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What is inarguable is the simplicity with which Trout and Ries explain how branding isn't about products and services, it's about how people think about products and services. The best compliment I could give the authors is that they made the complex topic of branding simple. If only they could now make it easy, we could all go home.
Profit from the Core: Growth Strategy in an Era of Turbulence, by Chris Zook and James Allen
This one won't make most marketers' top books lists, and that's a shame. Zook and Allen base their thesis on a 10-year study of 2,000 companies, expounding on the reasons why all companies seek sustained, profitable growth but only a fraction of them actually achieve it. I've always been fascinated by the principle of entropy, the tendency of all things in the universe towards disarray. This book demonstrates that the way to overcome entropy in business is by biting off no more than you can chew. Companies grow big by focusing narrowly.
The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing, by Jack Trout and Al Ries
Trout and Ries get two spots on the list, for good reason. Building on the concepts they presented in Positioning, the 22 Laws is an easy, breezy read that proffers simple branding facts you don't need a Ph.D. to appreciate. In fact, people who have too much education sometimes characterize Trout's and Ries' simplicity as simplistic, but if you're facing a real-world competitive environment, their advice is well-taken. You don't have to buy their opinions hook, line, and sinker to appreciate them or profit from their application. (Extra credit: Marketing Warfare from—you guessed it—Trout and Ries.)
Application
Hitting the Sweet Spot: How Consumer Insights Can Inspire Better Marketing and Advertising, by Lisa Fortini-Campbell
If you're not in the advertising industry, you've probably never heard of this book, but it's the single best resource I've found that explains the mystical process our industry calls "account planning." Fortini-Campbell presents practical, straightforward advice about how to understand your customers and prospects and translate what you learn into actionable marketing and message strategies. Along the way she shows how you can put your own consumer experiences, insights, and hunches to work. Following the disciplines in this book can lead to truly groundbreaking marketing and advertising efforts.
A Technique for Producing Ideas, by James Webb Young
Just because you can read a book in 10 minutes doesn't mean it's not worthwhile. In fact, this little booklet is an invaluable aid to generating ideas of any kind. Originally developed in the 1930s for students at the University of Chicago, the advice in A Technique for Producing Ideas is as helpful as it is quaint. The booklet presents in plain terms how the process of creativity works and provides practical steps for developing innovative products, services, and ideas. Mr. Young—who died in 1973—likely never appreciated the impact his contribution has made.
Feeding the Media Beast, by Mark Mathis
I've always worked on the advertising side of the business, and in the early part of my career the realm of public relations completely intimidated me. The thought of taking a call from a reporter, let alone pitching a story or (gasp) appearing on network television was simply terrifying. Until I read Feeding the Media Beast. A former journalist, Mark Mathis explains how the news business works, the pressures journalists face, and the predicaments in which they often find themselves. He demonstrates how, by following 12 "Media Rules," your relationship with the press can go from fearful to friendly. I can personally attest that this stuff works.
The Elements of Style, by William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White
I can hear you now: "Really? A stylebook? I left that stuff behind in English class." Yep, and that's the problem. We may live in an increasingly video-dominated world, but the written word still drives business. No matter how brilliant your ideas may be, if you don't craft them properly they can actually set you back. I keep this handbook handy and refer to it often to maintain a mannerly manner of writing. If recommending Strunk & White does nothing more than keep you from using exclamation points in your advertising (Chapter III, page 34 of my well-worn copy), I'll be content.
Some of these books are easier to find than others, but now that we're in the Internet era, all of them can be turned up. There are dozens of others I could recommend, but if you can work your way through these, you'll know more about branding than 90% of business people in America (and 100% of your competition).
Of course, if your company still runs into a problem, there's a book I can recommend about what to do when growth stalls. But I can't claim objectivity on that one.
Steve McKee is president of McKee Wallwork Cleveland Advertising and author of the book When Growth Stalls: How It Happens, Why You're Stuck, and What to Do About It. Find him on Twitter @WhenGrowthStall and LinkedIn.
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