Importance of Branding - What's in a Name?

Filed under: Brand Marketing — admin at 4:24 am on Thursday, June 17, 2010

Branding is perhaps the most important facet of any business–beyond product, distribution, pricing, or location. A company’s brand is its definition in the world, the name that identifies it to itself and the marketplace. A model may be beautiful, but without a name, she’s just “that girl in that picture.” Where would Norma Jean be without Marilyn Monroe, or who would imagine Coca-Cola as just a soft-drink manufacturer? A brand provides a concrete descriptor to customers and competitors alike, a name for a product or service to distinguish it from anything else. Bob may run a hobby shop, but trying to advertise as “The hobby shop a guy named Bob runs down the street a ways” is financial suicide. Each customer will have to describe the shop, who Bob is, and what the shop does every time someone asks about it.

This makes the process of recommending a good hobby shop too much work for the average customer, and far too much work for a user looking for hobby shops on the Internet. A customer looking up Bob’s hobby shop will have an easier time of it if he or she knows to refer to it as “Bob’s House of Hobbies,” and the customer can then refer others to Bob’s hobby shop by name, increasing the potential advertising exponentially.

Developing a brand involves more than just picking a catchy name and placing an ad in the newspaper–a brand is more than a unique string of letters denoting a particular product; a successful brand is a mnemonic trigger that makes a consumer feel a certain way when the brand is thought of. For those who drink cola-flavored soft drinks, which is more appealing on a hot day: a cold cola soda, or an ice-cold Coke? Coca-Cola has spent 100 years developing their particular brand of cola-flavored soda as a refreshing beverage and a seminal representation of a market segment. Coca-Cola has used a combination of direct marketing, give-away techniques, and multi-product cross-branding to achieve maximum brand recognition and visibility in not only its immediately competitive market, but in markets as diverse as Coca-Cola branded race cars and housewares.

Brand loyalty is an integral part of building a brand, as consumers usually have a choice of products in the same market segment, and so a successful company will come up with a way to keep consumers re-buying their product or coming back to their location rather than going to a competitor. These brand loyalty-building efforts may come in the form of coupons, incentives such as many grocery chains’ technique of “grocery discount cards” or “loss leaders,” meant to draw consumers into the store, where they will hopefully buy products along with the discounted fare at a higher profit ratio.

In exchange for these discounts and grocery cards, many companies collect information about buying habits and average spending amounts, the better to tailor advertisements and better-focus future promotional efforts. Once a consumer is hooked, brand loyalty tends to result in higher sales volume, as well as loyal customers being less sensitive to price changes of their favorite brands (within reason, of course), as well as less sensitive to competitors’ incentives. Studies have shown that it takes 5 times as much money to gain a customer as it does to retain one. That’s 5 times as much money as could have been spent on other things.

A brand is who your company is, and what it is selling–it is as important as naming a baby, and should require the same amount of effort to develop it, but if done well, can mature into a successful and profitable adult.

EzineArticles Expert Author William King

William King is the director of All Wholesale UK: http://www.uk-wholesaler.co.uk , Wholesale Pages: http://www.wholesalepages.co.uk and Wholesale-Canada: http://www.wholesale-canada.com. He has 18 years of experience in the marketing and trading industries and has been helping retailers, entrepreneurs and startups with their product sourcing, promotion, marketing and supply chain requirements.

Which Private Jet Aircraft Is Correct For You and Your Business?

Filed under: Web Of Travel — admin at 10:50 pm on Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Short distance private jet aircraft:

A private aircraft such as the Citation Bravo by Cessna features more than enough space to accommodate up to seven people comfortably, is capable of flying across nearly all of Europe and yet leaves enough space to stow away every piece of the customer’s luggage. Its aptitude to land or take off on short airstrips enhances the number of airfields it is able to use, allowing you and your passengers a bigger abundance of flight destinations. The 400XP from Hawker also seats seven passengers and also comes equipped with generous luggage area, but designed for swift brief trips, its streamlined wings and formidable jet engines suit those who need to move rapidly over smaller distances. Find more information on private jet charters from the leading aviation companies online.

Medium range planes:

Passengers that need to take a trip over long distances in comfort should take a look at the 750/800XP by Hawker. With the ability to seat eight customers and their luggage and baggage with ease, and with a journey range in excess of two thousand nautical miles, the Hawker 750/800XP is capable of flying from destinations such as London all the way to Moscow. To prepare for these greater voyages, the Hawker 750/800XP has sufficient head-room for taller passengers, and comes totally prepared with a drinks bar as standard.

The slightly larger is the Falcon 2000/EX. Able to seat 10 people easily featuring an abundance of room, its extra open interior has more than sufficient space for passengers to relax and enjoy themselves, take a break or work in comfort. Competent at travelling without a break between the trading cities of London and New York or Paris and Dubai, the Falcon 2000/EX from Dassault is perfect for commuting between the commercial hubs located across the world.

Long-range jet planes:

Able to fly greater distances and at a higher speed than any other Dassault Falcon private aircraft the Dassault Falcon 7X easily accommodates up to fourteen passengers and its interior created by the world renowned Lord Norman Foster is the least noisiest of its class, making sure of a refreshing flight. Capable of continuous transatlantic travel, the Falcon 7X was relvealed as ‘Business Jet of The Year 2009′, and uses three formidable jet engines allowing it to carry as many as fourteen people and fly at up to over nine hundred kilometres per hour, and comes with a range in excess of 10,391km.

Finally, we have featured the G550 private jet - the globe’s best sold intercontinental business jet. Coming with a cabin interior that is pressurised to an altitude of 6000ft and has its air supply refreshed at intervals of two minutes, the Gulfstream G550 is the greatest private aircraft in the business jet industry. The jet in the region of a speed greater than 904kph and with a flight range of 11,911km, it is capable of seating up to fourteen customers and their bags in comfort on flying routes like London to New York.

A Case of The Fears

Filed under: The Beautiful Life — admin at 10:58 am on Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Chicken Soup is good for a cold

Sleep is good for the Flu

When I get a case of the Fears

What is a person to do?

It is not bacteria

Although it can eat away my soul

It is not a virus

Yet, it can keep me from feeling whole

I know what will do the trick,

What will put me back on top,

A great big bowl of Ice Cream

Will really hit the spot

That was great and now I am done

One bowl just won’t do

If one is good, then more is great

And now I have eaten two.

Bowls three, four, five and six

Came and then they went

I think my case of the fears are fixed

Look at how my time was spent

I am getting sleepy

It is time to go to bed

My fears are no longer in my stomach

Now they are in my head

I close my eyes and I can see

The Fears I want to kill

I will do, whatever it takes

To keep the monsters still.

When I rise to greet the day

My fears are rising too

I know I need a friend right now

Whatever will I do?

I walk into the kitchen

And Open the freezer door

I stop myself and think real hard

I have been here once before.

I grab a seat in my comfy chair

And reach over for the phone

What will I say, if you are there?

I can hear a dial tone.

I enter all your numbers

You answer right away

You sit and listen, as I speak

You said I would be ok.

We say good-bye and I start my day

I knew I had been wrong

I start to read and then to pray

To keep me feeling strong.

If you are like me then you will see

That the fears, they come and go

Be the person you were meant to be

Let your feelings show.

http://www.reflectingrace.com

Excellent Fishing Rods For That Perfect Fishing Experience

Filed under: Fishing + Angling — admin at 3:42 am on Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Today’s fishing rods have incorporated modern features that are not typical of the more primitive cane pole. Modern fishing rods contain reels, which aid in the retrieval of fish caught in its bait.

A much-sophisticated feature is the spinning rod where the entire shaft of the rod except the handle can move around on its axis to allow flexibility when fish caught on snare bait struggles through the water.

Like the classic cane fishing rods, the fishing gadget is thick at the handle (bottom) and is tapered and thinner at the tip. This very basic design allows handling stability and flexible movement of the entire length of the shaft.

Types of Fishing Rods and Specifications

A typical fishing rod measures 6 and 16 feet (2 and 5 m) and vary in capability to tolerate strain in fishing activity. The length has a lot to do with withstanding force exerted by the fish to the pole and determines for the most part the performance of rods used for angling.

Cane Poles

Cane poles are one of the smallest and less sophisticated gadgets in fishing. It is usually made of bamboo or other flexible wood material with the most basic fly line attached to it.

Unlike other more sophisticated fishing rods, cane poles do not usually contain reels or its equivalent to be used for reeling in or retrieving fish caught on bait. This very same action is known as angling.

Spinning Rods

These types of rods are the most popular today. They can be used either for heavyweight or lightweight fish although they were proven best for trout, walleye and bass fish. They vary in measurements from 5 and 7 feet (1.5 and 2.5 m).

Spinning poles are commonly used in bass fishing competition accounting for their flexibility and tolerance to stress. They accommodate bigger and tougher fly lines and stabilize them to avoid line tangles during uncoiling of float lines.

Jigging Rods

These rods are best for heavy lures and baits especially when reaching around 180 to 200 feet under the ocean’s surface. They are made of fine, solid materials which accounts to their heaviness. The use of jigging rods is specifically due to alternating currents during the fishing activity.

Some oceans have erratic undersea current. That is why the bait and fly lines should be kept in place. Lures are also disturbed and cause confusion among fish if the lines are not long and heavy enough to withstand and tolerate water currents under the sea.

These rods are best for target fishes usually found dwelling at the bottom of the sea such as halibut and cods.

Travis Clemens is a life time fisherman and he knows the ins and outs of gettinem on the hook! You too can gettem on the hook with Travis as your guide! www.best-fishing-tips.com