brand news
Posted by Dale Buss on May 10, 2013 09:20 AM

YouTube launches paid channels after rumors swirled earlier this week about subscription partners.
ESPN may subsidize wireless-data plans.
JPMorgan Chase is sued by California over credit-card cases.
AT&T returns to chatty kids for Mother's Day ads.
Amazon is reportedly developing a smartphone with 3-D screen.
Caterpillar and union suspend talks.
Chrysler faces uphill climb for Jeep in China.
Costco now offers travel packages to members.
Dell may see rival bid by Carl Icahn group.
Delta sees new terminal as symbol of air-travel makeover.Continue reading...
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brand roadmaps
Posted by Dale Buss on May 1, 2013 06:12 PM

JCPenney's brand-resuscitation efforts continued today with a digital-era form of a classic corporate move: the mea culpa.
The company launched a virtual apology tour on Facebook, YouTube (watch below) and Twitter to get the message out to customers—those same customers that now-ousted CEO Ron Johnson in large part ignored for more than a year—that the brand is sorry and wants them to come back.
According to Bloomberg, the campaign was developed on Johnson's watch and implemented by Sergio Zyman, the former Coca-Cola marketing executive who will go down in history as the architect of the New Coke fiasco.Continue reading...
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brand news
Posted by Dale Buss on April 30, 2013 09:15 AM

ESPN apologizes for comments by commentator after NBA player announces he's gay.
Honda recalls almost 46,000 Fits in North America.
Chrysler sees profit tumble on poorly executed product launches.
Alibaba and Sina form alliance of China online businesses.
Apple files for new technology that tells whether to text or call friends.
Asos prepares marketing drive to grow global brand.
BP reviews safety after oil leak in North Sea.
Best Buy sells Europe unit back to Carphone Warehouse.
BlackBerry CEO questions future of tablets (which brand doesn't have).Continue reading...
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brands that go bang
Posted by Renèe Alexander on April 18, 2013 02:11 PM

If observers of Canada’s fashion industry have learned anything over the last 30 years, it’s this: don’t bet against Joe Mimran.
The brains behind Joe Fresh, which just celebrated its first anniversary of bringing contemporary styles and affordable prices to the US with an exclusive fashion show at its flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York, continues to be a fashion force and is showing no signs of getting stale.
The 61-year-old is currently overseeing a major country-wide expansion south of the 49th parallel. Joe Fresh’s “store-within-a-store” concept opened up to rave reviews in nearly 700 of JCPenney’s 1,100 locations a few weeks ago. Amidst JCPenney's ongoing retail debacle, much of the media attention had centered on now-ousted JCPenney CEO Ron Johnson hitching perhaps his last cart to Mimran. It's obvious that if Joe Fresh and the sampling of other top designers can't pull through with improved sales figures for the chain, JCPenney's days will surely be numbered.
“If Joe Fresh doesn’t work, this could be the worst ides of March since Brutus greeted Caesar on the floor of the Senate,” Maxim analyst Rick Snyder told Business Week. “(Joe Fresh) is kind of a microcosm of what they’re trying to do, and if it doesn’t work, I think it’s going to get really ugly.”
Nevermind Martha—if Joe Fresh can't boost JCPenney—whose shares jumped five percent on Joe's debut weekend—then nobody can. All it takes is one quick look at Mimran’s resume and it’s plain to see—the Moroccan-born fashionista knows his stuff and he’s got the marketshare, revenue and real estate to back it up.Continue reading...
brand trainwrecks
Posted by Dale Buss on April 16, 2013 06:37 PM

Someday, Hollywood may make a movie about the dashing Myron "Mike" Ullman and how he reluctantly came back to rescue JCPenney, the company he loved so much that he was willing to attempt to lead it a second time—after first being rejected by its board in favor of a charismatic new leader, who subsequently laid waste to the enterprise.
But for now, what Ullman is faced with at "JCP" doesn't seem to be shaping up for such an inspiring climax. He and the executives who remain from the Ron Johnson administration appear "to at least understand that [they] have entered the endgame," as the New York Times put it. "But [Ullman] now has to show how he's going to win it."
Clearly, the odds are stacked high against Ullman and even against the future of the company. After a monumental sales slide that has continued to worsen after last year's 25 percent swoon, wholesale layoffs of JCPenney employees that have left those who remain dispirited and overworked, mass confusion of the brand's traditional customer base, a dwindling of financial resources and the sudden and ignominious if inevitable departure of Johnson—not to mention a verdict in JCPenney's litigation against Macy's hanging in the balance—there's not much room for optimism.Continue reading...
brand news
Posted by Dale Buss on April 12, 2013 09:02 AM

JCPenney seeks to raise $1 billion as Martha Stewart loses a round in JCP-Macy's case.
Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg launches FWD.us with Silicon Valley heavyhitters on immigration reform.
Apple agrees to settle suit on iPhone and iPad warranties.
Argos plans digital "store of the future" to fight Amazon.
Bibigo Korean food brand partners with Psy.
Bitcoin finds Winklevoss twins rise in digital money as crash continues.
BlackBerry looks to apps and China for growth.
Burger King CEO leaves to take top job at H.J. Heinz.
Douwe Egberts goes to JAB for $9.8 billion.
Eli Lilly plans to lay off 30 percent of sales reps in major restructuring.Continue reading...
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brand news
Posted by Dale Buss on April 11, 2013 09:16 AM

Deutsche Telekom raises bid for MetroPCS.
The Masters begins at Augusta National today with Tiger Woods again among the favorites.
Toyota and other Japanese automakers recall 3.4 million vehicles over Takata airbag.
Applebee's led first-quarter social media engagement by restaurants.
Barnes & Noble rebrands self-publishing platform PubIt! as Nook Press as it continues to invest in future of Nook brand.
Justin Bieber backs a debit card for teens, from parents.
ConocoPhillips suspends Arctic drilling plan.
Daimler says worsening Europe puts its 2013 profit outlook in doubt.
Dell plans to double sales outlets in China.Continue reading...
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brand trainwrecks
Posted by Dale Buss on April 10, 2013 04:22 PM

It's Day 2 of the post-Johnson era at JCP—or JCPenney (or is it back to J.C. Penney now?)—and it isn't at all clear how the venerable American retailer is going to recover from what just-sacked CEO Ron Johnson did, and didn't, do.
But JCPenney, now back under the leadership of pre-Johnson CEO Myron "Mike" Ullman, is going to try. Wall Street has been tapping down Penney's stock in the wake of the board's decision to oust Johnson earlier this week, but it isn't because investors believe that Johnson should have stayed. It's because they fear that the former head of Apple retail operations did so much damage during his short tenure at the helm that the company isn't salvageable.
Ullman is at least going to give it everything he's got in his second shot at the job. The retailer is still fighting a 10 percent sales drop during its ongoing fiscal first quarter, the Wall Street Journal said, on top of a 19 percent drop during the same quarter a year ago and the overall 25 percent dip in revenues during 2012.Continue reading...
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