deviant ART

[x]

Notices



Advertisement



More Hot Topics

Happy Holidays from deviantART

$lolly:iconlolly: reports, Dec 25, 2007
Happy Holidays from deviantART
6,267 comments     Last +fav: ~misao91

More Spooktacular Prints

$spinegrinder:iconspinegrinder: reports, Oct 19, 2007
That spooky time of the year is ahead of us again, the days of Halloween. Are you one of those hardcore Halloweeners who likes to prep their homes with spooky decorations? We have put together another scary selection of spooky prints and merch for your Halloweenish enjoyment!

Spooktacular Halloween Prints

$spinegrinder:iconspinegrinder: reports, Oct 9, 2007
That spooky time of the year is ahead of us again, the days of Halloween. Are you one of those hardcore Halloweeners who likes to prep their homes with spooky decorations? Then check out our selection of Halloween themed prints and merchandise that the Prints Team dug up from our local artist cemetery ...*ahem* Prints Shop!
549 comments   Prints News  Last +fav: ~quizo

Deviant's Appreciation Day 2007

$chix0r:iconchix0r: reports, Jun 20, 2007
So what's all the fuss about 22? All shall be revealed!

Eagle vs Shark Poster Contest

$lolly:iconlolly: reports, Jun 4, 2007
From the wilds of New Zealand comes Eagle Vs Shark, an Official Selection at Sundance, SXSW Film Festival and Winner for Best Screenplay at the U.S. Comedy Arts Festival!

Skin a Scion Contest - One Month Left!

$lolly:iconlolly: reports, Jul 1, 2007
deviantART and Scion proudly present to you our biggest contest give away ever. Read on if you would like to see how you can win a new car or 15,000 dollars in cold hard cash. Oh that got your attention? We thought so!

deviantWEAR Series SEVEN is HERE!

£deviantWEAR:icondeviantWEAR: reports, Mar 24, 2007
Now that it's been integrated into the deviantART Shop, deviantWEAR is back in action and lookin' better than ever! With the new changes you can easily keep up with all the latest deviantWEAR products while you're browsing for deviantART Prints. Check out Series SEVEN!

Dead Silence Movie Contest Winners

$lolly:iconlolly: reports, Mar 15, 2007
From the writer and director of the international phenomenon Saw comes an experience on the razor's edge of fear, Dead Silence. There is an old ghost story in the sleepy town of Ravens Fair about Mary Shaw, a ventriloquist who went mad. Accused of the murder of a young boy, she was hunted down by vengeful townspeople who cut out her tongue and killed her. They buried her along with her "children," a hand-made collection of vaudeville dolls.

Dead Silence Movie Poster Contest

$lolly:iconlolly: reports, Mar 1, 2007
Beware the stare of Mary Shaw.She had no children, only dolls. And if you see her, do not scream. Or she'll rip your tongue out at the seam. From the writer and director of the international phenomenon Saw comes an experience on the razor’s edge of fear, Dead Silence.
1,518 comments   Contests  Last +fav: +lurso

Why Branding Isn't Bad

$liquisoft:iconliquisoft: reports, Feb 17, 2007
There are numerous grassroots movements which aim to gather support for their idea that branding, advertising, and marketing in general is bad for us and ruining our lives. They're wrong.

Hot Topics


Why Branding Isn't Bad

$liquisoft:iconliquisoft: reports, Feb 17, 2007
There is a movement out there. You can hear it. Shhhh. Listen carefully. Hear that buzzing noise? The one that sounds like a mosquito? Yeah that's the one.

The movement of which I speak is a somewhat recent anti-brand, anti-advertising, anti-marketing grassroots movement which aims to let the world know how useless, harmful, and evil advertising on the whole is.

I point to sites like areyougeneric.org and the anti-advertising agency as examples.

These movements and initiatives look for support from others who share the common goal or belief that corporate America is evil and marketing is to blame. While I revel in and enjoy the anti-capitalist sentiment (I honestly do enjoy rebellion), I think these movements are misguided, misinformed, and in some ways hypocritical.

Allow me to explain, if I may.

These movements' primary message seems to be that branding is bad. That it clutters our society with visual pollution and noise that hides the true nature of our being and removes us even further from a natural, more organic lifestyle. In the case of areyougeneric.org, they actually have a battlecry: "No Logo. No Brand. Pure Concept." This might seem honorable and anti-establishment at first, but let's look closer. Right there, next to their links...sort of to the left. Oh, yup. There it is. A logo. It's trying to be an anti-logo, but it's a logo nonetheless. And that battlecry? Why, it's a tagline! They tried to keep it non-tagline-ish by having two taglines that are used at random on page load, but they're still taglines. More accurately, they're positioning statements.

The idea of the "brand" is commonly frowned upon because it has become marketing lingo. All marketers know that a product or company needs a brand; that message it sends the public that tells us if it's cool (Scion), if its eco-friendly (GE), or if it's serious business (CNN). The brand isn't anything evil or malicious, but rather it is a way of allowing us to identify the positives and negatives associated with a company or product (usually they focus on the positives, of course). Branding is not unique to companies, though. Branding is a part of every day life, but usually it goes by another term: street smarts.

When we're walking down the street and we come across a rough-looking guy, our intuition and experience tells us to back off and avoid him because he looks like he might mess us up. The rough-looking guy himself has actually gone to great lengths to brand himself as tough. Perhaps he doesn't shave often, has a mean look about him, is very muscular, etc. All of these elements, when put together, send the public a clear message that this guy is tough. As humans, we pick up on these intricacies and formulate opinions about our "tough guy" as we do with all other people. It is natural, and we do it with everybody and everything. We rely upon these prejudgement abilities every day of our lives, and we always run the risk of being incorrect. For example, our "tough guy" could actually be a really nice person who loves cuddly puppies, but we wouldn't know it without actually getting to know him. However, his outward appearance and the message he sends is that of a tough guy, and as such we leave him alone.

Now let's compare him with a product. If a product were released that was plain, had no message, no name, no nothing, would you know how to feel about it? Well, you might: you'd probably not feel much of anything. Think of it as our "tough guy" totally stripped down and without any attitude. It'd be generic, uninteresting, and without importance. To avoid this problem, a brand is necessary. The brand communicates to us what the product is, what it does, and why it's good. It sends us messages that we pick up on, which allow us to formulate opinions based upon the data we're receiving. We humans are pretty perceptive like that.

So brands, inherently, are not bad things. The negativity lies all in how they're used.

As consumers, we are pretty jaded. When we look at products, we tend to scrutinize them more than any other generation of people ever have. Our grandparents lived in a world of trustworthiness, where the car salesman down the street was actually your neighbor and did everything in his power to treat you fairly. But not this generation. Not at all. We look up facts, we read reviews, and we complain to high-heaven if the product doesn't do what it's supposed to. We can sum up all this cynicism and skepticism and point towards one culprit: false marketing.

False marketing is, as it would imply, the practice of deceiving the public into believing something that is not true. A lot of infomercials are guilty of this practice, over-promising and under-delivering with the wares they sell. Lies in the name of profit have damaged the face of marketing, and as such we humans simply do not believe much of what is sold to us. The lies have essentially ruined it all, and isn't that always the case?

So instead of being anti-brand, anti-advertising, and anti-corporation, we need to look more closely at the companies ruining it for the rest of us. Those companies that lie about what their products do, or manipulate the data in order to support their claims, or add little asterisks next to claims in the effort of forcing you to read fine print (but it's so small they know you won't read it). We need to take those brands and tear them down, and support the honest brands in the world. The ones that represent simple products that do what they say. Overall, we simply need to be more specific as to the causes we fight, because lumping all marketers together is unfair and hurts the craft on the whole.

Devious Comments

love 2 2 joy 5 5 wow 1 1 mad 0 0 sad 1 1 fear 0 0 neutral 0 0

~terf:iconterf: Feb 17, 2007, 11:55:17 AM
Wonderful article.

--
Black Magic! That blows your mind away!
Founder of TRFWRK!
:new:AND CONGO-KONG!
~dreamweb55:icondreamweb55: Feb 17, 2007, 12:26:09 PM Mood: Pleased
Very, very true.
:worship:
It's contradictive (maybe even stupid) how people who are anti-brand still support brands by just buying branded clothes.. Eating branded food...Watching TV on a branded tv set.. Putting branded condoms on ;) Typing their articles on a branded word procesor, on their branded PC, using branded software to make their anti-brand stickers.

--
[:couch: designerscouch] [:gallery:Gallery] [:daprints:]
!everingham:iconeveringham: Feb 17, 2007, 12:52:21 PM
Good article.
But when does the anti-brand become a brand in and of itself?
=frictiondesign:iconfrictiondesign: Feb 17, 2007, 12:53:07 PM
Great article! I agree wholeheartedly with almost all of your points. The only one I take issue with is the characterization of the Scion as "cool". :sarcasm:

--
friction.fotografie | da prints | etsy prints | *holga
$liquisoft:iconliquisoft: Feb 17, 2007, 12:55:14 PM
Scion is trying to portray an image of coolness/urban/street. I didn't say they actually were cool.

--
+

The Public is more Familiar with Bad Design than Good Design. It is, in effect, conditioned to prefer Bad Design, because that is what it lives with. The new becomes Threatening, the Old Reassuring.

-Paul Rand
$liquisoft:iconliquisoft: Feb 17, 2007, 12:56:07 PM
An anti-brand is automatically a brand.

A brand is an identifier; a way of differentiating one thing from another. By creating an anti-brand, you are branding your movement so it won't be confused with other movements.

--
+

The Public is more Familiar with Bad Design than Good Design. It is, in effect, conditioned to prefer Bad Design, because that is what it lives with. The new becomes Threatening, the Old Reassuring.

-Paul Rand
~SCriBu:iconSCriBu: Feb 17, 2007, 1:40:07 PM
Good lesson. Thanks! :)

--
scribu - propria subcultură
@leaf-lover:iconleaf-lover: Feb 17, 2007, 2:00:44 PM
Fantastic article again. I had never heard of the two sites you mentioned, but as soon as you did mention them, I felt a sweet sense of irony begin to form. You, I am sure, understand my sense of irony. :aww:

--
Scars in the country, the summer and her
~zootlocker:iconzootlocker: Feb 17, 2007, 4:46:31 PM
:giggle:

--
:dance:dAZine:dance:
:sing: "Feeling brighter than sunlight oh,
Louder than thunder oh,
Bouncing like a yo-yo, wooh oh." :sing:
~brain-fork:iconbrain-fork: Feb 17, 2007, 5:05:05 PM Mood: Pleased
Thank you... I recently ran into this person who was complaning about capitalism and advertising, saying that it was evil and manipulative. I'm a graphic designer, marketing is half of my job, so you can imagine this irritated me. I'm glad to see there are others who feel the same way about these issues as I do.

--
cheers,
Brain Fork
:pride::pride::pride::pride:

~BF-Stock imagery