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Posted On: 06/11/2017 6:53:31 PM
Post# of 871
“Ingredient Branding is a marketing strategy where a component or an ingredient of a product or service is pulled into the spotlight and given it’s own identity.” Think Intel, Gore-tex, Teflon… So honestly I cannot wait for a promotion campaign educating the world on the value of what Lightwave what Lightwave has after all is very similar “Intel Inside”. Honestly Most folks are too busy in life or too lazy to look at the problems facing the world and vet viable solutions. I’ll bet that 80 Per Cent of Lightwave’s investors were made aware of it by word of mouth.
“Millions of otherwise tech-illiterate consumers came to know Intel through its “Intel Inside” campaign, which at the time was an incredibly novel marketing approach. Here’s what you can learn from their innovative strategy.
Things change, even if we don’t want them to. No company operating in the free market can be successful in perpetuity by delivering the same products with the same marketing and the same margins. While it is easy and natural to crave consistency and avoid risk, the changing nature of life and our environment requires us to change, to adapt, and to take chances in order to survive.
If one thing distinguishes Intel’s innovative thinking, it is their 1990s strategy of branding a semiconductor chip as a valuable feature that consumers would look for when they purchased a computer. The campaign’s two decades of ubiquity make us forget this now, but at the time it was an incredibly novel approach to marketing. People bought computers because of the software, the specs, or a friend’s recommendation. Who cared about who made some tiny chip inside the box that you couldn’t even see?”
https://www.fastcompany.com/3004135/marketing...ehold-name
A Proprietary Plastic that can Control Light just as Transistors control Electrons on Silicon, Compatible with today’s materials for the Hybrid devices of Tomorrow and at a fraction of the cost.
“The more successful they are the luckier they’ll say we were.”
Xster
Games will be played my friends it was inevitable.
“Millions of otherwise tech-illiterate consumers came to know Intel through its “Intel Inside” campaign, which at the time was an incredibly novel marketing approach. Here’s what you can learn from their innovative strategy.
Things change, even if we don’t want them to. No company operating in the free market can be successful in perpetuity by delivering the same products with the same marketing and the same margins. While it is easy and natural to crave consistency and avoid risk, the changing nature of life and our environment requires us to change, to adapt, and to take chances in order to survive.
If one thing distinguishes Intel’s innovative thinking, it is their 1990s strategy of branding a semiconductor chip as a valuable feature that consumers would look for when they purchased a computer. The campaign’s two decades of ubiquity make us forget this now, but at the time it was an incredibly novel approach to marketing. People bought computers because of the software, the specs, or a friend’s recommendation. Who cared about who made some tiny chip inside the box that you couldn’t even see?”
https://www.fastcompany.com/3004135/marketing...ehold-name
A Proprietary Plastic that can Control Light just as Transistors control Electrons on Silicon, Compatible with today’s materials for the Hybrid devices of Tomorrow and at a fraction of the cost.
“The more successful they are the luckier they’ll say we were.”
Xster
Games will be played my friends it was inevitable.
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