Posts tagged as:

authenticity

4-dimensional branding?

by Jake Yarbrough on July 29, 2009


Christopher Rice wrote an extremely thought-provoking post recently in his Culture Hacker blog.

In it, he proposed that script writers think about writing cross-platform characters with rich pasts and futures. This way, the stories would contain even more dimension and the characters would be infinitely more compelling.

…the form of storytelling is evolving, which means producers, agents, and everyone that comes in contact with your story, in addition to your audience, will be expecting it just as they expect interesting characters, dialogue they’ve never heard before, and situations that they’d either hate or love to experience.

I think it is quite smart. And, of course, I want to consider it in the context of the characters I work with every day — brands.

All brands in the market have a real (as opposed to a fictional Hollywood invention) past and a real present. While some are certainly more compelling than others, are their back-stories and present-day tales contextually rich? Can they be made deeper and more meaningful in a responsible, authentic way?  Or, if we tinker with the history, does it tarnish the future?

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Rethinking Relationships?

March 1, 2009

So many of us are so lucky.
We have clients who don’t listen to our brilliance. The more fortunate few can’t get a photo to align like we want because of our limited HTML skills. We also get the pleasure of dealing with auto DMs on Twitter and live in places where it’s snowing another foot [...]

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Emergence

November 30, 2007

This weekend I listened to a podcast of Radio Lab from back in August. It was a discussion of the science of emergence. Sounds eerily similar to my previous post. I must just be catching on. Anyway, the idea that a seemingly chaotic, disorganized mass can be more intelligent and become more quickly organized than [...]

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