These are exciting times for business managers and marketing professionals, yet the challenges imposed by ongoing social and technological developments are daunting. In an age in which marketers can reach their audiences with greater facility than ever before, firms have never been less in control of their customer targets.
This increasing connectedness of consumers provides a range of unique and promising opportunities for product and brand managers. Connecting With Consumers describes the various strategies and techniques that can be utilized to harness consumer influence. The book traces evolving developments in the consumer marketplace, considers their impact on the potential reshaping of the marketing profession, and describes the emerging set of tools that can enable marketers to respond to new marketplace realities. It provides, clear, up-to-date coverage of a number of topics currently on the minds of many: Web 2.0, word of mouth, buzz, the social web, social media metrics, customer engagement, viral and guerrilla marketing.
The book critically assesses emerging marketing strategies and tools within the context of research and theory, and provides numerous applied examples to illustrate marketing successes and common pitfalls to avoid. It argues throughout for a more collaborative relationship between companies and consumers towards their mutual benefit. Although the balance of power has shifted to the consumer for each of the various aspects of the marketing process, collaboration is what the future of marketing likely will be all about. Marketers can avoid irrelevance in the face of change, but this will require a clear commitment to connecting with consumers rather than searching for ways to regain control over them.
The book challenges marketers to make a choice: embrace the ongoing changes as opportunities for reshaping relationships with consumers, or cling to the past at the risk of becoming irrelevant. This is the book for those who choose the first alternative.
Arvustused
getAbstract recommends this well-researched book to research driven marketers, academics and marketing researchers. * getAbstract *
Preface |
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vii | |
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x | |
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xi | |
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xii | |
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xiii | |
Abbreviations |
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xv | |
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PART I CONSUMER-TO-CONSUMER INFLUENCE: THE RISING POWER OF CONSUMERS |
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3 | (22) |
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Two Marketing Philosophies: The Selling Concept Versus the Marketing Concept |
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5 | (14) |
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19 | (5) |
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24 | (1) |
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2 The Twenty-First Century Consumer Landscape: New Realities |
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25 | (34) |
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Media and Audience Fragmentation |
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25 | (17) |
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Consumers Tuning Out Formal Marketing Efforts |
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42 | (7) |
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49 | (9) |
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58 | (1) |
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3 Targeting Consumers in the Era of Web 2.0 |
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59 | (35) |
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60 | (3) |
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63 | (5) |
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Market Segmentation and Targeting |
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68 | (7) |
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Emerging Consumer Target Groups |
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75 | (6) |
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Movers and Shakers: Opinion Leaders, Brand Advocates, and Innovators |
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81 | (11) |
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92 | (2) |
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4 Word-of-Mouth Influence |
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94 | (35) |
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95 | (9) |
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104 | (6) |
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110 | (5) |
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Separating Fact from Fallacy About WOM |
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115 | (11) |
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126 | (3) |
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PART II CONNECTED MARKETING: MEASUREMENT, APPROACHES, AND TECHNIQUES |
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5 Word of Mouth and Social Media Research and Measurement |
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129 | (41) |
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130 | (2) |
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WOM Research: Traditional Scientific Approaches |
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132 | (14) |
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146 | (13) |
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159 | (10) |
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169 | (1) |
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6 Listening to and Engaging Consumers |
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170 | (41) |
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The Tenets of Good Conversation |
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171 | (13) |
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Trust and the Building of Marketer-Customer Relationships |
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184 | (2) |
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Participating in the Blogosphere |
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186 | (7) |
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Engaging with Online Networks and Communities |
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193 | (6) |
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How Companies Listen and Engage: Some Case Examples |
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199 | (11) |
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210 | (1) |
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7 Connected Marketing I: Word-of-Mouth Marketing Techniques |
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211 | (38) |
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Alternative Marketing Approaches: Defined, Classified, and Deconstructed |
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213 | (5) |
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218 | (29) |
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247 | (2) |
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8 Connected Marketing II: Viral and Live Buzz Marketing Techniques |
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249 | (41) |
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251 | (1) |
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The Nature of Viral Marketing |
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252 | (5) |
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Hotmail: An Early Viral Marketing Success Story |
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257 | (2) |
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Practical Suggestions for Viral Marketing Campaigns |
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259 | (14) |
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273 | (16) |
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289 | (1) |
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9 Synthesis and a Look to the Future |
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290 | (15) |
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Five Key Lessons for Connected Marketing |
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290 | (10) |
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Connecting with Consumers: What Does the Future Hold? |
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300 | (5) |
References |
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305 | (20) |
Index |
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325 | |
Allan J. Kimmel is Professor of Marketing at ESCP Europe in Paris, France. He holds MA and Ph.D. degrees in social psychology from Temple University (USA). He has research and writing interests in connected marketing and word of mouth, marketing communication, consumer behavior, ethics, deception, and commercial rumors. He has published extensively on these topics, including three books on research ethics and articles in the Journal of Consumer Psychology, Psychology & Marketing, American Psychologist, Business Horizons, The Journal of Behavioral Finance, Ethics & Behavior, Journal of Marketing Communications, and European Advances in Consumer Research, among others. His latest books are Rumors and Rumor Control: A Manager's Guide to Understanding and Combatting Rumors (Lawrence Erlbaum, 2004) and Marketing Communication: New Approaches, Technologies, and Styles (OUP, 2005).