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Tag Archives: Postmodern Marketing

‘All that you are’ campaign

This advertisement featuring Peter O’Toole is intriguing on a number of levels.  Noted for taking a colourful, rebellious and devil-may-care approach to life and the living of it, Peter O’Toole – in spite of his advancing years – is still able to lay claim to being ‘cool’.  Given the spread of readers the Sunday Times is pitching to, O’Toole’s iconic status has obvious advantages in appealing to both  ‘old-as-you-feel’ and  ‘rebellious youth’ segments of the market.

But just taking advantage of O’Toole’s iconic status is not enough.  The ad demonstrates with its ironic twist that the Sunday Times is laying claim to being cutting edge and contemporary, strongly independent, still challenging, still able to spring a surprise, in touch with and part of life’s rich tapestry of consuming experiences.

But the ad takes the irony a stage further, featuring O’Toole  as a person of many parts not just in his acting career but in real life.  This of course neatly opens the way for the Sunday Times to pitch its strapline: ‘The Sunday Times: for all you are.’

On this point the ad is interesting because it reveals something of a trend in what might be called postmodern marketing.  No longer is it a case of knowing who you are, but of making ‘play’ and experimenting with multiple personas.

But  rather than asking whether this offers a more nuanced understanding of our psychological make-up and priorities in a postmodern world, perhaps it would be more productive to think about such discursive stratagems in terms of possible consequences.  One obvious consequence is that  disseminating and ‘taking-as-read’ the  individual constituted by the trying-out of multiple identities and desires, at one stroke, exponentially expands the market .

There only remains the simple matter of rewriting the psychology textbooks to account for this change.

 
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Posted by on Saturday, 18 July, 2009 in Approaches to Marketing

 

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Best thing since sliced bread

Fascinating video by Seth Godin. What he has to say about idea diffusion isn’t that remarkable. Differentiation is a well-established part of marketing. What is remarkable is the way Seth captures your attention and makes you think. His image of Pope John Paul II reminds us religion used its network of churches to spread ideas. TV used another form of network. The final word on what ideas spread lay with Popes or TV magnates. The www network has changed all this, but I think Seth is being a bit optimistic as to how far power has shifted to the consumer.

 
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Posted by on Wednesday, 15 July, 2009 in Approaches to Marketing

 

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Apple logo

An interesting article on Apple and branding in Wired magazine. In many respects the later versions of the Apple logo with the bite taken out provides a pun on bite/byte – whether consciously or sub-consciously. The story linking ‘the bite’ to Alan Turing sounds somewhat apocryphal, but now it’s out in the linguistic ether, it will be nonetheless real.

Whenever I reference the apple logo during teaching, I link its significance to the story of Adam and Eve. In what might be seen as an act of resistance, Eve bites from the apple of the tree of knowledge and becomes ‘knowing’. If you think of computers as a way of extending knowledge then it makes a degree of sense. It also fits in with Apple’s counter-cultural aspirations as demonstrated in their renowned ’1984′ advertisement. And whether the ‘originators’ of the Apple logo intended these connotations of meaning isn’t really an issue. The story of Eve and the apple is so iconic, so deeply embedded in Western culture that it will operate at both conscious and subconscious levels.

 

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