Brand Mel?

Johnnie Moore

Johnnie Moore

I’m Johnnie Moore, and I help people work better together

Laura Ries comments on the Mel Gibson story. Would I be the only person who has something to do with branding who felt uncomfortable with this line?

He began the brand healing process early which is the only thing to do after a crisis of this magnitude.

Laura talks about the “brand” as if it is a separate thing from the man; that’s one way of looking at the issue I suppose. But when you juxtapose the word healing with that I start to feel anxious. If you want to talk about brands as somehow separate from human beings it muddies the waters if you then describe the brands as if they have some kind of soul.

Personally, I’m not a big fan of people talking about other people or themselves as brands. I have the same reaction when people talk about themselves in the third person. There’s something dehumanising about it.

Share Post

More Posts

Waterfalls and chaos

I linked to this paper on wicked problems the other day and Chris Corrigan commented “there’s a lot in that paper eh?”. Which is true.

Passion branding

Passion brands bring people together based on common interests and excitements. I’m particularly interested in ones created from the bottom up, as opposed to driven by producers concerned mainly with profit.

Medinge Moments

Just back from another extraordinary gathering at Medinge where the community that has produced Beyond Branding meets each summer. I was planning to keep this

The volatile chemistry of trust

Interesting research from Stanford suggests that exciting brands get more trusted after making mistakes and putting them right whilst more “sincere” brands start with more trust but lose it more easily. Perhaps the sensible interpretation is that second-guessing customers can be a waste of time!

What brand are you?

Thanks to Matt Tucker at Smith Associates for telling me about What Brand Are You. It strikes me that lots of companies waste money on

Just Undo It?

The AntiBrand: blackSpot sneakers, a project by Adbusters attacks Nike directly. In doing so they take on what has become one of the great icons

Putting humanity into branding

We live in a world of too much marketing and too much branding. People’s faith in advertising has fallen to new lows as we simply

New Abbey

So the Abbey National is rebranding itself this morning. As I write this entry, they are revealing their new look, their shortened name (just “Abbey”)

More Updates

Emotional debt

Releasing the hidden costs of pent up frustrations

Aliveness

Finding the aliveness below the surface of stuck

Johnnie Moore

Self or self-esteem?

New York magazine has more coverage of Carol Dweck’s research (which I posted about earlier): How Not to Talk to Your Kids. Here is one of the experiments reported. Kids

Johnnie Moore

Not being a company

Harold Jarche has been reviewing his blog from 2004. That’s a fun thing to do I think. He found this apposite then – and it resonates well for me now.

Johnnie Moore

On Dialogue

I’m reading Bill Isaacs’ Dialogue for about the fourth time. And I’m probably getting more out of this reading than the previous three. It’s a densely written, thought provoking book

Johnnie Moore

links for 2010-12-23

The Simple Software That Could — but Probably Won't — Change the Face of Writing – James Somers – Technology – The Atlantic For me, the software bit is less