Nov
20
iled Under (Accounting & Marketing Books) by admin on 20-11-2010

Marketing Metrics, Second Edition, is the definitive guide to today’s most valuable marketing metrics. In this thoroughly updated and significantly expanded book, four leading marketing researchers show exactly how to choose the right metrics for every challenge.

The authors show how to use marketing dashboards to view market dynamics from multiple perspectives, maximize accuracy, and “triangulate” to optimal solutions. You’ll discover high-value metrics for virtually every facet of marketing: promotional strategy, advertising, and distribution; customer perceptions; market share; competitors power; margins and pricing; products and portfolios; customer profitability; sales forces and channels; and more.

This edition introduces essential new metrics ranging from Net Promoter to social media and brand equity measurement. Last, but not least, it shows how to build comprehensive models to support planning–and optimize every marketing decision you make.


To the authors substantial credit, they make effective use of a number of reader-friendly devices which enliven what would be an otherwise dull textbook and they do without compromising the integrity of research-driven insights which so many books on marketing lack. These devices include definitions, formulas, and brief descriptions of various metrics. They also include within individual chapters several sections, such as “Construction” (e.g. metrics issues concerning their formulation, application, interpretation, and strategic ramifications), “Data Sources”, “Complications, and Cautions” (i.e. an analysis of the limitations of the metrics under consideration, and their potential inadequacies once executed), and “Related Metrics and Concepts” (briefly surveyed). This is by no means an “easy read” but will generously reward those who absorb and digest its material with appropriate rigor.


What is good about working through these metrics is that you will be asking yourself questions that you need to ask. Even if the metric doesn’t apply to your specific situation, finding out that it doesn’t will help you think more clearly about your situation. You may find that some of them will help you think through things that are important to your business with a new perspective. Some of the data for the metrics is hard to come by, and thinking that through will help you think about your business in a more focused way because your assumptions will have to be more explicitly made rather than the kind of vague impressions we too often let suffice for thinking about our business.

This book is an excellent resource and all executives responsible for the way their business competes in the marketplace should have this book.

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  4. JavaScript: The Definitive Guide : David Flanagan & Flanagan David
  5. The Unofficial Guide Walt Disney World 2009 (Unofficial Guides) – By Bob Sehlinger


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