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Spanning Silos: The New CMO Imperative [Hardcover]

David A. Aaker (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 21, 2008
Powerful product, country, and functional silos are jeopardizing companies' marketing efforts. Because ofsilos, firms misallocate resources, send inconsistent messages to the marketplace, and fail to leverage scale economies and successes--all of which can threaten a company's survival.

As David Aaker shows in Spanning Silos, the unfettered decentralization that produces silos is no longer feasible in today's marketplace. It's up to chief marketing officers to break down silo walls to foster cooperation and synergy.

This isn't easy: silo teams guard their autonomy vigorously. As proof of their power, consider the fact that the average CMO tenure is just twenty-three months. How to proceed? Drawing on interviews with CMOs, Aaker explains how to:



  • Strength your credibility with silo teams and your CEO
  • Use cross-functional teams and other strategic linking devices
  • Foster communication across silos
  • Select the right CMO role-- from facilitator to strategic captain
  • Develop common planning processes
  • Adapt your brand strategy to silo units
  • Allocate marketing dollars strategically across silos
  • Develop silo-spanning marketing programs



In this age of dynamic markets, new media, and globalization, getting the different parts of your organization to collaborate is more critical--and more difficult--than ever. This book gives you the road map you need to accomplish that feat.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

David A. Aaker is Vice-Chairman of Prophet, a marketing consultancy, and has published more that one hundred articles and thirteen books, including Brand Portfolio Strategy, Brand Leadership, Strategic Marketing Management (8th edition), Building Strong Brands, Managing Brand Equity, and From Fargo to the World of Brands.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard Business School Press (October 21, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1422128768
  • ISBN-13: 978-1422128763
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.1 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #490,710 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

My passion is understanding brands and helping firms build brands and brand portfolios. My first brand book, Managing Brand Equity defined brand equity and set forth its value to a firm and its customers. The second, Building Strong Brands, described the "brand identity" model that many firms use to manage their brands and also introduced the Brand Equity Ten measurement structure. The third, Brand Leadership extended the brand identity model and adding material on brand building programs. The fourth, Brand Portfolio Strategy, introduces models and concepts that allow a firm to sort out the complexities of brand portfolios and the priorities and relationships that define them. The fifth, Spanning Silos presents research showing the problems that product and country silos organizations pose to those who would build brands and create effective marketing and what some firms have done to create cooperation and communication to break down the silo barriers.

My latest book, not counting my autobiography, is Brand Relevance: Making Competitors Irrelevant that shows success in dynamic markets involves creating offerings so innovative that they create new categories or subcategories making competitors irrelevant.

I am a part of Prophet, a global brand and marketing consulting company that is on the forefront of branding issues, professor emeritus of the Haas School at UC Berkeley, and an advisor to Denstu. I also blog on Aaker on Brands (http://www.davidaaker.com). I live in Orinda, California near my three daughters and seven grandchildren and try to do a lot of biking and just enough golfing.


There follows the formal career summary.


David A. Aaker is the Vice-Chairman of Prophet Brand Strategy, Professor Emeritus of Marketing Strategy at the Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley and an advisor to Dentsu Inc. The winner of three career awards for contributions to the science of marketing (the Paul D. Converse Award), marketing strategy (the Vijay Mahajan Award) and the theory and practice of marketing (the Buck Weaver Award), he has published over 100 articles and 14 books including Strategic Market Management, Managing Brand Equity, Building Strong Brands, Brand Leadership (co-authored with Erich Joachimsthaler) Brand Portfolio Strategy, From Fargo to the World of Brands, Spanning Silos and his latest book, Brand Relevance: Making Competitors Irrelevant. His books have been translated into eighteen languages with sales well over one million. Named as one of the top five most important marketing/business gurus in 2007, Professor Aaker has won awards for the best article in the California Management Review and (twice) in the Journal of Marketing. A recognized authority on brand equity and brand strategy, he has been an active consultant and speaker throughout the world and is on the Board of Directors of the Food Bank of Contra Costa and Solano Counties.


 

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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How to create a "road map" for marketing success in a "hot, flat, and crowded" world, November 11, 2008
This review is from: Spanning Silos: The New CMO Imperative (Hardcover)

Over the years, David Aaker has published more than 100 articles and 14 books, including Managing Brand Equity, Building Strong Brands, Developing Business Strategies, Brand Leadership, Strategic Market Management, From Fargo to the World of Brands, and Brand Portfolio Strategy. In this his latest book, he examines a subject of special interest to me: organizational "silos." I agree with Aaker that there are situations in which they can have substantial value. Aaker uses a silo as a metaphor for "organizational units that contain their own management team and talent and lack the motivation or desire to work with or even communicate with other organizational units." The largest organizations are collections of silos that can be classified according to the country in which they are located, the product(s) for whose marketing they are primary responsible, or their operational (non-marketing) function such as IT and HR. As companies such as P&G, GM, HP, and Unilever demonstrate, there can also be silos within silos. Up to a point, a decentralized structure that not only allows but indeed supports silos is desirable.

But there can also be problems with silos, especially in a world that Thomas Friedman has characterized as "hot, flat, and crowded." According to Aaker, "relying on unfettered decentralized organizations with highly autonomous silo units is no longer competitively viable. The world has changed...Silo-spanning brands increasingly require consistency and synergies. There is a drive for marketing accountability that is inhibited by the silo structure. The need for deep expertise in cutting-edge marketing disciplines, difficult to achieve in a fragmented organization, is emerging at a rapid pace. There is also an increasing intolerance of inefficient and ineffective marketing that is coupled with an increasing ability to discern when they are around and about. Marketing is called on to do more with less and the inherent inefficiency of silos has become a significant burden...There is just too much at stake to allow silo interests to inhibit or prevent the effort toward achieving strong brands and effective marketing. That does not mean that the answer is to disband silos." Rather, organizations must determine how to eliminate the problems caused by silos without losing the benefits they can provide. Aaker advocates the need for a chief marketing officer (CMO) who concentrates on achieving that worthy objective.

Throughout his narrative, Aaker responds to questions such as these:

1. What are the major silo issues?
2. How have various global organizations done about them?
3. What has worked? Why? What hasn't? Why not?
4. What are the best-practice approaches?
5. What insights has his extensive research revealed, including interviews of dozens executives revealed?

What Aaker provides in this book is a "road map to success" for CMOs and their associates. He identifies the major silo structure-driven problems, the most important action items and the key barriers facing CMOs. He also identifies indicators that decentralization is out of control and recommends corrective initiatives that encourage more and better allocation of marketing resources, clarity and linkage in silo-spanning brand strategy, silo-spanning marketing offerings and programs, marketing management competence, leveraging success, and communication and cooperation. The material is carefully organized so that a CMO will be well-prepared to determine what the right role and scope for her or him will be, how to gain credibility and buy-in, how to use teams and other means to silo linking, how to develop a common planning process and information system, how to adapt the master brand to silo markets, how to prioritize brands in the portfolio, and finally, how to develop winning silo-spanning marketing.

My frequent use of the word is "how" is deliberate. Aaker briefly and skillfully identifies the "what" in the first chapter or two, then focuses almost all of his attention on the "how." He is a relentless empiricist and a diehard pragmatist. For example, drawing in part from a study of some 55 successful virtual task forces and teams, he offers ten suggestions in Chapter 3, Pages 90-92. In the next chapter, he provides seven specific recommendations to increase usage participation within an organization, to make it more widespread, on Pages 121-122. And then in Chapter 6, Aaker focuses on what he characterizes as a "Brand Priority Framework" for determining the relevant brand set, selecting brand assessment criteria, completing brand evaluation, prioritizing various brands, developing the revised brand portfolio strategy, and then designing and implementing the migration strategy.

In my opinion, this is David Aaker's most important book thus far. His brilliant use of various reader-friendly devices such as dozens of "Figures," check-lists, key points identified by italics and/or bold face, charts, and a "For Discussion" section at a chapter's conclusion all add substantial value to the rock-solid content. Bravo!
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4.0 out of 5 stars A good book for CMO's and mktg. execs. at large companies, March 16, 2010
By 
The Marketing Guy Who Drives Sales -r (Charlottesville, VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Spanning Silos: The New CMO Imperative (Hardcover)
David Aaker does his usual excellent job, this time covering the topic of how to either break down or effectively build bridges between marketing silos at large and largish companies. I don't think there is going to be much in this book for the small business marketer, mid-sized business marketer or entrepreneur, though. This book targets large or multinational companies with a portfolio of brands across sectors, geography and/or cultures and does a great job discussing the issues at those types of companies. If your company is large enough to support the title CMO (chief marketing officer), has separate marketing groups based on geography, brands, business unit type or that utilizes multiple outside marketing/advertising agencies then you will probably benefit greatly by reading this work.

I found the discussion to be very dry and academic for the first four or five chapters but then it picks up with real life examples and tangible actions that can be taken to bridge the sometimes seemingly huge chasms between silos or separate marketing groups. You'll gain some great knowledge about how other companies have effectively managed the marketing and branding functions when they work with many different product or brand silos. The "we're different" mantra that is often heard in marketing silos might be your cue to see if maybe, just maybe there are synergies to be found by spanning those silos and tying in your marketing efforts to a common vision and shared brand message.

~~Review by the author of the e-book, "How to Build and Manage Your Brand (in sickness and in health)."
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4.0 out of 5 stars Cooperative guide to making corporate marketing work, March 27, 2009
This review is from: Spanning Silos: The New CMO Imperative (Hardcover)
Chief marketing officers often face two serious corporate problems: first, trying to market and promote a company's brands when its internal units or departments are not working well together and, second, building credibility in such a contentious atmosphere. David Aaker's marketing book brings considerable analysis to bear on these issues, perhaps even too much. It may be that the cure he seeks resides in organizational change, not marketing. Nonetheless, his information on fostering cooperation and communication, drawn from more than 40 interviews with chief marketing officers, will help senior marketers. getAbstract suggests it to those who represent multibrand, multinational corporations. You can market your company, if you can get its fragmented silos to work well together for the greater good of powerful marketing.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
spanning silos, silo world, strategic captain, silo units, master brand strategy, silo market, silo context, central marketing group, common planning process, central marketing team, country silos, silo groups, silo teams, brand portfolio strategy, silo managers, silo barriers, silo business, standardized brand, product silos, brand vision, other silos, silo organization, knowledge hub, captain role, strategic brands
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Silo Linking, Prioritize Brands, Adapt the Master Brand, Silo Markets, World Cup, Dell Services, United Kingdom, Wells Fargo, American Express, Leading Through Innovation, Dow Corning, Gillette Foamy, Create Winning Marketing
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