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To me, 5brand was irresistible. I couldn’t wait to answer the question, and I did it with ease. But then, like most of the people who joined the 5brand party early, I am in the branding business. What reaction, I wondered, will this experiment get from a more typical mall-cruising consumer? Could they even perform the task?

I’ve spent the last several months working on a new book that deals extensively with the social meaning of brands. The book will contend that, in the difficult times we face both economically and environmentally, people should not turn their backs on branded marketing so as to punish corporations. Far from it. They should, in fact, engage deeply in that system of commerce. Brands, I believe, put power into the hands of consumers in the same way as democracy puts political power in the hands of citizens. Because we can choose, we control the destiny of marketplaces, whether we like it or not.  And from the perspective this project has given me, I think the answers to these two questions are different.

What reaction will the 5brand experiment get from a ‘typical’ consumer, especially in North America? Tentative at best, I’ll bet. Ironic, maybe. Subversive even. And probably most commonly, they will simply decline the invitation. Consumers in this culture are uncomfortable with the fact of branding. They see brands as a shallow vanity. They worry that brands exist to manipulate them, and they don’t want to be seen as fooled so easily. And they’re more than willing to blame what’s wrong with the world today on the companies behind the brands they buy. A typical North American consumer sees himself as above brands, and as a profoundly rational creature. Not the sort of person who could summarize the essence of their character by naming their favourite computer, sneaker, cell phone, beverage or musical instrument.

Given that, if so forced, could the average consumer still perform the task? Yes, in fact. With ease. Whether people want to confess it or not, brands are a language in which we are all stunningly fluent. Assuming the brands involved are all familiar, I think that it would be a rare consumer who would look at another respondent’s answers and not feel that they knew them better afterward. I think it would be a rare consumer who could not name five brands that would provide a similarly revealing mosaic about themselves. And what makes this more interesting is the reason why. It’s not, as we might suspect, because marketing has taught these meanings to people the way your 10th grade Latin teacher conjugated verbs. It’s because it was consumers who actually wrote the language. It’s native to us. Marketers can give a brand its functional meaning, and they can try to charm us into granting them permission to make it mean more. But, in the end, the social meaning of a brand is entirely in the hands of ‘we, the people’. If a 5brander chooses to include Apple (as many did), it will not be because Apple claimed to be awesome. It will be because people like us anointed them so, and because, with our money, we fed this value judgment back into the system from which brands come.

The interesting and passionate people who built this experiment have their own motives, and they’ll learn from it what they seek to learn. But, daydreaming here in my frosty corner of the world, there is one revelation that I would love 5brand to deliver unto everybody who buys things, everywhere: Brands are whatever consumers say they are.  And the fact that we ultimately control their meaning is our best hope that we might ultimately control their conduct, and the world that conduct creates.


Bruce Philp is an author and CEO of GWP Brand Engineering, where he is a practicing consultant. You can read his blog brandcowboy.com or follow him on Twitter @brandcowboy.

The 5brand Project began running the first issues of its global database of countries, people, professions and brands. To enter the User is asked to answer a question unconventional. “Can you define yourself with only 5 brands?”

Already in the database people from 25 countries of which Brazil accounts more than half of registrations, with 850 different brands highlighted by thousands of participants from 180 different professions as well as students.

The Top 10 5brand Project Brazil:

TOP 10 Brasil

Of the 10 brands of greater empathy with the Brazilians, three are part of the ranking of the 100 most valuable brands in the world in 2009 according to Interbrand. They are: Coca-Cola, Google and Nokia.

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Last week Interbrand in association with Businessweek have released an annual ranking of the 100 “Best Global Brands” by brand value.

While the first five rows are the same as in the 2008 (Coca-Cola, IBM, Microsoft, GE and Nokia) only two leaders have shown growth and the following giants have lost some value. In general the list is not surprising: banks and auto brands are falling (Merrill Lynch was No.34 last year and now they are out of list completely, UBS has fallen 31 places losing 50% of brand’s value and Harley-Davidson has lost 43%) while internet and food brands are growing (Google is already No. 7 with 25% growth in 2009 and 43% in 2008, Amazon, Zara and Nestle are among top gainers as well).

Via Bootb Blog

We’ve talked enough in the way people project themselves through the brands. Now I want to tell a funny story that happened in Egypt.

Cairo City, 6 pm, 38C in full with the Hamadan mosque chanting prayers through their speakers. After a day of visits to the Pyramids, Cairo Museum to my wife and I were waiting a train to aswan when suddenly she says: “We need to find a pharmacy now.” I looked at her face that was pale and I understood immediately what was happening.

We left the station and walk about 4 or 5 blocks until we found a pharmacy. The stores are all the same and written in Egyptian. We entered the store and had a very strange sensation. It seemed that I was looking my drawer clutter. That almost everyone has and we play everything.

Then we started trying to communication. Side and there, just talking about an Egyptian, Egyptian. And here the side of the counter, try English and Spanish. And no understanding. All words had already been exhausted. I thought about making a gesture simulating a inner absorbent, but I was afraid of being arrested. Until sprang spontaneously from my mouth “Always”. At the same instant the man was silent, looked at me seriously and said: “Ohhhh! Always, always …”.

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Pharmacy is written more or less like this:  الصيدلة.   Always one writes and says he is always the same.

An ironic curiosity: The inner absorbent were created 3,500 years ago in Egypt and were made of papyrus.

 

Returning to the train station I thought … “Tanks God it’s branding!”.

 

Martin Henkel – 5brand Team

brand

I was really impressed with these images.
But thinking in 5brand, which makes me feel bad about it is that tattoos are the brands of products.
If they were brands of rock bands or “peace and love movement” I have not think so strange.
Soon, I ask once more: after all, what is a brand?

http://adivertido.com/brand-loyalty/

One more: http://www.consolidatedskateboard.com/tattoo.php

 

For lawyers, every brand is a distinctive sign, visually perceptible, that identifies and distinguishes products and services of others, and certify them with certain standards or specifications.

Philip Kotler, exceeding the limits graphics, defines brand as “a promise from the seller to offer, consistently, a specific group of features, benefits and services to buyers.”

According to David Aaker, brand is “a different name and / or symbol (such as a logo, trademark, design or packaging) to identify the goods or services of one seller or group of sellers and differentiate those goods and services from those of competitors”.

Without ignoring the theories of marketing studied by masters of the subject, to the “branders” of 5brand Project, brand is all that and more. Based on pure perception, the database is creating the project points to new ways of looking at the brands that is meaningful for people. Many perceive brand as something that goes beyond product or service. The marks are no longer on supermarket shelves and not in the yellow pages. People perceive something as a mark that has a public meaning, which synthesizes a state of mind, which has a greater significance.

For example: Jesus Christ, Sierra Nevada, Caipirinha, Peace and Love, Obama. Are not in the supermarket shelves or in the yellow pages, but brands are much quoted by our branders.

Imagem Post Blog 5Brand

Aaker argues that brand that is “a set of human characteristics associated with a particular brand.” That topic, of “human characteristics” is what I like. I confess that on several occasions I tried to summarize what I understand about it, but each time we analyze our database, each time a new user signs up, new insights appear.

We are fascinated by this project and want to share with you our insights and fields of research. But one thing we already found out: you, your name, what you are and how people see you, is a brand. Manage your brand very well, ok?

Let’s brand people!

Martin Henkel – 5brand Team

grafico-wm

Each day the 5brand has more and more fans but one thing still intrigue us: Why men are much more participatory than women? Does this relate to the personal perception? Or men have less problems with being exposed?