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Corporate Religion
 
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Corporate Religion [Hardcover]

Jesper. Kunde
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Financial Times/ Prentice Hall; 1 edition (26 Oct 1999)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0273643800
  • ISBN-13: 978-0273643807
  • Product Dimensions: 24.4 x 17.3 x 2.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 759,517 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Jesper Kunde
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Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review

We all believe by now that brands are important, nay absolutely central, to business these days. In a cluttered, competitive world, a strong brand is the only way to stand out. But for Jesper Kunde, mere intellectual acceptance of this idea is not enough. You have to really believe. No, really, really believe in your own brand, if you are to stand any chance.

There can be no higher state of belief than a religion, offering total faith with a deep spiritual element. And that is exactly what Kunde is proposing: that your brand must become a Corporate Religion. "Only with a strong spirit at its foundation can a company achieve a strong market position. And make no mistake, it is a brand position that ultimately decides a company's success--or lack of it", he writes. He argues that today the product is still the main way a company communicates. But soon that will not be enough. The brand isn't merely a facade that is presented to the consumer. It must be a truth, a vision that informs everything the company does, internally and externally, anywhere and everywhere in the world.

Kunde, head of leading Danish marketing consultancy Kunde & Co, describes a brand hierarchy, starting with product, moving to concept brand, corporate concept and brand culture (where brands are so strong in the eyes of the consumer that they become the equivalent to the function they represent).He takes an holistic approach to both brands and organisations, which could lead to interesting but rather vague conclusions. The real value of this book is that while his vision is almost mystical, he constructs the stairway to brand heaven out of concrete. He discusses the minutiae of international organisation, looks at how the idea can be disseminated, looks at the implications for different types of company, talks about how to implement a corporate religion and focuses in detail on the implications for management and the organisation.

Although this is largely about marketing, it is fascinatingly and provocatively written in a way that makes it ideal for all marketers as well as anyone in the organisation who may be concerned that their organisation lacks true competitive edge. --Alex Benady

Review

I've previously said that the companies that are lasting are those that are authentic. If people believe they share values with a company, they will stay loyal to a brand. While many books deal with the specifics of either brand management, marketing, advertising, general management or value-driven organizations – Corporate Religion is a compelling, very persuasive and very how-to lecture of how to grow brands from the heart.  Howard Schultz, Starbucks Coffee  Corporate Religion steps right on the sore toes of so-called international companies, so I must swallow hard before holding to my conviction that only by carrying our weaknesses on a silver tray can we become stronger. This well-written book puts into words what we know to be true, and there's no getting away from it. The argumentation and methodology is here. We have no more excuses. It's the book I've been waiting for!  Anders Knutsen, Bang & Olufsen  "I wish I'd written this Corporate Religion! It is a genuine original in a world full of 'me too' management books. To make a mark on 'the outside' - the traditional focus of 'branding literature' - a company needs soul, spirit, character and personality on 'the inside.' That obvious inside-outside link has never been made before. Bottom line: This is a timely, brilliant, readable, important book."  Tom Peters

"Jesper Kunde has written a very readable and interesting book about what is possible and sensible to do with a brand. It is a good book about how to develop a brand from just being the name of a product to be, what Jesper Kunde calls, "the ultimate position." Something the consumers profess to as a religion… The book gets even better with the wide range of examples on how to use and abuse a brand"

Jens M. Roelsgaard, Jyllands Posten

 


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I came across this book by accident after someone lent it to me after meeting them on a plane. Before the flight had landed I had read it cover to cover. When the flight landed I called Kunde's office's in London. After a two meetings I asked them to help my business. The agency really does live by the book. The principles are far reaching into every angle of what your business needs to be, not just about what so many think how it should be done. That is to say spending lots of money on the hit or miss affair of "normal" advertising. Everyone, within my business has read this book, and we, as a collective, are stronger for it. That has enabled us to identify, grow and communicate our own "corporate religion", with huge success.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Many will be offended or discouraged from reading this book because of its title. Most of us would like to get our religion from a religious institution or our spiritual practices.

What is in the book did not seem to me to really relate to creating and maintaining a corporate religion, however. I found the book to be describing the benefits of having intense emotional bonds among customers, users, companies, and employees. I would rename this book, In Search of More Intense Connections.

The key theme of the book is the importance of creating emotional value. 'Emotional values are replacing physical attributes as the fundamental market influence.'

Mr. Kunde is the head of his own advertising agency, and his perspective is very much a psychological one. He takes that point of view, however, and effectively expands it to include a company's external positioning, internal culture, nature, mission, corporate concept, external market competition, internal relationships, and management tasks. This is one of the broadest corporate concept descriptions that I have seen, and is a helpful one.

The book contains detailed examples of companies operating at various levels of effectiveness in these areas. The examples are very visible ones that should mostly be known to you. His examplars are companies like The Body Shop, Coca-Cola, McDonald's, The Walt Disney Company, Harley-Davidson, Nike, Virgin, and SAS. The book contains many beautiful color illustrations and photographs from these companies that reinforce the author's point. To him, 'corporate religion is a set of values which unite the organization around the mission and vision.' When these values are compelling enough, people who do not even use the company's products or services will wear merchandise with the brand name on it. For example, Harley-Davidson stands for freedom in the minds of most, and young women who honor that principle wear skirts with the brand name on it who have never been on a Harley. There are even Harley-Davidson cafes (I have eaten at the one in Manhattan, and I can promise you it isn't the food that brings people in. There is lots of wearable merchandise sold there and elsewhere).

The book ends with a one-year plan for implementing a corporate religion, and an example of how the author applied these principles in his own advertising agency.

Just a few years ago, it was unusual for a management book to address the psychological satisfactions of having an empowering purpose in one's work. Today, that theme is a fairly common one. The book rises above many of the rest by addressing more elements of creating and maintaining this empowering purpose. I encourage you to read the book and apply its lessons. When I first worked in a company after attending law school, I was pleased to find out how cooperative business is compared to how competitive law is. This book brought back that perspective and made it fresh for me again.

These days, many people seek out volunteer work to gain the satisfactions that paid work does not provide. You will know you are making progress with these concepts when people tell you they feel more self-esteem from what their business work stands for than for what their volunteer work does.

After you have finished reading this book, I encourage you to think about the most empowering purpose you can imagine for an organization or a company. Then ask others how they repond to that purpose. Keep refining that purpose until you find an expression of it that positively zings you and sends others into a happy orbit as well. When you can do that, you will then be well on your way to finding the ideal best practice for leadership.

Be irresistible!

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Outstanding 30 Mar 2001
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
If every senior executive put into practice even half of the tenets expounded in this book business failure would become a thing of the past. Should be compulsory reading for anyone in business.
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