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Article from GigaOm.

Google may not have had much of a choice when it came to buying Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion. If it didn’t, someone else would have and that would have put the company in an even bigger patent hole.

Our sources say that Motorola was in acquisition talks with several parties, including Microsoft for quite some time. Microsoft was interested in acquiring Motorola’s patent portfolio that would have allowed it to torpedo Android even further. The possibility of that deal brought Google to the negotiation table, resulting in the blockbuster sale.

Motorola found a Google deal more digestible because Microsoft had no interest in running a hardware business and was essentially interested in Motorola’s vast collection of patents. Google moved aggressively, and at $40 a share, Google is now paying a 60 percent premium to Motorola’s recent stock price. The deal it struck gives it access to Motorola’s strong portfolio of 17,000 current patents and 7,500 patent applications across wireless standards and non-essential patents on wireless service delivery.

The high-level talks between Google and Motorola started about five weeks ago. Google CEO Larry Page and Motorola CEO Sanjay Jha were talking directly, and only a handful of executives were brought into discussions. Our sources suggest that Android co-founder Andy Rubin was brought into the talks only very recently.

My view is that while Google might have won the battle, in the long run it has put the Android ecosystem at risk. Mobile industry insiders view this as a ray of hope for Windows Mobile Phone 7 to sign-up the disillusioned handset makers who at this point must be reworking their mobile OS strategies.

Read original post here.

Fashion + Politics: Hitting the Campaign Trail in Style

WASHINGTON, DC — Political style expert, Lauren A. Rothman sounds off on campaign fashion – who wore what and why they wore it. Learn how fashion speaks volumes about a candidate’s politics. Lauren, stylist, advisor to the political elite, and co-author of political style feature The Fashion Whip on HuffingtonPost.com is the founder of Styleauteur, a fashion, style, and trend consulting firm based in our nation’s capitol.

Lauren is passionate about working with our servicemen and women returning from overseas deployments and also counsels Congressmen and top brass at the Pentagon regarding professional dress. Her client roster includes the Washington Redskins, the Pentagon, Morgan Stanley, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Clifford Chance, Lord and Taylor, Saks Fifth Avenue, Cusp, and Bloomingdale’s. Her tips on wardrobe management and creating a versatile, fashion-forward closet have been featured in Glamour, Real Simple, and Washingtonian magazines, in Politico, and on NPR and XM/Sirius radio.

Lauren bridges the gap between fashion and politics – view her online portfolio at www.styleauteur.com and review her television and press clips at www.styleauteur.com/press.
www.facebook.com/styleauteur
http://twitter.com/styleauteur

Article from SFGate.

“Apple sliced through the competition to briefly become the most valuable company in the world Tuesday, as its market capitalization surged past No. 1 Exxon before settling slightly lower.

The Cupertino company closed the day with its stock up 5.9 percent to $374.01 per share, valuing it at $346.7 billion. Exxon, the Texas oil giant, ended the day with a value of $348.3 billion.

It capped an astonishing turnaround for a company that founder Steve Jobs has said was weeks from bankruptcy when he returned as CEO in 1997 and focused the company on a handful of key products.

Apple’s stock price has gone up nearly 35 percent in the past year, reflecting heightened confidence among investors in its line of computers and mobile devices. In its most recent quarter, the company posted a record $28.57 billion in revenue as sales of the iPhone, iPad and notebook computers soared.

The company’s growth is particularly strong in the Chinese market, Apple Chief Operating Officer Tim Cook told analysts last month. International sales accounted for 62 percent of Apple’s revenue in the last quarter.

The company is expected to continue growing in the near term, analysts predict. A new iPhone is expected in the fall, and analysts say Apple might also introduce a lower-cost model that would help the company reach a lucrative new market.

Sales of the iPad continue to soar. Apple sold 9.25 million of the tablet computers in the last quarter, a 183 percent increase over the same period in 2010.

“On the iPad side, they’re so far ahead of the market that none of the Android or other tablet competitors have really made much of a dent in their market share,” said Charles Golvin, an analyst with Forrester Research. “‘Tablet is still essentially synonymous with ‘iPad.’ ”

It was less than two years ago that Apple joined the list of the 10 most-valuable U.S. companies. Since then, it has made a rapid ascent, surpassing Microsoft last year to become the world’s most valuable technology company.

Less than a month ago, Exxon was worth more than $50 billion more than Apple. Exxon’s market value declined as investors became pessimistic about prospects for economic growth, which drives demand for oil.”

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What About Me?

As I patiently wait for my invitation to join Spotify, I can’t help but think about the way social media and all of the newest online, must-join sites have used exclusivity to create buzz. I couldn’t help but feel “accepted” when I finally received the invite to join Google+. I relate it to getting a bid from a popular fraternity or even getting invited to a great party. Like the kids that stuffed themselves with chocolate with the hopes of visiting Willy Wonka’s Chocolate Factory, there are millions of people staring at their inboxes waiting for their golden ticket to explore parts of the web that are new and uncharted.

Whether it be a new website or gadget, brands have us all waiting patiently to visit or play with them. I gave TechCrunch’s live blog feed during the unveiling of the iPad2 the same attention I gave the final episode of the Sopranos (but at least Apple gave me something to look forward to). Is it because Twitter and Facebook have become boring? Not really. It seems like Facebook comes out with a new feature monthly. I think it’s because we are all trying to stay ahead of the curve. In my case, I want to be able to share something new with a client, especially the “next big thing.” But a lot of these new offerings make life easier. Apple’s iCloud will be available in Fall. I have hundreds of apps and documents in addition to thousands of songs and pictures spread across five different devices in my home, office, and pocket. To me, iCloud equals organization and efficiency, something I am sure we could all use more of in our lives.

So be patient all, and if you’re looking for an invite to Google+, reach out to us on Facebook and we’ll hook you up. Also, check out some of the links below for a couple of shortcuts to getting an invite to Spotify.

http://www.spotify.com/us/coca-cola/

http://venturebeat.com/2011/07/14/spotify-invites-from-klout/

Don Middleberg
Middleberg Communications, LLC
317 Madison Avenue, 15th Fl.
(entrance on 42nd st)
New York, NY 10017
P:  212-812-5664
M: 914.629.3999
twitter.com/donmiddleberg

don@middlebergcommunications.com

The Landmark Aviation story

By Hans Ullmark, Founder and CEO at Collaborate and a member of Gerbsman Partners Board Of Intellectual Capital.

How much is a brand worth – just the brand itself – in actual dollars. This rather unusual story provides an answer.

A few years ago three aviation services companies came together under new ownership to form a new company, Landmark Aviation, with sales of around $750M. All three founding companies had long histories in the aviation industry, with their own distinct corporate cultures and business processes.

Landmark Aviation’s new management team was faced with lots of practical challenges, and two big questions, namely, “How do we turn these diverse companies into a single organization with a common purpose and business focus?” and “How do we create a single, sustainable brand?”

Fortunately, they had the foresight and wherewithal to address these questions in a deliberate way, both internally and externally. They knew that a strong brand would not only help get business off to a flying start (pun intended), but that it would also help the company command a higher acquisition price, in the likely event that it were to be sold sometime in the future.

In order to create a brand strong enough to transcend the three founding brand names, along with their combined 150 years of heritage in the industry, the marketing team employed an approach we call “brand-led change.” It’s designed to help accelerate the growth of brand asset value for companies going through disruptive transitions such as mergers, acquisitions and new leadership, and it consists of the following steps.

Step 1: Know the brand’s strengths, and the competition’s relative weaknesses.

The first step was to conduct qualitative research, both internally and externally, to provide management with actionable insights, rather than the typical overload of abstract data that traditional research companies tend to offer. The results gave management the tools to define both a customer-driven service offering, and a unique brand positioning.

Step 2: Provide a compelling vision.

Internally, people wanted to know what the common purpose of the new, “merged” company would be. The vision was expressed as: “We are dedicated to enhancing the ownership and operating experience for every customer.”

Step 3: Start internally, then go externally.

Before any marketing and sales activities were put in motion, management launched an internal program called “Living the Vision.” It introduced the new company and the new brand to Landmark Aviation’s 2,400 employees in 35 locations across North America. As a result, the new organization entered this fiercely competitive field (a handful of well-established service providers fighting for market share) with highly motivated employees, clear on their goal of becoming the country’s leading aviation services company.

Step 4: Retain existing customers.

Along with creating the new brand came the necessity of demonstrating to existing customers that the new entity was stronger than it had been before, and was relentlessly focused on bringing more value than its competitors.

After the launch of the new brand, Landmark helped minimize confusion by clearly communicating that the services offered were just what the customers had asked for. Many of the airport operations, the so-called FBO terminals, were re-designed and upgraded. The resulting feeling — of a fresh, new company backed by extensive experience — resonated with customers, who overwhelmingly stayed with Landmark.

Step 5: Win new customers.

Confident of retaining existing customers, Landmark set out to win new ones, reaching out to nearly all their constituents via a broad-based marketing effort that included a strong web presence, print advertising, direct marketing, an impressive trade show calendar, local events, sales tools, an active PR agenda and branding at over 30 airports around the country. The rather traditional and conservative aviation services industry was unprepared for how quickly and convincingly the new company had gotten its act together. In taking the industry by surprise, Landmark took market share with it.

Step 6: Measure your progress…and then wait for the offers.

After 18 months, a tracking study revealed that Landmark had climbed to a No. 2 ranking in “most preferred provider” status in all of the different segments and service categories in corporate aviation. The owners soon started receiving offers to sell the company.

The offers were not made solely for the entire company, but for parts of it as well. In particular, offers came in for the FBO part of the Landmark operation, both with and without the Landmark brand name. The difference between the offers was that the one that included the Landmark brand name was approximately $70M higher.

The day the sale closed, the new owner walked away with both the operation and the brand name, and we realized the value of just the Landmark Aviation brand was around $70M.

Given that the costs for building the brand over nearly a two-year period were around $8M, this meant that the investment in building the brand had yielded a return of 875%. Few, if any, investments in the lifespan of a corporation ever generate such remarkable returns in such a short time.

Of course, every company, and every brand, is different. But the process of building a brand doesn’t change that much: know the competition better than you know yourself; start internally and work your way out, because your own people are among your greatest resources; retain your existing customers, and then go after new ones with everything you’ve got; measure your progress (and maybe, in some cases, field the offers); and finally, put all the resources you can behind creating a differentiating brand idea – an idea that helps visualize the brand.

And who wouldn’t like 875% return on marketing.

Collaborate
Collaboratesf.com

If you’d like to know more about the external team that helped Landmark Aviation build its brand and its business, call Hans Ullmark at Collaborate (415) 710 2139.

About Gerbsman Partners

Gerbsman Partners focuses on maximizing enterprise value for stakeholders and shareholders in under-performing, under-capitalized and under-valued companies and their Intellectual Property. Since 2001, Gerbsman Partners has been involved in maximizing value for 68 technology, life science and medical device companies and their Intellectual Property and has restructured/terminated over $795 million of real estate executory contracts and equipment lease/sub-debt obligations. Since inception in 1980, Gerbsman Partners has been involved in over $2.3 billion of financings, restructurings and M&A Transactions.

Gerbsman Partners has offices and strategic alliances in San Francisco, Boston, New York, Washington, DC, Alexandria, VA, Europe and Israel.