by Marc H. Rudov | August 23, 2018 | Article
Nothing negatively pressures a company’s prices and profits like the marketplace relegating it to commodity status. A commodity is a raw material or finished product that customers deem indistinguishable from like materials and products, regardless of source....
by Marc H. Rudov | May 3, 2016 | Article
At Macworld in 2007, Steve Jobs announced to his fans that, with the introduction of Apple TV and the iPhone, Apple Computer officially had become Apple. Diversifying the product portfolio was the public rationale for shortening the company name. Reality: Jobs had...
by Marc H. Rudov | October 24, 2014 | Article
Recently, a venture capitalist, who had read my book on branding for CEOs, asked my opinion of Amazon’s brand. I couldn’t fathom it. Amazon’s sell-everything-to-everyone model, I averred, is unbrandable, not to mention, unsustainable. When trying to...
by Marc H. Rudov | June 7, 2011 | Article
On June 6, 2011, Steve Jobs, emerging briefly from his medical leave, made a rare branding blunder in a product announcement: incorporating “cloud” in its name. Jobs heralded Apple’s free iCloud service, which allows users to store remotely their...