Marketing Guru David Aaker, "Brand Relevance"

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • Marketing guru and Haas Professor Emeritus David Aaker talks about his new book, Brand Relevance, as part of the David Aaker Distinguished Speaker Series. In this event at the University of California, Berkeley's Haas School of Business, Aaker describes a competitive strategy of developing innovative offerings that make competitors irrelevant.
    The University of California Berkeley Haas School of Business is one of the world's leading producers of new ideas and knowledge in all areas of business - which includes the distinction of having two of its faculty members receive the Nobel Prize in Economics over the past 15 years. The school offers six degree-granting programs. Its mission is to develop innovative business leaders - individuals who redefine how we do business by putting new ideas into action, and who do so responsibly. The school's distinctive culture is defined by four key principles - question the status quo; confidence without attitude; students always; and, beyond yourself.
    Visit our website at haas.berkeley.edu

Комментарии • 35

  • @SK-le1gm
    @SK-le1gm 3 года назад

    *This is the best presentation on brand possible. Aaker explaining this is sublime. A thousand thanks.*

  • @blkrdr59
    @blkrdr59 9 лет назад +21

    starts at 3:54

  • @spookseo5244
    @spookseo5244 11 лет назад +1

    This was two years ago but the things discussed here still apply today. Great and useful video. Everyone needs to be aware of brand relevance and why branding is essential. This will greatly help.

  • @jordaosandro
    @jordaosandro 12 лет назад +2

    D. Aaker theory on Brand Equity, was inspirational for my thesis on "Developing a Multidimensional, Equal-Weighted Scale of Brand Equity for the Smartphone Segment".
    at Social Science Research Network
    Thanks David!

  • @PhilBuho
    @PhilBuho 11 лет назад +1

    Branding is an important element of marketing, a useful video here on brand relevance!

  • @kyoungd
    @kyoungd 11 лет назад

    Thanks for an enlightening lecture, Professor. And thanks Berkeley. This is world class information for everyone.

  • @WeMei
    @WeMei 8 лет назад

    great prof and great knowledge. lots of learning! shorten my curve! thanks

  • @chrisjustus5446
    @chrisjustus5446 3 года назад

    EVERYTHING in its time.

  • @flowewritharoma
    @flowewritharoma 13 лет назад

    I was fascinated this talk.

  • @baderalsalhan6897
    @baderalsalhan6897 10 лет назад

    Great video

  • @chrisjustus5446
    @chrisjustus5446 3 года назад

    PAY IT FORWARD.

  • @lukascarter55
    @lukascarter55 11 лет назад

    Everything in here is still applicable in today's market.

  • @jideomololu6089
    @jideomololu6089 10 лет назад

    Intelligent words!

  • @jaybrooks8206
    @jaybrooks8206 7 лет назад

    Great information, should be useful in my most recent branding/launch consulting project for a brand new green energy invention hitting the market next month. Any advice in this sector?

  • @theweirdgene8251
    @theweirdgene8251 2 года назад

    Still as relevant as today

  • @fukidngan
    @fukidngan 12 лет назад

    love this!!

  • @fernandasales3059
    @fernandasales3059 7 лет назад

    Eu só queria entender o inglês, para ter o prazer de receber essas informações. Que pena! :/

  • @saalemsadeque9516
    @saalemsadeque9516 7 лет назад +1

    It sounds like brand relevance is something similar to blue ocean strategy.

  • @caribislenatural
    @caribislenatural 10 лет назад

    I think one of the biggest brand relevance companies that failed was Blockbuster. Just as Sony was tied to analog, Blockbuster was tied to its stores and could not break with those profit centers to concentrate on digital and online.

  • @globalmagnet
    @globalmagnet 12 лет назад +1

    Great concepts here - Al Ries verbatim really...i have a bit of an issue with the explanation of apples ipod success over sony et al mp3 players at 25:00. A bit of a superficial explanation here IMO...'you don't have to be the pioneer but you do have to be the market leader'...hmm ok...so why did apples ipod become number 1 then? - iTunes (i.e. apple saw napsters success and made a legitimate, easy, cheap, instant, flexible way to buy music) thats why ipod become no1 and continues to dominate.

  • @nickvoutsas5144
    @nickvoutsas5144 5 лет назад

    Genius

  • @troublesome1101
    @troublesome1101 11 лет назад +1

    Guy stop putting this message on every board.. know that the some of the best idea no matter how good they are if they can't be market or if there aren't any investors in them THEY WILL NEVER SEE THE LIGHT OF DAY!! And to help these business grow they need MBA grad's and CEO's that didn't create the company but know how to manage it and beat the competition so no they are not stealing anything. APPLE, MICROSOFT, COKE.. they've been all funded!

    • @dosseyrichards1681
      @dosseyrichards1681 6 лет назад

      Most funded companies fail. Funding is easy if you actually have something people 'need'.

  • @abeautifulcity3301
    @abeautifulcity3301 11 лет назад

    Is this an Al Ries rip-off?

    • @MrLamotta86
      @MrLamotta86 8 лет назад

      +Frank Converse I have also

  • @jordaosandro
    @jordaosandro 12 лет назад

    I forgot to put the link to my thesis t.co /pC1mYPsB

  • @aminkh6872
    @aminkh6872 2 года назад

    OMG thinking about Groupon company is really funny these days; this Company is one of the worst examples of a startup that went public through an IPO. If you watch the valuation of this company right now, it just tells you one thing: destroyed! Groupon has proved building a business in that market with those characteristics is a no-no. Having price-sensitive customers with no loyalty, having business partners who don't care about their service quality because they give a high discount to people and etc., is a bad business model.

  • @mattissurf
    @mattissurf 10 лет назад +2

    Branding is simple. All you need is a better product than the competitors, sell it to a price that the customers will accept and that makes profit for the company and enter the market at the right time.
    The only issues you have to find out about are: What is a better product, what price will the customer accept while you also make profit, and when is the right timing? Do that, and you are all set.

    • @pigeonnnn
      @pigeonnnn 9 лет назад +4

      Couldn't agree less. Branding is about values. The most successful brands, and companies, have always embraced a set of unique values that drives them. Apple is, as always, the prime example of this. They were bleeding and on the brink of bankruptcy when Jobs introduced the Think Different campaign. It wasn't promoting any product what so ever. This campaign was the starting point of Apples rise to become one of the most valuef brands of the world and what has driven everything they have done going forward. Apple is a _PC_ manufacturer that dominated the market of the MP3-players, Smartphones, music and film services etc. Other brands have not been able to do that since they haven't clearly defined their brand. I could go on forever, but the point is that what you do is not as important as why you do it. Brand is all about values and nothing else.

  • @scottysscandinavia5793
    @scottysscandinavia5793 3 года назад

    Until he can provide clear, quantitative definitions of what a category is, and what incremental, substantial and transformational innovations are within a category then all the rest is just amusing stories, but not very useful.
    Unfortunately, this talk is about as bulletproof as Kelvar.