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Member You - Steal From The Market Leader
Corporate Governance and its Development zed disk that cost $100.There is no doubt that interest in corporate governance has substantially increased in recent years. Not only have separate states adopted their own corporate codes but also changes in corporate governance are directed at a global level. For developing economies, corporate governance helps to achieve stable economic growth by means of effective management of corporations and, to some extent, governments (Bushman and Smith 2001).Countries which already possess advanced corporate governance standards strive to strengthen adherence to them. It goes without saying that the catalyst of the process was the corporate and financial collapse of Enron. The crash of t Segment To Your Advantage Real segmentation is based on a clear understanding of the precepts (beliefs) of your target audience. You need to segment the market by what your customer believes to be the immutable laws that define who they believe they are. If, from the perspective of your customer, brands exist to make life simpler for them, than it is no stretch to see that your most coveted customer wants to make purchase decisions with the least amount of information needed to make the decision. Anything more than that is not overkill… it is complexity. What they seek is a brand that tells them that people like “them” choose it. When we look at some of the biggest ad spend categories, it always amazes us how much money is spent on those undifferentiating category benefits. Look at beer. What the brands sell is taste, refreshment, and fun. Yet everyone knows that to be a BEER, you had better taste good, be refreshing, The New HP Laptop With Linux-Is It The Right Choice For You Outsmart ThemIn the Microsoft Windows dominated world, it is big news when a company announces that it is going to implement a Linux operating system on one of its computers. It is even more surprising that when that computer is a laptop. But that is exactly what Hewlett-Packard did with its nx5000 HP laptop.While you may have experienced glitches on other laptops running the Linux operating system, this one passes the test with flying colors. But if you just have to have your Windows operating system, HP does allow this as an option for its nx5000.The nx5000 model HP laptop is a medium sized computer weighing in at approximately six pounds. Some of the featur Category benefits are a poor substitute for brand meaning and brand definition. It is one of the major pratfalls in brand development and a trap into which many brands fall victim. Defining your brand by such benign promises is a sure fire bet to promote the market leader — not exactly what you have in mind when your goal is to grab market share and outsmart your competition. Look around at the market today and you can see these “benign brands” wallowing in brand failure and falling back on big budget ad spends to steal share. In banking, a service industry, you hear such benign brand claims as friendly, trustworthy, professional, and convenience (read: Lot’s of ATMs). Hotels promise comfortable beds and more space to “stretch out”. Supermarkets promise fresh food and great prices; mutual funds promise expertise and perspective, logistics providers promise on-time delivery, and pharmaceuticals promise efficacy. A Cunning Plot It is almost a conspiracy. As a market leader, I would want my competitors to squabble over minimum category benefits. After all, if every hotel chain promises comfortable beds and fair prices who is poised to take Marriott by the throat and beat them at their own game? If every tropical destination promises blue water, palm trees, nightlife, and interesting culture — who is poised to take share from the Bahamas? Unless I am mistaken, the Bahamas have blue water, palm trees, nightlife and interesting culture. No wonder “It’s better in the Bahamas” works. They have usurped the category benefits and have successfully positioned themselves against the rest of the pack. Think Differently The reason for the lack of brand identity in our world today is a direct result of brand managers and marketers confusing brand equity with product benefit. As long as you define your brand with efficacy and category descriptors you will never steal market share. You need to think differently. Your brand is how your customer makes sense of the choices that bombard them. At its root benefit (from your customer’s perspective — the outside-in perspective) the value of brand is to make life simpler; to aid your customers in making choices and to better identify the choices that will personally satiate them. From a marketer’s perspective (the inside-out perspective), the value of brand is to create preference and to elevate (increase) margins. I don’t think anyone would argue with these assessments. The latter is a no-brainer; it is why we invest in building brands, but the former deserves a closer look because all brands must find their power in the acceptance of the target audience that they are designed to influence. What does it mean when your customer hopes that brands “make life simpler for them, aid them in making choices and to better identify the choices that will personally satiate them” (read —The Information Age Is A Dangerous Myth)? Simple Wins Everyday Simplification and ease of use is by no means a modern phenomenon but in an increasingly complex world, your customer does not desire complexity. In general, the brand that makes it easier for them will win. This is both simplicity in brand promise and the resulting mandatory simplicity in process. Often we (at Stealing Share) rail against market segmentation. This is because most of the segmentation is based on an inside-out perspective and on misleading research that pretends to understand customer usage and attitudes. These so called studies are excellent when shedding light on product usage but fail miserably when used as segmenting indicators. These studies have given rise to such exciting category offerings as Arch Deluxe burgers and Laser Disks. After all, market segmentation studies clearly indicated that adults wanted a “grown-up” burger from McDonalds and movie buffs wanted an LP sized disk that cost $100. Segment To Your Advantage Real segmentation is based on a clear understanding of the precepts (beliefs) of your target audience. You need to segment the market by what your customer believes to be the immutable laws that define who they believe they are. If, from the perspective of your customer, brands exist to make life simpler for them, than it is no stretch to see that your most coveted customer wants to make purchase decisions with the least amount of information needed to make the decision. Anything more than that is not overkill… it is complexity. What they seek is a brand that tells them that people like “them” choose it. When we look at some of the biggest ad spend categories, it always amazes us how much money is spent on those undifferentiating category benefits. Look at beer. What the brands sell is taste, refreshment, and fun. Yet everyone knows that to be a BEER, you had better taste good, be refreshing, Understanding Accounting Vocabulary otThe following article is an excerpt from the free online course "Using Finance & Accounting in Your Small Business".When you learn something new like accounting concepts and terms, it helps to create links between what you know and what you are trying to learn. In some ways, it is like learning a second language and decoding the new word is part of the learning process. For example, trying to translate the Spanish word necesario you might brainstorm with necessary - and you would be right. How about blanco? Blanco is like blank which is like white. So, blanco is Spanish for the color white.Try to make some logical connections about the accountin It is almost a conspiracy. As a market leader, I would want my competitors to squabble over minimum category benefits. After all, if every hotel chain promises comfortable beds and fair prices who is poised to take Marriott by the throat and beat them at their own game? If every tropical destination promises blue water, palm trees, nightlife, and interesting culture — who is poised to take share from the Bahamas? Unless I am mistaken, the Bahamas have blue water, palm trees, nightlife and interesting culture. No wonder “It’s better in the Bahamas” works. They have usurped the category benefits and have successfully positioned themselves against the rest of the pack. Think Differently The reason for the lack of brand identity in our world today is a direct result of brand managers and marketers confusing brand equity with product benefit. As long as you define your brand with efficacy and category descriptors you will never steal market share. You need to think differently. Your brand is how your customer makes sense of the choices that bombard them. At its root benefit (from your customer’s perspective — the outside-in perspective) the value of brand is to make life simpler; to aid your customers in making choices and to better identify the choices that will personally satiate them. From a marketer’s perspective (the inside-out perspective), the value of brand is to create preference and to elevate (increase) margins. I don’t think anyone would argue with these assessments. The latter is a no-brainer; it is why we invest in building brands, but the former deserves a closer look because all brands must find their power in the acceptance of the target audience that they are designed to influence. What does it mean when your customer hopes that brands “make life simpler for them, aid them in making choices and to better identify the choices that will personally satiate them” (read —The Information Age Is A Dangerous Myth)? Simple Wins Everyday Simplification and ease of use is by no means a modern phenomenon but in an increasingly complex world, your customer does not desire complexity. In general, the brand that makes it easier for them will win. This is both simplicity in brand promise and the resulting mandatory simplicity in process. Often we (at Stealing Share) rail against market segmentation. This is because most of the segmentation is based on an inside-out perspective and on misleading research that pretends to understand customer usage and attitudes. These so called studies are excellent when shedding light on product usage but fail miserably when used as segmenting indicators. These studies have given rise to such exciting category offerings as Arch Deluxe burgers and Laser Disks. After all, market segmentation studies clearly indicated that adults wanted a “grown-up” burger from McDonalds and movie buffs wanted an LP sized disk that cost $100. Segment To Your Advantage Real segmentation is based on a clear understanding of the precepts (beliefs) of your target audience. You need to segment the market by what your customer believes to be the immutable laws that define who they believe they are. If, from the perspective of your customer, brands exist to make life simpler for them, than it is no stretch to see that your most coveted customer wants to make purchase decisions with the least amount of information needed to make the decision. Anything more than that is not overkill… it is complexity. What they seek is a brand that tells them that people like “them” choose it. When we look at some of the biggest ad spend categories, it always amazes us how much money is spent on those undifferentiating category benefits. Look at beer. What the brands sell is taste, refreshment, and fun. Yet everyone knows that to be a BEER, you had better taste good, be refreshing, Free Small Business Accounting Software al market share. You need to think differently.Free small business accounting software primarily focuses on assets. Assets may be described as valuable resources owned by a business, which were acquired at a measurable money cost. As an economic resource, they satisfy three requirements. In the first place, the resource must be valuable. A resource is valuable if it is cash/ convertible into cash; or it can provide future benefits to the operations of the firm. Secondly, the resource must be owned. Mere possession or control of a resource would not constitute an asset; it must be owned in the legal sense of the term. Finally, the resource must be acquired at a measurable money cost. In cases in which an asset Your brand is how your customer makes sense of the choices that bombard them. At its root benefit (from your customer’s perspective — the outside-in perspective) the value of brand is to make life simpler; to aid your customers in making choices and to better identify the choices that will personally satiate them. From a marketer’s perspective (the inside-out perspective), the value of brand is to create preference and to elevate (increase) margins. I don’t think anyone would argue with these assessments. The latter is a no-brainer; it is why we invest in building brands, but the former deserves a closer look because all brands must find their power in the acceptance of the target audience that they are designed to influence. What does it mean when your customer hopes that brands “make life simpler for them, aid them in making choices and to better identify the choices that will personally satiate them” (read —The Information Age Is A Dangerous Myth)? Simple Wins Everyday Simplification and ease of use is by no means a modern phenomenon but in an increasingly complex world, your customer does not desire complexity. In general, the brand that makes it easier for them will win. This is both simplicity in brand promise and the resulting mandatory simplicity in process. Often we (at Stealing Share) rail against market segmentation. This is because most of the segmentation is based on an inside-out perspective and on misleading research that pretends to understand customer usage and attitudes. These so called studies are excellent when shedding light on product usage but fail miserably when used as segmenting indicators. These studies have given rise to such exciting category offerings as Arch Deluxe burgers and Laser Disks. After all, market segmentation studies clearly indicated that adults wanted a “grown-up” burger from McDonalds and movie buffs wanted an LP sized disk that cost $100. Segment To Your Advantage Real segmentation is based on a clear understanding of the precepts (beliefs) of your target audience. You need to segment the market by what your customer believes to be the immutable laws that define who they believe they are. If, from the perspective of your customer, brands exist to make life simpler for them, than it is no stretch to see that your most coveted customer wants to make purchase decisions with the least amount of information needed to make the decision. Anything more than that is not overkill… it is complexity. What they seek is a brand that tells them that people like “them” choose it. When we look at some of the biggest ad spend categories, it always amazes us how much money is spent on those undifferentiating category benefits. Look at beer. What the brands sell is taste, refreshment, and fun. Yet everyone knows that to be a BEER, you had better taste good, be refreshing, Does The FTC Truly Live Up To Their Mission? ation Age Is A Dangerous Myth)?Most of the American citizens believe in the Federal Trade Commission’s original mission, although having seen the truth and reality of the Federal Trade Commission’s ten-year delay on the changes to the franchise rule and the way they conduct themselves, do we really need the franchise rule at all? Do we even need the Federal Trade Commission involved in a business model they clearly do not understand, which is so vital to our Gross Domestic Product?Shouldn’t the Federal Trade Commission franchise division have a business library on franchising the size of any franchisor? Shouldn’t they have to in turn at a franchise company before working in that cushy Simple Wins Everyday Simplification and ease of use is by no means a modern phenomenon but in an increasingly complex world, your customer does not desire complexity. In general, the brand that makes it easier for them will win. This is both simplicity in brand promise and the resulting mandatory simplicity in process. Often we (at Stealing Share) rail against market segmentation. This is because most of the segmentation is based on an inside-out perspective and on misleading research that pretends to understand customer usage and attitudes. These so called studies are excellent when shedding light on product usage but fail miserably when used as segmenting indicators. These studies have given rise to such exciting category offerings as Arch Deluxe burgers and Laser Disks. After all, market segmentation studies clearly indicated that adults wanted a “grown-up” burger from McDonalds and movie buffs wanted an LP sized disk that cost $100. Segment To Your Advantage Real segmentation is based on a clear understanding of the precepts (beliefs) of your target audience. You need to segment the market by what your customer believes to be the immutable laws that define who they believe they are. If, from the perspective of your customer, brands exist to make life simpler for them, than it is no stretch to see that your most coveted customer wants to make purchase decisions with the least amount of information needed to make the decision. Anything more than that is not overkill… it is complexity. What they seek is a brand that tells them that people like “them” choose it. When we look at some of the biggest ad spend categories, it always amazes us how much money is spent on those undifferentiating category benefits. Look at beer. What the brands sell is taste, refreshment, and fun. Yet everyone knows that to be a BEER, you had better taste good, be refreshing, 9 Winter Driving Tips for Truckers zed disk that cost $100.There are no secrets when it comes to winter driving. If there's ice on the road, it's dangerous. The big truck flying past you at 55 mph when everyone else is crawling along at 15 or 20 mph doesn't have the inside track on the winter roadways. You're liable to see him in the median a few miles up the road.If you're driving on ice, you won't know it until you need to stop. It doesn't matter if you're in a sedan, a 4-wheel drive or a big rig: brakes are the great equalizer.Tip #1 Ice on your windshield means ice on the road.The ice doesn't have to be packed up on the roadway to be dangerous- a thin sheet of ice can develop quic Segment To Your Advantage Real segmentation is based on a clear understanding of the precepts (beliefs) of your target audience. You need to segment the market by what your customer believes to be the immutable laws that define who they believe they are. If, from the perspective of your customer, brands exist to make life simpler for them, than it is no stretch to see that your most coveted customer wants to make purchase decisions with the least amount of information needed to make the decision. Anything more than that is not overkill… it is complexity. What they seek is a brand that tells them that people like “them” choose it. When we look at some of the biggest ad spend categories, it always amazes us how much money is spent on those undifferentiating category benefits. Look at beer. What the brands sell is taste, refreshment, and fun. Yet everyone knows that to be a BEER, you had better taste good, be refreshing, lead to good times and be COLD (are you listening Coors?). This market noise makes a real brand like Corona stand out. None of the sophomoric humor or machismo is found in their brand messaging. No, their brand assumes we KNOW all the category benefits… after all, Corona is a BEER. No — Corona tells us that their beer is for kicking back and relaxing. Now that is a real brand.
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