Title
Eating the Big Fish: How 'Challenger Brands' Can Compete Against Brand Leaders

Author
Morgan, Adam

Publisher

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Year
1998

ISBN
0471242098

physical KP library, N/A if not

Library
N/A

Curriculum and Classification

Subject
Market and Branding

MainCurriculum
Business Design

SubCurriculum
The Market 2

Semester
Semester 4

Abstract

Amazon.co.uk Review The title of this book comes from an advert from Avis, the car rental firm, published at a time of planned growth. It positioned Avis as a small fish being chased by a bigger one--a bigger car hire firm. They had to stay ahead or be swallowed. Morgan calls Avis and others like them "Challenger Brands" or second-raters, and he examines 40 of them in this book. His aim is to identify their common marketing strands as they find themselves in an increasingly vulnerable position. By using the lessons revealed in the book, second-raters can develop strategies to consolidate and, if they want to (they don't always), compete with the leaders. The book is divided into three sections. The relatively short opening one outlines the challenges facing the second-raters, but the real meat is in the much larger section two where Morgan lays out his Eight Credos of Challenger Brands, their key marketing features. The third and final section, again short, is very practical. It shows how any company can use the Eight Credos as part of a two day practical exercise to start improving their own market position. With wide ranging examples from both the US and Europe, Morgan stresses time and again that you can learn from those outside your own market as well as those within it. He makes his points very well indeed, revealing that second-raters will have to operate very differently from market leaders if they are to survive. --Sandra Vogel

Steve Hayden, President, Worldwide Brand Services, Ogilvy & Mather "Eating the Big Fish is on fire with ideas. Best in the marketplace." -Steve Hayden, President, Worldwide Brand Services, Ogilvy & Mather

Reviews

Kaospilots reviews of the book. Please describe the book, why is it good or why is it bad (strength/weakness), what did the book do for you, and why do you recommend it. Plus of cause - you contact information so other people can discuss this with you and get more info if needed.



CategoryBook

Homebase: EatingTheBigFishBook (last edited 2006-11-03 09:09:58 by FrederikWulff)