Archive for October, 2009

30.October.2009

Olympic torch here today

An Olympic sized brand requires an Olympic sized brand management plan. To become an Olympic partner and win the right to bear the logo you will need significant amounts of cash. There are tiers of partnership though, and they want everyone to be able to share in the journey. So, if you want, you can just buy mittens. To get a sense of the value of the Olympic brand you need only consider how much effort goes towards protecting it. The laws that have been changed to prevent people from using the images and symbols are an interesting example. But what I think is totally fascinating is that when the torch comes to town, it gets it’s own security detail. Big-time-security. Everywhere the flame goes, a security detail including numerous plain clothes officers go. Heck the flame got here on a military airplane.

It’s of interest to me because the flame is a symbol. That’s it.

I mean, really, if someone took it, you could just light another one and keep running. Do people think there is something magic about combustion? The fuel runs out – you have to keep filling it up. It’s not like we live in an age where it’s hard to light. But the effort that gets put into protecting the flame, is really part of a larger brand management strategy designed to protect and create the symbolic meanings surrounding the Olympics. It’s not that different from the superstitions and the symbolic meanings surrounding Christianity. Except of course that this Greek flame hearkens back to a polytheist era of Gods and Goddesses.

29.October.2009

Ani Difranco in Victoria

Went to see Ani Difranco last night. She has new songs. Some folks seemed a little affected by that. Luckily, I don’t really know her old songs that well. She is really wonderful. High energy. And super smart. Some guy was yelling smack about Obama and she had five easy things to say about it and that was that. This one stuck with me1: “When I hear a lefty crawling all over Obama, it makes me want to ask them, ‘what have you done, lately’?” But what stuck with me about this is that she didn’t say it in a way that was meant to shut down the conversation. It was said in a way that was meant to continue and enrich the conversation. Did I already say that she rocks?

ani_0349_webMy initial concern about seeing her at the Royal Theatre was that it might be too much, well, sitting. But I wasn’t feeling super high energy last night and it turned out to be just the right amount of sitting for me. Going in we were asked not to take any photos but this cell phone photo is surly fair use by virtue of it’s ultra low resolution. Anyway, if you want to see some really awesome photos from last night, check out Keri Coles’ blog.

Anais Mitchell opened. We bought her cd. Found this rather endearing home video of her asking Leonard Cohen out for dinner. Wrote him a song and everything.

  1. This is by memory and I wasn’t taking notes
28.October.2009

CBC logos have always been cool

old_cbc_logo_spiral_cafe_weI was at my local coffee shop yesterday, and Alison (sp? sorry) was wearing this cool shirt with a cool design on the front. When I noted that it was rather awesome she asked me if I recognized it. I didn’t. Turns out that it’s an old CBC logo. Well, sort of. It’s the image they devised to introduce their new colour television programming. Wow.

It got me thinking how the CBC logo has changed a little over the years. Not recognizing the butterfly I knew there were probably others that I don’t know about. And there are. I’ve included them below so you can check them out. And while they’re all very cool you can see how much more effective the simpler, more essential design is more effective. Again and again, I’m amazed at how powerful a minimalist sensibility can be.

28.October.2009

Texting abbreviations

Update: I’ve launched an online reference for the brevity challenged at Texting Abbreviations.

image_abbreviations_poster

If you’re like me and not super into texting and/or online social networking tools then you’re probably unfamiliar with various web and texting acrynoms. I’m making a concerted effort to change that. And I’ve discovered that there’s a lot of online resources where I can look stuff up. LOL? Well even I get that one. But I often have to consult with someone more text savvy about such things as IMHO or INALB.

All of this looking up has resulted in a poster that I’ve devised. 1 I chose to set it up using Garamond and Myriad Pro. Solid fonts those.

Poster of Text Abbreviations 11×17 [PDF]

  1. It’s eleven inches by seventeen inches, just in case you’re interested in printing it out.
22.October.2009

Autumn, reprise

Came across this photo of an old journal entry dating back to 1999. It’s a poem. Just in case you can’t read the writing, I’ve provided the text below. I kind of like it! But I would make some edits, including some different line breaks and a change of a few words. But I’ve provided the unedited text below.

ode_to_autumn

Autumn

October. It seems now like the lake is never calm,
Always grey or dark blue and heavy with cold.
Rough. Not rough like my auntie’s hands.
Rough like the marangue on my mom’s pie.

21.October.2009

Pictorial metaphor for autumn

autumn_sunflower

21.October.2009

Olympic Brand Management

Organizations have brands whether they want them or not. Organizations have brands whether they manage them or not. This is the common wisdom of brand developers and advertisers as they try to show organizations how to be more cool, more authentic and more sellable. Don’t have a unique and memorable brand? No problem. Let’s just pay to have your business or organization associated with really unique and memorable stuff. Here’s a singer-songwriter who will sell you the rights to their song for your ad. Here’s a cool athlete who will wear your logo as they cross the finish line.

But what if the singer or athlete turns out to be less charismatic than their agent let on. Or what if they turn out to be downright poisonous? Well companies have often fortified themselves against this kind of risk by opting to be associated with an entire team instead. Or better yet, a whole sport. Why sponsor a hockey team when you can just buy ad time during hockey games? After all, even a team can do poorly. Even a team can become defamed or end up with less brand value then their agent assured you they had. An entire sport is harder to tarnish and generally more resilient. And I don’t care how boring you think an organization might be, if they are associated with the feelings of excitement and joy people have about sports, then your brand becomes more exciting and more joyous. 1

I leave it to the reader to apply this logic one step further to the Olympics.

Much like any large organization, the Olympics has to work very hard to make sure that not just anyone associates their brand with the Olympics. To earn the right to associate with the Olympics you have to pay. Big time. If you don’t pay, you infringe on their rights – they call this ambush marketing. There is a sense of entitlement around the Olympics that makes it common for businesses and organizations to do just this. That’s because part of the Olympic experience is about community and sharing. So managing the Olympic brand can be a little tricky. Here’s a sentence from the Vancouver2010 website: “Vancouver 2010 is an open invitation for everyone to share in the Olympic and Paralympic journeys.” Of course, they don’t mean that they’re willing to share their brand. That takes a little money.

While everyone and their dog is trying to be seen with all of that feel-good Olympic stuff, the Olympics is also an increasingly controversial event with an increasing number of people arguing that it’s not feel-good at all. This Globe and Mail article tells us that a recent survey shows BCers aren’t really into the Games: “Asked if they were excited about the coming Games, 71 per cent of British Columbians said they were either not very excited or not excited at all. Only nine per cent said they were very excited.” Balance that against concerns regarding the loss of liberty associated with hosting the games, and it could spell concern for the value of the Olympic Brand.

More on this soon.

  1. I love playing sports, and I’ve watched various sports over the years, but for the life of me, I don’t really get the national and international uproar around turning on the television or radio and following a game. For hours. For so many hours. I don’t get it.
21.October.2009

Cory Doctorow in brief

Cory Doctorow is a force to be reckoned with. I listened to a free audiobook of Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom recently and thoroughly enjoyed it. But he doesn’t just write science fiction. He also writes and lectures about contemporary and important issues surrounding publishing, copyright, and the future of information sharing. This recent interview is really informative. How many insightful things can one man say in 11 minutes?

Cory Doctorow, technology activist, journalist, and science fiction author brings his own refreshing insights into privacy rights and access in a keynote entitled Copyright, Copyleft, Privacy, Librarians and Freedom.
20.October.2009

Intention and responsibility

It is entirely possible for the meanings we create to be beyond our intent and within our responsibility. I’ve said  this before, here. You have to read down a ways to get to it, and it’s so fascinating, that I thought I would repeat it.

In the wild of human to human interactions, more meaning is made than can be understood. It’s air and water. It’s simply everywhere. And whether we try to understand and rationally consider the currents of meaning that flow around and through us or not, there is more meaning than we can ever comprehend. The meaning shapes us. It animates us. So when someone says, “that’s not what I meant!” or “that’s doesn’t logically follow from what I said!” it might not matter. It is entirely possible for the meanings we create to be beyond our intent and within our responsibility.

Some of you will find this obvious. Others might find this to be a head scratcher. There are, of course, obvious legal examples. When you enter into a legal or written contract, it doesn’t matter what you intended by saying or writing such-and-such. What matters is what the legal meaning of the words are. These legal meanings are largely out of your hands. We hire lawyers and judges to sort through the words and figure out the meanings. This is not to say that they aren’t interested in intentions. They are. But in the end, you can be found to be legally responsible for meanings you never intended.

There are also obvious non-legal examples. In the context of a WordPress conference, you might intend to be speaking about adding pages, but if you use the language of posts, then you will be misunderstood and/or corrected. The extent to which you are misunderstood and/or change your behaviour is entirely your responsibility. You can’t expect hundreds of thousands of WordPress users to adopt your conventions, no matter how correct they seem to your personal logic.

But it’s not just  WordPress, or Canadian law, or an analytic philosophy lecture on Ludwig Wittgenstein and Bertrand Russell. One might run into these meaning regimes and their pre-existing meanings in any given community. We will encounter meaning regimes in our families and our intimate relationships. We can’t simply ask everyone else to get on board our intended meanings without sometimes being willing to do the same. We share language and we negotiate the conventions and meanings of the terms. The catch is that the more fixed a given community or meaning regime is, the less negotiation there is. Intentions be damned, you will be responsible for your unintended meanings.

19.October.2009

About yahoo

Well I was going to sign up for a Yahoo account but it required that I sign up with my birthday and gender. And I’m not really into it. I really just wanted to be able to submit sitemaps to their search engine for indexing, which is easier if you’re a member (which also doesn’t really make sense to me). It all seems like bad design – but of course it’s so they can advertise “better”.