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Mass Affluence: Seven New Rules of Marketing to Today's Consumer
Mass Affluence: Seven New Rules of Marketing to Today's Consumer

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Authors: Paul Nunes, Brian Johnson
Publisher: Harvard Business School Press
Category: Book

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Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 221829

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 269
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.3

ISBN: 1591391962
Dewey Decimal Number: 658.8
EAN: 9781591391968
ASIN: 1591391962

Publication Date: September 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Thankyou for looking at Bookscorner1. May have a remainder mark and shelf wear.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

How to Capture Today's Biggest Untapped Market

Forget mass customization and microsegmentation. Winning in today's business world requires a return to an approach abandoned by marketing experts decades ago. Mass marketing is back, say Paul Nunes and Brian Johnson-but with a new target and a fresh approach that companies ignore at their peril.

While the mass-marketing concepts of the 1950s consisted of lowest-common-denominator strategies aimed at the "middle class," Nunes and Johnson argue that the rules of mass marketing must be rewritten to appeal to today's burgeoning mass of different-and far more affluent-consumers. The "moneyed masses" have more disposable income than ever, and research shows the richest among them are not spending up to their potential-thus creating a windfall of opportunity for marketers. Based on extensive consumer research, Mass Affluence outlines seven new rules for capturing this largely ignored market, and reveals how innovative companies are already employing them to launch billion-dollar industries in categories from oral care to homebuilding to exotic automobiles.

A sea change in marketing is underway-and future growth and profitability will belong to the companies that woo and win today's affluent mass market.




Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Lead, Follow, or Get Out of the Customer's Way   September 21, 2004
 23 out of 24 found this review helpful

Nunes and Johnson help to increase our understanding of an especially powerful trend in contemporary marketing: creating or increasing demand for customized products or services which have been mass produced primarily for affluent consumers. This is a complicated subject in that, as recent research clearly indicates, many of these same products and services also appeal to less affluent consumers. This is precisely what Michael Silverstein and Neil Fiske discuss in Trading Up: The New American Luxury in which they refer to "products and services which possess higher levels of quality, taste, and [key word] aspiration than [other] goods in the [same] category but are not so expensive as to be out of reach...[trading up to products and services which] sell at much higher prices than conventional goods and in much higher volumes than traditional luxury goods and, as a result, have soared into previously uncharted territory high above the familiar price-volume demand curve." According to Nunes and Johnson, what is needed is "an approach that considers the facts about mass affluence and delivers a comprehensive view of how companies can change their marketing strategies to capture the value created from greater consumer affluence. That is why we wrote this book; that's what we're attempting to provide."

Indeed they do, and with discipline and eloquence. Their material is carefully organized within four Parts: The New Rules of Positioning, The New Rules of Designing Offerings, The New Rules of Customer Reach, and then a final section which responds to the question "What's Next?" Then in their Epilogue, Nunes and Johnson share their observations and suggestions with regard to "Reenvisioning an Industry" (i.e. the jewelry and watch business), applying to it the "seven new rules of mass marketing" previously introduced and discussed in the first chapter.

Long ago, Warren Buffett suggested that price is what we charge and value is what the buyer thinks it's worth. I was reminded of that as I read Part One in which Nunes and Johnson explain "The New Rules of Marketing." These are not their rules nor are they even rules per se. Rather, they are strategies which the competitive marketplace has already determined are more appropriate to new realties. For example:

Old Rule: Avoid middle-market positions between low-cost and premium.

New Rule: Seize the new-middle-ground position, above the rest of the conventional offerings and below the ultrapremium solutions. (Please see Figure 2-1 on page 33.)

Old Rule: Produce less-expensive versions of luxuries to sell to the masses.

New Rule: Introduce new models of ownership that make a wealthy lifestyle, and even real luxuries, affordable to the masses.

According to Nunes and Johnson, traditional mass marketers can "play by the new rules" (i.e. can capture the spending of the moneyed masses) without sacrificing the former core mass market. How? Give customers the chance to spend more by offering new premium versions, adding on product upgrades and differentiated service levels to existing offerings. Also, honor customers with the recognition they desire by creating status levels that richly reward willing-to-spend customers in all of the ways they wish to be recognized. Also, offer the right price to each customer by using effective pricing to achieve differential margins based on qualities that aren't intrinsic to the offering. Customers may not always be right but, ultimately, their perceptions ARE market realities. They are asking different kinds of questions now. For example, "What does this [watch, handbag, dress, set of golf clubs, etc.] say about me?" Moreover, they are less concerned about a luxury item's purchase price than they are about ROI which includes enhanced self-esteem in their own eyes as well as in others'. New realities do indeed require different (if not "new") strategies by which to respond to them. Nunes and Johnson offer several in this book, anchoring each within a context of relevant information and appropriate examples. Well-done!

Those who share my high regard for this book are urged to check out James H. Gilmore and B. Joseph Pine's Markets of One: Creating Customer-Unique Value through Mass Customization, the aforementioned Trading Up, James B. Twitchell's Living It Up: America's Love Affair with Luxury, Virginia Postrel's The Substance of Style: How the Rise of Aesthetic Value Is Remaking Commerce, Culture, and Consciousness, Gerald Zaltman's How Customers Think: Essential Insights into the Mind of the Market, Joseph Epstein's Snobbery: The American Version, and Bill Stinnett's Think Like Your Customer: A Winning Strategy to Maximize Sales By Understanding and Influencing How and Why Your Customers Buy.



5 out of 5 stars Not How...But Why Starbucks a Success   September 26, 2004
 7 out of 8 found this review helpful

There are no lack of books on the market talking about affluent marketing, however Mass Affluence goes beyond a simple recitation of case histories and delves into the functional statistical realities that are driving today's Frapuccino fixation. Mssrs. Nunes and Johnson have a clear and articulate "voice" that takes very dry statistics and make them easily understood and accesible for today's marketers.

Pity the retailers and manufacturers that don't read and absorb these new fundamental truths behind why Starbucks is selling so many cups of coffee. While America has become enamored of darker roast coffees, the real fact is that their are incrementally more Americans able to afford a $4.00 cup of joe with a little carmel squirt and a dollop of whip cream.

Clear, consice, logical and well-presented, Mass Affluence is an empirical study on the shifting of American demographics and a guideline to changing how marketers approach bringing their wares to market.

Seldom have stats been used to make a more compelling arguement in such a readible way. Logic and intelligence combine to make Mass Affluence a compelling read.




4 out of 5 stars Ideas you can use to reach affluent customers   June 30, 2006
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

So many books about marketing or business are long on high-minded concepts, but very short on ideas you can use when you go to work the next day. Mass Affluence happily breaks that mold and offers up useful ideas in almost every chapter.

Nunes does a great job of breaking down how to approach the large demographic of relatively wealthy consumers into different functional areas and makes a chapter out of each. He explains how something, like billing, was typically done in the past and how it should be handled now. Beyond that, Nunes has found pertinent real-world examples of every concept he discusses and gets helpful input from the business people out using the strategies on a day-to-day basis.

The result of all Nunes work (I'm sure it would've been easier to write the book without running down real-world examples) is a highly practical guide to setting up or improving upon a business that caters to wealthy, but not mega-rich, customers.

Highly recommended.



5 out of 5 stars Why this one is a standout...   February 22, 2006
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

There are zillions of books out there on marketing moderate to high end items, most of them repeating the same old principles (yawn). You certainly don't need to waste your time or money on those.
Happily, this one is different, showing sellers how to reach the elusive buyers who may fall somewhere between high end and moderate end...perhaps prefering items that fall somewhere between the High end of Moderately priced...or, if you like, the low end of Luxury. They'll spend plenty...but they have definite needs.
This book shows sellers how to appeal to those needs and to market the same (or similar) items in a way to appeal to diverse buyers.
By the way, it is always a plus when a publisher takes advantage of the "Look Inside the Book" feature on Amazon - and this publisher does. So don't take my word on the benefits of this book. Take a look at a sample page or two and see if it appeals to you.
I will add that there is a LOT of info crammed into this book and I learned quite a bit. I'd also recommend Let Them Eat Cake.



5 out of 5 stars A Marketing Book Than Can Make a Difference   September 30, 2004
 5 out of 5 found this review helpful

It's not just the rich who are getting richer; it's also a broad swath of some 22 million U.S. households who have gained significant levels of wealth, income and discretionary spending over the past 30 years. In a meticulously well-researched and well-written marketing best seller, researchers Paul Nunes and Brian Johnson document the phenomenon of mass affluence. They then describe the tremendous opportunities marketers have in crafting innovative new products and services to serve the top 20 percent of households that have some 60 percent of the nation's discretionary spending power.

The timing of this important work could not be better for retailers and brands struggling to increase share and margins in a Darwinian marketplace. I've been involved in consumer marketing for more than twenty years and I've seen only a handful of marketing books that can really make a difference. "Mass Affluence" is one of them. We were so impressed with the book that we bought copies for all our associates. I highly recommend it.


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