首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Internal Market: Selling the B
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below. Internal Market: Selling the B
admin
2018-09-11
37
问题
You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 27-40, which are based on Reading Passage 3 below.
Internal Market: Selling the Brand Inside
When you think of marketing, you more than likely think of marketing to your customers: How can you persuade more people to buy what you sell? But another "market" is just as important: your employees, the very people who can make the brand come alive for your customers. Yet in our work helping executives develop and carry out branding campaigns, my colleagues and I have found that companies very often ignore this critical constituency.
Why is internal marketing so important? First, because it’s the best way to help employees make a powerful emotional connection to the products and services you sell. Without that connection, employees are likely to undermine the expectations set by your advertising. In some cases, this is because they simply don’t understand what you have promised the public, so they end up working at cross-purposes. In other cases, it may be they don’t actually believe in the brand and feel disengaged or, worse, hostile toward the company. We’ve found that when people care about and believe in the brand, they’re motivated to work harder and their loyalty to the company increases. Employees are united and inspired by a common sense of purpose and identity.
Unfortunately, in most companies, internal marketing is done poorly, if at all. While executives recognise the need to keep people informed about the company’s strategy and direction, few understand the need to convince employees of the brand’s power—they take it as a given.
Employees need to hear the same messages that you send out to the marketplace. At most companies, however, internal and external communications are often mismatched. This can be very confusing, and it threatens employees’ perceptions of the company’s integrity: They are told one thing by management but observe that a different message is being sent to the public. One health insurance company, for instance, advertised that the welfare of patients was the company’s number one priority, while employees were told that their main goal was to increase the value of their stock options through cost reductions. And one major financial services institution told customers that it was making a major shift in focus from being a financial retailer to a financial adviser, but, a year later, research showed that the customer experience with the company had not changed. It turned out that company leaders had not made an effort to sell the change internally, so employees were still churning out transactions and hadn’t changed their behavior to match their new adviser role.
Enabling employees to deliver on customer expectations is important, of course, but it’s not the only reason a company needs to match internal and external messages. Another reason is to help push the company to achieve goals that might otherwise be out of reach. In 1997, when IBM launched its e-business campaign(which is widely credited for turning around the company’s image), it chose to ignore research that suggested consumers were unprepared to embrace IBM as a leader in e-business. Although to the outside world this looked like an external marketing effort, IBM was also using the campaign to align employees around the idea of the Internet as the future of technology. The internal campaign changed the way employees thought about everything they did, from how they named products to how they organised staff to how they approached selling. The campaign was successful largely because it gave employees a sense of direction and purpose, which in turn restored their confidence in IBM’s ability to predict the future and lead the technology industry. Today, research shows that people are four times more likely to associate the term "e-business" with IBM than with its nearest competitor.
Perhaps even more important, by taking employees into account, a company can avoid creating a message that doesn’t resonate with staff or, worse, one that builds resentment. In 1996, United Airlines shelved its "Come Fly the Friendly Skies" slogan when presented with a survey that revealed the depth of customer resentment toward the airline industry. In an effort to own up to the industry’s shortcomings, United launched a new campaign, "Rising," in which it sought to differentiate itself by acknowledging poor service and promising incremental improvements such as better meals. While this was a logical premise for the campaign given the tenor of the times, a campaign focusing on customers’ distaste for flying was deeply discouraging to the staff. Employee resentment ultimately made it impossible for United to deliver the improvements it was promising, which in turn undermined the "Rising" pledge. Three years later, United decided employee opposition was undermining its success and pulled the campaign. It has since moved to a more inclusive brand message with the line "United," which both audiences can embrace. Here, a fundamental principle of advertising—find and address a customer concern—failed United because it did not consider the internal market.
When it comes to execution, the most common and effective way to link internal and external marketing campaigns is to create external advertising that targets both audiences. IBM used this tactic very effectively when it launched its e-business campaign. It took out an eight-page ad in the Wall Street Journal declaring its new vision, a message directed at both customers and internal stakeholders. This is an expensive way to capture attention, but if used sparingly, it is the most powerful form of communication; in fact, you need do it only once for everyone in the company to read it. There’s a symbolic advantage as well. Such a tactic signals that the company is taking its pledge very seriously; it also signals transparency—the same message going out to both audiences.
Advertising isn’t the only way to link internal and external marketing. At Nike, a number of senior executives now hold the additional title of "Corporate Storyteller." They deliberately avoid stories of financial successes and concentrate on parables of "just doing it," reflecting and reinforcing the company’s ad campaigns. One tale, for example, recalls how legendary coach and Nike cofounder Bill Bowerman, in an effort to build a better shoe for his team, poured rubber into the family waffle iron, giving birth to the prototype of Nike’s famous Waffle Sole. By talking about such inventive moves, the company hopes to keep the spirit of innovation that characterises its ad campaigns alive and well within the company.
But while their messages must be aligned, companies must also keep external promises a little ahead of internal realities. Such promises provide incentives for employees and give them something to live up to. In the 1980s, Ford turned "Quality Is Job 1" from an internal rallying cry into a consumer slogan in response to the threat from cheaper, more reliable Japanese cars. It did so before the claim was fully justified, but by placing it in the public arena, it gave employees an incentive to match the Japanese. If the promise is pushed too far ahead, however, it loses credibility. When a beleaguered British Rail launched a campaign announcing service improvements under the banner "We’re Getting There," it did so prematurely. By drawing attention to the gap between the promise and the reality, it prompted destructive press coverage. This, in turn, demoralised staff, who had been legitimately proud of the service advances they had made.
Questions 27-32
Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A-E, below. Write the correct letter, A-E, in boxes 27-32 on your answer sheet. NB You can use any letter more than once.
A alienated its employees by its apologetic branding campaign.
B attracted negative publicity through its advertising campaign.
C produced conflicting image between its employees and the general public.
D successfully used an advertising campaign to inspire employees.
E draws on the legends of the company spirit.
A railway company
选项
答案
B
解析
该题对应原文最后一段British Rail的例子。文章在段落最后明显提及“By drawingattention to the gap between the promise and the reality,it prompted destructive press cov-erage”,这里的“destructive press coverage”对应选项B的“negative publicity”。所以正确答案为选项B“attracted negative publicity through its advertising campaign”。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/opNO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
Afool,especiallyifhehasthemisfortuneofknowinganything,should______itaswellashecan.
Researchershavemadesignificanttechnologicalprogresstowardincreasingtheamountofplasticthatplantscangrowand
In______marketforskilledlabor,corporationsareincreasinglybuyinghomesforhotnewhires,a______oncereservedfortopexe
Researchershavenotedthatantsarrangetheirdeadusingthesameprinciplesthoughttoproducethemarkingsonanimals
Sendingarobotintospacetogatherinformationiscertainlyaviableoption,Linebutshouldberegardedonlyasthat--anopt
ThispassageisadaptedfromTheAmericanRepublic:Constitution,Tendencies,andDestinybyO.A.Brownson,1866.Thean
Howisanewbornstarformed?Fortheanswertothisquestion,wemustlooktothefamiliarphysicalconceptofgravitat
Wemustlearnto______sentencesandtoanalyzethegrammarofourtext,forthereisno______tothegrammarofpoetry,toth
Thispassageisadaptedfrommaterialpublishedin2001.FrederickDouglasswasunquestionablythemostfamousAfricanAmerican
Thispassageisadaptedfrommaterialpublishedin2001.In1998scientistsusingtheneutrinodetectorinKamioka,Japan,were
随机试题
下列关于德育过程的表述正确的有()。
鞣质外观为鞣质难溶于
指出下列正确的
再生障碍性贫血属于
某热力管线暗挖隧道,长3.4km,断面有效尺寸为3.2m×2.8m,埋深3.5m。隧道穿越地层为砂土层和砂砾层,除局部有浅层滞水外,无需降水。承包方A公司通过招标将穿越砂砾层段468m隧道开挖及初期支护分包给B专业公司。B公司依据A公司
信用风险评估方法中的“5W”因素分析法,“5W”是指()。
在秋冬时节,我国大部分地区常会出现大雾,阻碍水、陆、空交通的正常运行,引发交通事故。危害人体健康。下列关于雾的说法正确的是()。
离开家乡转眼近二十载,立业,成家,每日忙忙碌碌,即使回去,也是行色匆匆,没有机会走街串巷品尝家乡的美食。一把雪里蕻引起我对家乡美食的馋涎,也勾起我许多的乡愁。我怀念家乡的味道,不仅仅是这些美味,还有空气中那夹杂的某种浅浅的腥土味以及混合着的一些青草花香的气
依次填入下面一段文字中横线处的关联词语,恰当的一组是:小说家应尽可能把人物对话写得流利自然,生动活泼,______不能完全像实际说话,______讲故事或作报告,——又绝不能像日常说话那样支离破碎,______不写稿子,______应像一篇文章。
ForAmerica’scolleges,Januaryisamonthofreckoning.Mostapplicationsforthenextacademicyearbeginningintheautumnha
最新回复
(
0
)