Companies need to imbibe a service-oriented culture as customerempathy and engagement matter most in the long run.
Managing product brand, as well as corporate branding, has become a challenging area. Today, each firm is making efforts to increase brand equity and public relations (PR) has emerged as the favourite tool. Social media is the most-soughtafter medium now for making the correct noises at the right time and places. Moreover, of late, corporate social responsibility and its different offshoots have been sought after as a part of the PR strategy.
Researches of David Aaker and Jean-Noël Kapferer are still very relevant when it comes to brand management. However, firms in India have moved far ahead when it comes to establishing and maintaining a sustainable competitive edge through brand equity. Interestingly, with the ever-increasing array of product variants and brands, customers were never more confused than now. To top it all, an incessant barrage of marketing communications has created complete chaos. Social media chatter and paid blogs are giving a rich flavour to this clutter.
To be seen as a responsible/preferred brand in the market, firms have gone too deep into complex, strategic thinking. Another dimension that has created a double whammy for business leaders is that all these exercises have been tied to some tight and tangible sales targets. Nowadays, most of the Indian firms are driven by year on-year and month-on-month sales figure comparisons. But then, if every step that a company takes is tied to an increase in sales, we become too myopic. This trend was identified and very well presented by Theodore Levitt in his celebrated work titled ‘Marketing Myopia’, published in the Harvard Business Review.
Denne historien er fra October 07, 2018-utgaven av Business Today.
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Denne historien er fra October 07, 2018-utgaven av Business Today.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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HOW TO ADAPT TO EXTREME HEAT
India is vulnerable to extreme heat and yet unprepared. But various initiatives provide a glimpse of what is possible when collaboration and ingenuity come together
THE WORLD IN 2030
The policy implications are that India would have to maintain a strong link to a re-industrialising US but find a way to use Chinese capital and inputs
A PEEK INTO THE FUTURE
INDIA IN 2025 AND BEYOND: TRENDS TO WATCH OUT FOR
"STEERING SBI INTO THE FUTURE"
C.S. Setty, Chairman of the State Bank of India, talks about his plans for the bank, the strategy for the future, and technology, among other things
"Outlook for India is very positive"
Paul Uren, Head of Investment Banking (Asia-Pacific), J. P. Morgan, on M&A activity, the environment of investment banking market in India, and more
The 2025 Slate
The Indian film industry is hoping that 2025 will mark the return of big-budget blockbusters
TECH, SET, GO!
With up to 30 tech start-ups looking to go public, the year promises to be a turning point for India's thriving start-up ecosystem
CAUTION AHEAD
A series of events in the first few weeks of the New Year could shape the trajectory of the equity markets, especially the Trump administration's policies
THE GENTLEMAN-SCHOLAR PM
IN EVERY ROLE HE HELD, BE IT FINANCE MINISTER OR PRIME MINISTER, SINGH REMAINED OPEN-MINDED AND CONSTANTLY SOUGHT NEW IDEAS
THE COMPLETE ECONOMIST
THE MANMOHAN SINGH ERA WILL GO DOWN IN HISTORY AS THE ONE THAT CHANGED THE IMAGE OF INDIA, NOT MERELY IN THE ECONOMIC SPHERE, BUT IN EVERY OTHER ASPECT