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It's Not All Rocket Science
By Michael Alan Hamlin
June 24, 2002

Marketing and brand development is not rocket science, or so says Kevin Lane Keller (whose father is a rocket scientist) of the Amos Tuck School of Business at Darmouth College. He says, "Branding is not rocket science. It is just as much an art as a science." That's an important observation in the context of localization versus globalization in advertising. Asian advertising "is not different, it's just culturally oriented," according to Don E. Schultz of Northwestern University.

For Schultz, Western advertising is logical, process oriented, and "horribly dull and boring." On the other hand, Asian advertising, he argues, is holistic. "Many Asians believe everything is connected to everything else. From feng shui to Zen, the view is that of the whole, not of the individual pieces. How things and the world fit together. How they relate. How they are seamless and consistent. And that I think, is reflected in the Asian approach to advertising and promotion."

While Schultz shortly thereafter comes dangerously close to falling from the precipice of Asian advertising mythology ("the western world has 'contracts,' Asians have 'guanxi."), there is no arguing that Asian advertising is inherently more esthetically pleasing than western advertising. What we don't know, though, is whether that makes any difference.

Take your typical western multinational that has invested millions of dollars researching and developing a global brand to provide a powerful, globally consistent image, uniformity of marketing practices, lower production and distribution costs, lower marketing costs, and even faster dissemination of new ideas quickly through the organization. Just how far is localization allowed to go?

In most cases, not much. Paul Temporal in his latest book, Advanced Brand Management, provides the example of Jim Beam. Jim Beam abandoned its old "American Cowboy" positioning when research showed that "more than 70 percent of the brand's target consumers enjoy consuming bourbon with their friends." In its place, the company made its brand sociable, associating friendship with the product. Temporal evokes a self-serving generalization from Thomas Maas, vice president of Global Brand Management, to rationalize adaptation, rather than adoption, of the global brand to local Asian markets. "Global positioning should allow local adaptation to meet huge cultural differences in different markets, while brand pillars should be maintained on a global basis for the franchise."

Okay, well let's see how the case of Jim Beam, meant to illustrate this need, turns out. First, Jim Beam's Catherine Hu, according to Temporal, seemed just fine adopting - rather than adapting - the global brand into the Asian market. In fact, she says, "It's our key to differentiate from competitors and be relevant to today's Asian consumers' changing lifestyle." Hu is the company's international marketing manager.

However, "research found that Asian consumers expect to see a deeper and stronger friendship depiction in order to be convinced and stimulated for purchase," Temporal explains. He then presents four advertisements to demonstrate how the global brand was adapted to local cultures. In the first, intended for the local market, a group of young men are sitting around (with pretty goofy grins at a small cocktail table in what seems to be a stripper club. At least that seems evident from the shapely pair of legs atop an adjoining table. The caption is "Who says men don't like dancing."

The European version of this advertisement pictures another group of laughing young men staring at the back of an attractive young woman in a low-cut blouse, also laughing, as she walks toward the camera. The caption is "They know what you're going to say even before you say it." Presumably, this refers to the laughing young men, I tend to think, however, that it is much more likely that it is the woman knows what the men are going to say, even though they are probably not friends. In fact, no one needs to be friends with these guys to know EXACTLY what they are thinking and saying. So far, the Jim Beam western idea of friendship is men sitting around leering at beautiful young women. Well, young men do tend to do this (regardless of what they are drinking).

So how is this advertisement sensitively adapted to Asian sensibilities? In the first of two "Far East"-labeled advertisements - you guessed it - a SMALLER group of young men is seen leering at an attractive woman's legs while smiling. The faces are Asian. Perhaps this is what is meant by deeper and stronger friendship: one less person and all local complexions. The caption is "Real friends share the same taste in art." I see. Real friends must be really boring as a group, too.

But not as boring as the next "Far East" advertisement. In this version we're back to four men, all dressed in tuxes, presumably at a wedding because a bride, not smiling, is standing in the background looking at them. The men definitely are not leering at the woman, apparently the bride of one of the men. In fact, they are ignoring her. The caption is: "Real friendship lasts." Despite marriage, obviously.

This last advertisement clearly has been sanitized in as boorish a manner as is imaginable due to some local sensitivity, true. But I'm pretty sure that among the age demographic depicted in the advertisement, ignoring your new bride is culturally unacceptable (And it's clear that Jim Beam has written off women completely. In fact, if my Asian wife saw this ad I would probably never be allowed to bring another bottle into the home.). As for the others, the argument that Jim Beam's local marketing executives and agencies spent a lot of time thinking carefully about adapting these advertisements - regardless of the research that suggested they do so - is simply laughable.

And that's the whole point. There's no science, or art, involved here.

(Michael Alan Hamlin is the managing director of consultancy TeamAsia and the author of three books on Asian economies and companies. His latest book is Marketing Asian Places, of which he is a co-author (Wiley, 2001). He can be reached at mahamlin@teamasia.com.).

Copyright © 2002 Michael Alan Hamlin. All Rights Reserved.


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