday, Singapore’s exchange market was rife with speculation about a possible merger of the two land transport giants: ComfortDelGro and SMRT. As a result, their share prices skyrocketed between 5.9% and 6.6% at closing.ComfortDelGro is the “world’s second largest public listed land transport company with a fleet of more than 40,000 vehicles”. It is the parent company for Comfort and SBS Transit which are the market leaders in taxi and bus industry in Singapore respectively. SMRT, the market leader for train services, is a multi-modal public transport company offering train, bus and taxi services, as well as expertise in consultancy and project management in railway systems. Both companies have advertising arms.In a newspaper report by The Straits Times (attached below), it was reported that ComfortDelGro What Is Your Brand’s Permission? In addition, brand is the permission that your advertising and marketing of your product or service is built upon. If your brand does not foster that permission, if in its woven fibers your customer does not find an illumination of their own self- description and the language of personal importance, your advertising and marketing is wasting most of its budget. A great adman once told me that the enemy of great advertising is not bad advertising, anyone can spot bad advertising. No, he told me, the enemy of great advertising is good advertising — and he was right! The same is true for brands and the underlying permission that forms their foundation. Customers Have Choices All choices in this world are attempts to self-define, even B2B choices. The brand mix, the “recipe,” for your brand definition and resulting permissions, consists of both left-brain and right-brain elements. For the left-brain, your brand must include the logic and reasoning that conveys importance. It must be built upon a foundation of believable truths. But, oddly enough, truth is most often a right-brain perception and PERMISSION comes from a belief in a truth. As a result, your brand recipe must include the ingredients of motivation and esthetics, and they must all be mixed together into something that “tastes” satisfying and substantial. If your brand is build upon such a foundation and its permissions are persuasive, Emergency Operation s not foster that permission, if in
its woven fibers your customer does not find an illumination of their own self-
description and the language of personal importance, your advertising and
marketing is wasting most of its budget. A great adman once told me that the
enemy of great advertising is not bad advertising, anyone can spot bad advertising.
No, he told me, the enemy of great advertising is good advertising — and he was
right! The same is true for brands and the underlying permission that forms their
foundation.T h e U l t i m a t u mA couple of months ago, Marc (name changed), a manager in his early 40s, called me and said: "I need your help! My superiors told me today that I get another 6-week trial period and if by then I can't show a good performance, I will be fired."He sounded quite panicky and outraged, which is not surprising in such a situation. First, I helped him to calm down so that he would be able to think clearly and rationally.Typically, my clients get coached 2 to 4 times per month. However, as this was a true emergency case, we decided to set up 2 coaching sessions per week for the first 3 weeks and then review the situation again.It turned out that he started this job less than 6 months ago and that in the first 2 to 3 months, everything seemed to develop well. And then all of a sud Customers Have Choices All choices in this world are attempts to self-define, even B2B choices. The brand mix, the “recipe,” for your brand definition and resulting permissions, consists of both left-brain and right-brain elements. For the left-brain, your brand must include the logic and reasoning that conveys importance. It must be built upon a foundation of believable truths. But, oddly enough, truth is most often a right-brain perception and PERMISSION comes from a belief in a truth. As a result, your brand recipe must include the ingredients of motivation and esthetics, and they must all be mixed together into something that “tastes” satisfying and substantial. If your brand is build upon such a foundation and its permissions are persuasive, Why Advertise?
mix, the “recipe,” for your brand definition and resulting permissions, consists of
both left-brain and right-brain elements. For the left-brain, your brand must
include the logic and reasoning that conveys importance. It must be built upon a
foundation of believable truths. But, oddly enough, truth is most often a right-brain
perception and PERMISSION comes from a belief in a truth. As a result, your brand
recipe must include the ingredients of motivation and esthetics, and they must all
be mixed together into something that “tastes” satisfying and substantial.A lot of businesses advertise, but I often wonder if some of them know why they are doing it. Take the time to look around this week, as you do your grocery shopping, run the kids to hockey practice, and whatever else you do. Who is advertising in your area, and how? If you really pay attention, you’ll see some advertising done so badly it may as well not even be there at all. If you had to look to find it, or force yourself to read it, it’s probably ineffective.Here are the top 3 reasons to advertise • Awareness • Differentiation • ImageAwareness is probably the most important reason to advertise. If people don’t know who you are, what you do, or what your services are, then you aren’t going to have very many customers. You have to let people know that you are out there.Differentia If your brand is build upon such a foundation and its permissions are persuasive, then your marketing strategy needs to be altered. The media wisdom of the day always talks in terms of reach and frequency, and these are both important... but they are not science. They are based in part on the experience of ad agencies and most of that experience is founded on mediocre brand definitions and forgettable advertising executions. The goal, if you are being outspent, is to out-reach your competition with less frequency. This means that you need to ignite the right and left-brain responses of more people with fewer impressions. A properly defined brand creates that space and it defines your executions in the same way that your eye color was defined by an allele on chromosome 19. If your brand is differentiated from the competitive set by customer precepts — the core “life” beliefs that propel your customer to choose — then the resulting marketing and advertising, if it is true to the brand, will be by definition — different and better. Choose Your Agency All too often we see brands choose and ad agency because of personality and reputation. They assume that bigger is always better and that you must “get along” to be effective. If you are going to steal market share, one rule to remember is that it is folly to copy the market leader. This includes looking for ad agencies that “specialize” in your category or have experience in your category. If an agency has had previous category experience but no longer has a client in your category, then it is imperative to ask the agency why the previous client fired them. How they answer will tell you a lot about the agency. Were they quick to blame the client? Was there some mix-up? Do not rest asking this question until you are completely satisfied with the answer. It is important the client/agency relationship begin on the right foot. Our clients come to Stealing Share® because they want to win — it is as simple as that. We counsel them to be more dispassionate when choosing an ad agency. We warn them to listen carefully, judge objectively, and be careful not to hear what they want to hear. How much you like an agency may have nothing to do with their ability to be effective for you. Remember, with the exception of an “Effie”, winning “Ad” awards have nothing to do with building great brands. They are self-serving aggrandizements judged by other ad folks. Today, the advertising world is crammed with delightfully entertaining ads that become the fodder of conversation for everything other than the brand they are intended to propel upward. How To Succeed The moral of
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