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Kellogg on Marketing

Kellogg on MarketingAuthor: Dawn Iacobucci
Publisher: Wiley

List Price: $37.00
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Seller: gr8lakesbooks1
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 205507

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Pages: 427
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.4 x 1.3

ISBN: 047135399X
Dewey Decimal Number: 380
EAN: 9780471353997
ASIN: 047135399X

Publication Date: January 15, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Praise for Kellogg on Marketing

"The Kellogg Graduate School of Management at Northwestern University has always been at the forefront of cutting-edge marketing. What a treasure to find such a complete anthology of today's best strategic marketers all in one place. Kellogg on Marketing provides a unique combination of new and proven marketing theories that the reader can translate into business success." -Betsy D. Holden, President and CEO, Kraft Foods

"Kellogg on Marketing presents a comprehensive look at marketing today, combining well-founded theory with relevant, contemporary examples in the marketplace. This should be mandatory reading for all students of marketing." -Robert S. Morrison, Chairman, President and CEO, The Quaker Oats Company

"The Who's Who write on the what's what of marketing. Now, these preeminent marketing doctors are making house calls. Enjoy." -Robert A. Eckert, Chairman and CEO, Mattel, Inc.

"This volume is a fascinating collection of perspectives on what it takes to dominate a marketspace in the New Economy. . . . A clear demonstration of why Kellogg is Kellogg-one of the thought leaders in the discipline of marketing." -Mel Bergstein, Chairman and CEO, Diamond Technology Partners

"New economy cases make this text appeal to old economy strategists. We shouldn't be suprised with the quality of this work, given its origin in the Kellogg School." -Ronald W. Dollens, President, Guidant Corporation


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 7



5 out of 5 stars Your Marketing Guidebook...   May 7, 2007
J. D. Mischo (Chicago, IL)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Kellogg on Marketing is a great guidebook to the world of marketing. It covers all of the basic topics and the articles go into enough detail to help a novice understand the concepts, or help a pro explain them.

If you're in business, particularly marketing, this should be on your reference shelf long after you've read it.



5 out of 5 stars Something of substantial value for everyone   March 29, 2006
Robert Morris (Dallas, Texas)
4 out of 5 found this review helpful


The last time I checked, Amazon and its online partner Borders sell more than 38,000 different books on the general subject or a specific component of marketing. Presumably this number will continue to increase as organizations become more actively involved with marketing initiatives to create or increase demand for what they offer, especially on a global level.

What we have here is one of the volumes which comprise a series produced by faculty members at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University and elsewhere. It was superbly edited by Dawn Iacobucci (Wharton) who wrote the Introduction. Sidney J. Levy (to whom this book is dedicated) wrote the Foreword and Philip Kotler (Kellogg) the Preface. I feel obligated to suggest at the outset that none of the volumes in this series is an "easy read." On the contrary, each requires but will generously reward a careful consideration of its content which, in this volume, is carefully organized within three Sections:

I (Chapters 1-6) Strategy: Thinking About the Customer and the Marketplace
II (Chapters 7-9) Intelligence: Learning About the Customer and the Marketplace
III (Chapters 10-13) Implementation: Managing the Marketplace

There are several reasons why I hold this book in such high regard. Here are three. First, the contributors cover almost every possible aspect of the general subject of marketing but, to their credit, focus much more attention on practical and effective applications than on general theories and concepts. Throughout the narrative, there are all manner of reader-friendly devices which help to correlate and synthesize key ideas such as charts, graphs, and check-lists which summarize key points in each of the 17 chapters, thereby facilitating and expediting periodic review of those points later.

Also, the contributors provide a number of valuable insights of general interest and practical value. Here are two representative examples:

"Firms that are operationally excellent are not primarily product or service innovators, nor do they cultivate deep, one-to-one relationships with customers. Instead, they provide middle-of-the-market products that can appeal to the mass of consumers in a category by offering the best price with the least inconvenience....Firms that adopt a product leadership orientation focus on developing new and better products, often making their own products obsolete. In so doing, they must address three challenges. One is to foster creativity, knowing how and where to look for it and how to recognize it. Another challenge is to get products to market expeditiously. And product leadership implies being the first to present the latest technology or the best new service to the marketplace." Chapter 1, "Segmentation and Marketing," Brian Sternthal and Alice M. Tybout, excerpted from pages 23-24

"The key principle in services marketing and management is to remember that `people,' both the customers and the service providers, are much more intricately involved in the marketplace exchange than for the relatively simple purchaser of most goods. Keeping in mind this customer-service provider dyad helps the marketing manager gain empathy for the customer experience, hopefully with the goal of designing service delivery systems that provide opportunities for inherently high-quality interactions, and that accommodate modifications, either for still higher quality customization requested, or in recovery to reattain high-quality provision." Chapter 14, "Services marketing and Customer Service," Dawn Iacobucci, excerpted from page 328.

Finally, most of those who read this book will have about as much information, observations, counsel, and guidance as they could possibly need to create or increase demand for what they take to market. Obviously, only a fool would attempt to apply all of the strategies and tactics which the contributors provide in such generous abundance. It remains for each reader to select with great care whatever is most relevant to her or his own organization's specific needs and objectives...and then to apply effectively whatever is most appropriate to the given objectives and available resources. Fragmented and isolated marketing initiatives can quickly accumulate as substantial costs. If guided and informed by a rigorous and prudent selection of what is most relevant in this book, however, allocation of whatever resources may be required should be viewed as an investment.

Those who share my high regard for this book are urged to check out Kellogg on Integrated Marketing co-edited by Iacobucci and Bobby Calder as well as Kellogg on Branding co-edited by Alice Tybout and Tim Calkins.

I also recommend Theodore Levitt's The Marketing Imagination (which includes his classic HBR article, "Marketing Myopia"), Barbara Bund's The Outside-In Corporation, Kenneth E. Clow and Donald Baack's Integrated Advertising, Promotion, and Marketing Communications (Second Edition), George E. Belch's Advertising and Promotion: An Integrated Marketing Communications Perspective, P. R. Smith and Jonathan Taylor's Marketing Communications: An Integrated Approach, and Noel Capon and co-authors' Total Integrated Marketing: Breaking the Bounds of the Function.



4 out of 5 stars It's great, but not enough.   May 20, 2002
Prior Jun-Ming Yang (Taipei County, Taiwan Taiwan)
4 out of 5 found this review helpful

This book is definitely one of the best Marketing books I have ever read. But it's still not good enough. Some chapters are too simplified for students majoring in Marketing, especially in advanced education, such as master or doctoral degree. On the other side, this book could be a very nice one for a newbie in Marketing field. You can clarify some important concepts through reading. I strongly recommend it to students in undergrudate degree, managers of business, but not to students in advanced education.


4 out of 5 stars Great but uneven content   November 23, 2001
Ingo Leung (Hong Kong)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

'Kellogg on Marketing' consists some excellent essays in various aspect of Marketing, but I find the content of the essays uneven. There are overlapping in topic discussed & there are also essays that are obviously abstract version of academic research. Despite the less than perfect execution, the book should be valuable & enjoyable to readers with various level of knowledge & interest in marketing.


4 out of 5 stars Insightful at times, but uneven in execution   June 29, 2001
Michael G (San Francisco, CA United States)
7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I realize the authors are among the top thinkers in their field. Their brilliance shines through on page after page of this book. However, some chapters are too basic, while others are clearly watered down versions of seriously advanced academic writing, leaving the reader at times bewildered and at others aching for more depth. Of course, your own training may affect which is which.

I recommend the book for anyone with a basic to intermediate marketing background, looking to flesh out his or her understanding of the practice. More advanced readers will find nuggets here and there, but mostly will cover familiar ground. I do have to say there is enough depth and new insights that even the long time professional marketer will find something new to consider. Beginners start elsewhere.

Showing reviews 1-5 of 7





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