Merchandising
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Image:WJT2005 Pope Merchandising.jpg
Merchandising is a marketing practice in which the brand or image from one product or service is used to sell another. It is most prominently seen in connection with films, usually those in current release, and with television shows oriented towards children.
Trademarked brand names, logos, or character images are licensed to manufacturers of products such as toys or clothing, who then make items in or emblazoned with the image of the license, hoping they'll sell better than the same item with no such image.
Merchandising, especially in connection with child-oriented films and TV shows, often consists of toys made in the likeness of the show's characters or items which they use. However, sometimes it can be the other way around, with the show written to include the toys, as advertising for the merchandise. The first major example of this was the TV show "He-man and the Masters of the Universe," in the early 1980s, but this practice has been common in children's broadcasting ever since.
Sometimes merchandising from a television show can grow far beyond the original show, even lasting decades after the show has largely disappeared from popularity (Hello Kitty). In other cases, huge amounts of merchandise can be generated from a pitifully small amount of source material (Mashimaro).
A smaller niche in merchandising is the marketing of more adult-oriented products in connection with similarly adult-oriented films and TV shows. This is common especially with the science fiction and horror genres. (Examples: Star Trek, McFarlane Toys) Occasionally shows which were intended more for children find a following among adults, and you can see a bit of a crossover, with products from that show oriented towards both adults and children. (Gundam model kits)
The most common adult-oriented merchandising, however, is that related to professional sports teams (and their players).
Sometimes a brand of non-media products can achieve enough recognition and respect that simply putting its name or images on a completely unrelated item can sell that item. (An example would be Harley-Davidson branded clothing.)
Merchandising, as commonly used in Marketing also means the promotion of merchandise sales, as by coordinating production and marketing and developing advertising, display, and sales strategies to increase retail sales. This includes disciplines in pricing and discounting, physical presentation of products and displays, and the decisions about which products should be presented to which customers at what time.
Films, shows and brands with related merchandise (Alphabetical)
- Care Bears
- Chevy
- Digimon
- Dilbert
- Disney Company
- Dodge
- Doraemon
- Dragon Ball
- The Fairly OddParents
- Ford Motor Company
- GI Joe
- Gundam
- Harley-Davidson
- Harry Potter
- Hello Kitty
- Hellraiser
- He-man
- Looney Tunes characters
- Mashimaro
- MLB teams
- My Neighbor Totoro
- NASCAR
- National Hockey League teams
- NBA teams
- NFL teams
- Neon Genesis Evangelion
- Pokémon
- Power Rangers
- Rainbow Brite
- Scooby-Doo
- Sentai shows
- Shrek
- South Park
- SpongeBob SquarePants
- Star Wars
- Star Trek
- Strawberry Shortcake
- Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
- Teen Titans (2004 animated series)
- The Simpsons
- Transformers
- Winnie the Pooh
- WWE professional wrestling
- Yu-Gi-Oh!de:Merchandising
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