

|
Brandchild: Remarkable Insights into the Minds of Today's Global Kids & Their Relationships with Brands [ILLUSTRATED] (Paperback) (Paperback)
by Martin Lindstrom, Patricia B. Seybold
Category:
Branding, Brand management, Marketing |
Market price: ¥ 278.00
MSL price:
¥ 248.00
[ Shop incentives ]
|
Stock:
Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
|
MSL Pointer Review:
Informative and inspiring, BRANDchild stands as one of the top references on marketing to young people. |
If you want us to help you with the right titles you're looking for, or to make reading recommendations based on your needs, please contact our consultants. |
 Detail |
 Author |
 Description |
 Excerpt |
 Reviews |
|
|
Author: Martin Lindstrom, Patricia B. Seybold
Publisher: Kogan Page
Pub. in: November, 2004
ISBN: 0749442840
Pages: 316
Measurements: 9.3 x 6.1 x 0.9 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA00365
Other information: Revised edition
ISBN-13: 978-0749442842
|
Rate this product:
|
- Awards & Credential -
Follow Philip Kotler in recognizing this book as a must have if you sell to the customer segment of kids. |
- MSL Picks -
This is an excellent book about marketing to children. Based on extensive research into the attitudes, perceptions, emotions and preferences of children around the world, it tells you in no uncertain terms how to target one of the biggest and most influential consumer populations on earth. Children between the ages of 8 and 14, dubbed "tweens" ("tweenagers") by the authors, are a curious group. They are also a lonely, insecure group with an engaging mix of naiveté and sophistication. Devilishly hard to capture, they are a rich economic prize, controlling an enormous amount of money of their own, and strongly influencing their families' purchases, even of major appliances. This book shows you what matters to these kids and what false notes to avoid if you want to tap into their buying power. We acknowledge that some readers may be uncomfortable with such tactics as setting up a web site that pretends to belong to a friendly child in order to attract kids and start buzz about some brand, but the book's reporting is accurate, practical and forward looking, for good or ill.
(From quoting Rolf Dobelli, Switzerland)
Target readers:
Marketing professionals, advertising and communication professionals, entrepreneurs, academics, and MBAs.
|
- Better with -
Better with
Creating Ever-Cool: A Marketer's Guide to a Kid's Heart
:
|
Martin Lindstrom is recognized as one of the world’s primary branding gurus. He is the author of several best-selling brand books including Clicks, Bricks & Brands with Don Peppers and Martha Rogers, PhD, and Brand Building on the Internet (both published by Kogan Page). For more than a decade, Lindstrom has advised Fortune Top 500 brands including Mars, Pepsi, LEGO, Cartoon Network, American Express, Mercedes-Benz, VISA, Ericcson, HSBC, Gilette, Yellow Pages and Microsoft. He is a former COO of British Telecom-LookSmart, co-founder of BBDO Interactive/Framfab, Europe’s largest Brand Dialogue Company, and founding CEO of BBDO Interactive Asia, the region's largest Brand Dialogue Company. Lindstrom is an acclaimed keynote speaker at conferences all over the world. He writes regular columns on branding which reach a global audience of more than 4 million people in 30 countries. His acute insights have been featured in The Times, Fortune, The Daily Telegraph, The Australian, The Independent and on the BBC.
|
From Publisher
Tweens (8- to 14-year-olds) comprise a new type of audience. An increasingly powerful and smart consumer group, they spent US$300 billion but influenced an astounding US$1.88 trillion spent across the globe last year. They are different from previous generations in every way. They are more likely to have a friend on the other side of the world than in their own street, they think the TV remote is broken when they can’t find the cursor on the screen, they drop from existence when the battery in their cell phone is flat, and they know current brand images better than any advertising expert.
Based on the world's most extensive study of tween attitudes and behaviors ever conducted, BRANDChild is the first book to look in-depth at the phenomena behind global kids and their relationships with brands. Conducted by Millward Brown, the leading global market research agency, the BRANDchild survey involved several thousand kids from more than 70 cities in 15 countries (throughout Europe, Asia, the United States and South America). Several renowned experts including best-selling author Patricia B. Seybold ('Customers.com') share their unique views on kids' trends and fascinating marketing techniques.
BRANDChild summarizes this research, as well as decades of experience from a variety of other sources on how to market to kids. It looks at their life priorities, hopes and dreams and reveals the true drivers of kids’ trends by analyzing teen-minority groups, communities and clubs.
Packed with practical advice on how to create kids' brands, including more than 50 previously unpublished case studies, BRANDchild proposes new innovative ways of marketing to this young audience. It is required reading for anyone wanting a fresh insight into this increasingly influential and demanding consumer group.
|
View all 7 comments |
Stan Davis (Author of Blur and It's Alive) (MSL quote), USA
<>
A real thought-provoker for marketing and business people. BRANDchild is a wonderful tool..." |
(Philip Kotler) (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-01 00:00>
This is a must read book if you want to communicate with and market to young people. |
(Lester Wunderman, Chairman Emeritus and Founder of Wunderman Cato Johnson), USA
<2007-01-01 00:00>
BRANDchild will be a valuable addition to our industry's literature. |
Allan Watson (MSL quote), Japan
<2007-01-01 00:00>
Martin Lindstrom does a great job letting the reader know that the root of success when communicating with kids is understanding kids, their lives, dreams and hopes. He not only analyzes data from 7 countries, but includes his own experiences with working with kids and with kids related brands. He is able to get his point across without being boring, looking at the subject form different angles. I also checked out the MartinLindstrom.com site. I think it is a great site, with tons of brand info related to kids and general brand trends. Well done! |
View all 7 comments |
|
|
|
|