The document discusses the differences between 20th century and 21st century concepts of branding. 20th century branding focused on advertising and targeting consumers, while 21st century branding emphasizes growing brand value through relationships and trust with all stakeholders. It proposes that 21st century branding will organize systematic knowledge to consistently deliver unique value and build pride and passion among employees through living up to promises. Tables provide examples of how networks, intranets, and e-brands can strengthen relationships and transparency to align organizations.
Free eBook on the importance of creating social capital as part of your personal or business brand-building strategy. Learn what it is, why it is important, and how to create more of it. Based on years as an award-winning technology evangelist and chief marketing officer.
This document summarizes key points from an issue of the Portland Quarterly publication. It discusses how reputation management has changed in the digital age, requiring an integrated approach across communications disciplines. It also provides examples of how companies and organizations can prepare for and handle social media crises through simulation exercises and coordinated response teams. Additionally, it explores how Twitter hashtags can help or hinder campaigns if hijacked by critics, and gives real-world examples of both successful and unsuccessful hashtag campaigns.
The Brand University - How to make a sustainable, successful brandMinter Dial
The world of branding has, over a very condensed period of time, undergone a virtual and very real revolution as far as both the consumer and the employee are concerned. The challenge that companies are now facing is how to adapt effectively and efficiently to several convergent paradigm shifts. This white paper reviews some of the major changes and raises questions about the implications for today’s leaders. This paper’s position is that, more than ever before, companies need to evolve into Learning Organizations and that instituting a company-wide Brand University can offer a compelling way to accompany such a change.
Mit Convergence Ahead: The Integration of Communication and Marketing präsentiert Weber Shandwick eine qualitative Studie, die den Blick für die zunehmende Überschneidung von Kommunikation und Marketing schärft. Convergence Ahead untersucht die Erfahrungen von Führungskräften, die diese traditionellen Silo-Funktionen bereits erfolgreich zusammengeführt haben.
Für die Studie wurden telefonische Tiefeninterviews mit Kommunikations- und Marketingverantwortlichen (CCMOs bzw. CMCOs) geführt, die in ihrem Unternehmen für die erfolgreiche Bündelung dieser beiden Aufgabenbereiche verantwortlich zeichnen. Als treibende Faktoren für die Konvergenz wurden neben der immer komplexer werdenden Medienwelt auch sich rasant entwickelnde soziale und digitale Technologien sowie die zunehmende Überschneidung von Marke und Reputation identifiziert. Die Studie zeigt neben diesen Faktoren auch Chancen und Herausforderungen einer solchen Strukturveränderung.
In Convergence Ahead hat Weber Shandwick anhand der CCMO-Erfahrungen einen Sechs-Stufen-Plan für eine erfolgreiche Fusion von Kommunikation und Marketing entwickelt.
This document discusses how social media can be used effectively for B2B marketing. It begins by explaining why social media matters for B2B, noting that B2B buyers now use social media to research purchases. It then provides guidelines for companies to start using social media, including planning a strategy, researching where customers are online, and setting engagement guidelines. The document also provides examples of how companies can use social media for objectives like product launches, lead generation, and brand building. It emphasizes that B2B marketers must engage in conversations online and provide value to customers through high-quality, consistent content.
Collaboration across business units and with external partners is essential for innovation but difficult to achieve. Leaders must change cultures from "win-lose" to "win-win" by collaborating themselves. Soft skills like listening, trust-building and effective conversations are key to collaboration but often lacking. Training can improve soft skills and measure collaboration's impact, starting with self-awareness and conversation skills. Successful partnerships like Senseo coffee show the benefits of collaboration in creating new innovations.
Gamification offers significant potential benefits for businesses but is often misunderstood and misapplied. When implemented as a methodology that draws on human psychology research around gameplay, gamification can deeply engage users by appealing to basic human instincts and harnessing emotions like motivation, collaboration and problem solving. Successful examples demonstrate gamification's ability to drive behavior change, enhance learning, and establish longer-term customer relationships through psychological engagement. However, businesses must move beyond superficial rewards and implement gamification as a holistic framework to realize its full impact.
Marketers face increasing pressure to drive innovation while delivering proven results and making sense of a large amount of data. While collaboration and creativity are important for innovation, middle management can sometimes stifle new ideas, and senior leaders must champion innovation from the top. Additionally, testing new ideas through trials is important to learn what works and what doesn't. Market research provides useful customer insights but cannot replace actual experimentation with new products or services.
Free eBook on the importance of creating social capital as part of your personal or business brand-building strategy. Learn what it is, why it is important, and how to create more of it. Based on years as an award-winning technology evangelist and chief marketing officer.
This document summarizes key points from an issue of the Portland Quarterly publication. It discusses how reputation management has changed in the digital age, requiring an integrated approach across communications disciplines. It also provides examples of how companies and organizations can prepare for and handle social media crises through simulation exercises and coordinated response teams. Additionally, it explores how Twitter hashtags can help or hinder campaigns if hijacked by critics, and gives real-world examples of both successful and unsuccessful hashtag campaigns.
The Brand University - How to make a sustainable, successful brandMinter Dial
The world of branding has, over a very condensed period of time, undergone a virtual and very real revolution as far as both the consumer and the employee are concerned. The challenge that companies are now facing is how to adapt effectively and efficiently to several convergent paradigm shifts. This white paper reviews some of the major changes and raises questions about the implications for today’s leaders. This paper’s position is that, more than ever before, companies need to evolve into Learning Organizations and that instituting a company-wide Brand University can offer a compelling way to accompany such a change.
Mit Convergence Ahead: The Integration of Communication and Marketing präsentiert Weber Shandwick eine qualitative Studie, die den Blick für die zunehmende Überschneidung von Kommunikation und Marketing schärft. Convergence Ahead untersucht die Erfahrungen von Führungskräften, die diese traditionellen Silo-Funktionen bereits erfolgreich zusammengeführt haben.
Für die Studie wurden telefonische Tiefeninterviews mit Kommunikations- und Marketingverantwortlichen (CCMOs bzw. CMCOs) geführt, die in ihrem Unternehmen für die erfolgreiche Bündelung dieser beiden Aufgabenbereiche verantwortlich zeichnen. Als treibende Faktoren für die Konvergenz wurden neben der immer komplexer werdenden Medienwelt auch sich rasant entwickelnde soziale und digitale Technologien sowie die zunehmende Überschneidung von Marke und Reputation identifiziert. Die Studie zeigt neben diesen Faktoren auch Chancen und Herausforderungen einer solchen Strukturveränderung.
In Convergence Ahead hat Weber Shandwick anhand der CCMO-Erfahrungen einen Sechs-Stufen-Plan für eine erfolgreiche Fusion von Kommunikation und Marketing entwickelt.
This document discusses how social media can be used effectively for B2B marketing. It begins by explaining why social media matters for B2B, noting that B2B buyers now use social media to research purchases. It then provides guidelines for companies to start using social media, including planning a strategy, researching where customers are online, and setting engagement guidelines. The document also provides examples of how companies can use social media for objectives like product launches, lead generation, and brand building. It emphasizes that B2B marketers must engage in conversations online and provide value to customers through high-quality, consistent content.
Collaboration across business units and with external partners is essential for innovation but difficult to achieve. Leaders must change cultures from "win-lose" to "win-win" by collaborating themselves. Soft skills like listening, trust-building and effective conversations are key to collaboration but often lacking. Training can improve soft skills and measure collaboration's impact, starting with self-awareness and conversation skills. Successful partnerships like Senseo coffee show the benefits of collaboration in creating new innovations.
Gamification offers significant potential benefits for businesses but is often misunderstood and misapplied. When implemented as a methodology that draws on human psychology research around gameplay, gamification can deeply engage users by appealing to basic human instincts and harnessing emotions like motivation, collaboration and problem solving. Successful examples demonstrate gamification's ability to drive behavior change, enhance learning, and establish longer-term customer relationships through psychological engagement. However, businesses must move beyond superficial rewards and implement gamification as a holistic framework to realize its full impact.
Marketers face increasing pressure to drive innovation while delivering proven results and making sense of a large amount of data. While collaboration and creativity are important for innovation, middle management can sometimes stifle new ideas, and senior leaders must champion innovation from the top. Additionally, testing new ideas through trials is important to learn what works and what doesn't. Market research provides useful customer insights but cannot replace actual experimentation with new products or services.
웨버 샌드윅(Weber Shandwick) 본사에서 새로운 글로벌 리포트, “The Convergence Ahead : The Integration of Communications and Marketing” 발표하여, 리포트 내용 중 주요 포인트를 공유합니다.
해당 리포트는 2013년 10월부터 2014년 3월까지 약 6개월 기간 동안 미국, 유럽, 아시아-태평양 등 주요 글로벌 기업 내 최고 커뮤니케이션 경영자(CCO) 와 최고 마케팅 경영자(CMO)를 대상으로 전화인터뷰를 실시해서 완성되었다.
디지털 미디어 시대의 도래로 인해, 기업 및 브랜드와 기업 인지도의 상관 관계는 더욱 밀접해지고 있으며, 이에 따라, 기업 커뮤니케이션/ 마케팅 커뮤니케이션 활동에도 변화가 필요하게 되었다. 전통적으로 독자적인 영역이었던 두 부문이 서로의 영역 구분이 모호해지고 있음을 설문 참여 대상자들이 해당 리포트에서 확인시켜 주고 있다. 이미 이러한 커뮤니케이션 변화를 예상하고, 해당 변화에 대응하고자 몇몇 글로벌 기업들은 최고 커뮤니케이션 & 마케팅 경영자(CCMO, Chief Communication & Marketing Officer)라는 통합 직급을 새롭게 만들었으며, 본 리포트에는 CCMO의 경험을 기반으로 정리된 유익한 정보를 담고 있다.
해당 리포트에서는 기업 커뮤니케이션 & 마케팅 커뮤니케이션이 수렴화되는 트렌드(Convergence Trend)가 도래하게 된 배경을 분석하였을 뿐 아니라, CCMO의 성공적인 Convergence 를 위해 참고가 필요한 사항들을 6가지로 정리했으며, 주요 내용은 다음과 같다.
기업 커뮤니케이션과 마케팅 커뮤니케이션 활동의 성공적인 수렴화를 위한 6단계:
Consider Convergence for Strategic advantage: 두 커뮤니케이션 분야가 수렴화를 통해 얻을 수 있는 전략적 혜택을 고려하라
Start with a shared vision and mission: 조직에서 서로가 합의된 목표와 비전을 갖고 시작하라. 브랜드의 정체성을 정의한 후, 두 커뮤니케이션 부문의 수렴화를 진행하는 이유와 목표를 조직에 공유시켜야 한다
Evangelize widely and deeply: 각 부문 리더, 외부 관계자, 주요 클라이언트의 니즈를 파악하고 새로운 미션을 조직 내에 널리 알려야 한다.
Govern the integration: 통합된 조직을 탄생 시키기 위해서는, 각 부서를 통합 관리하는 능력이 필요하다.
Move quickly but planfully: 새로운 통합 과정이 조직 내에서 스무스하게 진행될 수 있도록, 본인과 팀의 능력을 믿고, 계획하에서 신속히 움직여라.
Celebrate successes early and often: 변화에서 얻게 되는 가시적인 성과와 혜택을 조직 내에 자주 보여주고 공유할 수 있는 방안을 찾아야 한다. CCMO 들은 성과가 있는 부분은 내부적으로 프로모션하고, 또 다른 성과를 이끌어내어야 한다.
Success in the "Pull Economy" means understanding that a number of significant business principles have changed. In a hyper connected world information flows much faster and more freely. Organisations as a result are subjected to a growing level of collective intelligence and value creation from outside the company's walls brought on by the increased collaboration of customer/consumers, consumers, employees and suppliers in what is now a much larger ecosystem of data, conversation, innovation and participation. There needs to be a knowledge framework to help companies manage this transformational change and maximise as much value from it in a way that benefits the business and the customer/consumer.
This white paper addresses common questions that small and midsize businesses have about marketing. It surveys leaders from small advertising agencies on topics like measuring marketing ROI, leveraging social media, agency compensation, marketing budgets, and skills needed. The executives provide insights on setting goals for each campaign, tying marketing activities to sales data, using tools like Google Analytics, and defining success metrics upfront to best measure ROI for specific business objectives.
This document discusses how marketing must become more pervasive throughout companies in order to truly engage customers in today's environment. It argues that everyone in a company is now responsible for marketing, so companies need to establish accountability. The marketing organization needs to stimulate dialogue across the company to design, build, operate, and renew cutting-edge customer engagement approaches. Examples are provided of companies that have distributed marketing tasks, formed councils to coordinate activities, and partnered more closely with customers and vendors.
This document discusses the role of image and identity in international relations beyond just nation branding. It argues that a country's reputation is shaped by its real actions and achievements, not just advertising or communications. A country needs strategic direction, substantive policies and actions, and symbolic actions that communicate its identity and progress. Shortcuts like advertising will not enhance a country's reputation - it requires sustained high-quality products, services, policies and other outputs over many years. Managing a country's international image is important for attracting investment and opportunities in the global marketplace dominated by quick impressions.
The role of the Corporate Communication Director or Chief Communications Officer is gaining more weight in organisations, combining various strategic functions from managing some key intangibles, such as brand and reputation, to communication
Marketing is not effective and no longer yields expected results, advertising has become trite and ineffective, traditional public relations fail to reach new audiences and digital communities, communication tools used by companies in the past lost a good part of their capacity to generate value and are no longer useful for companies because the rules of the game have changed.
This document was prepared by Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership and contains references, among other sources, to the statements made by Joan Costa, an expert on communication, design, sociology, profesor of the University of Mexico and a member of the Corporate Excellence Board, during the panel discussion titled “Communication Innovations in Business and the Mass Media”, organised at the Faculty of Information Sciences, Complutense University in Madrid, on April 10, 2012, and his book “El Dircom hoy” (Communications Director Today) published by CPC Editor.
A corporate brand is used not only to ensure the application of business strategy but also to design it. Brands are increasingly becoming cultures, manners of seeing life and ways of doing things that have to be shared with customers, although they first have to be cultures created and defended by employees.
There are still companies today that have yet to apply strategic management to their corporate brand, despite there being more and more companies, even in the mass commodity sector, that are beginning to use it as backing for their commercial brands. This approach to management ensures, on the one hand, the conveyance of meaning between the two and, on the other, the contribution the company’s own corporate reputation makes to product brands.
This document has been prepared by Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership based on the book Taking Brand Initiative: How Companies Can Align Strategy, Culture, and Identity Through Corporate Branding by Majken Schultz and Mary Jo Hatch.
Chapter 2 is all about defining social business strategy. Essentially, I condense the entire content of my first book, Smart Business, Social Business, into one chapter and introduce new thinking, implementation strategies and new models.
The document discusses predictions from marketing experts regarding social media and new media trends for 2012. Experts predict that (1) marketers will need to react in real-time to social media and embrace social business evolution, (2) brands will focus on metrics and ROI from social media and better integrate marketing tools, and (3) there will be a focus on mobile social media, measuring influence, and earning audiences rather than renting attention through paid media.
Strategic Thought Leadership In The New MillenniumMoonSoup, Inc.
Strategic management approaches have waxed and waned in popularity since the 1960s due to changing business environments and globalization. In the 1960s and 1970s, top-down planning was popular but declined in the 1980s as global competitors rose. Strategy regained prominence in the 1990s with concepts like business ecosystems and value migration. Today, strategic management must account for social/viral networking, media convergence, customization, sustainability, and mobile advertising to navigate constant connectivity and customize experiences for individuals and groups.
Reputation is probably the most important asset owned by a company, and not only because it attracts and retains the best resources, but also because it leverages the value of the company’s unique character and identity by showing how well the company manages to align its external perception with the internal reality.
This document was prepared by Corporate Excellence and among other sources contains references to Corporate Reputation and Competitiveness by Gary Davies and Rosa Chun, Professors at the University of Manchester (the UK) and the IMD Business School (Switzerland), respectively, and published by Routledge in 2003.
The document discusses the concept of a "citizen brand" which focuses on understanding and addressing social concerns rather than just treating stakeholders well. It argues that in today's "butterfly economy" with empowered and values-driven consumers, ethical and responsible behavior is essential to building trust and reputation. To be a citizen brand, a company must make social issues and local communities a central part of its strategy and be fully transparent in its operations. This model of proactive social engagement can increase business success by generating loyalty and goodwill.
The document discusses new trends in customer relationship management (CRM). It is presented as an e-book with six parts contributed by different authors. The introduction provides an overview of common challenges with CRM implementation and discusses how leveraging CRM tools can help sales and marketing professionals engage customers in new ways and gain insights. It emphasizes that defining business strategies and understanding customers is key to getting value from CRM. The first part discusses differentiating prospect types and how to more accurately forecast sales pipelines based on whether a prospect sought, was sought, or was referred. It argues this is a better indicator of close likelihood than typical CRM stage-based probabilities.
In an era of the disruption of traditional advertising and the ever growing digital media channels, brands have the opportunity to connect directly with their audiences online and through social media.
Advertisers are re-locating their budgets from traditional advertising to content media.
Web Intelligence For Small and Medium Enterprisesmicky83
Web Intelligence for Small and Medium Enterprises - Social Media Marketing Tools and Techniques for Small and Medium Enterprises
(European Project TRI-ICT)
In this presentation we'll see how small and medium enterpises can use Social Media in order to improve their business and their image.
Another social media framework, this time from the 1-to-1 customer management experts Peppers & Rogers. Good insights with focus on business applications & customer experiences.
Brands in the digitally connected world, social media, social technologies, business strategy, and innovation
Update on Feb 2014: Check out our newest report on the "Always-On Consumer" 2014 here: http://www.slideshare.net/vivaldipartners/alwayson-consumer-2014-report-by-vivaldi-partners-group
This document provides guidance on developing a social media strategy. It discusses why a social media strategy is important, what it should include, and how to develop it. A social media strategy should describe the current state, objectives for social media use, and a roadmap. Developing the strategy involves assessing current activities, creating a vision, roadmapping next steps, and launching the strategy. The document also includes an appendix with questions to assess a company's "corporate active listening" abilities.
Passionate about championing powerful social media possibilities inside and outside of your organization? Facing frustrating roadblocks along the way? Great! You're in motion. And a fresh perspective might just be what you need.
Check out "Inspiring Social Change Within Organizations."
a frank webinar presentation we shared 11/17/10 with our friends at Awareness Networks.
This document discusses how social media has changed how businesses interact with and engage customers. It provides an overview of the evolution of social media marketing and the two main approaches: passive, by analyzing user generated content; and active, using social media as an engagement and communication tool. The document also examines how companies can use influencers and hyper targeting on platforms like Facebook and LinkedIn. It aims to understand the role of social media strategies in creating buzz and engaging customers.
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Mediajcsmyers
A brand, wrote Stephen King in 1971, “has to be a coherent totality, not a lot of bits.” The founder of JWT’s planning department knew that brands are most effective when all their elements come together as a single unique personality. What would King make of today’s fragmented world of marketing where communication is delivered quite literally in bits: a Facebook comment, a 140-character Tweet, a Pinterest image.
The driver for this is, of course, social media. In every sector of society where individuals and organizations interact, social media has emerged as a disruptive force. While the benefits of social media to marketers are many – opening a two-way dialogue with consumers, influencing word-of-mouth, building rich stores of data – the challenges for brands can’t be ignored. In particular, brands must consider how to tell a coherent story across a growing array of platforms and amid a cacophony of consumer and competitor voices.
How can marketers take advantage of all that social media offers while protecting the integrity of the central brand idea? Is it even realistic that one idea can support conversations with millions of consumers across hundreds of platforms in multiple formats? The answer is an unequivocal yes. Given the demands of the today’s media landscape, it’s never been more important for all marketing efforts to be unified under a powerful brand idea.
웨버 샌드윅(Weber Shandwick) 본사에서 새로운 글로벌 리포트, “The Convergence Ahead : The Integration of Communications and Marketing” 발표하여, 리포트 내용 중 주요 포인트를 공유합니다.
해당 리포트는 2013년 10월부터 2014년 3월까지 약 6개월 기간 동안 미국, 유럽, 아시아-태평양 등 주요 글로벌 기업 내 최고 커뮤니케이션 경영자(CCO) 와 최고 마케팅 경영자(CMO)를 대상으로 전화인터뷰를 실시해서 완성되었다.
디지털 미디어 시대의 도래로 인해, 기업 및 브랜드와 기업 인지도의 상관 관계는 더욱 밀접해지고 있으며, 이에 따라, 기업 커뮤니케이션/ 마케팅 커뮤니케이션 활동에도 변화가 필요하게 되었다. 전통적으로 독자적인 영역이었던 두 부문이 서로의 영역 구분이 모호해지고 있음을 설문 참여 대상자들이 해당 리포트에서 확인시켜 주고 있다. 이미 이러한 커뮤니케이션 변화를 예상하고, 해당 변화에 대응하고자 몇몇 글로벌 기업들은 최고 커뮤니케이션 & 마케팅 경영자(CCMO, Chief Communication & Marketing Officer)라는 통합 직급을 새롭게 만들었으며, 본 리포트에는 CCMO의 경험을 기반으로 정리된 유익한 정보를 담고 있다.
해당 리포트에서는 기업 커뮤니케이션 & 마케팅 커뮤니케이션이 수렴화되는 트렌드(Convergence Trend)가 도래하게 된 배경을 분석하였을 뿐 아니라, CCMO의 성공적인 Convergence 를 위해 참고가 필요한 사항들을 6가지로 정리했으며, 주요 내용은 다음과 같다.
기업 커뮤니케이션과 마케팅 커뮤니케이션 활동의 성공적인 수렴화를 위한 6단계:
Consider Convergence for Strategic advantage: 두 커뮤니케이션 분야가 수렴화를 통해 얻을 수 있는 전략적 혜택을 고려하라
Start with a shared vision and mission: 조직에서 서로가 합의된 목표와 비전을 갖고 시작하라. 브랜드의 정체성을 정의한 후, 두 커뮤니케이션 부문의 수렴화를 진행하는 이유와 목표를 조직에 공유시켜야 한다
Evangelize widely and deeply: 각 부문 리더, 외부 관계자, 주요 클라이언트의 니즈를 파악하고 새로운 미션을 조직 내에 널리 알려야 한다.
Govern the integration: 통합된 조직을 탄생 시키기 위해서는, 각 부서를 통합 관리하는 능력이 필요하다.
Move quickly but planfully: 새로운 통합 과정이 조직 내에서 스무스하게 진행될 수 있도록, 본인과 팀의 능력을 믿고, 계획하에서 신속히 움직여라.
Celebrate successes early and often: 변화에서 얻게 되는 가시적인 성과와 혜택을 조직 내에 자주 보여주고 공유할 수 있는 방안을 찾아야 한다. CCMO 들은 성과가 있는 부분은 내부적으로 프로모션하고, 또 다른 성과를 이끌어내어야 한다.
Success in the "Pull Economy" means understanding that a number of significant business principles have changed. In a hyper connected world information flows much faster and more freely. Organisations as a result are subjected to a growing level of collective intelligence and value creation from outside the company's walls brought on by the increased collaboration of customer/consumers, consumers, employees and suppliers in what is now a much larger ecosystem of data, conversation, innovation and participation. There needs to be a knowledge framework to help companies manage this transformational change and maximise as much value from it in a way that benefits the business and the customer/consumer.
This white paper addresses common questions that small and midsize businesses have about marketing. It surveys leaders from small advertising agencies on topics like measuring marketing ROI, leveraging social media, agency compensation, marketing budgets, and skills needed. The executives provide insights on setting goals for each campaign, tying marketing activities to sales data, using tools like Google Analytics, and defining success metrics upfront to best measure ROI for specific business objectives.
This document discusses how marketing must become more pervasive throughout companies in order to truly engage customers in today's environment. It argues that everyone in a company is now responsible for marketing, so companies need to establish accountability. The marketing organization needs to stimulate dialogue across the company to design, build, operate, and renew cutting-edge customer engagement approaches. Examples are provided of companies that have distributed marketing tasks, formed councils to coordinate activities, and partnered more closely with customers and vendors.
This document discusses the role of image and identity in international relations beyond just nation branding. It argues that a country's reputation is shaped by its real actions and achievements, not just advertising or communications. A country needs strategic direction, substantive policies and actions, and symbolic actions that communicate its identity and progress. Shortcuts like advertising will not enhance a country's reputation - it requires sustained high-quality products, services, policies and other outputs over many years. Managing a country's international image is important for attracting investment and opportunities in the global marketplace dominated by quick impressions.
The role of the Corporate Communication Director or Chief Communications Officer is gaining more weight in organisations, combining various strategic functions from managing some key intangibles, such as brand and reputation, to communication
Marketing is not effective and no longer yields expected results, advertising has become trite and ineffective, traditional public relations fail to reach new audiences and digital communities, communication tools used by companies in the past lost a good part of their capacity to generate value and are no longer useful for companies because the rules of the game have changed.
This document was prepared by Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership and contains references, among other sources, to the statements made by Joan Costa, an expert on communication, design, sociology, profesor of the University of Mexico and a member of the Corporate Excellence Board, during the panel discussion titled “Communication Innovations in Business and the Mass Media”, organised at the Faculty of Information Sciences, Complutense University in Madrid, on April 10, 2012, and his book “El Dircom hoy” (Communications Director Today) published by CPC Editor.
A corporate brand is used not only to ensure the application of business strategy but also to design it. Brands are increasingly becoming cultures, manners of seeing life and ways of doing things that have to be shared with customers, although they first have to be cultures created and defended by employees.
There are still companies today that have yet to apply strategic management to their corporate brand, despite there being more and more companies, even in the mass commodity sector, that are beginning to use it as backing for their commercial brands. This approach to management ensures, on the one hand, the conveyance of meaning between the two and, on the other, the contribution the company’s own corporate reputation makes to product brands.
This document has been prepared by Corporate Excellence – Centre for Reputation Leadership based on the book Taking Brand Initiative: How Companies Can Align Strategy, Culture, and Identity Through Corporate Branding by Majken Schultz and Mary Jo Hatch.
Chapter 2 is all about defining social business strategy. Essentially, I condense the entire content of my first book, Smart Business, Social Business, into one chapter and introduce new thinking, implementation strategies and new models.
The document discusses predictions from marketing experts regarding social media and new media trends for 2012. Experts predict that (1) marketers will need to react in real-time to social media and embrace social business evolution, (2) brands will focus on metrics and ROI from social media and better integrate marketing tools, and (3) there will be a focus on mobile social media, measuring influence, and earning audiences rather than renting attention through paid media.
Strategic Thought Leadership In The New MillenniumMoonSoup, Inc.
Strategic management approaches have waxed and waned in popularity since the 1960s due to changing business environments and globalization. In the 1960s and 1970s, top-down planning was popular but declined in the 1980s as global competitors rose. Strategy regained prominence in the 1990s with concepts like business ecosystems and value migration. Today, strategic management must account for social/viral networking, media convergence, customization, sustainability, and mobile advertising to navigate constant connectivity and customize experiences for individuals and groups.
Reputation is probably the most important asset owned by a company, and not only because it attracts and retains the best resources, but also because it leverages the value of the company’s unique character and identity by showing how well the company manages to align its external perception with the internal reality.
This document was prepared by Corporate Excellence and among other sources contains references to Corporate Reputation and Competitiveness by Gary Davies and Rosa Chun, Professors at the University of Manchester (the UK) and the IMD Business School (Switzerland), respectively, and published by Routledge in 2003.
The document discusses the concept of a "citizen brand" which focuses on understanding and addressing social concerns rather than just treating stakeholders well. It argues that in today's "butterfly economy" with empowered and values-driven consumers, ethical and responsible behavior is essential to building trust and reputation. To be a citizen brand, a company must make social issues and local communities a central part of its strategy and be fully transparent in its operations. This model of proactive social engagement can increase business success by generating loyalty and goodwill.
The document discusses new trends in customer relationship management (CRM). It is presented as an e-book with six parts contributed by different authors. The introduction provides an overview of common challenges with CRM implementation and discusses how leveraging CRM tools can help sales and marketing professionals engage customers in new ways and gain insights. It emphasizes that defining business strategies and understanding customers is key to getting value from CRM. The first part discusses differentiating prospect types and how to more accurately forecast sales pipelines based on whether a prospect sought, was sought, or was referred. It argues this is a better indicator of close likelihood than typical CRM stage-based probabilities.
In an era of the disruption of traditional advertising and the ever growing digital media channels, brands have the opportunity to connect directly with their audiences online and through social media.
Advertisers are re-locating their budgets from traditional advertising to content media.
Web Intelligence For Small and Medium Enterprisesmicky83
Web Intelligence for Small and Medium Enterprises - Social Media Marketing Tools and Techniques for Small and Medium Enterprises
(European Project TRI-ICT)
In this presentation we'll see how small and medium enterpises can use Social Media in order to improve their business and their image.
Another social media framework, this time from the 1-to-1 customer management experts Peppers & Rogers. Good insights with focus on business applications & customer experiences.
Brands in the digitally connected world, social media, social technologies, business strategy, and innovation
Update on Feb 2014: Check out our newest report on the "Always-On Consumer" 2014 here: http://www.slideshare.net/vivaldipartners/alwayson-consumer-2014-report-by-vivaldi-partners-group
This document provides guidance on developing a social media strategy. It discusses why a social media strategy is important, what it should include, and how to develop it. A social media strategy should describe the current state, objectives for social media use, and a roadmap. Developing the strategy involves assessing current activities, creating a vision, roadmapping next steps, and launching the strategy. The document also includes an appendix with questions to assess a company's "corporate active listening" abilities.
Passionate about championing powerful social media possibilities inside and outside of your organization? Facing frustrating roadblocks along the way? Great! You're in motion. And a fresh perspective might just be what you need.
Check out "Inspiring Social Change Within Organizations."
a frank webinar presentation we shared 11/17/10 with our friends at Awareness Networks.
This document discusses how social media has changed how businesses interact with and engage customers. It provides an overview of the evolution of social media marketing and the two main approaches: passive, by analyzing user generated content; and active, using social media as an engagement and communication tool. The document also examines how companies can use influencers and hyper targeting on platforms like Facebook and LinkedIn. It aims to understand the role of social media strategies in creating buzz and engaging customers.
Why the Brand Idea Still Matters in the Age of Social Mediajcsmyers
A brand, wrote Stephen King in 1971, “has to be a coherent totality, not a lot of bits.” The founder of JWT’s planning department knew that brands are most effective when all their elements come together as a single unique personality. What would King make of today’s fragmented world of marketing where communication is delivered quite literally in bits: a Facebook comment, a 140-character Tweet, a Pinterest image.
The driver for this is, of course, social media. In every sector of society where individuals and organizations interact, social media has emerged as a disruptive force. While the benefits of social media to marketers are many – opening a two-way dialogue with consumers, influencing word-of-mouth, building rich stores of data – the challenges for brands can’t be ignored. In particular, brands must consider how to tell a coherent story across a growing array of platforms and amid a cacophony of consumer and competitor voices.
How can marketers take advantage of all that social media offers while protecting the integrity of the central brand idea? Is it even realistic that one idea can support conversations with millions of consumers across hundreds of platforms in multiple formats? The answer is an unequivocal yes. Given the demands of the today’s media landscape, it’s never been more important for all marketing efforts to be unified under a powerful brand idea.
The document discusses emerging trends in technology and their potential impacts on businesses over the next 18-24 months. It focuses on five technology forces - analytics, mobility, social, cloud and cyber security - and how they are influencing businesses to operate in a more "digital" way. The report examines ten technology trends grouped into two categories: disruptors, which can create positive disruption for businesses; and enablers, which many companies have already invested in but still warrant examination due to new developments. Each trend is presented with real-world examples and commentary from business leaders on how the trends can benefit organizations.
The document discusses social business and how leading organizations are applying social technologies like collaboration, communication, and content management across their business functions. It explains that social business allows companies to fundamentally change how they operate and serve customers by taking a more active, social approach across the entire value chain. Done effectively, social business can shift a company's dynamic from isolation to engagement by providing ways to discover, share, and spread ideas and expertise both internally and externally.
The document discusses social business and how leading organizations are applying social technologies and principles to fundamentally change how their companies operate and serve markets. It provides examples of how companies like Gatorade and Tesco are using social media monitoring, command centers, and social commerce to improve marketing, product development, and business operations. The document also describes how one high-tech firm broke down research silos by shifting to more open collaboration using social platforms.
The document discusses social business and how leading organizations are applying social technologies and adopting a social mindset. Some key points:
- Social business allows companies to fundamentally change how they operate and serve markets by focusing on engagement over isolation and tapping into shared interests.
- Early efforts focused on social media monitoring and command centers, but social business is now being applied across functions like HR, product development, and operations.
- Technologies like collaboration tools, sentiment analysis, digital content management, and digital identities can help make social interactions more effective within organizations.
- Examples are provided of how companies like Gatorade, Tesco, and a tech firm have applied social business principles to gain customer insights, improve social commerce
The document discusses social business and how leading organizations are applying social technologies within their businesses. It describes how social business can shift an organization's dynamic from isolation to engagement by providing vehicles for discovering, growing and propagating ideas and expertise across the entire value chain. The document also provides examples of how some organizations like Gatorade and Tesco are successfully adopting social business approaches.
The document discusses social business and how leading organizations are applying social technologies and principles to fundamentally change how their companies operate and serve markets. It provides examples of how companies like Gatorade and Tesco are using social media monitoring, command centers, and social commerce to improve marketing, product development, and business operations. The document also describes how one high-tech firm broke down research silos by shifting to more open collaboration using social platforms.
The document discusses social business and how leading organizations are applying social technologies and adopting a social mindset. Some key points:
- Social business allows companies to fundamentally change how they operate and serve markets by focusing on engagement over isolation and tapping into shared interests.
- Early efforts focused on social media monitoring and command centers, but social business is now being applied across functions like HR, product development, and operations.
- Tools include internal collaboration suites, expertise finders, and communities that form around topics. This helps distribute knowledge and foster engagement.
- Adopting social requires a shift in mindset from the corporation to the individual and allowing more direct connections across divisions and with customers.
- Examples
The Worlds Leading Independent Agencies 2012 - SAPIENTNITRO PROFILEaasokaku
1) SapientNitro is a large digital agency with over 6,000 employees globally that is continuing to grow.
2) The agency believes that large scale is necessary to deliver innovative and creative ideas for clients, especially in today's globally connected, technology-enabled world.
3) Unlike smaller agencies that treat digital technology as an experiment, SapientNitro structures its entire organization around understanding consumer experiences and creating engaging brand interactions across channels.
This document provides best practices for brands becoming publishers based on research analyzing leading brands' publishing platforms and content strategies. Some key findings include:
- 1/3 of top brands have created publishing platforms, with 1/5 replacing their main website. Platforms include branding sites, content hubs, and sponsored destinations.
- Successful platforms are visually innovative, have a strong editorial mandate, and include user-generated content. Blended brand and user content outperforms solely brand content.
- Publishing frequency varies by platform type, with content hubs averaging 4.6 posts/day and destinations 2.2 posts/day.
- Case study of Virgin's data-led content strategy shows how research
Creating a social media strategy for a tourism business | Block 4: Case prese...Francisco Hernandez-Marcos
Creating a social media strategy for a tourism business
Block 4: Case presentation
International Master in Hospitality and Tourism Management
ESCP Europe - Cornell University School of Hotel Administration
The document discusses best practices for brands establishing themselves as publishers in the current media landscape. It finds that one-third of top global brands have created publishing platforms. There are three main types: core branding sites, content marketing hubs, and sponsored destinations. The most successful platforms use a blend of brand and user-generated content, have a strong visual style and editorial mandate, and engage their communities. The document analyzes various brand publishing platforms and rates them on metrics like audience value and brand value. It provides the example of Virgin's data-driven content strategy improving site engagement through personalized storytelling.
Web Intelligence For Small and Medium Enterprisesmicky83
Web Intelligence for Small and Medium Enterprises - Social Media Marketing Tools and Techniques for Small and Medium Enterprises
(European Project TRI-ICT)
In this presentation we'll see how small and medium enterpises can use Social Media in order to improve their business and their image.
This document summarizes research on successful innovations in educational leadership preparation programs. It identifies six such innovations that were selected based on their fidelity of implementation, positive student outcomes, and adaptability. These innovations include partnerships between universities and school districts, innovative recruitment and selection processes, use of cohort models, new content focuses on instructional leadership and social justice, and active learning pedagogies like discussion and collaboration over lectures.
This document discusses early childhood education as a sector in New Zealand. It describes how early childhood education has become marketized and privatized due to neoliberal reforms in the 1980s and 1990s. These reforms emphasized values like competition, commodification, and consumption. The sector is now focused on facilitating women's workforce participation and monitoring vulnerable children. Describing early childhood as a sector is problematic as it implies homogeneity but the individuals and organizations within are diverse. The rest of the document analyzes the metaphor of "sector" and how that shapes understanding of early childhood education.
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
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Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...
Leadership in the 21st century
1. The Journal of Brand Management Volume 7 Number 4
Page 220
Ed itorial
21 st century brandknowledge - towards the ADEP*T
standard for brands' promise and trust
INTRODUCTION TO WHAT 21ST C
BRAND KNOWLEDGE IS NOT
As we enter the 21st century, it is important
to understand that two very different defini
tions of branding exist. The next two para
graphs oversimplify just a bit.
The first concept of branding is whatever
the advertising agency says perfect brand exe
cution is. Typically, this is targeting the con
sumer, creating images, leveraging perceptions,
extracting a premium price from the consumer
over the lifetime of the campaigns that the
brand client buys from the agency, etc. Some
would say this concept has been the essence of
20th century mass marketing (though interest
ingly those like Drucker1 who helped coin the
term marketing in the middle of the century
had a different organisational purpose in mind).
The second concept of branding is the
one which grows the brand - or more
technically a company's systematic knowl
edge organisation around and investment in
brand architecture2 - as the most valuable
corporate asset.
In this second role,3 branding identifies
what the company as a leader communi
cates, acts on, takes a stand on in the eyes
of all its communities, and what it pur
posefully changes, as living organisms must,
to compete. Branding emotionally con
nects all the intangible assets of the com
pany and its authority in the information
age. Branding is the promise consistently to
deliver unique value to the world. Brand
ing is the pride that is communally shared
by all employees of an organisation and the
passion in perceiving how to make an indi
vidual contribution that enables the com-
pany and and its competence to grow.
Branding is the relationship system de
signed to grow value equably for all con
stituencies w ho trust the company brand
with their loyalty. 21st century branding
will also be the web and nets which do
this. I hope you will agree that the ideas in
Table 1 give exciting food for thought.
They support the hypothesis that the com
munications revolution that we are enact
ing today makes the circa 1950 revolution
of television advertising look like a blip on
the Richter scale.
This special issue is devoted to frames for
organising the systematic integrity of this
second - and 21st century - concept of
branding. Managers from many business dis
ciplines may need to do some millennial
soul-searching, not the least marketers. My
virtual research among practitioners E-mail
discussion groups over the last five years has
revealed (see Table 2 - reasons) why mar
keters are disliked or distrusted by their fel
low knowledge-workers.
Demand for the corporate and social
need to reform brand knowledge is also
emerging from a diverse movement ofopin
ion leaders. One of the most important
things leadership communications does
(when it truly aligns the company) is to help
resolve paradoxes.4 Paradox busting has al
ways been a way human beings evolve to a
higher level of intelligence - why not
human organisations in the age of knowl
edge workers too? Here, leadership's core
communications role is about focusing the
organisation's mind on simplicity in what
would otherwise be a business world of
2. TABLE 1 MANAGERS OF THIS EARTH ...
Know ye the glossary meanings of four forces defining the turn-of-millennium revolution in
marketing learning organisations:
A) Networked online market conversations;
B) Internet;
C) Intranet;
D) Connections to make with e-brand (or 21st century brand leader).
A) Managers of this earth - interact with the first lesson of c1uetrain.coms
(soon to be a tOOk run book for those who cannot surf)
'Online Markets build up as powerful global conversations because ... networked markets are
beginning to self-organise faster than the companies that have traditionally served them. Thanks
to the web, markets are becoming better informed, smarter, and more demanding of qualities
missing from most business organisations.'
B) Managers of this earth - listen to a founding father's core value of the net
'The Internet is a place, an environment, made up of people and their myriad interactions.
It is not merely a technology but a new way of cooperating, sharing and caring. Businesses that
recognise the human aspect of the Internet will be more likely to find success in the artificial
worlds of the Digital Age, for they will understand that the artificial is rooted in reality, and
reality is rooted in our hearts.'
Vint Cerf,'Father of the Internet '
C) Managers of this earth - experience why intranets change what is organisationally
possible
'Intranet technology is altering the culture of international corporations, qualifying employees
worldwide to understand key issues facing their business, exchanging ideas in real time, and to
collaborate on solutions ... You cannot implement the technology for the sake of technology. You
must align the visions, the mission, and the goals of the organisation to identify the best way for your
organisation to evolve and mature into a 21st century organisation ...There is no need for
reengineering the organisation. The focus is to move the decision making, the actions, the problem
solving and the responsibilities closer to the people who understand the opportunities and possess the
skills to react quickly and efficiendy. When a problem needs an organisational solution, users can
reach out to the expertise, power and wealth of the intranet and focus total resources on the problem.
The intranet is about being linked together like some great collective consciousness, where people
can cultivate their intelligence or call on networked intelligence as a powerful resource.
Randy Hinrichs, author of'INTRANETS
,
6
D) Managers of this earth - design all leadership communications with this idea as
top-of-mind awareness among all you work with
'The e-brand (or 21 st C brand leader) communicates to its community of relationship-owners (ie
all the constituencies whose loyalty it seeks) and through a living media (ie connecting internet,
intranet ...) made up of people and their myriad interactions. Our most human qualities are now
needed to help us recall that the most valuable interactions will be those which revolve round
making heroic promises and keeping the trust.'
Reproduced with permission of http://www.brandknowledge.com
Editorial
Page 221
3. Ed itorial
Page 222
TABLE 2 MASS MEDIA MADE MARKETING TOO EASY FOR THE LAZY
Dimensions of dislikable marketing:
added cost, endemic wherever defensive marketing is practised;
- obsession with sexiness of external media and being wined and dined;
rivalry between internal brand empires for resources etc;
- awful at exchanging knowledge internally (arrogant, won't be there ...);
- too big ajob so others take over piecemeal (strategy, quality ...);
lost organisational confidence in offensive (AV) marketing;
not taking advantage of change, irony: changes, eg globalisationldigitalisation, never greater;
not participating in Drucker's two mainjobs of marketing leadership:
• circulating external knowledge needed so that every employee can action learn;
• supporting leaders in emotionalising how the next change challenge is an opportunity to
grow the company.
Source: Author's slide show on findings from E-mail surveys first presented to marketing professors at
Harvard, February 19997
complexity and internal politics.
You can start to see the paradoxes that
trnstworthy 21st century branding will need
to master emerging in such varied thinking
spaces as:
'Built to Last' by Collins and Porras8
where paradoxes of leadership such as
'preserve the core while stimulating
progress' provide the book's structure.
The discipline of simplicity championed
by Americans such as Bill Jensen9and
Thomas Petzinger.1o
Revolutionary consumer movements
of the networking age such as http:
Ilwww.cluetrain.com
How the most successful e-business con
cepts appear to work. Because they are
confident that they deliver win-win
value across all their constituencies, they
make information transparent, ideally
having nothing to hide from anyone
they serve.
Work on transforming organisational IQ
by Haim Mendelson and Johannes
Ziegler11 chronicled in their new book
'Survival of the Smartest' .
The research programmes of Enterprise
IG which seek to 'out' the different cor
porate identities that a company poses
under as a precursor to Brand Align
ment™.
W hite papers issued by Oracle on the
connection between brand, databank in
tranets and performance measurements.
The founding editorial policy of Henry
Stewart's journal Corporate Reputation
Review, and -at least as I read it - of
this journal.
One of Tapscott's summary conclusions
4. Branding is the business of growing smart
relationship connections aligned around a
Promise Systematically-worth Trusting
connections{ �) * 'fcC}relationShiPS
Eg employee knowledge,
motivations, culture,
systems, processes...
editing the book 'Creating Value in the
Networking Economy:12
the 20th cen
tury ideology of brand image will in
creasingly be replaced by the 21st
century ideology of brand relationships
made transparent by information access
to all constituencies of the brand.
The new leadership philosophy of Frac
tal Marketing for acting responsibly as a
global and local network advocated by
Mazda's UK President, David Heslop:
http://www.brad.ac.uk/branding/brad
fordlectures.html
The communal belief which members of
http://www.brandknowledge.com are
interacting around namely: the only 21st
century organisations of any real value
will prove to be those which make the
most of brand, knowledge and their peo
ple ... and harness webslintranets to de
liver the promise of heroic customer
servlce.
Conversely, you can see places where failure
to distinguish between 20th and 21st cen
tury concepts of branding appears to create
Constituencies include
consumers, employees,
network partners,
shareholders, society,
opinion leaders
an editorial or leadership muddle. One ex
ample seems to be the Harvard Business Re
view. On the one hand, this thinking
person's medium now attaches importance
to the brand as major corporate asset by in
cluding a feature article involving the brand
in almost every other issue. On the other
hand, most of these contributors seem to be
busy burying the brand in the complexity of
paradoxes (by insisting on either one or the
other, rather than leadership integration of
the two). Fortunately, our interactive age
provides a way for insisting that this muddle
be resolved quickly. See, for example, how
Harvard's readership have been transparendy
answering back to such paradoxically biased
article titles as: 'The Lure of Global Brand
ing': (to which readers ask, Don't leaders
need the best of global and local branding?)
http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu/webboard/w
ebboard.dll/�forum_novdec1999.
'How e-Commerce will trump Brand
Management', (to which readers ask, Don't
leaders need to integrate both?)
http://www.hbsp.harvard.edu/webboard/we
bboard.dll/�orumjulaug1999
Editorial
Figure 1
Page 223
5. Ed itorial
Page 224
TABLE 3
PROMISE
Alignment and convergence Nets: internet, intranet,
ofidentities extranet. . .
Essence/UOP (Unique Webs: communities ofpractice
Organising Purpose)
Reality ofBrand Positioning
(ie employee pride and
passion)
Values driving culture and
corporate personality
Brand Mantra
Hoshin Planning, ie the way
Japanese action change
challenges
Productive competences
Visionary focus: map of
sub-goals
Knowledge for action: fast
company structure
Learning organisation and
system disciplines
Simple common language
Paradox-busting leadership
tools, eg Catalytic Mechanisms
Best practice e-business and
e-society models
Systems dynamics
Programming interactive
measurement systems
TRUST
True best friend relation
ships
Reputation among stake
holder constituencies
Win-Wins across value
exchange network
Transparency ofinforma
tion
Measuring value to (not just
from) the other party
True leadership of quality
and value
Total 2-way integrity of
communications and doing
Fractal Marketing
Economics of intangibles
Listing not intended to be comprehensive - aim is to give reader a multidisciplinary window to
selecting interconnected atoms of P*T
A SIMPLE STANDARD FOR WHAT
21ST CENTURY BRANDKNOWLEDGE
IS - PART 1 - P*T
Clearly the 2 1 st century may bring many
changes to brandknowledge. And the next
decade in which e-business and e-society
blossom worldwide and in localities near
you will be as exciting as any time I can
think of. The turn-of-millennium genera
tion has the extraordinary privilege of ex
perimenting with far more means for really
human media than the mass marketing revo
lutionaries enjoyed with the mid-20th cen
tury advent of the television spot. 13 We
need to see this as a privilege which con
nects every human expertise and aspiration,
not just an issue for grey suited businessmen
or colourful creatives.
Whatever branding connects, the three
simplest core constructs I can imagine are
P*T:
P = Brand Promise;
T = Brand Trust;
* = The web and net communities of
information which as an integrated liv
ing whole make the relationship of a
brand promise really worth trusting. I
*
6. use * because our language doesn't really
have a term yet for expressing the com
mon emotional currency which will
come from interconnecting e-business
and e-society and by making seamless
links between webs, internets, in
tranet, 14 extranets, communities of
practice . . . The lack of terminology
should not stop you from imagining
how electronic knowledge transparency
will flow. (See Figure 1).
Moreover, each of these constructs is tricky
in that it requires us to unlearn some 20th
century brand expertise as well as building
on our marketing and learning organisa
tional disciplines.
Brand Promise requires us to stop think
ing ofmerely positioning prospects' percep
tions and to make the brand real inside.14
Brand Trust requires us to make mea
surements which are far more balanced
than any corporate scorecard I have seen
to date. There's a lie at the heart of many a
20th century corporate's notion that you
create value by taking it from someone like
your customers. Moreover business quar
ters are a poor time period for measuring
relationship strength, and if your com
pany's culture is only concerned with
maximising profits, wearing my consumer
hat I would be the dumb opposite of in
teractively smart to perceive you as worth
trusting. Arguably, balanced is even the
wrong word for monitoring something
which is only going to sustain trust if it is
continuously interacting communal win
wins15 between the company's different
stakeholder constituencies.
Knowledge needs to be focused both in
terms of what a company's purpose is
within a wider network and for actionabil
ity by every employee and in every business
activity. Few 20th century leaders yet un
derstand how revolutionary a change infor
mation transparency will bring to those
corporate cultures which will have earned
a high reputation (aka 21st century e-brand
equity) in 2010.
This P*T model has influenced me in se
lecting the breadth of papers appearing in
this issue. And reading this issue may con
vince you that Brand Knowledge should be
brought out into the open as the great -
and humanising - multidiscipline of the
21st century businesses. Table 3, as a display
of partial synonyms, may instill a deeper feel
for the connectivity which P*T requires us
to charter into the way brands are led.
THE CONTRIBUTORS TO THIS ISSUE
Ben Schneider explains what organisa
tional behaviourists already know about
the link between employee and customer
motivations, and the win-win values that
can be gained from doing this right. While
this link has often disappeared in 20th cen
tury organisations, it is the core link be
tween internet and intranet in almost
every robust e-business model I have ever
researched. There is now a huge opportu
nity for brand marketers and organisational
behaviourists to share their learnings. By
doing so they can demand that netbuilders
preserve the human point of all their fan
tastic technology.
Charles Fombrun examines the research
basis for developing a Reputation Quotient.
What are the factors of trust that different
audiences of a company relate to and how
can a company synthesise these into a com
posite benchmark and maturity profile? As
Charles points out this hugely significant
area has previously been under-researched,
reputation league tables having been popu
larised by business magazines such as
Fortune.
Dave Allen updates us on a five-year re
search programme designed to develop a
framework for a leadership team of a
global company to implement brand
promise starting from the hypothesis that
active and aligned participation in the
Editorial
Page 225
7. Editorial
Figure 2
Page 226
Dsoovery --- "Think Leadership'
�A:tion "Do Leadership" ----
bpression "Qm1l1unicate 2-W8:>J" --
Promise@ Trusted
/' t �
brand promise is new to everyone in the
company. In other words, a common lan
guage of what the company stands for
needs to be developed from scratch so that
everyone in the company can discover
what corporate identity they want to com
mit to. The discovery process requires that
several different corporate identities be
outed and the gaps between them nar
rowed. This work cannot be done pur
posefully unless it involves clarifying the
motivations of everyone in the company
and the cultural drivers which resonate
through the organisation.
Peter Fisk goes deeply into how values
are the brand magnet of great companies -
being both the emotional sustenance of a
company's brand promise and the reason
why it worth placing trust in a relationship
with a company.
Melissa Richardson provides us with
some in-depth experiences on how the in
ternal campaign for clarifying and sustaining
brand promise needs continuous support,
propagated through all employees' senses
(not just verbal ones). Doing this right can
make the promise of an internal brand
lifestyle a highly imaginative process at
group and individual levels.
Brad VanAuken provides us with a timely
checklist for a full 360 degree view of brand
management. As companies embrace the
wake-up call of e-business, it is the right time
to completely review the people responsibili
ties for the brand. Do this by understanding
the new dynamics of net-enabled companies
and the full breadth of connections that the
�ign
emotions
I!I.I3b ofbrll'1d
knowledge
Qow
relationships
brand must make in real organisational set
tings as well as virtual ones.
As this is the first special issue of the third
millennium, I asked two contributors to help
us stretch our visions a little further out.
David Weinberger, one of the four co
founders of Cluetrain.com now also pub
lished as a book with a 100,000 print run,
explains why a the net generation of con
sumers is already redefining the marketing
concept in conversational terms. W ith the
new transparency of interactive dialogue,
they hate to be targeted, brand managed
and to be the object of almost every other
one-way penetration that mass marketing
speak used to congratulate itself on. At
time of writing this editorial (December
99), Cluetrain has also just started up a
worldwide E-mail conference.16 It is a
space for many huge controversies con
cerning the principles which human be
ings want an e-mediated world to
respect. A seminal case is how the Go
liath of etoys.com (#1 e-retailer of toys)
is trying to erase the unlikely David of
etoy.com (an avant guard European cul
tural web).17
Simon Torrance is a director of bright
future.com, one of the few world class e
age networks of communities to have been
born in Europe. Bright specialises in creat
ing communities so that internal marketing
knowledge is shared on intranets etc.
Simon provides an insight into how trust
needs to b,e branded pervasively across any
virtual knowledge building network before
business to business at the speed of light
8. T
• = Building blocks or learning blocks?
EXERCISE: Who's blocking brand promise, *knowledge and trust in 20th C Organisations?
Which blocks are most disconnected fi'om which others? Which blocks measure success in ways
that destroy trust?
d-line (eg accountants, investment banks, management consultants, tangible
strategic planning, megatrend future scenario advisers, other...)
e-line (eg ad agency, design, direct marketing (ltol), market research, other... )
a-line (eg performance appraisals, rewards, training facilities, change agents,
knowledge-builders, IT, other...)
gets liftoff. His future-case paper also sug
gests how new forms of intermediaries
have the potential to be powerful business
to business brands.
A SIMPLE STANDARD FOR WHAT
21ST CENTURY BRANDKNOWLEDGE
IS - PART 2 - ADEP*T
One day realising the brand as the networks
where communities of people exchange
promises and keep the trust will come natu
rally. As you read through the details - and
indeed the immediate future shocks - cata
logued by our contributors, that day may
seem far away. Arguably that's all the more
reason why we should blueprint a common
standard for getting to the promised brand
sooner rather than later.
The idea18
of putting the ADE suffix to
P*T is that it provides a way to map out the
current gaps (or literally map the state of
disintegration) currently impeding an or
ganisation. What are the gaps (of under
standing, of enabling information flow and
ofpeople interconnectivity) between:
marketers responsible for the way the
company Expresses itself;
the leadership team responsible for the
way the company Directs and constantly
Discovers communal identity;
and every employees' Actions (poten
tially facilitated by experts in such lively
areas as Human Resources, IT, Knowl
edge Management).
Recent research19 confirms that one of the
biggest barriers to best branding practice is
the way that different consultants and cre
atives who supply brand owning companies
fail to work with each other or, indeed, to
have a simple way of understanding each
other. Try and make an honest map of this
(see Figure 3 for illustration) . This state of
disintegration becomes a real eye-opener
when you reflect on just how many of
these suppliers' business cases depend on
not integrating their knowledge, let alone
webbing this as simply as possible into
Ed itoria l
Figure 3
Page 227
9. Ed itorial
Page 228
TABLE 4 BRANDKNOWLEDGE.COM MAP
ICONTENT IIACCESS.,(FORMATS) IIINTERACTIVEPOTENTIAL II RESOURCES I
IGloSSiIT
S�eeches &
Pa�ers
IReading Lists
ILOgic & Magic
ISoundbites
Ilweb; e-mail
pdf download; e-mail
reVleWS
IIweb; e-mail
Ibi-format : press and
pdf
IIweb; e-mail
IHelp us simplifY standard definitions ;and link to histoncal onglnators of terms
and their contexts
Review paper. Exchange learning with fellow readers and author.
I Assemble top 100 multidisciplinary texts connecting brandknowledge
Suggest opinion leading authors whose frames CEOs find logical or magical
I Debate the issues to reflect on symbolised by the soundbite
I HOT DEBATE I
ICurrent Debate IIweb & "chat box" I Help us to reveal all expert perspectives of the brand knowledge revolution
I NEWS & LINKS I
IHot Links Ilweb links IAssembly of uptodate top 100 bookmarks nominated by members of
brandknowledge community
INews & Feeds
Iweb; e-mail (events
etc)
Directory of happenings and recent brandknowledge newslabstracts
IJournal Abstracts Ilweb Gournals) IFuller abstracts of journals who have freed us from copyright barners in providing
fast content indices
S�eeches of
Iweb; e-mail
ICurrent speeches by signatories and sponsors of the brandknowledge.com �ission
Founders
IComing Soon IIweb IIMajor New Content: Expected time of arrival
I
IRecent Additions Ilweb IInternal links to our most recent content additions and hot news from our
researcher networks
organisation-wide action. Anyone work
ing in a company can use this kind of a
map to work out whether the board really
supports the transition from typical 20th
entury disintegrated brand state to inte
grated 2 1 st Century Brandknowledge. If
your board doesn't truly support this, it is
probably best to consider another em
ployee brand relationship than to continue
to work for a company which has no right
to exist in the transparent integrity that e
world will demand.
LOOK BEFORE YOU LEAP INTO
MEASUREMENT
Measurement is a very powerful thing. It
can very easily inhibit change rather than
,
enable it. It can easily disalign (or politicise)
employee motivations rather than harness
them. It can very easily represent one pro
fessional group's attempt to subordinate oth
ers. To some extent, I would argue that
through the 1990s brand valuation,20 brand
equity and marketing metrics have been
guilty of all these easy faults. So let me ask
you to stand back and participate in a differ
ent measurement exercise.
Exercise: If you could test with five pieces
of litmus paper for the corporate brand IQ
of a 2 1 st C organisation, what areas would
you profile?
E-mail me at wcbn007@easynet.co.uk if
you would like to compare your five profiles
versus mine. I would currently summarise as
my probes for excellence as:
10. TABLE 4 BRANDKNOWLEDGE.COM MAP - CONTINUED
I LEADERS & THINKERS I
Ipurpose Ilweb;e-mail
I
Introducing the world's first multidisciplinary electronIc bramstrust on 21 st
Century brandknowledge and the free rules of engagement
IWho's Who !!web
!BIOS of our panel of Leaders & Thinkers. Members nominations for areas of
additional expertise representation
ICommunity Log I Log of hot questions members are asking the panel
I
Members
Registratioll
Sign into
N�tworks
Short database
questionnaire
II
�-mail electing into
networks
MEMBERS I
Gateway to Joining eg community of practice networks focused by expert content
and personal curiosity
IIdentifying globally and locally hot research/practice agendas of brandknowledge
IThe Notice Board Ilweb; e-mail IDisplay personal request to build quorums for new network agendas
IOrigin Pages !Iweb; e-mail
!Those who helped coin relevant terminology explain their intended context of use
and invite sightings of earlier claims to defining the subject
Communities of
Jlweb; e-mail IPriority networks of special interest (eg urgent goals) to founding members of
practice brandknowledge.com
IOl1line Surveys Ilweb; e-mail
I
Worldwide online benchmarks on opinions relating to leadership aspects of
brandknowledge
I ASK BENIHELP I
WQrds of
Ilweb IThe participatory and inclusive mission of brandknowledge.com
Welcome
�ommunal
Ilweb;e-mail ICurrent focal points and feedback on our values
�riorities
IO&A Ilweb; e-mail IIMost common member Questions/Answers
I
intranet;
brand promise;
primary value to lead a global network
is 'value in cost out' ;
energetic buzz of employees who know
their organisation enables them to learn
and do 'insanely great or really valuable
stuff';
transparent monitoring of every con
stituent stakeholder's trust in getting
value from the brand.
NB: Clarifying what you believe to be the
five top areas to profile in appraising organi
sational value creation is only a start, but it
is also the right starting place for then de
bating how next to construct systematic
measurement instruments. As an example of
how times are a-changing, I am informed
that what I call a company's 'intranet' capa
bility (but others may equally well call e
business readiness) has in the last few years
risen from nothing to be the biggest single
factor that many US analysts use in rating a
corporation's future growth potential.
CONCLUSION
21st Century Brandknowledge is changing
so fast that it is beyond the scope of one
person or one expert discipline to master
it. This is a big challenge - not the least
for those who share my belief that the
brand is the most natural way in which
leaders can connect all the intangibles of
the networking age - organising the
Editorial
Page 229
11. Ed itorial
Page 230
most that your company's brand and
knowledge and people have to offer. W hat
the worldwide web permits disciplined
people to do is to integrate their disci
plines and to network accelerated learning
to each other.
After five years of practice as a
webmaster21 I hope to play a small part in
this accelerated learning as one of the
founders of the 2 1 st century site
www.brandknowledge.com (see map of
version 1 in Table 4). Our mission includes
providing an interactive space for assem
bling various worldwide research networks
geared to putting ADEP*T into multidisci
plinary practice. For example, why not join
our list of reviewers in their communal as
sembly of a Good Management Guide -
instead of the UK's Food Guide reviews of
restaurants our members aim to review all
the most famous 20th century classical
management and professional frameworks
for gaps vis a vis ADEP*T connectivity. Or
join another network which is concerned
with assembling a corporate brand IQ test.
Or post a question on e-business to our
multidisciplinary brainstrust. Or simply
come and debate the papers you see in this
journal with their authors.
I would like to sign off this millennial
space by posing one further question: what
do you think is the biggest mistake busi
ness theorists taught 20th century MBA
students? Answers by E-mail only please to
me at wcbn007@easynet.co.uk . My own
candidate - reflecting my father's decades
of writings at The Economist and hopes for
net-age free markets - concerns all mod
els of defensive strategy. W hile I am not
against getting time to breathe through de
fensive tactics, it is clear to me that invest
ment in defensive strategy is a synonym for
adding cost, or slowing desirable innova
tion, or disaligning your leadership
promise and creating distrust between peo
ple, or all of these things. I sincerely be
lieve that the information transparency and
interactivity of the Internet age means that
organisations that persist in this complex
indulgence are business dinosaurs whose
rapid extinction will be an early outcome
of our third millennium.
REFERENCES
(1) Drucker, P. (1999) 'Management
Challenges for the 21st Century',
Harperbusiness.
(2) Macrae, C. (1996) 'Brand Chartering
Handbook - How Brand
Organisations Learn Living Scripts', Ch.
1 1 , Addison-Wesley; and Uncles, M.,
Cocks, M. and Macrae C. (1995)
'Brand Architecture - reconfiguring
organisations for effective brand
management', TheJournal ifBrand
Management, Volume 3, Number 1; and
Matthews, G. (in prep.) 'Brand
Architecture -Managing the
Marketing Communications Process',
previewing at
http://www.brad.ac.uk/branding/archit
ecture99.html
(3) See, for example, the multidisciplinary
reading list
http://www.brandknowledge.com/rdis
ca.htm
(4) http://www.brandknowledge.com/
cop3m2a.htm
(5) Hinrichs, R. (1997) 'Intranets -
W hat's the bottom-line?', Sun Micro
Systems, Prentice Hall.
(6) Powerpoint presentation available from
author, E-mail
wcbn007@easynet.co.uk
(7) http://www.cluetrain.com; and Locke,
c., Levine, R. Searls, D. , Weinberger,
D. (2000) 'The Cluetrain Manifesto',
Perseus.
(8) Collins, J. and Porras, J. (1994) 'Built
to Last', Harperbusiness.
(9) Jensen, W (2000) 'Simplicity: The
New Competitive Advantage in a
World ofMore, Better, Faster', Perseus;
12. also http://www.simplerwork.com
(10) Petzinger, T. (1999) 'The New
Pioneers: The Men and Women who
are Transforming the Workplace and
Marketplace'; also
http://www.petzinger.com
(1 1) Mendelson, H. and Ziegler, J. (1999)
'Survival of the Smartest', Wiley.
(12) Tapscott, D. (1999) 'Creating Value in
the Network Economy', Harvard
Business School Press.
(13) Macrae, C (2000) 'Chartering
interactive marketing's 21st Century',
Interactive Marketing, Volume 1 ,
Number 3.
(14) (1998) Special Triple Issue on
Employee Brand Reality. TheJournal of
Marketing Management, Volume 15,
Numbers 1-3.
(15) Mitchell, A (2000 in prep.) 'Win-Win
Marketing'.
(16) http://www. topica.com/lists/cluetrain
(17) See eg, Washington Post (1999) 'EToys
vs Etoy: A Clash of Commerce and
Art', 10th December.
http://washingtonpost.com/wp
dyn/business/A39614-1 999Dec9.html
(1 8) Allen, D. (1999) 'Enterprise
Alignment', 3rd International
Corporate Reputation Conference,
Puerto Rico.
(19) SCAN (1 999) Survey ofBrand and
Communication Management,
Netherlands. Further info: E-mail:
m.ligtenbarg@scan.nl
(20) (1998) Special Brand Valuation Issue,
TheJournal ofBrand Management,
Volume 5. Number 4.
(21) Macrae, C. (1996) 'MELNET96 invites
you to contribute to the brand learning
organisation', TheJournal ofBrand
Management, Volume 3, Number 4.
Editorial
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