Stronger Loving World

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Sunday, March 20, 2005

Brands on the Run: Love Marks

At the bookstore the other day, I ran into the coffee table sized tome "Love Marks", another book ostensibly providing expert criticism containing thinly veiled consultation tips. The book is constructed like a string of advertising copy loosely flung together and binded. On the first page, a glass filled halfway sits on a table over the words,

"I was born an optimist".Image hosted by Photobucket.com

Love Marks posits that branding is not based on manipulation or complex narratives but on deep, abstract emotional associations. The most important brands, author A.G. Lafley suggests, are ones that create an inscrutable emotional appeal for consumers. Consumers feel a loyalty that they can not explain, something usually reserved for family or friends. Lafley cites Apple as an example of a brand that has a cult-like following, whose consumers view it as means of self-identification. The rest of the book is a combination of self-help book and marketing primer; "love yourself, and the money will come!" If we remove any reference to brands, the book reads like a dating manual. Tips include creating an aura of "mystery, sensuality, and intimacy". This aproach will help to take brands to "the next level" after their current power is depleted by the "attention-economy". Is it self-evident that you can't provide a manual on how to create something that is "beyond reason?" I suppose not. "Love Marks" advocates corporations to act more and more like people, not in a legal and regulatory sense, but in the emotional, and even romantic sense.
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Whereas brands are constructed personae that corporations can send out into the world to mediate information and concepts in a way that lay-folk understand, "love marks", another way of saying "ultra brands", are romantic laisons that project the consumer's emotional appeals onto their product. Douglas Holt, breaking down the ultimate nature of brands and the message/sender/receiver problem, suggests that brands need not be created by either consumer or producer but that they exist as a connection between the two, with each party providing their respective lexia. Advertisers attempt to shape and mold brands in a way that mediates consumers' emotional energy and sensory appeal-it's the difference between using a rubber band and a copper wire to conduct electricity. "Love Marks" advocates self-help techniques, honesty and authenticity as necessary in building a better copper wire and catching the emotions of consumers.

Holt's vision is close to Stuart Hall's encoder/decoder model. Consumers and Producers use their own models to encode and decode the information within the brand. The hope of advertisers is that the brand is the only medium by which the consumer can communicate with it. Television news, newspapers and and investigative research aren't factored into sending/receiving model of the brand unless they absolutely have to be. That is, unless a scandal arises that must be addressed or alluded to within the brand. Everything about the semiotics of branding depends on producers' idea of "public perception" and the relative concept of authenticity, which is why so much depends upon newer and often stranger forms of market research.
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One of the ironies of the Love Marks book is that, while it claims to invent a new form of marketing separate from the category of "brands" the difference between "brands" and "Love Marks" is a form of branding. "Love Marks" the book is an attempt to brand the consultancy firm Saatchi and Saatchi, who invented the concept after a slew of market research a few years ago. In the collapse of many "cool-hunting" brands like Look-Look and Youth Intelligence, advertising agencies, always willing to obscure actual data and create elaborate self-serving narratives, try to re-brand branding. I call the languages of branding and their method of relating to consumers "Brand Logic". This is a take on Douglas Holt's term "The logic of branding". While it's cleaner to assume there is a singular logic of branding, the truth is that their are many Brand Logics;dictated by the ever-changing market and by the specific methods of advertisers. "Love Marks" then, is not "above brands" but is rather a new Brand Logic; a new language and methodology of branding. And even this may be giving it to much credit--we might also say it's one "meta-brand" within an emerging new Brand logic.

The theme of "intimacy" inherent in Love Marks calls out some of the things that people find uncomfortable about brands. Why is this corporation, an enormous abstract entity, professing to know me? Why am I receiving warm, personal messages written by an anonymous hand in advertising copy? Why am I receiving syruppy, over-emphatic messages from an author I can not see, feel, or touch? I'm fine, but how are you, omniscient God-like Cingular Wireless narrator? Postmodern branding addresses this by pulling out the rug of authenticity, becoming self-conscious, in an attempt at appearing authentic. Love Marks proposes that marketers can only connect with consumers by becoming "honest with yourself", by augmenting the sender of the message in order to change the message. Is this "super-authenticity" really the answer to consumers' distrust of the authenticity-games played by advertisers? Is the final answer, as Holt suggests, simply to allow consumers to brand the product directly?Image hosted by Photobucket.com
Brands exist because corporations are not people. Corporations are groups of people, bound by abstract concepts, handshakes, and agreements, who come together in an attempt to physically embody (or "incorporate") ideas. These behemoths lumber around our mediasphere, rumble through our streets and homes like long-dead Gods seeking ways to legitimately exist in a world full of individuals and egos. The languages they make in their attempts to define themselves are often clumsy and inarticulate, sometimes pathetic and sometimes charming, but always impossible to take our eyes off of. They are like hideous alien creatures fitting themselves into human skins, trying to walk straight, shake hands and ask us how the weather is, unaware of how grotesque and incongruent their cadence is. But no matter how strange it is, the longer they are here, the closer they are to getting it right. There is something both monstrous and beautiful about their attempts to elicit our passions and appeal to us on an emotional level.

Saturday, March 12, 2005

those dreamless dreams
So you've all probably read about "Podcasts", or are listening to them right now. Honestly, it isn't really much of a phenomenon right now, but all of the major newspapers and magazines nodded heads and winked at each other one day and decided that this would be the next big technology news story. (What ever happened to nanotechnology?) Even the New York Times gave it front page status. Last month's WIRED devoted its entire issue to the obsolescence of radio, discussing the popularity of satellite radio as well as podcasting/mp3s as alternative media. The basic idea is that entertainment is leaning towards personalization and away from "mass media", as i-pods are more equipped to personalize musical content and now radio/banter/speech. Um, I don't actually have an i-pod, and unless I start mugging people I don't imagine I'll have one soon. But I have been listening to one "podcast" that is available as streaming audio. It's called "Theory of Everything" and is hosted by a guy named Benjamin Walker.

The show is really clever and often poignant. Every episode follows a loose theme, and is composed of long interviews, the narrator's own personal stories, and skits that integrate seemlessly with the non-fiction. It is sometimes not clear at first what parts are fiction and what's "real". For instance, the first episode (my favorite) is about Philip K. Dick. In the introduction, a buzzing sound is heard, and the host claims to be having the "Ubik" logo tattoed on his arm. He gives a brief description of the book in between grunts of pain, and then transitions to an excellent interview with Jonathan Lethem, who was aparently a member of PKD's fan club when he was a kid and Dick was still an obscure, fringe, barely in print author. This, along with the second interview of a Rolling Stone writer (name I can't recall) sum up the backdrop of Dick's work, his major themes and his message wonderfully.

In another episode, he discusses Abu Ghraib with an expert, and then leads into an "interview" with Alan Dershowitz, a Harvard Law professor who advocates torture as necessary in fighting terrorism. It becomes evident that this isn't really Alan Dershowitz when the host calmly ties Dershowitz's hands behind his back and begins to hit him violently with a hammer, both parties continuing the interview as though nothing absurd were transpiring. In another episode, Benjamin devotes an episode to the concept of death, having learned that one of his friends died only days before. The show is pretty impressive considering the fact that he does all of the recording and production for the show himself. Anyone else have any reccomendations?

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