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Authenticity in the Age of Trump

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The power of brands

Maria conceived the Moleskine brand and has overseen its identity ever since it was created. A sociologist, semiologist and a poet, she’s the author of various socio-anthropological studies on contemporary mutations and new languages. She has worked as a consultant on strategic communication and product concept, as a literary translator and as a copywriter. She has taught at public and private universities and is a member of OPLEPO, the Workshop of Potential Literature. We get her take on the power of brands.

Content disruptors

Back in 1996, when the internet was yet to become the global phenomenon it is today, Microsoft co-founder and chairman Bill Gates argued that content would be king in the rapidly-evolving digital world.

Building a community of customers

Castorama, a French home-improvement chain owned by Kingfisher, has devised an innovative way of allowing its customers to benefit from each other’s expertise. Les Trocs'heures is a free website that allows customers to swap their DIY expertise (troc is French for barter or swap).

The i Factor

Retailers have every reason to feel that consumers are winning a technological arms race. Armed with smartphones and wider broadband access and coverage, consumers boast unprecedented price transparency and can call on customer reviews with the swipe of a barcode or the tap of a touchscreen. Increasingly, the shopping trip does not start on the high street, but rather during the lunch hour at work, at the bus stop or even in bed. When customers do hit the shops, more than ever they expect to know what is in stock and demand the ability to reserve it, pay for it and go.

Don’t think

I’m lucky enough to see inside lots of marketing organisations – big and small, here and overseas – and one of the things that strikes me most in the conversations I have is the degree to which marketers continue to misunderstand their audiences.

Customer experience: when the numbers lie

Post financial crisis, a major US bank was rapidly losing customers. The numbers suggested that the solution laid in selling customers multiple products. A customer who only had a checking account, the data suggested, were significantly more likely to change banks than a customer that had a checking account, a credit card and a mortgage.

Redefining value

It’s a fairly common assumption that in a recession, marketing budgets are the first to go. And yet Nielsen’s quarterly AdView Pulse report released this week reveals that global advertising spend increased by 3.1% in the first quarter of 2012 (Europe though was the only region to see it decrease).

Tell the truth

It’s much easier to talk about engagement, conversation, and all the activities that brands spend billions annually to deliver. But doing so without addressing the basic human need for truth is like opening a beautiful new restaurant and neglecting to stock the kitchen. Or hanging an art museum full of empty frames. Or building bridges and roads to nowhere. It’s all process without meaning.

Le geek, c’est chic

In 2007 the American research group MRI defined the elite market as those who subscribed to, or attended, at least two of the following: the New Yorker, The Economist, Atlantic Monthly, HBO, art galleries, theatre or classical concerts.

Getting closer to the customer

Getting closer to the customer is an Economist Intelligence Unit report which examines how the dialogue between customers and companies has changed in response to the advent of new communication channels.

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