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Branding that Means Business: How to Build Enduring Bonds between Brands, Consumers and Markets

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A revelatory guide on how to build, sustain and grow a brand.
 
 A brand is either beloved, or it’s noise. We live in a fast-paced world of immediate gratification where consumers can listen to any song, watch any movie, or read any article, with the touch of a few buttons. They are peppered with hyper-personalized targeting for products that can be ordered seamlessly and arrive within hours. And if your brand isn’t the first to come to mind, they’ll click that button and it’ll be delivered by someone else.
 
So how do you make sure your brand connects with consumers? Branding that Means Business draws from the authors’ experience and business literature as well as psychology, sociology, and even anthropology to show readers that while any brand serves the business, the mechanisms that enable it are all about connecting with people. Readers will learn how to create, maintain, and operationalize their brand, and think creatively about how to differentiate their product and most importantly, make consumers fall in love with it.

 

240 pages, Hardcover

Published October 25, 2022

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About the author

Matt Johnson

63 books13 followers
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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Chris Boutté.
Author 8 books290 followers
October 15, 2022
This is a fantastic book that’s a must-read for any business, and it definitely has some great advice for individual entrepreneurs as well. Johnson and Misiaszek do a fantastic job explaining the importance of branding and how you build a loyal customer base by doing branding the right way. This book doesn’t have as much neuroscience and psychology as Johnson’s previous book Blindsight, but I enjoyed it just the same because it provided so much value and some great reminders about how to do branding the right way.

I think the best chapter on this book was about activism and brands taking a stance. This is a topic that nobody wants to talk about, but the authors actually had the guts to do it. These days, people are looking for brands to align with them morally and ethically, and this book teaches you the do’s and don’ts of how to do this the right way without it just seeming like PR.
Profile Image for Kelsey Weekman.
495 reviews436 followers
Read
February 21, 2023
don't want to give this book a bad review, but it definitely was not for me and i didn't finish at 10%. i always love to take a peek into how people talk about marketing and branding, but i could tell this just wasn't for my demographic. sure it's great for those its targeting, though! DNF
Profile Image for piltri.
27 reviews
November 10, 2024
overview of the branding fundamentals. some notes:

- brands matter only when they matter to humans. The same things that bind us to people bind us to brands
- to best meet consumers needs often is by meeting their their societal aspirations too- purpose far beyond utility of the products
- Brand loyalty=Warmth and competence. Once those are known we can get into details
- our brand is one of the first things we consider when meeting someone new + Strong predictors of loyalty
- brands are evolving to become more political themselves- benefit when they align with their target customers views
- importance of internal principles
- importance of caring about environment/social causes. Csr is good
- Drive+ Clarity of thought—>being able to explain things in an easy way

3 ⭐️ because it didn’t teach me a lot of new things, but stood out when talking about internal principles/alignment with target audience
Profile Image for Kaitlin.
15 reviews
January 11, 2024
Solid review of branding principles and fundamentals. Even though it wasn’t necessarily anything new, the content was thought provoking and sparked new ideas around the practice of branding. Audiobook listen but would read the hard copy for note taking + book marking benefits. The last few chapters were a little blah for me but that’s fine.
Profile Image for Peter Green.
1 review5 followers
November 25, 2024
It’s such a useless book (maybe good for beginners but tbh I doubt it) that I went on a quest to find where I got the recommendation from. Thanks to Goodreads I’ve traced it to Rory from Ogilvy whom I saw on Lenny’s podcast. Lesson is: don’t trust recommendations by people whose taste you don’t know.
Profile Image for Daniel Olshansky.
98 reviews7 followers
December 16, 2024
Full review: https://olshansky.info/book/branding_...

## Summary

I wish I had read it earlier in my engineering career and entrepreneurial journey.

It's a great book that helps build foundational intuition around branding, but is not very tactical if you already have that baseline.

As a technical leader who spent many years doing software engineering, it took me some time to understand the importance of product, the customer, the business, distribution, marketing and branding. Having already learnt those lessons the hard way, this book acted as a reinforcing agent to solidify those lessons with a few new learnings. But, it didn't fundamentally shift my thinking.

It wasn't mind blowing, but the content was still good and helpful. I stared getting a bit bored by the 4th chapter. It felt more like a PhD dissertation than a novel. A podcast episode or an essay could have been enough rather than writing a whole book.

My only complaint about the book is that they referenced huge brands: Apple, Google, AirBnb, Coca Cola, etc. Though those brands act as north starts, and leverage the same lessons, it would have been nice to reference smaller and more niche brands along the way as well. We need to see the stepping stones :)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews