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Everyday consumers buy into the concept of brands and their
associated meanings--the perception of quality, a symbolic
relationship, a vicarious experience, or even a sense of identity.
Marketing Semiotics suggests that the extent to which consumers
recognize, internalize, and relate to brand meanings is not only an
academic question. These meanings contribute to "brand equity," the
financial value of intangible brand benefits that exceed the use
value of goods, and impacts upon a firm's financial performance.
Therefore, the management of brand equity demands first and
foremost the management of brand meanings, or semiotics.
The book uses structural semiotics, a discipline that extends the
laws of structural linguistics to the analysis of verbal, visual,
and spatial sign systems, to shed light on the cultural codes and
discourse of brands. It proposes that semiotic research should form
the cornerstone of brand equity management, since brands rely so
heavily on sign systems that contribute to profitability by
distinguishing brands from simple commodities, from competitors,
and engaging consumers in the brand world.
The book includes dozens of global business cases where semiotics
has been used to refocus, reposition, or extend the brand to new
products, customers, and markets. Drawing upon twenty years of
academic and consulting experience, the book provides actionable
direction for steering brands through technological and cultural
change, differentiating brands in the competitive environment, and
counteracting the natural depletion of brand meaning over time.
Everyday consumers buy into the concept of brands and their
associated meanings - the perception of quality, a symbolic
relationship, a vicarious experience, or even a sense of identity.
Marketing Semiotics suggests that the extent to which consumers
recognize, internalize, and relate to brand meanings is not only an
academic question. These meanings contribute to 'brand equity', the
financial value of intangible brand benefits that exceed the use
value of goods, and impacts upon a firm's financial performance.
Therefore, the management of brand equity demands first and
foremost the management of brand meanings, or semiotics.
The book uses structural semiotics, a discipline that extends the
laws of structural linguistics to the analysis of verbal, visual,
and spatial sign systems, to shed light on the cultural codes and
discourse of brands. It proposes that semiotic research should form
the cornerstone of brand equity management, since brands rely so
heavily on sign systems that contribute to profitability by
distinguishing brands from simple commodities, from competitors,
and engaging consumers in the brand world.
The book includes dozens of global business cases where semiotics
has been used to refocus, reposition, or extend the brand to new
products, customers, and markets. Drawing upon twenty years of
academic and consulting experience, the book provides actionable
direction for steering brands through technological and cultural
change, differentiating brands in the competitive environment, and
counteracting the natural depletion of brand meaning over time.
In global consumer culture, brands structure an economy of symbolic
exchange that gives value to the meanings consumers attach to the
brand name, logo, and product category. Brand meaning is not just a
value added to the financial value of goods, but has material
impact on financial markets themselves. Strong brands leverage
consumer investments in the cultural myths, social networks, and
ineffable experiences they associate with marketing signs and
rituals. Creating Value: The Theory and Practice of Marketing
Semiotic Research is a guide to managing these investments by
managing the cultural codes that define value in a market or
consumer segment. The book extends the discussion beyond the basics
of semiotics to post-structural debates related to ethnographic
performance, multicultural consumer identity, the digitalized
consumer, and heterotopic experiences of consumer space. The book
invites readers to challenge the current thinking on topics ranging
from cultural branding and brand rhetoric to digital media
management and service site design. It also emphasizes the role of
product category codes and cultural trends in the production of
perceived value. Creating Value explains theory in language that is
accessible to academics and students, as well as research
practitioners and marketers. By applying semiotics to the everyday
world of the marketplace, the book makes sense of the semiotics
discipline, which is often mystified by technical jargon and
hair-splitting debate in the academic literature. The book also
provides practitioners and professors with a practical guide to the
methods used in semiotic research across the marketing mix.
The semiotics discipline - a hybrid of communication science and
anthropology - accounts for the deep cultural codes that structure
communication and sociality, endow things with value, move us
through constructed space, and moderate our encounters with change.
Doing Semiotics shows readers how to leverage these codes to solve
business problems, foster innovation, and create meaningful
experiences for consumers. In addition to the key principles and
methods of applied semiotics, it introduces the basics of branding,
strategic decision-making, and cross-cultural marketing management.
Through practical exercises, examples, extended team projects, and
evaluation criteria, this book guides students through the
application of learning to all phases of semiotics-based projects
for communications, brand equity management, design strategy, new
product development, and public policy management. In addition to
tools for sorting data and mapping cultural dimensions of a market,
it includes useful interview protocols for use in focus groups,
in-depth interviews, and ethnographic studies, as well as expert
case studies that will enable readers to apply semiotics to
consumer research.
The semiotics discipline - a hybrid of communication science and
anthropology - accounts for the deep cultural codes that structure
communication and sociality, endow things with value, move us
through constructed space, and moderate our encounters with change.
Doing Semiotics shows readers how to leverage these codes to solve
business problems, foster innovation, and create meaningful
experiences for consumers. In addition to the key principles and
methods of applied semiotics, it introduces the basics of branding,
strategic decision-making, and cross-cultural marketing management.
Through practical exercises, examples, extended team projects, and
evaluation criteria, this book guides students through the
application of learning to all phases of semiotics-based projects
for communications, brand equity management, design strategy, new
product development, and public policy management. In addition to
tools for sorting data and mapping cultural dimensions of a market,
it includes useful interview protocols for use in focus groups,
in-depth interviews, and ethnographic studies, as well as expert
case studies that will enable readers to apply semiotics to
consumer research.
In global consumer culture, brands structure an economy of symbolic
exchange that gives value to the meanings consumers attach to the
brand name, logo, and product category. Brand meaning is not just a
value added to the financial value of goods, but has material
impact on financial markets themselves. Strong brands leverage
consumer investments in the cultural myths, social networks, and
ineffable experiences they associate with marketing signs and
rituals. Creating Value: The Theory and Practice of Marketing
Semiotic Research is a guide to managing these investments by
managing the cultural codes that define value in a market or
consumer segment. The book extends the discussion beyond the basics
of semiotics to post-structural debates related to ethnographic
performance, multicultural consumer identity, the digitalized
consumer, and heterotopic experiences of consumer space. The book
invites readers to challenge the current thinking on topics ranging
from cultural branding and brand rhetoric to digital media
management and service site design. It also emphasizes the role of
product category codes and cultural trends in the production of
perceived value. Creating Value explains theory in language that is
accessible to academics and students, as well as research
practitioners and marketers. By applying semiotics to the everyday
world of the marketplace, the book makes sense of the semiotics
discipline, which is often mystified by technical jargon and
hair-splitting debate in the academic literature. The book also
provides practitioners and professors with a practical guide to the
methods used in semiotic research across the marketing mix.
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