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Book Description

Don't let the customer get between you and building a strong valued brand

If you want to stand out from the crowd, develop a clear and consistent brand voice, and ultimately build a fruitful business – listen to your brand. Stop Listening to the Customer offers insights into how consumers are driving homogeneity in brands and shares the proven strategies you can implement to amplify your own position in the world. 

The customer is not always right. In fact, our obsession with the customer risks devaluing brands by making them generic and forgettable. Brands have become too consumer-led, where they are driven by journey-mapping, customer-centric design, and an excessive focus on consumer-driven data. Instead try redressing the balance, and be brand-led, where brands and businesses can truly become unique, interesting and highly profitable.

 Multi-award-winning brand strategist and consumer psychologist Adam Ferrier shares his contrary approach to building a strong brand in Stop Listening to the Customer. Backed by science, real-world examples and extensive industry experience, Ferrier explores the dangers of listening to the consumer too much, shares lessons from successful businesses who prioritise their brand, and reveals the brand-building secrets of their success. With insights from Jules Lund, Lisa Ronson, John Newcomb, Rory Sutherland, and many more, this invaluable book will enable you to:

• Avoid the pitfalls of drowning in customer data
• Establish a strong, brand-led business
• Develop a unique brand by embracing and leveraging your weaknesses
• Define your brand
• Get your customers to invest into you

Stop Listening to the Customer is ideal for those looking to grow their brands and businesses by defeating consumer-driven mediocrity, standing out from the crowd, and listening their own brand.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover
  2. dedications and thanks
  3. preface: getting from awkward to awesome
  4. Introduction
    1. A confession
    2. Note
  5. chapter 1 stop the ­consumer ­obsession
    1. Why do all cars look the same?
    2. Love him or loathe him, Steve Jobs had vision
    3. Customer obsession
    4. Customer Obsession is Over
    5. Notes
  6. chapter 2 consumers lie
    1. Lying makes life better
    2. Bad men do what good men dream
    3. Why did you buy those shoes?
    4. The three big issues with research
    5. Does behaviour lie?
    6. It's a wrap
    7. Notes
  7. chapter 3 listening to the consumer ­eliminates value
    1. Dinner with Gladwell
    2. Consumer in Control
    3. Don't let this thought slide by
    4. Notes
  8. chapter 4 listening to the consumer makes your business homogeneous
    1. Listen to Forrester. CX is dangerous
    2. How we buy just about anything
    3. The consumer wants your category, not you
    4. Fear the power of tradition
    5. Notes
  9. chapter 5 they who hear their brand
    1. Hearing IKEA
    2. The effort paradox
    3. What about Apple?
    4. Tourism Australia
    5. A bit of romance
    6. Art Series Hotels
    7. Along came ALDI
    8. Hear the brand
    9. Notes
  10. chapter 6 create the category
    1. Making sex better
    2. Bending an established category into a new shape
    3. Stretching a pre-existing brand
    4. Be the category
    5. Note
  11. chapter 7 define the brand
    1. A brand I'm particularly proud of
    2. The Great Brand Positioning Rumble
    3. The practical attack on brand positioning
    4. Defining Vegemite
    5. Now that everyone knows the brand …
    6. It starts with the brand
    7. Note
  12. chapter 8 gonzo marketing 1: fire the CEO
    1. Gonzo marketing
    2. Corporate governance and me
    3. Inside out with superannuation
    4. Do we need a marketing department?
    5. Do you need a CEO?
    6. Trade secrets
    7. Think gonzo
  13. chapter 9 gonzo marketing 2: put the customer second
    1. Your employees are media
    2. Embrace internal engagement
    3. Tackling the faceless ride-share companies
    4. The tech startup and branding from the inside out
    5. Customers are Number 2
    6. Notes
  14. chapter 10 embracing the negative
    1. The yin yang symbol is not just a cool tattoo
    2. Dirt is creativity
    3. Wabi-sabi is not just a sushi restaurant
    4. We all cast a shadow
    5. Negative emotions
    6. Negative cognitions
    7. The alternative to perfect
    8. Embrace your weakness
    9. Celebrate flaws
    10. Notes
  15. chapter 11 creating weakness
    1. 1. Force friction
    2. 2. Be wasteful
    3. 3. Make mistakes
    4. 4. Make a mess
    5. Don't forget this
    6. Notes
  16. chapter 12 ask what your consumer can do for you
    1. Attitude follows action
    2. The Aesop effect
    3. s p a c e
    4. Doing nothing does harm
    5. So will you do something for me?
    6. Notes
  17. chapter 13 the closing argument
  18. appendix: the ‘how cool are you' questionnaire
  19. about the authors
  20. Index
  21. END USER LICENSE AGREEMENT
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