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2 - Making sense of brands

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2011

Martin Kornberger
Affiliation:
University of Technology, Sydney
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Summary

The Deloitte brand

Usually, when I meet David Redhill over breakfast at Bondi Beach, he is just coming back from an early-morning surf. I am not sure how many senior partners of global accounting firms surf, but David seems to be an exception in many ways. It starts with his rather eclectic background: he was born in Singapore, has Russian ancestors, worked in London, Barcelona, San Francisco and New York, and now lives in Sydney, near the beach. His career is no less colourful: he was Global Head of Marketing for Landor before joining Deloitte. Landor is one of the leading global brand strategy and design consultancies. Its client list reads like a who's who of the business world, and includes Accenture, BP, Procter & Gamble, FedEx, Microsoft, Pfizer, HP among many others.

David is Chief Marketing Officer at Deloitte and a key member of a multinational team developing the Deloitte brand on a global level. For him, the move from FMCG to knowledge-intensive firms is the best thing that ever happened. ‘It is more exciting to sell ideas than dog food,’ he says. Knowledge-intensive firms such as Deloitte increasingely engage in branding, which makes it a very dynamic and challenging field: as David puts it, auditors are designed to take things apart, and being creatures of habit, this is what they do with brands and branding practices too.

Type
Chapter
Information
Brand Society
How Brands Transform Management and Lifestyle
, pp. 24 - 48
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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