htm EJM 40‚7/8 Seven dimensions of corporate identity A categorisation from the practitioners’ perspectives T.C. Melewar Brunel Business School‚ Brunel University‚ London‚ UK‚ and 846 Received August 2003 Revised September 2004 and April 2005 Accepted May 2005 Elif Karaosmanoglu Istanbul Technical University‚ Istanbul‚ Turkey Abstract Purpose – This paper investigates what organisations perceive as the essential components of corporate identity concept and their contents. It proposes
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Literature Review Corporate Identity What is corporate identity? The task of defining corporate identity is challenging. Different views and definitions were introduced to the concept. The first time the “corporate identity” term was used was in 1957 by Lippincott and Margulies (Cornelissen & Elving‚ 2003). It was constrained by the visual representation of the organization by which means it identify itself. The understanding of the concept has expanded later to include all the characteristics
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Corporate Communication and the Corporate Brand Peggy Simcic Brønn (From: Corporate Communication: A Strategic Approach to Building Reputation (2002)‚ Brønn‚ P.S. and R. Wiig (eds.)‚ Oslo: Gyldendal.) The first years of the 21st century have been hard on companies and their brands. It is predicted that Firestone is dead as a brand as a result of its defective tires used on Ford SUVs‚ which tipped over causing loss of lives. Arthur Anderson is feverishly trying to find partners for its many
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Corporate identity – the management of the process of change in the name/logo in the context of brands’ merger Joana César Machado Paulo de Lencastre Pedro Dionísio Universidade Católica Portuguesa E-mail: jcmachado@porto.ucp.pt E-mail: plencastre@porto.ucp.pt Instituto Superior de Ciências do Trabalho e da Empresa E-mail: pedro.dionisio@imr.pt Abstract The creation of strong corporate identity‚ including identity signs‚ is crucial for companies to encourage positive attitudes in
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14 May 2010 REPORT KELLOG’S CORPORATE COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES Executive summary The Kellogg’s company is the largest ready-to-eat cereal manufacturer in the world‚ employing over 13‚000 people and producing over 1 billion kilos of ready-to-eat cereals annually for distribution in over 160 countries. From small beginnings in Battle Creek‚ Michigan the company has grown into a global organisation with factories‚ distribution networks and markets worldwide. Its founders Dr John Harvey Kellogg
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Working Paper Series British Airways and Balmer’s AC3ID Test of Corporate Brand Management Professor John M T Balmer Dr Helen Stuart Working Paper No 04/26 July 2004 The working papers are produced by the Bradford University School of Management and are to be circulated for discussion purposes only. Their contents should be considered to be preliminary. The papers are expected to be published in due course‚ in a revised form and should not be quoted without the author’s permission. W O R
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The symbolic elements were widely used in the past especially in the middle ages. Designing‚ displaying‚ describing‚ and recording coats of arms and badges were and still are the elements found in todays business. Corporate identity blossomed just after the world war two in the 1950’s which took place in America by the Modernist movement . The consumer and modernist culture has led to a transformation due to the changes‚ the social life was going through. The war caused destruction but also brought
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Corporate Social Responsibility and Marketing: An Integrative Framework Isabelle Maignan Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam‚ the Netherlands O. C. Ferrell Colorado State University This article introduces a conceptualization of corporate social responsibility (CSR) that emphasizes the role and potential contribution of the marketing discipline. The proposed framework first depicts CSR initiatives as the actions undertaken to display conformity to both organizational and stakeholder norms. Then
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shareholders lose their investments‚ and societies lose key parts of their economic infrastructure‚ have you noticed that it often appears that the senior directors involved walk away with a clear conscience and they seem to be unaffected by the corporate collapses they have created. They present themselves as glibly unbothered by the chaos around them‚ unconcerned about those who have lost their jobs‚ savings and investments‚ and lacking any regrets about what they have done. Some of these individuals
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Environmentally unsound policies due to oil and toxic spills; Occasional refinery explosions; Corrosion in pipelines; Competition from Shell and Chevron Ceasing operations in a number of potential locations with their further re-branding (Conoco); Sale of corporate-owned stations; More than 5.000 shortages within coming months; $66‚71 per barrel creates considerable tensions for running oil business;
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