Empower
Chinese consumers, brands and the MNC learning curve
A seasoned China watcher takes a look at China’s progress in terms of the brand issues marketing people need to understand.
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Western multinationals expand into China
Since the mid-1990s, many Western multinationals have established beach-heads in China by focusing on the three main population centres. The question now is whether to move beyond these major cities.
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Whose brand is it anyway? And can you pick its friends?
You can pick your brands and you can pick your friends. But if you're a marketer; can you pick your brand's friends? Should you even try?
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What choice architecture means for marketing
Behavioural economics has given us the concept of choice architecture. What it means is simply that the way a choice is presented influences how it is made.
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The inexorable rise of brand response
Communication campaigns traditionally have been divided between two types of activities: ‘above the line’ brand building and ‘below the line’ for gaining immediate response.
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What hope-fuelled markets can teach fear-fuelled markets
Most markets can be identified as either hope- or fear-fuelled. Ann Mack and Mark Truss describe the outlook of the two types and the lessons mature markets can learn from emerging ones
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The death of innovation
John Kearon examines the heretical proposition that the adoption of ‘marketing science’ is the reason why large corporations no longer seem capable of creating the kinds of new category innovations that made them big in the first
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New routes from old roots: Comparing the Indian and Chinese middle class
WHEN WE THINK of India and China, a huge variety of popular perceptions and images come to mind, captured in these real chapter titles from some recent, more popular books:
India:
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How to improve client-agency relations: whose responsibility is it?
New media and the economic challenges have changed the landscape of marketing forever Richard Pinder argues that clients must take the lead, while Camilla Honey (panel, opposite) offers tips to agencies
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