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Talent Agent and Consultant Evan Morgenstein Says Now is the Time to Reinvent Your Brand Overview The coronavirus is wreaking havoc on businesses large and small, curtailing travel, sporting events, […]
Clorox Bleach is 6% sodium hypochlorite and 94% water, the exact formulation of most generic store brands. Yet Clorox consistently commands 65% of U.S. bleach sales.
Why?
Because, says Lindsay Pedersen, who oversaw the hygienic cleaner for The Clorox Company, Clorox Bleach is an “ironclad” brand, one of many she showcases in her new book, “Forging an Ironclad Brand: A Leader’s Guide.”
Lindsay, whose Ironclad Brand Strategy consulting firm has also helped build ironclad brands for Starbucks, T-Mobile, Zulily, and other large companies, believes that a business’s brand it too important to be left to marketers alone. As she explains to host Dean Rotbart, brand is such a crucial driver of value creation that it needs to be developed and supported by virtually every employee at a company or organization, starting with the CEO.
Good brand, Lindsay notes, really is just good business.
You may think you know enough about branding or that your business or professional practice doesn’t need to have an ironclad brand to succeed.
You’d be surprised at how many customers and how much profit you likely are missing out on.
Hear for yourself on this week’s edition of Monday Morning Radio.
Photo: Lindsay Pedersen, Ironclad Brand Strategy
Posted: April 22, 2019
Monday Morning Run Time: 45:17
Editor May 5, 2020
Talent Agent and Consultant Evan Morgenstein Says Now is the Time to Reinvent Your Brand Overview The coronavirus is wreaking havoc on businesses large and small, curtailing travel, sporting events, […]
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