Trump University fails students: Lawsuit

Sally Herships Aug 26, 2013
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Trump University fails students: Lawsuit

Sally Herships Aug 26, 2013
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(Check out the slideshow of Trump’s various branded products above.)

Donald Trump spent Monday on the defensive — as much as anybody with such a knack for self-promotion can actually be on the defensive.

Trump took to the airwaves to deny charges in a $40 million lawsuit filed by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman. He is accused of fraud for allegedly helping to run a bogus for-profit university where students paid up to $35,000 for not much more than a series of seminars.

That’s a lot of chicken scratch just to be associated with the Trump brand. But that’s the point: His name, after all, is the real estate mogul’s trump card.

Sure, Trump is a billionaire. Forbes estimates he’s worth $3.2 billion. But in some ways you could call him cheap.

“I think he licenses his name to everything and anything that someone will pay him to do it,” says Hayes Roth, chief marketing officer at Landor, a branding firm. “He’s tried airlines, and he’s tried soda pop and he’s tried all kinds of things.”

Reality TV, women’s perfume, men’s cologne, chocolate designed like gold bars.  The details of the deals are private, so it’s hard to know what’s succeeded and what hasn’t. But we do know Trump has declared corporate bankruptcy a number of times. Could that could that be why he rents his name so extensively?  

No, says Roth.  “I think he’s a born entrepreneur — I think he’d do it whether he went bankrupt or not.”

For Trump, licensing is about more than cash.

“The other thing it does,” says Tim Calkins, a professor of marketing at Northwestern’s Kellogg School of Management, “it makes the Trump brand look even bigger.”

Calkins notes that many of Trump’s deals have run into problems, but the brand still conveys confidence.

“It doesn’t matter if you’re a senior citizen who has a dispute about a real estate deal, or if you’re the New York Attorney general,” he says. “He’s very, very quick to come back and say, ‘The problem is not with Trump, the problem is with you.’”

That attitude is what keeps the licensing deals coming. Market research firm Q Scores says 70 percent of Americans, age 6 and older, know Trump’s name.

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