doc. Ing. Pavel Štrach, Ph.D., Ph.D., Škoda Auto University, Marketing and Management Department, Na Karmeli 1457, 293 01 Mladá Boleslav, Czech Republic, e-mail: pavel.strach@savs.cz
Marketing BriefVol 19, Issue 1, 2024 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

The rise of direct sales models for fast fashion 2.0: Sustainable greenwashing?

Fast Fashion 2.0 represents a paradigm shift in the fashion industry, characterized by a renewed focus on sustainability, transparency, and direct-to-consumer sales models. Addressing these challenges will require collaboration, innovation, and a concerted effort from brands, consumers, and policymakers alike. Ultimately, the future of fashion lies in striking a balance between profitability and sustainability, where ethical considerations are woven into the fabric of every garment.

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Marketing BriefVol 18, Issue 4, 2023 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Native advertising: „Nativity“ goes beyond matching the publisher’s design

In the ever-evolving landscape of marketing, native advertising has emerged as a powerful and innovative strategy. As consumers became increasingly adept at ignoring traditional banner ads, marketers sought new ways to engage their audience. Native advertising emerged as a solution, leveraging the visual and contextual aesthetics. Native advertising has roots that trace back to advertorials in print media, where advertisements were designed to mimic the editorial content of the publication.

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Marketing BriefVol 18, Issue 3, 2023 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

X Factor: Mastering the mystery of successful customer connections

Letter X has been a powerful weapon in marketing for decades. Words such as eXtra, eXclusive, eXpertise, eXcitement or eXperience have been popular jargon among marketing professionals. Marketers play with the symbolism of “X” to evoke curiosity or intrigue in their branding. Product names containing “X” make them sound modern, innovative, or cutting-edge – just recall iPhone X, Tesla X, or the X box.

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Marketing BriefVol 18, Issue 2, 2023 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Developing meaningful sales leads in the online environment

A sales funnel looks at the consumer’s buying journey from a corporate perspective. A sales funnel is based on the idea that a company needs to attract many interested individuals, before narrowing them down until sales happen with some. This cut off is inevitable, although effective funnels convert higher numbers of target audience into buyers.

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Marketing BriefVol 18, Issue 1, 2023 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Screenagers or Generation Alpha: How do the youngest consumers shape the future of marketing?

Although screenagers are a complex and diverse group with a variety of attitudes toward marketing, understanding their values, motivations, and preferences is a key to successful communication. Screenagers skip providers without strong online footprint. Online shopping, home delivery, and cashless transactions are no more alternatives to traditional brick-and-mortar cash-based store experience.

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Marketing BriefVol 17, Issue 4, 2022 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Reaching for the stars: On importance and peculiarities of rating

In many cultures, end-of-the-year period is marked with depictions of stars. Stars are called heavenly bodies. Stars are beautiful to look at. A star is a positive symbol of hope, happiness, eternity, faith, and excellence. For marketers, stars are associated with rating and their key feature is the number of them. The more the merrier.

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Marketing BriefVol 17, Issue 3, 2022 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Promotional items: Lasting memory of right and wrong

Promotional products, promotional merchandise, giveaways, corporate gifts for business partners and employees have been popular lasting reminders of donors. Sometimes promotional merchandise does not really carry the right message at the right time. And the group of advocates, in fact, believing we all love to receive things for free and that the true loyalty comes from subtle bribery.

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Marketing BriefVol 17, Issue 2, 2022 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

How doomscrolling habits might be used for effective marketing communications in metaverse

Doomscrolling is a label for compulsive consumption of bad news, that are saddening, disheartening and frustrating. Since measures on social distancing were introduced in 2020, many people found themselves lost and detached from physical reality. Many resorted to virtual spaces to find their second selves, some established their second life in metaverse.

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Marketing BriefVol 17, Issue 1, 2022 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Expanding salespeople skillset by adding virtual selling skills

Fewer and fewer business meetings are happening in person. Online shopping, corona and proliferation of home office have shifted the center of gravity for sales faster from brick-and-mortar to virtual settings, regardless of whether the focus is individual clients or B2B customers. Being able to deal with various information and communication technologies is a foundation for becoming a successful salesperson in the virtual world.

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Marketing BriefVol 16, Issue 4, 2021 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Foodie: Upgrading a basic need to artistic obsession

Food for a modern consumer is merely a way to fill the gap. Whether you prefer sour, bitter, savory, sweet, or umami for your taste buds, there is a meal to spice up every soul. No more food is a quick affair to curb hunger. Food has become a trendy thing to talk about. Elaborate and informed social talk about various kinds of meat, variety of cheeses, coffee preparation …

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Marketing BriefVol 16, Issue 3, 2021 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Article 1

Environmental guilt: How to work with climate concerns in marketing

Climate change has been far too omnipresent to ignore for policy makers, consumers, and businesses alike. Environmental guilt, anxiety or shame have been reported mostly in connection with younger generations and women seeking right and righteous behavioral patterns which would bring balance to modern lifestyle and its environmental impact. Guilty consumers try hard to curb negative environmental consequences of their lives.

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Marketing BriefVol 15, Issue 3, 2020 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Paper

Let’s go shopping (online): Diminishing boundaries between traditional and online stores

Global pandemic has exposed and sped up several recent trends in consumer behavior. Consumers are more likely to try and adopt new technologies, experiment with innovative delivery modes, payment options or interact with providers digitally. Trusted brands and savvy offerings are the most likely winners. Betting on pleasant brick-and-mortar shopping experience, introducing new brands or selling pricy discretionary items have been challenging.

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Marketing BriefVol 15, Issue 2, 2020 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Paper

On marketing planning: How VUCA has faded into oblivion to re-emerged as a new normal

The acronym of VUCA stands for Volatility, Uncertainty, Complexity and Ambiguity. It has been proposed as early as 1987 by Warren Bennis and Burt Nanus alerting leaders to the need for highly flexible, vibrant, agile and adaptive style of acting and thinking. Such a notion was a little premature at that time, where the only disappearing anchor of the world order was the dissipating bipolar world divided between two world superpowers …

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Marketing BriefVol 15, Issue 1, 2020 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Paper

Before, during, and after: Marketing amid coronavirus crisis

In the aftermath of shock from the rapid spread of coronavirus, its detrimental effects on human lives and wellbeing, there is time to stop for a moment and think consequences. Certainly, the way we used think and project future from past events will be further challenged. Not globalization, digitalization, global warming, migration issues or the rise of nationalism, but a tiny creature no larger than 0.12 microns …

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Marketing BriefVol 14, Issue 4, 2019 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Paper

Why marketing does not understand sociology

We know well that customers are spoiled and their expectations have rightly been on the increase, as ever greater number of product attributes become a must. It has always been a real challenge to satisfy customers throughout the marketing mix and throughout the product lifecycle. For years, marketers have used mainly psychology to interpret consumer behavior.

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Marketing BriefVol 14, Issue 3, 2019 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Paper

Why political correctness and affirmative action do not work in marketing

We live in a hypercorrect world. Many regulatory bodies safeguarding correctness, fairness and social justice in marketing communications have been getting the wrong end of the stick. Careful segmentation has been in the DNA of marketing, which makes social and societal differences and ability to differentiate offerings for various audiences its primary concern. Political correctness…

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Marketing BriefVol 14, Issue 2, 2019 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Paper

Marketing: Getting Out of Sight

Earlier marketing briefs discussed the value of sensory marketing for relevant and sticky communication with customers. Today, our concern will be unconventional marketing vocabulary related to one particular sense: eyesight. Ability to see and foresee, envision, imagine or even dream about future is the key to anticipate important trends…

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Marketing BriefVol 14, Issue 1, 2019 Marketing Science and Inspirations Journal Paper

Deploying hybrid warfare strategies: Demarketing and communications denial

It has been proven countless times, that being competitive means doing things better or just different than others. Recent military strategies of hybrid warfare combine various tactics with strong social and conventional media involvement to create different images of who battles whom. Hybrid warfare…

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