Customer Reviews
Great little book on the essentials of branding - By: Joanne Morley, 16 Dec 2008 
I bought this book quite a few years ago & lost my copy so bought it again a few weeks ago. It is a great book on the essentials of branding & the authors take a simple, yet really informative look at what makes up a brandin short chapters that you can read on their own. As a marketeer I recommend this book to my clients as you can learn a lot about brandingin a very short space of time. It is suitable for everyone & even my husband who is an engineer & usually doesn't have time for marketing "fluff" as he calls it, said he found it quite engaging & now believes himself a branding expert:-)
Ankle-deep branding - By: M. Cavenett, 17 Sep 2008 
This book reminds me of when my older brother told me about sex when I was about eight years old: he didn't really know what he was talking about, but it sounded great at the time. Sure, read this book to stimulate thoughts about branding, but make sure you question every sentencein it, & when you realise how shallow it is, throw it away...
Brand management made easy - By: Mr. Ck Griffiths, 29 Feb 2008 
A really simple & enjoyable book to read & every point is robustly backed up with real life examples of how to do & not to do things.
The writer makes the difference between the sucess & failiure of brands seem so simplistic it makes you wonder why on earth companies waste £millions on ideas that have been proven not to work or seriously harm future sales.
A real eye opener.
The place to start - By: Martin Turner, 26 Jan 2008 
How can a book which has almost no pictures be the ultimate introduction to branding?
I was highly sceptical, & only added it onto to my list of branding books to buy because it was cheap. How wrong I was.
In 172 readable, small-paperback pages, Al Ries & his daughter Laura unveil the fundamentals of branding, stripping away the most powerful myths & demonstrating with a mixture of brand successes, failures, falls & rises, that they know what they are talking about. What's more, what they say made sense of many things I have been dimly feeling towardsin my 20 years as a communications professional.
I suspect that this book oversells itself slightly. The title made me suspicious, & the definitiveness of statements which go against what you findin other books makes you wonder, at points, if what it's saying is really this cut & dried. I probably would have disregarded this book if I'd read it ten years ago: but practical industry experience convinces me that what it is saying is right, & the other books, which focus on choosing your name & redesigning the logo, are the ones which only understand a part of the picture.
It took me about an hour & a half to read this book, & I will never see branding the same way again. That's good value for you. On the other hand, I probably won't be reading & re-reading it avidly. It makes its points, which can be quickly revised from the chapter headings. Now it's time to move on.
I would recommend this book to anyone & everyone who wants (or needs) to learn about branding. I can't imagine a better introduction to the subject for someone who already has enough industry experience to recognise what it is talking about. I wouldn't recommend anyone to _only_ read this book: it is an extremely sound beginning, not an encyclopaedia.
In terms of what this book is trying to be, I don't think there could be any higher recommendation than that.
Superb.
A stunning piece of work! - By: David Connelly, 29 Jul 2005 
Let's face it, the title & subject matter of this book is unlikely to leave most of us hanging on the edge of our seats. Indeed, I think one of the great ironies of this book is that it possibly suffers from its own branding problems! But don't let that fool you- the book is absolutely fantastic & I would urge anyone who runs or is thinking of starting up their own business to drop all your tools & read this book IMMEDIATELY.
Throughout the book, the authors draw upon countless examples from household names to illustrate the various branding laws that the authors are trying to put foward. After reading the first two chapters (i.e., laws) you'll understand how companies like Starbucks have became the world's leading coffee shop brand within just a few years. You'll appreciate how ventures like Google.com have managed to become overnight megabrands without spending a penny on advertising. Conversely, the book will unveal the costly branding blunders that have recently been made by the likes of Pepsi, Mercedes Benz & Miller. The authors even go so far as to predict the death of Kodak & any other global superbrands who are currently failing to obide by the laws of branding.
Perhaps most intersting of all, for me, was the suggestion that we are now livingin a brave new agein which the companies that thrive are not going to be those that have the best logos or the best advertisments or the best salesmen or even the best service- it will be the companies with the best brands.
This book took a subject that I was mildly interestedin & made it utterly fascinating. This is my ever first five star review & a well deserved one at that!