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Book cover of Ingredient Branding: Making the Invisible Visible by Philip Kotler

Ingredient Branding: Making the Invisible Visible

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English

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50

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Book Description

An Ingredient Brand is exactly what the name implies: an ingredient or component of a product that has its own brand identity. This is the first comprehensive book that explains how Ingredient Branding works and how brand managers can successfully improve the performance of component marketing. The authors have examined more than one hundred examples, analyzed four industries and developed nine detailed case studies to demonstrate the viability of this marketing innovation. The new concepts and principles can easily be applied by professionals. In the light of the success stories of Intel, GoreTex, Dolby, TetraPak, Shimano, and Teflon it can be expected that component suppliers will increasingly use Ingredient Branding strategies in the future. Ingredient Branding by Kotler and Pfoertsch is the most thorough and complete analysis of ingredient branding one could ever hope for in a single source—a virtual encyclopedia on InBranding. Replete with insightful case studies of companies from a variety of industries that have successfully transformed their traditional brands into powerful new InBrands, and have launched entirely new products and services employing InBranding. Ingredient Branding should be top on the list for all CMOs to read whose companies’ "live or die" based upon the success of their brands. —John A. Caslione, founder, president and CEO, GCS Business Capital, LLC, and co-author of "Chaotics: The Business of Managing and Marketing in The Age of Turbulence" This book explains how and why putting the brand of an ingredient on the outside of a product increases its appeal to the customer. The authors give managers and business leaders important insights into how this innovative marketing concept works and implement it. —John A. Quelch, Lincoln Filene Professor of Business Administration, Harvard Business School, Cambridge, MA, and author of "Greater Good: How Good Marketing Makes for Better Democracy" A fascinating, eye-opening perspective on the marketing and positioning of new, complex products, and a most valuable, wonderfully practical and readable book and guide for business leaders wanting to communicate the qualities of their products and components - by "making the invisible visible". —Rolf D Cremer, Dean and Vice President, CEIBS, China Europe International Business School, Shanghai, China
Author portrait of Philip Kotler

Philip Kotler

Philip Kotler: Born May 27, 1931 in Chicago. Professor of International Marketing from E&J Johansson and Dettingchweed at the Kellogg's School of Management at Northwestern University in Illinois. He completed his master's degree from the University of Chicago and his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, both of which were in economics. After his doctorate he studied mathematics at Harvard University and behavioral sciences at the University of Chicago. He was chosen by the Financial Times in 2001 as the fourth most important thinker in the field of management, ranked after Peter Drucker, Bill Gates, Jack Welch. In 2008, Wall Street Journal named him the sixth most influential business thinker. Kotler works as a consultant for several major American companies such as IBM, Michelin, American Bank, General Electric, Motorola. His consultancy in the field of marketing strategies, planning and organization in marketing management, international marketing. Kotler conducts panel discussions and lectures in various countries of the world. His book (Marketing Management), in its twelve editions, is considered the basic book for teaching marketing in many universities around the world, and it has also been translated into many languages. On his definition of marketing, Kotler adopts Peter Drucker's description of marketing, which is that marketing cannot be considered an independent function in the organization (the company), but is part of all its functions... It is the view of the organization's products from the customer's point of view. Kotler is considered a pioneer of marketing.talk.

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