Ehrenberg-Bass: Narrow targeting ‘counter-productive’ to B2B growth

Marketing Week

The road to growth in B2B starts with understanding that irrespective of size or positioning, a brand’s main competition are the biggest brands in its category, as shown by a major new study from the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute.

For a B2B marketer looking to acquire new customers and drive business growth, it might seem common sense to target a niche group of customers whose needs directly align with the product or service on offer.

However, according to a major new study by Ehrenberg-Bass Institute’s Professor Jenni Romaniuk for the LinkedIn B2B Institute, that’s a “counter-productive” approach. The best way to drive B2B business growth is to target all customers within the brand’s category.

Professor Romaniuk’s study confirms that the marketing law of duplicate purchase applies to B2B markets just as much as it applies to B2C. This means B2B brands share customers with and acquire customers from all other brands in their market, proportional to competitor share.

Building on previous research, Professor Romaniuk observes the duplication of purchase law taking effect across the US business insurance market, as seen in the table below.

Covering 16 different business insurance products, including commercial auto insurance, crime coverage, business income interruption insurance, travel insurance and professional liability insurance, the data shows how customer sharing declines in line with brand penetration.

Read the full article on Marketing Week.

Posted on May 6, 2021 .

The power of brand assets: Rudi ist zurück!

Adformatie

At the right time, Heineken uses the two old brand assets: the slogan Beertje? and der Rudi.

Never change a winning team or in the case of Heineken: the winning horse . The terraces will open today and Heineken has taken its winning horse out of the stable again. Ski instructor Rudi – Who doesn't know the 2002 commercial “Heeeee, Biertje”? – was given a new look on April 20, immediately after the cabinet announcement with the campaign #Heteerstebiertje.

Heineken has planted this well-known brand asset seed to give us the right push on April 28th. They want to see as many happy terrace goers as possible, naturally associated with Heineken. The consumer should celebrate #heterstebiertje by ordering it en masse, photographing it and sharing it via social media. For the time being, we can only enjoy a snack on the terrace until six o'clock, but what's wrong with us: "Give me such a nice beer!"

How Brands Grow

What is Heineken doing so well here? It all comes together. The right moment (the terraces will open again), the two old brand assets (the slogan Biertje? and der Rudi) and a clear call-to-action. Order, enjoy and above all share, in other words create social proof: everyone does it, including you. They make it very easy for us to buy. Byron Sharp would be pleased. Make it easy to buy  is his theory.

If you want people to think about your brand more often, consider you more often and buy more often, you have to build on the mental availability of the brand:  mental availability . You claim a relevant situation in the daily life of the consumer and link this to a strong brand asset. Finally, the beer must also be available to order:  physical availability . If the total picture is relevant for the large group ( mainstreames ), then everyone can think of you, consider you and buy. Ergo: brand growth. The theory of  How Brands Grow  in a nutshell.

Read the full article on Adformatie.

Posted on April 28, 2021 .

Debunking the Pareto principle: Why we should be critical of accepted truths in marketing

Econsultancy

Many widely-accepted truths in marketing have a less-than-solid grounding in fact or reality, often due to the way they are repeated uncritically and simplified in quotations, presentations or slide decks. Nils Andersson Wimby talks about one famous example, the Pareto principle or the 80/20 rule, and why it isn’t as faultless as it’s presented.

Simple, distinctive and categorical statements have a way of becoming truths. That is because they simplify complex patterns, because they slash the time spent on analysis and discussion in processes, and because they make for really nice statement slides.

These statements and “rules” range from a few indisputable truths, over a wide range of statements that are factually based but are subject to conditions and can be questioned depending on the scenario, to the outright questionable ones. Here are some examples:

“A strong brand reduces price elasticity.” Can’t argue with that.

“The optimal budget distribution between long- and short-term advertising is 60/40.” This is a data-based insight, yet Binet & Field themselves say that the ratio varies depending on brand maturity, category etc. Also, the distinction of budget items between advertising and other disciplines can sometimes be blurry, creating some ambiguity. The rule is valid, but in the over-simplified way it is often repeated, there are arguments to be made against it.

“Successful influencer marketing depends on giving the influencers freedom to create the content they know works for their followers.” I seriously believe this can be questioned, at least if you have some faith in the thinking about distinctiveness, singularity and brand asset management.

“Innovate or die.” We’ve all seen the Kodak slides, but the idea of innovation as a universal necessity is just bonkers.

So while ranging in validity, these statements are regarded as absolute truths because they are so simple, and because their simplicity causes them to be repeated in so many trend and strategy decks. After some time, they become so ubiquitous you are considered out of the loop if you don’t mention them – or agree with them for that matter.

Interestingly, the statements you need to agree with can vary depending on the field you work in. They can also often be completely contradictory to the ones followed by other, adjacent fields. Do you work in digital strategy and UX? Of course, the future is customer-centric and personalized! Ad agency professional? Naturally, most of your efforts need to be emotionally driven and have broad and universal appeal.

One of the laws that has been around long enough to become an accepted truth, and dodged scrutiny and critical examination, is the Pareto principle (also called Pareto’s law).

The Pareto principle (also known as the 80/20 rule) states that, for many events, roughly 80% of the effects come from 20% of the causes. Management consultant Joseph M. Juran suggested the principle and named it after Italian economist Vilfredo Pareto, who noted the 80/20 connection while at the University of Lausanne in 1896.

In the fields of business economics and marketing, the Pareto principle has been applied as the idea that 20% of any given brand’s customers make up 80% of that brands business. As a result, it is concluded that brands would be well-advised to focus a lot of their energy on these most valuable customers.

However, a new paper from Byron Sharp, Jenni Romanuk, Charles Graham and the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute shows that this relationship is just not true.

Read the full article on Econsultancy.

Posted on September 15, 2020 .

Seven tried and tested strategies for getting back into work

Marketing Week

The consequences of the pandemic are now being felt in redundancies, and if you’re in this position, a structured approach is your best bet for finding the next opportunity.

‘We are all in this together.’

Er, no, we’re not. The real impact of the pandemic is now starting to hit us all in marketing and advertising.

The recession is happening and it’s here now. Unsurprisingly, a collapse in demand means that companies are laying off people in droves. And the downstream effect on folks in marketing and advertising has started. Unlike other recessions, this one is affecting almost all industries. So, what should you do if you are being affected?

First, let me take you back to April. Yes, the one that was just a few months ago, but feels like about 20 years.

You might need to read my last column to get the gory and unpleasant (at least for me) details, but here is a quick synopsis: despite having what appears to be a good marketing career, part and parcel of this has been getting laid off four or five times. The reaction to the article took me by surprise.

Lots of people from around the world – Bulgaria, Colombia, Germany, the US, India; you name it – got in touch. They said some pretty nice things. But there were a lot of things I left out. So, here are some battle-tested ideas you can use if your career has been affected, to face your future positively and keep your ambition intact.

I did get accused of using uncompromising language in the last column and was told that maybe I should tone it down (are these people reading Professor Ritson of this parish, I wonder?). Of course, I am going to ignore this advice – so, fasten your seatbelts, snowflakes, it’s going to be a bumpy ride.

Ideas for coping

When I am asked about coping, I recommend looking at it as the ‘three-month turnaround’ – this is the label I have given to the emotions and perspectives that you’ll experience if you are let go from your job. Let me explain:

  • Month one: You still look backwards – thinking about the job and the world you have left behind. There is some denial, anger and bargaining.

  • Month two: The dawning realisation that the old world is not coming back, and you can start thinking – good and bad – about the future. There is still some denial or anger.

  • Month three: The old job begins to fade in your mind, and you start to look forward to the future and believe in concrete plans. Denial is over and you realise anger is futile.

This model reflects many people’s experiences. Only late in month three can they see the future more clearly – and start making concrete plans. I even suggest that people don’t go applying for lots of jobs or dusting off their CV during this three-month period. Perhaps in month one you will, but in reality you are not seeing clearly – something you don’t realise until after month three.

That’s when it dawns on you that you might have been on autopilot for a while – and I don’t mean in your job. I mean you have been following a ‘script’ that’s been in your head. And now that script is no longer useful.

In cognitive psychology, a script is defined as “a predetermined, stereotyped sequence of actions that define a well-known situation”. We all draw on them to create ideas about how things will unfold – such as when you are laid off.

With the pandemic, some of our previous ideas about your career might now not pan out. The sooner you process this the better. Back to the point about denial here: I have been guilty of using the same scripts and holding on tight to an imaginary future. Nothing good comes of this.

After month three, you should have a clearer head and more realistic take on the future. Working on the CV, getting out there – all of these normal job-hunting practices will be a lot more real and grounded at this stage.

Read the full article on Marketing Week.

Posted on July 3, 2020 .

Call To Action

Call To Action podcast by Gasp!

We've cast a net off the coast of Adelaide this week to catch one of the globe's greatest researchers and sci-fi fans, Jenni Romaniuk. Jenni is Research Professor and Associate Director (International) at the conveyor belt to marketing stars, the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, where she has advised many of the world's biggest brands.

She is the author of two must-read books; Building Distinctive Brand Assets and How Brands Grow Part 2, co-authoring the latter with industry legend Professor Byron Sharp, as well as being an engaging and entertaining keynote speaker at global industry conferences.

She chinwags to us on her first job as a talented mixologist in a football club bar making fruit cups, her two books, how to build mental availability, best practices for managing and measuring distinctive brand assets, and tonnes more. You’d be a fool not to fill your ear canals up.

Listen to the interview on Call To Action.

Posted on June 12, 2020 .

Direct Line understands the power of characters in unlocking branded recall

Marketing Week

Direct Line has replaced one of the most effective brand campaigns of recent years with a new approach that promises similar success, all thanks to the team’s understanding of distinctive brand assets.

In every marketing decade there are a couple of brands that everyone follows. Not just because the brand is brilliant, but because those in charge of it are so far ahead of everyone else that you have to keep an eye on what they do next.

Three decades ago we all looked to Levi's, then to Boddingtons and to Tango, then Gillette, on to Skoda and First Direct, and then spectacular work at Stella Artois and Häagen-Dazs and Cadbury, to Dove, then Tesco and most lately John Lewis.

Each brand, and the team behind it, had its moment in the marketing sun. A six- or seven-year spell when the brand could do no wrong and its strategic excellence begat tactical effectiveness, which built brand equity, which fed more tactical effectiveness. A super-collider of marketing effectiveness that built and built and built.

At the moment, it is very much Direct Line that is building the energy and deriving the most attention from savvy marketers. Mark Evans and his team of flying effectiveness monkeys are smashing it and, as various industry gongs and effectiveness prizes testify, they have their shit well and truly together.

Eventually, as history teaches us, this team will diffract and defect across the industry and the brand will fade from its current power place. But not for a while and certainly not yet.

Read the full article on Marketing Week.

Posted on March 11, 2020 .

Connecting the dots for Coca-Cola

Marketing Tribute

What is the advice to Coca-Cola with regard to outdoor advertising and the use of its own 'heritage'?

“Our advice is to consistently focus on your own distinctive brand assets, the distinctive elements of a brand, as described in Jenni Romaniuk's Building Distinctive Brand Assets. Although this book didn't appear until 2018, Coca-Cola's marketers have long known the importance of communicating consistently. The bottle is a strong element and by always communicating that clearly in combination with the name, strong brain connections are made. Even if you quickly walk past the message, there is a good chance that you will link the combination of color and bottle to Coca-Cola. And then you probably haven't even seen the literal brand name. Good job Coca-Cola. "

Read the full article on Marketing Tribute.

Posted on March 4, 2020 .

Short-term shame? Completely unjustified!

Adformantie.

The lessons from Sharp, Binet and Field still matter, but you shouldn't be ashamed of your short-term strategy.

Last week, during Koffiedik Kijken 2020, it was back: the cry for help from marketers to stop with that short-term focus. Rabobank's Dorkas Koenen predicted - or actually hoped - that by 2020 marketers will really stop focusing on quick profit and product-oriented communication. "The trick no longer works," said Koenen. "It breaks brands," David Snellenberg also wrote in an emergency letter to Adformation last year.

Lately, it has become popular among marketers to cite publications by Byron Sharp (How Brands Grow) and The long and the Short of it by Les Binet and Peter Field. They show that successful brand building is due to conservatism. If you stick to your brand identity to a certain extent, focus on building brand associations, appeal to the widest possible audience and (as Nike's Phill Knight calls it) create an 'emotional tie' with your target audience, that promises greater market share in the long run . In other words, slow and steady wins the race. Something I myself have preached with great frustration for a long time.

Read the full article on Adformantie.

Posted on January 17, 2020 .

Make it stick

Adformatie

Do you already have the connection between emotion and your brand in order?

How do you increase the effectiveness of advertisements?

Annelies Wittenberg and Folkert van Oorschot, research consultants at Validators, answer this question in a series of four blogs, written especially for Adformation. In these blogs you will learn about the BEST CREATION Framework, which underlies the creation tests of Validators. It covers four elements that increase the effectiveness of your creation: Breakthrough, Engage, Stick and Trigger. In this blog Annelies tells you more about how your brand will stay in the memory of a consumer as best as possible.

Typically, there is a significant amount of time between the time an ad catches a consumer's attention and the buying moment. That is why it is important that an advertisement leaves a mark in a consumer's memory. This can be an image, a message, a smell, a feeling, a thought, or any other association between advertising and brand. Often these associations are not even consciously processed.

Read the full article on Adformantie.

Posted on January 8, 2020 .

"Is digital marketing a bubble?"

Dagens Media

Really missing all online marketing effect? The best way to find out is to experiment and not let other advertisers' experience become a general truth, writes Iprospect's Erik Luhr and Martin Styrhagen.

IF OUR INDUSTRY does not adopt a scientific approach to how marketing works or does not work, it will lose its influence, says Jenni Romaniuk at the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute for Marketing Science . We are prepared to agree, which is perhaps why it feels a little sad to see how a poorly substantiated article that drives the thesis that all online marketing has no effect has been extensively shared on social channels in recent weeks.

The article is called "The new dot com bubble is here: it's called online advertising" , and as the article title suggests, the authors believe that our industry to half (50 percent of all media investment is digital) is built on a false belief in the effect in digital marketing.

Read the full article on Dagens Media.

Posted on December 3, 2019 .

3 reasons for a logo in your commercial

Adformatie

Add or not add logo to your advertisement; what effect does that have on how the viewer experiences the spot and the brand?

Ster investigated this question for CheapTickets.nl with the help of Ster AdMeasure .

To logo or not to logo?

CheapTickets.nl , the number one travel website in the Netherlands, has recently launched their new campaign. Whatever the reason for your trip, everyone can go to CheapTickets. With their new campaign they focus on brand awareness and branding:

“The aim of the campaign is to increase our brand awareness, to further build on a positive brand image in order to ultimately create brand preference.” — Joost de Wit, Lead Branding & Engagement

To increase brand awareness, it is of course important that viewers get a good idea of ​​who the sender of the campaign is. Showing a logo in the spot is an efficient way to clarify the sender and build your brand awareness.

Does a logo derive?

However, there may be resistance around showing a logo in the spot, for example because of the fear that a commercial will be less liked with a logo. Or maybe because a logo actually derives from the message of the commercial and the surprise effect is gone. Some brands therefore opt for a more pragmatic variant of the logo: a neutral or transparent version. However, these choices are often made based on gut feeling.

CheapTickets.nl faced the same question and considerations in their new campaign. There was a need for data to not only choose on the basis of taste.

To help them with this assessment, we tested three variations of the spot among the target group in AdMeasure, Ster's innovative research tool. Each respondent assessed one of the three spots and the results were compared.

The variants were:

  • With the logo only visible at the end

  • With the normal logo constantly in view

  • With a more subtle, white logo constantly in view

Read the full article on Adformatie.

Posted on December 3, 2019 .

Don't burn long term for short term

MediaCat

We met Jenni Romaniuk, International Director of the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute for Marketing Science at the Festival of Marketing.

You have a message from Jenni Romaniuk, International Director of the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute for Marketing Science, which we met at the Festival of Marketing: “Yes, you can only plan for the next quarter, but remember that what you do will have an impact beyond the next quarter.”

Your new book Building Distinctive Brand Assets has been released. Can you tell us about the book?

The book briefly describes how to use, measure and apply your brand identity. One of our problems with brand identities was to determine how to understand that you have a good brand identity. How will you know that you have a strong brand identity? What will you be able to change, how will you know if what you are doing is working? I've gathered all this in one place so you can understand how distinctive values ​​work.

How can marketers identify brand identity elements that can translate into distinctive values?

First of all, most brands have a history. So, you should go back and look at your history. What have you consistently applied? For example, you may have been using the same packaging for a very long time, or you may have used the same person for a long time in your ads. You may have used the same color, the same image, or the same style of ads in the background. When you look back at your history, you will realize that there are things that you repeat, both intentionally and unintentionally. These are your starting points. See how strong these are. Then look at what your competitors are doing; because you are fighting against your opponents in people's memory. Once you have gathered all this information and looked at your competitors, you can see how you can combine them and develop a distinctive value.

Read the full interview on MediaCat.

Posted on November 17, 2019 .

Moments of consumption, not consumer segments

Médiář

In the next chapter, Mark Cichon focuses on key strategies that can affect the category of occasional shoppers. In particular, we will look at the evidence and examples that encourage marketers and agencies to focus on creating products and services that address key moments of consumption - and therefore reach a wide range of users.

Read the full article on Médiář.

Posted on November 12, 2019 .

"Branding is like toothbrushing"

Dagens Media

After several years of fairs of types such as Fields, Binet and Sharp, advertisers now understand the importance of placing the majority of their media budget on long-term brand building. However, the industry is still stuck in old wheel tracks, writes Clear Channels Karl Höglund, who gives his best tips on how to trigger associations with your brand.

In line with digitalization, advertising has become an integral part of our everyday lives. We are constantly reachable and thus constantly exposed to commercial messages. Cynically, we are just one data point in someone's media plan. Given that marketers now have so much data on what works, but perhaps most importantly what doesn't work, it is a mystery to me that one does not succeed better. If everyone now knows that short-term efforts inhibit long-term growth - why do advertisers (according to IPA) continue to spend 60 percent of their media budgets on such efforts?

Jenni Romaniuk, brand researcher and author of the book Building Distinctive Brand Assets, demonstrates the importance of being consistent and long-term in her communications in order to successfully create and maintain recognition and "mental availability". Among other things, how to work with color, logos, fonts, manners, icons, sounds, shapes and so on to trigger the cognitive or intuitive in human brains. So trigger associations to your brand. 

Read the full article on Dagens Media.

Posted on October 18, 2019 .

Stop giving money to Mares, Slovaks and others, it does not make sense, the expert advises

Expres

Influencer. In many years, the term that many people have great difficulty in pronouncing has been declining in all cases. Young children no longer want to be a doctor, an astronaut, or a footballer, longing for an “career” of an influencer. However, according to Australian expert Jenni Romaniuk, who runs the world's largest brand marketing research center, companies that appeal to and bet on influencers throw money through the window. Working with them brings nothing.

“The first reason is that you have no control what they say. The second is that although they have a large audience, you need to realize how many brands they promote. There are a number of them, and your business will be just one of many, ” said Australian Jenni Romaniukin an interview with Hospodářské noviny.

Read the full article on Expres.

Posted on October 17, 2019 .

Ehrenberg-Bass: Marketing needs to embrace its scientific status or risk a slow death

Marketing Week

Unless marketers can embrace marketing as a ‘young science’ that needs to be nourished they will lose their influence at the top table, argues Professor Jenni Romaniuk.

Marketing is a young science that needs to be nurtured and nourished if the industry wants to enter an “age of enlightenment”, according to professor Jenni Romaniuk, associate director of the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute of Marketing Science

Speaking today (10 October) at the Festival of Marketing, Romaniuk urged marketers to embrace marketing as science if they want to ensure the discipline has impact and influence within organisations and among consumers.

“With the changes marketing is facing with the C-suite and getting credibility with the board, can we afford to not take ourselves seriously as a marketing discipline?” asked Romaniuk.

“Can we afford to wait for that or will we just get rendered obsolete by the CFO in the company? We can move now and get there more quickly than if we have to wait for all of the people who don’t think marketing is a science to first die.”

Romaniuk argued that to enter an age of enlightenment, marketers need the humility to realise they can’t know everything about such a new science and some of their thinking may be wrong.

Read the full article on Marketing Week.

Posted on October 10, 2019 .

Romaniuk: Seven (costly) sins of brand marketing

MediaGuru

Jenni Romaniuk showed at the Brand Management conference what marketers can increase in price to boost their brand growth.

“No marketer wants to destroy his brand,” said Jenni Romaniuk of the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute, who is trying to collect data for evidence-based marketing and is also behind the book How to Build Brands, said at the outset. Even so, marketers often destroy their entrusted brand when they let themselves be carried away in their strategies by “intuition” or common belief that something works, even if it is not. The mistakes made by marketers are manifested not only by the loss of money and time, but also by wasted opportunities and, last but not least, by clearing up competition. 

Seven “costly sins of brand marketing” to watch out for, Jenni Romaniuk showed at this year’s Brand Management conference

Read the full article and interview on MediaGuru.

Posted on October 4, 2019 .

Interview with Jenni Romaniuk

Festival of Marketing

Jenni Romaniuk is a Research Professor of Marketing and Associate Director (International) at the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute - the world’s largest centre for research into marketing.

Hi Jenni, thanks for chatting with us! Firstly, we’d love for you to tell us a little about yourself and what you do?

I am a Research Professor at the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute for Marketing Science, based at the University of South Australia.  My primary goal is to discover and share new knowledge in marketing science. I specialise in how the stuff people hold about brands in their memories affects the choices they make, and how marketing activity affects the stuff in people’s heads. 

More specifically, my research areas are Mental Availability, Distinctive Assets and Brand Health measurement and metrics.  My research hobbies include Word of mouth and Buyer behaviour. 

You’ve recently written a book about future-proofing your brand’s identity which will be available at Festival of Marketing. What are some of your top tips for building distinctive brand assets?

Yes, brand identity is an area where I see actions taken with the best of intentions, but unfortunately many mistakes are made due to lack of metrics and long-term strategy.  The aim of the book is to bring together, in one place, an understanding of strategy, measurement and tactics to Building Distinctive. 
The three headline tips I would have are:

  1. Don’t make life hard for yourself through poor asset selection – Use metrics and knowledge to avoid assets that will be more difficult to build.  There are no best assets, but there are definitely worse ones. 

  2. Think menu rather than meal – Select your set of assets like you would a restaurant menu, so you can choose the best one each time for the branding context. Too often assets are treated in isolation, rather than how the set of assets work together in all branding contexts. 

  3. Make ‘no’ your default response to change – If you select smartly, your brand’s Distinctive Assets should outlast you.  Too often investments in Distinctive Assets are abandoned for no valid reason.  Only change if there is a strategic advantage in doing so.

Read the full interview on the Festival of Marketing blog.

Posted on October 3, 2019 .

Marketing Journal Podcast: What the Marketing Bible 'How Brands Grow' by Byron Sharp says

Focus Agency

The most important source of information marketers can read in their lives. This is how renowned marketing professor Mark Ritson refers to the book How Brands Grow by Byron Sharp. In this podcast, you'll learn the most important things you can find in it.

How to build brands? This question has many answers. There are a number of approaches, and this diversity sometimes resembles the "school of thought" in the field of psychology. Experts argue which way is the right one. The layman (but also some marketer) is surprised. Is there any compass in this mix of uncertainty showing what really works? Yes, it's called " How Brands Grow ". This book was published by Byron Sharp in 2010, followed in 2016 by Jenni Romaniuk as its co-author.

In the Czech Republic strongly resonated performances Mark Ritson at the last Festival Marketing and its expertise is also involved in making this year's lineup. In his Making a Marketer document , the first question is: “We marketers like to say that our decision is based on evidence. Where to go when looking for data, what works and what doesn't? ”

Ritson then replies: “Lots of marketing is not based on evidence. It is either based on ignorance of empirical data, or was created on distorted half-truths designed to sell one thing to marketers instead of another. Since I have a Ph.D. in marketing, it is natural for me that when you say something, you have found empirical evidence to support it. This will take you to certain places . This will take you to Byron (Sharp) and the Ehrenberg-Bass Institute , because they have everything fantastically empirically grounded. The quality, application and insights of Les Binet and Peter Field's work, together with ' How Brands Grow ', form the most important corpus of information.”

And much of this most important information is available today . It was exactly what the "How Brands Grow" books said I was talking to Jan Patera, a former long-time marketing journalist from Marketing & Media and later Marketing Sales Media, who is now helping Blue Events design their conference program. Thanks to him in May of this year, he performed in Prague Les Binet and already in the Wednesday, October 2 at the conference have Brand Management in 2019 a chance to hear one of the main characters Ehrenberg-Bass Institute and co-author of the second edition of "How Brands Grow" Jenni Romaniuk.

Read the full article on Focus Agency.

Posted on September 29, 2019 .

Iconic Australian shopping centre brand Westfield to expand across Europe

The New Zealand Herald

What started in the backstreets of Blacktown is now coming to Paris and Prague after winning over London and New York. But there's a drawback to this Aussie success.

When the residents of Paris and Prague, Stockholm and Warsaw head out for some retail therapy this weekend they'll notice a new, unfamiliar and very Australian name taking pride of place on their local shopping centre.

Westfield, a brand born in Sydney's western suburbs, is taking over Europe.

Already a big deal in New Zealand, the US and UK, it's now on the march to France, Sweden, the Czech Republic and Poland, as it becomes one of Australia's most successful retail brands.

Jenni Romaniuk, a research professor at Uni SA's Ehrenberg-Bass Institute and author of Building Distinctive Brand Assets, said bringing Westfield to major centres across Europe was a smart move.

"Even the people who like online shopping also like going to a shopping centre because it's a social event. So having a strong international brand in that space creates economies of scale," Prof Romaniuk said.

Read the full article in The Herald.

Posted on September 22, 2019 .