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  2. Marketing co-operation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marketing_co-operation

    A marketing co-operation or marketing cooperation is a partnership of at least two companies on the value chain level of marketing with the objective to tap the full potential of a market by bundling specific competences or resources. Other terms for marketing co-operation are marketing alliance, marketing partnership, co-marketing, and cross ...

  3. Co-branding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-branding

    Co-branding is a marketing strategy that involves strategic alliance of multiple brand names jointly used on a single product or service. [1]Co-branding is an arrangement that associates a single product or service with more than one brand name, or otherwise associates a product with someone other than the principal producer.

  4. Co-promotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-promotion

    Co-promotion is a marketing practice that allows two or more companies to combine their sales force in order to promote a product under the same brand name and price with a single marketing strategy. [1] It is considered as one of the two major forms of joint marketing (Kalb 1988). Co-marketing is the other form and these terms are often ...

  5. Co-marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Co-marketing

    Co-marketing (Commensal marketing, symbiotic marketing) is a form of marketing co-operation, in which two or more businesses work together. "Co-marketing" began in 1981 when Koichi Shimizu, a professor at Josai University, published an article in a bulletin published by Nikkei Advertising Research Institute in Japan.

  6. Cooperative strategy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cooperative_Strategy

    Cooperative Strategy refers to a planning strategy [1] in which two or more firms work together in order to achieve a common objective. [2] Several companies apply cooperative strategies to increase their profits through cooperation with other companies that stop being competitors.

  7. Ingredient branding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingredient_Branding

    Cooperative advertising may be used to incentivize the end-product manufacturer to advertise the ingredient, of which the "Intel Inside" campaign was a big example. In fact, by the end of 1992, over 500 OEMs had signed onto Intel's cooperative marketing program and 70% of OEM ads that could carry the "Intel Inside" logo did so. [3]