jefferson john babasa asked:
Choosing the right kind of clothing that matches their taste and attitude are what women would usually think when it comes to clothing. These may include the brand they want to wear and the hottest trends in fashion. But finding the right brand that offers the right fashion at the right time can be tedious for them. So here are some of the best brands urban clothing lines for women.
Apple Bottoms
A clothing line founded founded by Nelly along with his cousin Yomi Martin & Ian Kelly. The brand became popular with the women because it’s one of the few brands that offers fashionable plus sized clothing lines for the women. Apple bottoms was inspired through Nelly’s vision that “a woman should not try to fit the clothes; the clothes should fit the woman!”
The brand, which when launched, was exclusively a denim label, and has since gone through a major line-expansion. Currently the Apple Bottoms label includes: apparel, footwear, handbags, eyewear RX, intimates, sunglasses, accessories, jewelry, cold weather, and girl’s apparel.
House of Dereon
The House of Dereon is an urban clothing line for women which was founded by an artists that known for explicitly showing women power through her songs, Beyonce Knowles. The style and concept is inspired by three generations of women in their family, with the name “Deréon” paying tribute to Beyoncé’s grandmother, Agnèz Deréon.
What made the brand popular with the women is its capability to show what a true woman have and is ready to show it to the world. It accentuates the curves and enhances the way women wear the clothing. Expanding the brand, Beyonce and her sister Solange Knowles launched the junior line Deréon that is geared towards younger consumers and is more reasonably priced.
LEI
The clothing brand lei is one of the many clothing lines for women geared to provide girls a way to feel a lot more feminine. The lei jeans collection includes junior pants, junior tops such hoodies, sweaters, and blouses. Apart from those collections, lei also offers plus size clothing lines from tops and bottoms. Other than the teen, lei can also provide clothing lines for girls, from lei sweaters and hoodies, to lei jeans and shorts.
Blac Label Pink
A rising urban clothing line for women, Blac Label Pink provides the same urban fashion feeling that its predecessor, Blac Label, offers for the men. This brand became rapidly popular because of its styles that emphasizes what the true urban living is.
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Scott White asked:
Why don’t identical twins don’t have identical first names? Though they may look the same, they’re not. Just ask their parents. Even as newborns, they could tell them apart, and as they grow up, they’re distinctions become ever more pronounced. This is why we don’t give twin babies the same first names.
In the business world, this idea would seem to carry over as the foundation for a common sensical approach to branding—that different products need to be different brands with different names. However, the only thing common about this sense is that it’s all too commonly ignored in the hopes of cheating risk and the possibility of failure.
Overextended brands are like overstretched rubber bands
Everyone’s heard of a company called Kraft. “Hey, those are the cheese people.” Yep. For years, Kraft and cheese were synonymous. It was a Corporate Branding with a position competitors would have been hard-pressed to erode had company brass been content in their cheesiness. They weren’t. Like many companies blessed with strong brands, Kraft began to think their brand name was invincible and that any product introduced under its banner would dominate their markets simply because of its name. So, Kraft began offering jams, jellies and mayonnaise among other things.
The numerical truth about Kraft’s brand extension strategy
Ohio-based Smucker’s owns 35% of the jams and jellies market. Kraft has 9%. Hellman’s mayonnaise has 42% of the mayo market. Kraft has 18%. The plan for equal domination didn’t quite work out as planned. Despite its dominance in the cheese market, Kraft was relegated to bit player status in these other categories. Their strategy of trying to leverage a great brand name into being all things to all people resulted in few real winning products.
Why doesn’t being all things to all people work?
In your family, you may have been the smart one. If you had brothers and sisters, there may have been the “social” one, the “rebellious” one or the “athletic” one, too. And invariably, those attributes seem to stick with a person throughout their life, often regardless of whether they change.
In Japan, Honda is known as a motorcycle company that dabbles in cars. In America, it’s a car company that dabbles in motorcycles. Despite the fact the company is equally prolific makers of both, the two different markets have Honda pegged as either/or. One name, one product. Burned-in and branded for life. This is because motorcycles and motor vehicles are two different product categories. It proves that conquering multiple different categories with one brand name doesn’t work. Rather, companies who wish to expand into other product areas, or a first product area for that matter, need to do so by using a strong brand identity as the foundation of its marketing strategy. Either that or create new product lines that somehow relate to your old product line, such as cheese companies putting out a line of pre-made cheese and cracker snacks. What Ritz did with Mini Ritz sandwiches, Kraft could have easily done by focusing the product’s marketing slant on the cheese in the cracker.
So what do you do with a brand once you have created one?
Those responsible for the brand defend the integrity of the brand and build on it. Just as Barbie dolls have for decades while Ninja Turtles and Cabbage Patch Dolls came and went. The Barbie brand recognizes the niche it fills in the toy industry—dolls with interchangeable clothes. Nothing else. Of course, refreshing a brand is completely necessary over its lifecycle. Barbie has a way of doing this built-in to its product—changing clothing styles. As the times change, so do Barbie & Ken’s wardrobe. But that’s just one way a brand remains strong through the years. Survey any industry, and you’ll find that long-term successful brands have at some point had to reinvent themselves along the way—like automobile companies of today in the beginning stages of moving to alternative sources for energy. This is the same thing that successful magazines do. They carve out a niche, become the leader in it and then defend it by banking on their uniqueness and further differentiating themselves from the competition—not duplicating it.
If this is the case, why do companies try to extend a brand?
Because launching a completely new brand is very risky and expensive. Often times, initial results of brand extension are positive, but the initiative commonly begins to lose ground and takes some of the overall brand strength with it.
Why creating a new brand is better for business than extending one.
In New Zealand, there is one Airline Company, but two airline brands. Air New Zealand is about top-class service with all the frills. Freedom Air, on the other hand, is the airline for the budget conscious. The two brands operate successfully and independently of each other, which allows the parent company to serve two distinctly different air travel markets.
Less really is best
A niche brand may not offer the sheer number potential of a more generalized brand, but it does offer something a lot better—sustainability. Over the long term, as your brand becomes synonymous with a specific kind of product or service, more people will turn to you for that product or service…and continue to do so because they believe they’re getting quality only a specialist can provide.
A jack-of-all-trades really is master of none. So if you are a master, or wish to become one, do it. Be it. Just not to everyone.
Website content
David Poulos asked:
The visibility, awareness and effectiveness of your organization’s brand directly impact your ability to recruit and retain members. If your organization isn’t the first thing member prospects think of when they turn to industry issues, there’s work to be done.
But where to start?
As popular wisdom has it, knowing and admitting you have a problem puts you half way to solving it. In this case, that means doing a little member research to determine how your members and prospective members view your organization through its brand. This can take one of several forms, including a quick poll on your website, a phone survey, an e-mail or electronic survey, or a paper/mail survey.
Regardless of the format, the recipient list should be equal parts members and prospects, to get both perspectives and spot any disconnects between those that know the organization from the inside versus what the brand alone presents to the outside world. The included questions should be formulated so that the responses returned are actionable, and give you some indication of their perceptions of the brand and the organization behind it, based on their actual experience with you, as customers, as members, as industry participants.
Reading the results in a timely fashion is important, as the cyclic nature of non-profit schedules creates peaks and valleys in the brand perception and awareness level, depending upon what time of the year it is, and how high the level of activity involving members is at the time you launch the survey. For organizations that have even more volatile years, it may be necessary to do two sets of surveys at different times of the year and compare the results to get a good reliable read on the level of awareness you can count on.
The results of your survey are one source of data, but there are other sources that while less formal or quantifiable, are just as valid in getting a read on your brand awareness and effectiveness. These include interviews with Board members, committee members, volunteers, chapter presidents or directors, vendors, other related professionals, including members of related associations, and members of ASAE.
Once all this data is collected, it needs to be interpreted accurately so that the actions you take drive your brand efforts in the most effective direction possible. Some items will be readily apparent if the surveys and interviews were constructed correctly.
One good tool you can use to read your results is to retrieve the set of brand characteristics from the marketing archives, and see how many of your responses line up with those characteristics. If your responses, including the open-ended comments, use some of the terms and attributes that make up your organization’s brand, then you’ve got a good solid start on reading your data correctly and rating a good score on your brand effectiveness.
Conversely, if very few or none of the responses include those attributes on the list, there’s a good chance there’s a disconnect between what you’re trying to convey with your brand, and how it’s being perceived by the various populations it’s designed to serve.
Now that you’ve got a read on how well you’re doing, how do you go about improving? The answer is, much as it’s been overused by too many of us in today’s litigious society – it depends. It depends upon what your data tells you, and every case is different. However there are some common scenarios and a few valuable remedies to match them.
Scenario #1 – Our brand registers very low on the surveys for memorability.
Typically this means that your customer base doesn’t remember your brand in response to a question designed to illicit a favorable response unprompted. Your organization isn’t top of mind for them as relates to your products or services, and someone else’s brand is. That could mean that your exposure frequency is too low, they don’t see enough from you to keep memorability high enough.
It could be that a competitor has captured some key emotional connection to the customer that you have not, despite an inferior product or service – they’re not as good, but customers remember them because they’re “out there” more. This can be remedied with some increase in exposure to key audiences – your top buyers should hear more from you in a positive light to reassure them that you offer the product or services that give the best value.
Putting your brand in front of them for positive reasons, like a price discount, a new offer that really saves money, rebate eligibility or other product or service related reason other than to sell them something should go a long way toward remedying this issue. It will boost memorability without seeming like you’re overselling them, a positive cognitive light that will cement the brand in the uppermost memory of the customer.
Scenario #2 – Our brand rates favorably and has high memory retention among customers, but neither do as well among prospects.
Usually, this indicates that your product or service has to be “seen to be believed” – it’s value is best seen at delivery or in the transaction, rather than prior to receiving it. This is a sticky problem that has to do as much with promotional direction and relevance as anything else. Your customers know you and have experienced your value, been satisfied with the product or service upon and after delivery and the reputation of the brand was reinforced positively.
Prospects, on the other hand, only know you by your “public” face – advertising, packaging, direct marketing, sponsorship associations. The brand unfortunately has little carriage by word of mouth, based on the fact that satisfied customers are not waving your flag and passing on the good word to prospects themselves. Prospects only get a read based on what you tell them.
Look to your research and find those key hot buttons of your best customers, and promote those attributes to prospects more heavily. Also, compare your reading on prospects versus customers in other areas of your brand – you may find another disconnect in their perceptions that could cause this effect, and you can remedy both with a shift in your promotional or creative approach to highlight those key elements more heavily. Align your creative with those highest ranking attributes of your best customers, and the prospects should get the best, most relevant perception of your product.
These are just two of the possible outcomes to this type of analysis. Suffice to say that if you’re brand is aligned with your message and your audience, you’ve got a strong package for success.
Best Brands in the World
Brendon Long asked:
When you purchase mobile phones you want to buy best cheap and banded mobile phones like Nokia, Samsung, LG, Sony Ericsson, Hyundai, Orion, Sigmatel and many more they must have the quality, good looking, features, camera, sound, memory size, guaranty, warranty, price and many more, Now a new brand mi-world available online in market. Homeshop18 offers best mobiles at lowest price. Please have a look below some details of mi world gsm mobile phones.
(1). Branded Mobile Phones – Mi-World GSM Mobile Phone Model No: Mi-Metalix 200F
Features:
• FM Radio: Built in Radio, Video Player
• Display: Type: LCD, Resolution: 128 x 128, 65K Colour, Size: 1.47 inch (3.7cms)
• Torch Light: Yes, Hindi Language Display, 3 Built in Games
• SMS Memory: 100 Messages + SIM Memory
• Phone Book Memory: 300 Contacts + SIM, 16 Chord WAV Ring tones
• Battery: Battery Type: 800mAh Li-ion Battery, Talk Time: Up to 4.5hrs, Stand-by Time: Up to 170hrs
Contents of the Box:
• Battery x 1, Charger x 1, Headset x 1, Manual x 1
(2). Mi-World GSM Mobile Phone Model No: Mi-Metalix 300F
Key Features:
• Video Player, VGA Camera, FM Radio: Yes, MP3 Player, USB Connectivity
• External Memory: Micro SD expandable up to 2GB, Screen Size: 1.77 inch (4.5cms).
• Hindi and English Languages – On Screen Display, 3 Built in Games
Image & Video:
• VGA Camera, Video Player, Image Browser
Audio:
• FM Radio: Yes, MP3 Player, 16 Chord – Polyphonic and MP3 Ring tones
Memory:
• SMS Memory: 100 Messages + SIM, Phonebook Memory: 300 Contacts + SIM
• External Memory: Micro SD expandable up to 2GB, USB Connectivity
Other Features:
• Display Type: LCD, Resolution: 128 x 160, 65K Colour, Size: 1.77 inch (4.5cms)
• Hindi and English Languages – On Screen Display
• Alarm Clock: Multiple Timing, Calculator, 3 Built in Games, Stop Watch
Battery:
Type: 650mAh Li-ion Battery, Talk Time: Up to 2.5hrs, Stand-by Time: Up to 140hrs
Contents of the Box:
Battery x 1, Charger x 1, Headset x 1
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