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"Fading Brands "
"The true power in the marketing and branding world is consumers," writes
Alison Wellner in her review of Naomi Klein's No Logo. "It's consumers that
turn brands into superstars over night and it's fickle consumers that change
their minds and send brands into the gutter. In fact, many of the center piece
mega-brands that Klein highlights in her book have since fallen on the wrong
side of the consumer trend cycle. Nike, for example, is suffering because teen
styles have turned away from the athletic look. Tommy Hilfiger has lost its
cool. The Gap isn't nearly the success story it once was. The reason that we
are deluged with marketing messages today isn't because marketing messages are
incredibly effective it's because they aren't."

From: Alison Stein Wellner

July 10, 2000
No Logo: Taking Aim at The Brand Bullies
(Knopf, 1999)
by Naomi Klein
Review by Alison Stein Wellner

There's a new kind of global village, and the glue that connects the pieces of
the village together is not a government. It's not an airplane. It's not
technology. It's the power of marketing, expressed in big powerful brands.
Brands like McDonald's, Nike, Coca-Cola. Some of us are the brand consumers,
and others of us, in less advantaged nations, are manufacturing the products
that will bear the powerful brand names. This web of branding is choking us,
choking our culture, choking our choices. It is a new brand of colonialism,
where teenagers in Manila build computers that they do not know how to use, or
assemble the sporting equipment that they will never have a chance to play
with.

"Logos, by the force of ubiquity, have become the closest thing we have to an
international language, recognized and understood in many more places than
English," writes Naomi Klein, a Canadian journalist who sets out to prove this
thesis in her 500 page tome, No Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies (Knopf,
1999). "Corporations have grown so big that they have superseded government
(unlike governments, they are accountable only to their shareholders). We lack
the mechanisms to make them answer to a broader public," she writes. It's rule
by corporation, Klein argues, and it's the building of big powerful brands that
have got us in this fix.

How did brands come to wield such power? During the 1980's, a rush towards
weightlessness occurred, Klein explains. Corporations outsourced their
manufacturing and concentrated their efforts on marketing, i.e. brand building.
Since marketing, or branding has become their primary business, "these
companies are forever on the prowl for creative new ways to build and
strengthen their brand images," she writes. "It requires an endless parade of
brand extensions, continuously renewed imagery for marketing, and most of all
fresh new spaces to disseminate the brand's idea of itself." This is why today,
we have rock concerts where the sponsor is more important than the musicians
(brands themselves, as she points out.) It's why corporations are renaming
streets, and even whole cities in their image as is the case of Celebration,
Florida, the Walt Disney corporate town. It's why brands have pushed into
formerly sacrosanct areas, like public schools. And it's why "unmarketed space"
has become an endangered species. Brands have become "content providers",
putting out their own magazines, and sports have become one huge excuse to show
off a Nike swoosh or some other logo. In short, the lines between marketing and
hat-which-is-not marketing have disappeared.

Klein paints a claustrophobic picture of the world, where there is no space
where we are free of branded people, branded things, branded experience. She
also paints a picture of omnipotent corporations shoving this version of
reality down hapless consumers' unwilling throats. Klein writes so well, and so
persuasively, that is easy to be carried along in the current of her thinking.
And yet, her primary thesis that we live in a world that is controlled by
powerful brands, powerful logos, is hard to swallow. She fails to fully prove
her case. Part of the problem is that she gets carried away in side arguments -
about misplaced activism in 1980's, for example. The rest of the problem is
that the picture that she paints is in simple black and white - and it's too
simple to accurately portray a world that's full of shades of gray.

As the editor of Forecast, a monthly newsletter that monitors consumer
demographics for the marketing community, and a contributing editor to American
Demographics magazine, I've also had the chance to examine the way consumers
interact with brands, and the way brands try to communicate with consumers. And
rather than corporations, and their brands wielding enormous power over
consumers, I've observed that brands are actually far more likely to get pushed
around by consumers. In other words, brands are more like giant wimps.

An illustration: Every month, I write a department piece for American
Demographics called "What Works" which is supposed to be a case study of an
effective marketing campaign. I've put out calls to public relations offices,
asking them to send me their client's success stories. "Deluge me," I've
begged. And yet, every month, I have to scramble to find a success story to
write about. It's not that I don't get an initial stack of flak pitches. It's
that when I ask them to substantiate their "successes" with hard numbers, most
successes mysteriously fade away. I believe that the percentage of marketing
campaigns that actually fulfill all but the most modest objectives is
remarkably small. Human behavior is a complicated brew of motivations, and
while marketing does play an important role, it sure ain't witchcraft. Any
marketing manager reading Klein's book would wish for the level of control that
she ascribes to them and would love for people to be as malleable as Klein
suggests.

The true power in the marketing and branding world is consumers. It's consumers
that turn brands into superstars over night and it's fickle consumers that
change their minds and send brands into the gutter. In fact, many of the center
piece mega-brands that Klein highlights in her book have since fallen on the
wrong side of the consumer trend cycle. Nike, for example, is suffering because
teen styles have turned away from the athletic look. Tommy Hilfiger has lost
its cool. The Gap isn't nearly the success story it once was. The reason that
we are deluged with marketing messages today isn't because marketing messages
are incredibly effective it's because they aren't. It's true that corporations
are trying to rise above the clutter that they've created by dreaming up new
ways to get their brands into pristine spaces. But as businesses, when those
new places for advertising stop working, the advertising will disappear.

Another central idea in No Logo is that everyday consumers (as opposed to
activists) are powerless to resist the forces of the mega brand.

"Everyone has, in one form or another, witnessed the odd double vision of vast
consumer choice coupled with Orwellian new restrictions on cultural production
and public space. We see it when a small community watches its lively downtown
hollow out, as big-box discount stores with their 70,000 items on their shelves
set up on their periphery, exerting their gravitational pull to what James
Howard Kunstler describes as 'the geography of nowhere'. It is there on the
trendy downtown main street as yet another favorite café, hardware store,
independent book store or art videos house is cleared away and replaced by one
of the Pac Man chains: Starbucks, Home Depot, The Gap, Chapters, Borders,
Blockbuster."

The homogenization of the world is a worthy point for consideration and debate,
but it's the corruption of the cause and effect chain here that left me
scribbling question marks in the margins. When Home Depot, Borders, or one of
their ilk sets up shop in a town, it's not like they put a drug in the water
supply that makes consumers climb in their cars and drive zombie-like to their
stores. It's consumers themselves - ourselves - that make the choice to eschew
downtown stores and spend our money at the big boxes' cash register. In a free
market system, there's obviously something that these big boxes have that we
want, and that mom and pop stores weren't able to provide us. It's not just
brand image. It's selection and lower prices.

The larger point here is that big brands would not exist if people didn't want
them to. They exist at the pleasure of consumers, and will disappear just as
rapidly if consumers are displeased. Consumers have shown a remarkable
tolerance to handle "branded" space, if there is a quid pro quo. If they can
get internet access for free, many consumers will lend their eye-balls to
advertisers. If the school can have better computer equipment so students can
be prepared for a new economy, many parents and teachers will let lend their
children's eyeballs. If consumers don't see the virtue of unbranded space, than
why shouldn't corporations jump in with both feet?

There are valid questions about the relationship between consumers and brands,
important questions, which were not answered to my satisfaction in this book.
Why are consumers willing to tolerate this level of a sponsored life? And at
what point will we start to draw the line? If corporations were, in fact, brand
bullies, they'd be able to make that decision for us. But they are not, and
they will not. To be able to truly assess the impact of brands and branding on
our future, we will need to understand the branding will of the people .

End<{{
A<>E<>R

Integrity has no need of rules. -Albert Camus (1913-1960)
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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