Book description
What have today's brands in common with politicians? - They need to
take an active, positive role in people's lives in order to be elected
Â-locally and globally, says Marc Gobé, the founder of the widely
successful Emotional Branding concept. Today's all-powerful,
post-hedonistic consumers expect a deepening level of emotional
commitment and social responsibility from the brands that they choose.
In CITIZEN BRAND, an evolvement of his revolutionary EMOTIONAL
BRANDING concept, the internationally acclaimed branding guru tells
corporations how to become the socially relevant, caring community
members that are elected in today's consumer democracy.
Three quarters of consumers would vote for corporate community
involvement and ethical business practices, say recent polls. Yet
while "cause marketing" programs abound, few corporations
truly understand the emotional power of the "Citizen Brand"
approach, argues Marc Gobé. Using brands like Starbucks and The
Bodyshop and Home Depot as examples, CITIZEN BRAND reveals how
companies can create strong and deep partnerships with people in
America and across the globe by enriching their lives in creative and
truly relevant ways.
The bursting dot. com bubble, anti-globalization protests in
Seattle and Genoa, an economic slowdown, and the September 11 tragedy.
. .the events of the past three years have changed dramatically what
consumers expect from today's brands: they seek emotional support and
orientation an increasingly complex, strenuous reality. Getting this
right requires an intimate understanding of one's customers and their
deepest values, says Marc Gobé. CITIZEN BRAND reveals how smart
companies have responded to this reality check by treating their
customersÂ--and employeesÂ-with a new humanistic, emotional
sensitivity. Nucor has made it a point to not lay off any of its
people in the face of recession; other companies have followed the
example of The Bodyshop by establishing community programs for
customers and employees; Coca-Cola is using its trucks in Africa to
bring medication and education to local customers.
As Gobé underlines, CITIZEN BRAND is not a comprehensive form
of philantrophy or a new business strategy, but an inevitable
consequence of global change: ". . .in a global world influenced
more and more by local politics, religious upheaval, and social
awareness, the role of businesses will change in a dramatic way. The
need to reassess one's corporate responsibility is critical in a
changed world."