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  2. Engagement marketing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Engagement_marketing

    Engagement marketing (sometimes called experiential marketing, brand activation, on-ground marketing, live marketing, participation marketing, loyalty marketing, or special events) is a marketing strategy that directly engages consumers and invites and encourages them to participate in the evolution of a brand or a brand experience. Rather than ...

  3. Work engagement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Work_engagement

    Five factor model is useful for examining the dispositional source of work engagement. As a higher order factor work engagement was related to big five factors. [34] Examples are extraversion, conscientiousness and emotional stability. Psychological capital also seems to be related to work engagement. [7]

  4. Customer engagement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Customer_engagement

    Offline customer engagement predates online, but the latter is a qualitatively different social phenomenon, unlike any offline customer engagement that social theorists or marketers recognize. In the past, customer engagement has been generated irresolutely through television, radio, media, outdoor advertising, and various other touchpoints ...

  5. Employee engagement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employee_engagement

    Employee engagement is a direct reflection of how employees feel about their relationship with the boss." [26] Perceptions of the ethos and values of the organization – "'Inspiration and values' is the most important of the six drivers in our Engaged Performance model. Inspirational leadership is the ultimate perk.

  6. AIDA (marketing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AIDA_(marketing)

    The AIDA marketing model is a model within the class known as hierarchy of effects models or hierarchical models, all of which imply that consumers move through a series of steps or stages when they make purchase decisions. These models are linear, sequential models built on an assumption that consumers move through a series of cognitive ...

  7. Brand engagement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brand_engagement

    An example of measuring brand engagement is the service-profit chain, a statistical model that tracks increases in employee “engagement drivers” to correlated increases in customer satisfaction and loyalty, and then correlates this to increases in total shareholder return (TSR), revenue and other financial performance measures.

  8. Enterprise engagement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_engagement

    Enterprise engagement is a sub-discipline of marketing and management that focuses on achieving long-term financial results by strategically fostering the proactive involvement and alignment of customers, distribution partners, salespeople, and all human capital outside and inside of an organization.

  9. COBRA (consumer theory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COBRA_(consumer_theory)

    COBRA (consumers' online brand related activities) is a theoretical framework related to understanding consumer's behavioural engagement with brands on social media. [1] [2] COBRA in literature is defined as a “set of brand-related online activities on the part of the consumer that vary in the degree to which the consumer interacts with social media and engages in the consumption ...