Global Brands: The Evolution of Multinationals in Alcoholic Beverages (Cambridge Studies in the Emergence of Global Enterprise)
Cambridge University Press, 9/24/2007
EAN 9780521833974, ISBN10: 0521833973
Hardcover, 326 pages, 23.5 x 16.2 x 2.5 cm
Language: English
In a world focused on science and new technology, brands help to explain why several of the world's multinational corporations have little to do with either. Rather they are old firms with little critical investment in patents or copyrights. For these firms, the critical intellectual property is trademarks. Global Brands, first published in 2007, explains how the world's largest multinationals in alcoholic beverages achieved global leadership; considers the predominant corporate governance structures for such firms; and looks at why these firms form alliances with direct competitors. Brands also determine the waves of mergers and acquisitions in the beverage industry. Global Brands contrasts with existing studies by providing a new dimension to the literature on the growth of multinationals through the focus on brands, using an institutional and evolutionary approach based on original and published sources about the industry and the firms.
1. Brands and the growth of multinationals
2. Leading firms - the historical legacy
3. Growth or survival
4. Family ownership and managerial control
5. Channel management
6. Diversification strategies
7. Acquiring brands
8. The life of brands
9. Conclusion.