colors in cultures

Information design: colors and their meaning in different cultures.


The parameters to brand success

1. Efficiency
Investments in optimized brand management structures and processes provide the efficiency that is needed.
2. Convergence
Brand worlds often collide when innovation cycles merge with new technologies. This demands a great deal of flexibility and foresight on the part of brand managers.
3. Multi-channel

Brand builders need to provide sustainable, adaptable answers regarding the type of exposure they want their brands to have in selected media/channels.
4. Self-segmentation
Brand builders should adapt expectations to the respective situation, while always remaining true to their brand values.
5. Diversification
expansion into new markets, and make the portfolio more resistant to crises.
6. Individualization
The trend toward the individualization of product offerings continues unabated. It is necessary to integrate stakeholders into the “service performance” process.
7. Globalization
Global brand management in different region, counties.
8. Social and economic change

The world is changing, climate change, new media, different ways of obtaining and processing information, food scandals, and the global financial crisis, are effecting fundamental, long-term changes in the way society thinks and acts. The keyword here is “sustainability.” Brand-builders of the future will be called upon to react to these changes, and in some cases take the lead in shaping the world of tomorrow.

Bercht, Walter. Interbrand. 24 April 2010 http://www.interbrand.com/paper.aspx?paperid=74&langid=1000

A book: Created in China-The Great New Leap Forward


This book traced back to the history of culture and commerce in China, examines China's creative economy and how television, animation, advertising, design, publishing and digital games are reshaping traditional understanding of culture. It provides a fresh look at China's global value chain. It argues that while government and citizens would prefer to associate with the nationalistic but unrealized "created in China" brand. It considers how new ways of managing cultural assets can renovate largely non-competitive Chinese cultural industries.

Keane, Michael. Created in China: The great new leap forward. New York: Routledge. 2007.


Neuroscience is the scientific study of the nervous system. Since neuroscience opens the brain to marketers, this signal of emotional attachment is the foundation for brand success. It unconsciously transports one from the mundane to the imaginational, transforming our inner world and inspiring us to buy.

A brand experience has the potential to actually transform our brain chemistry. The experience of a product/service and its messaging, can be transformational in a sensory way and emotionally. More importantly, at the end of a satisfying product experience, our feelings have been transformed into a strong emotional attachment that endures until proven otherwise.

Fostering magical brand connections is particularly important to create consumers loyalty. These three keys will unlock the doors to begin the journey.

1. Understand the "right brain" of your category.

What visual, sensorial and emotional benefits can your brand deliver and own - that work together with your product's attributes - to create an unbreakable bond that turns your consumers into brand enthusiasts? This can start with highly projective techniques like portrait building, present and future brand scenarios, and story creation with all of the internal teams that have a stake in the brand: marketing, design, R&D, senior management and your various agencies.

2. Understand the sensorial and emotional palette of your audience.

A lot of research is still left brain, Q&A focused. To unveil the magic in your brand, using highly right brained projective techniques – like image sorts, drawing and writing - can get at the more elusive sensorial and emotional attributes that are important to your consumer and relevant, meaningful and inspiring in your category. A great example is the method brand, which disrupted the established home cleaning market with a "detox your home" message and a visual position that brought that message to life using simple, clean, highly sensorial shapes and colors that intrigue, inspire and motivate one to buy.


3. Create a Visual Position.

Brand positions are often created in words, though people experience brands primarily visually. BUT...a brand's packaging, advertising and overall presence in the world starts with visual symbolism, not words. 70% of our sense receptors are in our eyes and 80% of what we learn about the world comes to us visually...yet most brands do not have a visual position that brings the written positioning and story to life.

Visual positioning defines the symbolic territory a brand can occupy to create distinction and often includes: overall personality, color and texture palettes, movement (upward like Gillette Mach3 or explosive and outward like Gillette Fusion), energy and other qualities that will unleash your brand's magic. overall personality, color and texture palettes, movement (upward like Gillette Mach3 or explosive and outward like Gillette Fusion), energy.


Packaging Design Differences between China and the West


In Chinese market, packaging design not only serves a function but also plays a role of appealing to consumers. In this article looks at the differences packaging design China and western market.

The components of packaging design is: color, label and typeface; image, patterns and shapes; and material.

Color: Japan, Green is not popular in Japan, France, or Belgium, while it is favored in Turkey and Austria. Yellow is death symbol in Islamic cultures but green is believed to help fight off diseases and evil. Black is mourning in European, they prefer red, grey, green and blue. Orange is a national color. Chinese customer prefer bright and shiny color for food products but tend to prefer white and pastel colors for personal care and household items. For example, Kleenex features brightly color and abstract flowers on the paper package in US but it designs Chinese uses pastel color and delicate and realistic flowers.

Label and Typeface: Label and typeface are critical to attract consumers. This is especially true in China where foreign brands adopt Chinese brand names, and consequently Chinese typeface, to better communicate to the market. Coca Cola in Chinese typeface became part of the brand identity in China and shapes the packaging in an unmistakable way.

Images, Patterns and Shapes: Products brands that are successful on the Chinese market clearly take into consideration how images and patterns printed on the packaging influence consumers decisions towards own products. Mirinda in order to reach younger segment of Chinese market, not only uses brighter colors but also features cartoon characters on the packaging.

Pepsi taps into local culture, people, icon and activities and response to them to the package.

Nivea offers a line of lip balm packaged in smaller solutions than the ones sold in the west. It is because Chinese customers prefer packages of smaller size. This is particular true for food products, they have smaller storage space than in the west.




Material: Package material reflects how much the company understands its market. Chinese customer dislikes products using too much waste material for packaging due to environmental concerns. Colgate, for instance, chose to differentiate its product in China by using different material when the company entered the chinese market in 1992. When the majority of domestic toothpaste manufactures used aluminum tubes, Colgate introduce plastic tubes which was more durable and safe. The new packaging has dominant 1/3 of the market over years.

Vladimir Djurovic. Food and beverage magazine online. 13 April 2010 http://fb101.com/?p=312

Shanzai-Copycat design in China





From the last post i mentioned quality design for the poor and yet Shanzai is such design. The character Shan (mountain)+ Zhai (fortness) implies banditry and lack of state control. There's lots of accuse about Shanzai because it is a copycat design. Shanzai is an open platform for original innovation in variety of products. It alternate the design and adapt the ways that appeal to Chinese customers in terms of price, aesthetics, values and needs. It represents a vast business opportunity in the nation of 1.3 billion people. Shan designs are an opportunity for international companies to introduce Chinese consumers to their brands.
One of the key design principles of Shanzhai is to make the assets of the product stand out. Shanzhai is not about being subtle. Of the population, 80-90% are unsophisticated consumers, they don't understand subtle design or complicated technology. They want to see the value immediately. It is also an idea brands who help the poor by stealing from the rich. "In this Chinese version of Robin Hood, 'right' and 'wrong' are presented in an ambiguous light. In this respect, shanzhai questions legitimacy and authenticity of design and blurs the line between cultural appropriation and outright theft." (Taniguchi, Wu)
Pattern suggested some actions:
1. Leverage the wisdom of common folks. Organize a Chinese version of Dragons Den, or innovation competition, to help grassroots innovation blossom.
2. Use tools for expression. Provide customizing tools that enable people to mark a bit of themselves on their products. Consider the gamut, from stickers of Swarovski crystal on mobile phones to prestige logos.
3. Be bold and explicit about the value proposition of a product. It has to make a clear statement of what consumers have paid money for.
4. Exploit grassroots sentiments. Harness grassroots humor to get closer to Chinese consumers in diverse regions. Such playful sentiments help build relationships with mass consumers.

quality design for the poor

When companies design products and services for the poor, they often think about making them as low-coast as possible. It is important to realize that people who live in poverty value quality design. Quality design doesn't mean that good and services need to cost more. Quality design meet people where they are and acknowledging status, aspiration and dignity. Design for the poor is more important now than ever before. It is the future of business growth. Howe can companies serve the legitimate needs of the poor not just for price but also for status, aspiration, and dignity?

Status: Evidence of wealth often reveals in the purchases people make. On the streets of Moscow in 2003, thousands of young people wear wearing cell phones around their necks as a statement achievement, however, 1/3 of these phones had no service. In Ghana, villagers are proud of displaying items to decorate home. How might we design experiences that are meaningful both to the individual and to the society around them?

Aspiration: In India, the hierarchy of the road mirrors the hierarchy of society. From bicycle to scooter to motorcycle to car, wealth is expressed not only in more comfortable experience, but by rules of the road that require smaller vehicles to yield to larger ones. TATA Nano fills a market need. It serves as a status symbol. It is aspirational but it has sacrificed quality for accessibility. How might we create accessible moments that retain their aspirational quality?

Dignity: Disney is a master at conferring on people the feeling of dignity and privilege. Its customers range across demographic. It respects audiences and designs an experience down to the smallest details. Unlike mainstream restaurants where servers recommend the most expensive wine on the menu, Disney servers suggest lower-end bottles so that guests feel like kings and queens. How might we elevate the dignity of the experience, across all moments?

Vanity for the poor: VisionSpring sells low-coast reading glasses to the poor in India at price ranging $2 to $4.

It pattern is very true, I agree with how many products, which represent aspiration. The challenge for design is finding a spot between aspirational and low-cost when you hit the boundary where they have to be traded. Good examples they have above. It remind me another pattern “Shanzhai” which is the exact “quality design for the poor” in China.

Madsen, Shally. Cotter, Colleen. Patterns. 10 April 2010 http://patterns.ideo.com/issue/quality_design_for_the_poor/