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hearts once nourished with love and compassion


NEW BRANDED WORLD

" As a private person, I have a passion for landscape, and I have never
seen one improved by a billboard. Where every prospect pleases, man
is at his vilest when he erects a billboard. When I retire from
Madison Avenue, I am going to start a secret society of masked
vigilantes who will travel around the world on silent motor bicycles,
chopping down posters at the dark of the moon. How many juries will
convict us when we are caught in these acts of beneficent citizenship? "

? David Ogilvy, founder of the Ogilvy & Mather advertising agency,
in Confessions of an Advertising Man, 1963


The astronomical growth in the wealth and cultural influence of
multinational corporations over the last fifteen years can arguably
be traced back to a single, seemingly innocuous idea developed by
management theorists in the mid-1980s: that successful corporations
must primarily produce brands, as opposed to products.

Until that time, although it was understood in the corporate
world that bolstering one's brand name was important, the primary
concern of every solid manufacturer was the production of goods. This
idea was the very gospel of the machine age. An editorial that
appeared in Fortune magazine in 1938, for instance, argued that the
reason the American economy had yet to recover from the Depression
was that America had lost sight of the importance of making things:

***
This is the proposition that the basic and irreversible function of
an industrial economy is the making of things; that the more things
it makes the bigger will be the income, whether dollar or real; and
hence that the key to those lost recuperative powers lies ... in the
factory where the lathes and the drills and the fires and the hammers
are. It is in the factory and on the land and under the land that
purchasing power originates [italics theirs].

And for the longest time, the making of things remained, at least
in principle, the heart of all industrialized economies. But by the
eighties, pushed along by that decade's recession, some of the most
powerful manufacturers in the world had begun to falter. A consensus
emerged that corporations were bloated, oversized; they owned too
much, employed too many people, and were weighed down with too many
things. The very process of producing -- running one's own factories,
being responsible for tens of thousands of full-time, permanent
employees ? began to look less like the route to success and more
like a clunky liability.

At around this same time a new kind of corporation began to rival
the traditional all-American manufacturers for market share; these
were the Nikes and Microsofts, and later, the Tommy Hilfigers and
Intels. These pioneers made the bold claim that producing goods was
only an incidental part of their operations, and that thanks to
recent victories in trade liberalization and labor-law reform, they
were able to have their products made for them by contractors, many
of them overseas. What these companies produced primarily were not
things, they said, but images of their brands. Their real work lay
not in manufacturing but in marketing. This formula, needless to say,
has proved enormously profitable, and its success has companies
competing in a race toward weightlessness: whoever owns the least,
has the fewest employees on the payroll and produces the most
powerful images, as opposed to products, wins the race.

And so the wave of mergers in the corporate world over the last
few years is a deceptive phenomenon: it only looks as if the giants,
by joining forces, are getting bigger and bigger. The true key to
understanding these shifts is to realize that in several crucial
ways ? not their profits, of course ? these merged companies are
actually shrinking. Their apparent bigness is simply the most
effective route toward their real goal: divestment of the world of
things. Since many of today's best-known manufacturers no longer
produce products and advertise them, but rather buy products
and "brand" them, these companies are forever on the prowl for
creative new ways to build and strengthen their brand images.
Manufacturing products may require drills, furnaces, hammers and the
like, but creating a brand calls for a completely different set of
tools and materials. 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. In
this section of the book, I'll look at how, in ways both insidious
and overt, this corporate obsession with brand identity is waging a
war on public and individual space: on public institutions such as
schools, on youthful identities, on the concept of nationality and on
the possibilities for unmarketed space.


The Beginning of the Brand


It's helpful to go back briefly and look at where the idea of
branding first began. Though the words are often used
interchangeably, branding and advertising are not the same process.
Advertising any given product is only one part of branding's grand
plan, as are sponsorship and logo licensing. Think of the brand as
the core meaning of the modern corporation, and of the advertisement
as one vehicle used to convey that meaning to the world.

The first mass-marketing campaigns, starting in the second half
of the nineteenth century, had more to do with advertising than with
branding as we understand it today. Faced with a range of recently
invented products ? the radio, phonograph, car, light bulb and so on ?
advertisers had more pressing tasks than creating a brand identity
for any given corporation; first, they had to change the way people
lived their lives. Ads had to inform consumers about the existence of
some new invention, then convince them that their lives would be
better if they used, for example, cars instead of wagons, telephones
instead of mail and electric light instead of oil lamps. Many of
these new products bore brand names ? some of which are still around
today ? but these were almost incidental. These products were
themselves news; that was almost advertisement enough.

The first brand-based products appeared at around the same time
as the invention-based ads, largely because of another relatively
recent innovation: the factory. When goods began to be produced in
factories, not only were entirely new products being introduced but
old products ? even basic staples ? were appearing in strikingly new
forms. What made early branding efforts different from more
straightforward salesmanship was that the market was now being
flooded with uniform mass-produced products that were virtually
indistinguishable from one another. Competitive branding became a
necessity of the machine age ? within a context of manufactured
sameness, image-based difference had to be manufactured along with
the product.

So the role of advertising changed from delivering product news
bulletins to building an image around a particular brand-name version
of a product. The first task of branding was to bestow proper names
on generic goods such as sugar, flour, soap and cereal, which had
previously been scooped out of barrels by local shopkeepers. In the
1880s, corporate logos were introduced to mass-produced products like
Campbell's Soup, H.J. Heinz pickles and Quaker Oats cereal. As design
historians and theorists Ellen Lupton and J. Abbott Miller note,
logos were tailored to evoke familiarity and folksiness (see Aunt
Jemima, page 2), in an effort to counteract the new and unsettling
anonymity of packaged goods. "Familiar personalities such as Dr.
Brown, Uncle Ben, Aunt Jemima, and Old Grand-Dad came to replace the
shopkeeper, who was traditionally responsible for measuring bulk
foods for customers and acting as an advocate for products ... a
nationwide vocabulary of brand names replaced the small local
shopkeeper as the interface between consumer and product." After the
product names and characters had been established, advertising gave
them a venue to speak directly to would-be consumers. The
corporate "personality," uniquely named, packaged and advertised, had
arrived.

For the most part, the ad campaigns at the end of the nineteenth
century and the start of the twentieth used a set of rigid,
pseudoscientific formulas: rivals were never mentioned, ad copy used
declarative statements only and headlines had to be large, with lots
of white space ? according to one turn-of-the-century adman, "an
advertisement should be big enough to make an impression but not any
bigger than the thing advertised."

But there were those in the industry who understood that
advertising wasn't just scientific; it was also spiritual. Brands
could conjure a feeling ? think of Aunt Jemima's comforting presence ?
but not only that, entire corporations could themselves embody a
meaning of their own. In the early twenties, legendary adman Bruce
Barton turned General Motors into a metaphor for the American
family, "something personal, warm and human," while GE was not so
much the name of the faceless General Electric Company as, in
Barton's words, "the initials of a friend." In 1923 Barton said that
the role of advertising was to help corporations find their soul. The
son of a preacher, he drew on his religious upbringing for uplifting
messages: "I like to think of advertising as something big, something
splendid, something which goes deep down into an institution and gets
hold of the soul of it.... Institutions have souls, just as men and
nations have souls," he told GM president Pierre du Pont. General
Motors ads began to tell stories about the people who drove its cars ?
the preacher, the pharmacist or the country doctor who, thanks to
his trusty GM, arrived "at the bedside of a dying child" just in
time "to bring it back to life."

By the end of the 1940s, there was a burgeoning awareness that a
brand wasn't just a mascot or a catchphrase or a picture printed on
the label of a company's product; the company as a whole could have a
brand identity or a "corporate consciousness," as this ephemeral
quality was termed at the time. As this idea evolved, the adman
ceased to see himself as a pitchman and instead saw himself as "the
philosopher-king of commercial culture," in the words of ad critic
Randall Rothberg. The search for the true meaning of brands ? or
the "brand essence," as it is often called ? gradually took the
agencies away from individual products and their attributes and
toward a psychological/anthropological examination of what brands
mean to the culture and to people's lives. This was seen to be of
crucial importance, since corporations may manufacture products, but
what consumers buy are brands.

It took several decades for the manufacturing world to adjust to
this shift. It clung to the idea that its core business was still
production and that branding was an important add-on. Then came the
brand equity mania of the eighties, the defining moment of which
arrived in 1988 when Philip Morris purchased Kraft for $12.6 billion ?
six times what the company was worth on paper. The price difference,
apparently, was the cost of the word "Kraft." Of course Wall Street
was aware that decades of marketing and brand bolstering added value
to a company over and above its assets and total annual sales. But
with the Kraft purchase, a huge dollar value had been assigned to
something that had previously been abstract and unquantifiable -- a
brand name. This was spectacular news for the ad world, which was now
able to make the claim that advertising spending was more than just a
sales strategy: it was an investment in cold hard equity. The more
you spend, the more your company is worth. Not surprisingly, this led
to a considerable increase in spending on advertising. More
important, it sparked a renewed interest in puffing up brand
identities, a project that involved far more than a few billboards
and TV spots. It was about pushing the envelope in sponsorship deals,
dreaming up new areas in which to "extend" the brand, as well as
perpetually probing the zeitgeist to ensure that the "essence"
selected for one's brand would resonate karmically with its target
market. For reasons that will be explored in the rest of this
chapter, this radical shift in corporate philosophy has sent
manufacturers on a cultural feeding frenzy as they seize upon every
corner of unmarketed landscape in search of the oxygen needed to
inflate their brands. In the process, virtually nothing has been left
unbranded. That's quite an impressive feat, considering that as
recently as 1993 Wall Street had pronounced the brand dead, or as
good as dead.


The Brand's Death (Rumors of Which Had Been Greatly Exaggerated)


The evolution of the brand had one scary episode when it seemed to
face extinction. To understand this brush with death, we must first
come to terms with advertising's own special law of gravity, which
holds that if you aren't rocketing upward you will soon come crashing
down.

The marketing world is always reaching a new zenith, breaking
through last year's world record and planning to do it again next
year with increasing numbers of ads and aggressive new formulae for
reaching consumers. The advertising industry's astronomical rate of
growth is neatly reflected in year-to-year figures measuring total ad
spending in the U.S. (see Table 1.1 on page 11), which have gone up
so steadily that by 1998 the figure was set to reach $196.5 billion,
while global ad spending is estimated at $435 billion. According to
the 1998 United Nations Human Development Report, the growth in
global ad spending "now outpaces the growth of the world economy by
one-third."

This pattern is a by-product of the firmly held belief that
brands need continuous and constantly increasing advertising in order
to stay in the same place. According to this law of diminishing
returns, the more advertising there is out there (and there always is
more, because of this law), the more aggressively brands must market
to stand out. And of course, no one is more keenly aware of
advertising's ubiquity than the advertisers themselves, who view
commercial inundation as a clear and persuasive call for more ? and
more intrusive ? advertising. With so much competition, the agencies
argue, clients must spend more than ever to make sure their pitch
screeches so loud it can be heard over all the others. David Lubars,
a senior ad executive in the Omnicom Group, explains the industry's
guiding principle with more candor than most. Consumers, he
says, "are like roaches ? you spray them and spray them and they get
immune after a while."

So, if consumers are like roaches, then marketers must forever be
dreaming up new concoctions for industrial-strength Raid. And
nineties marketers, being on a more advanced rung of the sponsorship
spiral, have dutifully come up with clever and intrusive new selling
techniques to do just that. Recent highlights include these
innovations: Gordon's gin experimented with filling British movie
theaters with the scent of juniper berries; Calvin Klein stuck "CK
Be" perfume strips on the backs of Ticketmaster concert envelopes;
and in some Scandinavian countries you can get "free" long-distance
calls with ads cutting into your telephone conversations. And there's
plenty more, stretching across ever more expansive surfaces and
cramming into the smallest of crevices: sticker ads on pieces of
fruit promoting ABC sitcoms, Levi's ads in public washrooms,
corporate logos on boxes of Girl Guide cookies, ads for pop albums on
takeout food containers, and ads for Batman movies projected on
sidewalks or into the night sky. There are already ads on benches in
national parks as well as on library cards in public libraries, and
in December 1998 NASA announced plans to solicit ads on its space
stations. Pepsi's on-going threat to project its logo onto the moon's
surface hasn't yet materialized, but Mattel did paint an entire
street in Salford, England, "a shriekingly bright bubblegum hue" of
pink ? houses, porches, trees, road, sidewalk, dogs and cars were all
accessories in the televised celebrations of Barbie Pink Month.
Barbie is but one small part of the ballooning $30
billion "experiential communication" industry, the phrase now used to
encompass the staging of such branded pieces of corporate performance
art and other "happenings."

That we live a sponsored life is now a truism and it's a pretty
safe bet that as spending on advertising continues to rise, we
roaches will be treated to even more of these ingenious gimmicks,
making it ever more difficult and more seemingly pointless to muster
even an ounce of outrage.

***
But as mentioned earlier, there was a time when the new frontiers
facing the advertising industry weren't looking quite so promising.
On April 2, 1993, advertising itself was called into question by the
very brands the industry had been building, in some cases, for over
two centuries. That day is known in marketing circles as "Marlboro
Friday," and it refers to a sudden announcement from Philip Morris
that it would slash the price of Marlboro cigarettes by 20 percent in
an attempt to compete with bargain brands that were eating into its
market. The pundits went nuts, announcing in frenzied unison that not
only was Marlboro dead, all brand names were dead. The reasoning was
that if a "prestige" brand like Marlboro, whose image had been
carefully groomed, preened and enhanced with more than a billion
advertising dollars, was desperate enough to compete with no-names,
then clearly the whole concept of branding had lost its currency. The
public had seen the advertising, and the public didn't care. The
Marlboro Man, after all, was not any old campaign; launched in 1954,
it was the longest-running ad campaign in history. It was a legend.
If the Marlboro Man had crashed, well, then, brand equity had crashed
as well. The implication that Americans were suddenly thinking for
themselves en masse reverberated through Wall Street. The same day
Philip Morris announced its price cut, stock prices nose-dived for
all the household brands: Heinz, Quaker Oats, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo,
Procter and Gamble and RJR Nabisco. Philip Morris's own stock took
the worst beating.

Bob Stanojev, national director of consumer products marketing
for Ernst and Young, explained the logic behind Wall Street's
panic: "If one or two powerhouse consumer products companies start to
cut prices for good, there's going to be an avalanche. Welcome to the
value generation."

Yes, it was one of those moments of overstated instant consensus,
but it was not entirely without cause. Marlboro had always sold
itself on the strength of its iconic image marketing, not on anything
so prosaic as its price. As we now know, the Marlboro Man survived
the price wars without sustaining too much damage. At the time,
however, Wall Street saw Philip Morris's decision as symbolic of a
sea change. The price cut was an admission that Marlboro's name was
no longer sufficient to sustain the flagship position, which in a
context where image is equity meant that Marlboro had blinked. And
when Marlboro ? one of the quintessential global brands ? blinks, it
raises questions about branding that reach beyond Wall Street, and
way beyond Philip Morris.

The panic of Marlboro Friday was not a reaction to a single
incident. Rather, it was the culmination of years of escalating
anxiety in the face of some rather dramatic shifts in consumer habits
that were seen to be eroding the market share of household-name
brands, from Tide to Kraft. Bargain-conscious shoppers, hit hard by
the recession, were starting to pay more attention to price than to
the prestige bestowed on their products by the yuppie ad campaigns of
the 1980s. The public was suffering from a bad case of what is known
in the industry as "brand blindness."

Study after study showed that baby boomers, blind to the alluring
images of advertising and deaf to the empty promises of celebrity
spokespersons, were breaking their lifelong brand loyalties and
choosing to feed their families with private-label brands from the
supermarket ? claiming, heretically, that they couldn't tell the
difference. From the beginning of the recession to 1993, Loblaw's
President's Choice line, Wal-Mart's Great Value and Marks and
Spencer's St. Michael prepared foods had nearly doubled their market
share in North America and Europe. The computer market, meanwhile,
was flooded by inexpensive clones, causing IBM to slash its prices
and otherwise impale itself. It appeared to be a return to the
proverbial shopkeeper dishing out generic goods from the barrel in a
prebranded era.

The bargain craze of the early nineties shook the name brands to
their core. Suddenly it seemed smarter to put resources into price
reductions and other incentives than into fabulously expensive ad
campaigns. This ambivalence began to be reflected in the amounts
companies were willing to pay for so-called brand-enhancing
advertising. Then, in 1991, it happened: overall advertising spending
actually went down by 5.5 percent for the top 100 brands. It was the
first interruption in the steady increase of U.S. ad expenditures
since a tiny dip of 0.6 percent in 1970, and the largest drop in four
decades.

It's not that top corporations weren't flogging their products,
it's just that to attract those suddenly fickle customers, many
decided to put their money into promotions such as giveaways,
contests, in-store displays and (like Marlboro) price reductions, in
1983, American brands spent 70 percent of their total marketing
budgets on advertising, and 30 percent on these other forms of
promotion. By 1993, the ratio had flipped: only 25 percent went to
ads, with the remaining 75 percent going to promotions.

Predictably, the ad agencies panicked when they saw their
prestige clients abandoning them for the bargain bins and they did
what they could to convince big spenders like Procter and Gamble and
Philip Morris that the proper route out of the brand crisis wasn't
less brand marketing but more. At the annual meeting of the U.S.
Association of National Advertisers in 1988, Graham H. Phillips, the
U.S. chairman of Ogilvy & Mather, berated the assembled executives
for stooping to participate in "a commodity marketplace" rather than
an image-based one. "I doubt that many of you would welcome a
commodity marketplace in which one competed solely on price,
promotion and trade deals, all of which can easily be duplicated by
competition, leading to ever-decreasing profits, decay and eventual
bankruptcy." Others spoke of the importance of
maintaining "conceptual value-added," which in effect means adding
nothing but marketing. Stooping to compete on the basis of real
value, the agencies ominously warned, would spell not just the death
of the brand, but corporate death as well

Around the same time as Marlboro Friday, the ad industry felt so
under siege that market researcher Jack Myers published Adbashing:
Surviving the Attacks on Advertising, a book-length call to arms
against everyone from supermarket cashiers handing out coupons for
canned peas to legislators contemplating a new tax on ads. "We, as an
industry, must recognize that adbashing is a threat to capitalism, to
a free press, to our basic forms of entertainment, and to the future
of our children," he wrote.

Despite these fighting words, most market watchers remained
convinced that the heyday of the value-added brand had come and gone.
The eighties had gone in for brands and hoity-toity designer labels,
reasoned David Scotland, European director of Hiram Walker. The
nineties would clearly be all about value. "A few years ago," he
observed, "it might have been considered smart to wear a shirt with a
designer's logo embroidered on the pocket; frankly, it now seems a
bit naff."

And from the other side of the Atlantic, Cincinnati journalist
Shelly Reese came to the same conclusion about our no-name future,
writing that "Americans with Calvin Klein splashed across their hip
pocket aren't pushing grocery carts full of Perrier down the aisles
anymore. Instead they're sporting togs with labels like Kmart's
Jaclyn Smith and maneuvering carts full of Kroger Co.'s Big K soda.
Welcome to the private label decade."

Scotland and Reese, if they remember their bold pronouncements,
are probably feeling just a little bit silly right now. Their
embroidered "pocket" logos sound positively subdued by today's
logomaniacal standards, and sales of name-brand bottled water have
been increasing at an annual rate of 9 percent, turning it into a
$3.4 billion industry by 1997. From today's logo-quilted perch, it's
almost unfathomable that a mere six years ago, death sentences for
the brand seemed not only plausible but self-evident.

So just how did we get from obituaries for Tide to today's
battalions of volunteer billboards for Tommy Hilfiger, Nike and
Calvin Klein? Who slipped the steroids into the brand's comeback?

__________________
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