• Joyce Beber, Creator Of Ads For Leona Helmsley, Dies At 80
  • Nissan Unifying Global Branding Efforts Under New Division
    Hans Greimel reports that Nissan aims to strengthen its global branding efforts by creating a Global Marketing Communications division that combines product planning, marketing, advertising and public relations. An inside source tells Greimel that the company wants to break down silos between departments and promote cross-communication. The goal is to create a clearer and more consistent brand image. Andy Palmer, currently svp in charge of global planning and program management, will oversee the division; Simon Sproule, who now heads global communications for the Renault-Nissan alliance in Paris, will lead the new unit and report to Palmer. …
  • Keller Fay Report: Teens Talk A Lot Amongst Themselves
    Teenagers "engage in a significantly higher level of word of mouth about all categories than the total public," according to data compiled by the Keller Fay Group between July 2009 and June 2010. Mark Dolliver reports that the brands that generate the most buzz among the young 'uns are Coca-Cola, Apple, Verizon, iPod, Ford, Pepsi, McDonald's, AT&T, Sony and Nike. Many of those brands pop up in conversations their elders conduct, too, where the Top 10 are: Coca-Cola, Verizon, Walmart, AT&T, Pepsi, Ford, Apple, McDonald's, Sony and Dell.
  • Celebrity Endorsements: Rewards Still Outweigh Risks
    Dean Crutchfield, chief engagement officer at brand experience agency Method, asks whether the Tiger Woods fiasco has finally convinced marketers that endorsement dalliances with celebrities just aren't worth all the glam and glitter. Turns out there's good reason it probably hasn't: Not only do studies indicate that sales can rise by as much as 20% for some brands, a Harvard Business School associate professor reports that some companies have seen their stock increase by .25% on the day a deal was announced. Crutchfield goes on to list seven "sound criteria" for a celebrity endorsement strategy. Bottom line: "Even …
  • Starbucks Raising Prices On Some Of Its Drinks After All
    Starbucks says it has to raise prices on some of its larger and more labor-intensive drinks just a month after resolving to absorb the rising price of high-quality Aribica coffee beans due to two poor harvests, Julie Jargon and Paul Ziobro report. The prices of some other beverages, including its $1.50 12-ounce house coffee, will stay the same or even drop in some markets. "Over the last six months, a highly speculative green coffee market and dramatically increased commodity costs have completely altered the economic and financial picture of many players in the coffee industry," according to CEO …
  • Virgin Group Expanding Into Ambitious Upscale Hotel Venture
    Believing that brand recognition will lure affluent clients, Richard Branson's Virgin Group will spend as much as $500 million developing hotels in as New York, San Francisco, Miami, Boston and Los Angeles, and plans to eventually expand globally, Nadja Brandt reports. Virgin Hotels will cater to "high-income, well-educated, metropolitan 'creative class'" customers, according to a Web brochure that invites property owners and developers to partner with it. Virgin plans to have as many as 25 hotels within a decade. "It is a competitive market with very savvy competitors," says Anthony Marino, …
  • Stores Scramble To Accommodate Budget Shoppers
  • Xerox Takes Wall Street To The Ball Game
  • Lincoln Needs Major Changes To Compete In Luxury Market
    "If Ford doesn't comprehend the scope of the challenge, it doesn't have a ghost of a chance of succeeding," writes columnist Mark Phelan.
  • L'Oreal's Marc Menesguen Becomes Its First CMO
    Marc Menesguen, a 25-year veteran of L'Oreal's marketing and general-management ranks, will run a newly created strategic marketing department as Chief Marketing Officer. Jack Neff reports that the beauty and package-goods company -- it's No. 68 on Ad Age's list of Top 100 Global Marketers -- was one of the last to not have a CMO. The strategic marketing department "is a result of the decision to anticipate worldwide evolutions in order to steer [the company] towards essential transformations in the areas of strategic watch, consumer understanding, marketing creativity, advertising creation, digital communication and distribution methods," the company …
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