September 8, 2004

note to self: synapses

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NOTE TO SELF:
Your job is no lon­ger about selling. Your job is about firing off as many synap­ses in your client

10 Responses to “note to self: synapses”

  1. bc says:

    Ab.so.lute.ly.
    Even as a tee­na­ger, I knew I bought clothes (or fabrics to sew clothes) in ser­vice of “what I shall be, where I shall go, whom I shall meet and what it will do for Who I Am.” I can find where every purchase, indeed every choice, still rever­be­ra­tes back to that.
    For ins­tance my last new food blen­der, which doesn’t blend well enough even to get rid of ripe-avocado lumps, was bought because it had a chef’s-kitchen look, and to help me make sum­mer soup not only to FeedThe­Body but to serve to lunch guests, to be the one with brag­ging rights to memo­ra­ble cold soup and published reci­pes, to enjoy the sublime creamy pas­tel colors of the soup and the asso­cia­ted reve­rie of Euro­pean set­tings and sty­les and con­vi­vial meals. *Mea­ning*, some of it through the sen­ses, but all of it mea­ning. Even ritual. And when it really works, all com­po­nents in place, liturgy.
    I should really toss the blen­der and get one that works. But the lite­ral­ness of lumpy food is only a small per­cen­tage of the equation.

  2. Eric S. says:

    Does this FRIGHTEN anyone else? Aren’t dopa­mi­nes the same ori­gi­na­tor in any addic­tive acti­vity? Could a pro­duct trap someone in an addic­tion like gam­bling? Or should we just say that the gam­bling industry is doing a very good job in pro­mo­ting their pro­duct? I rea­lize that almost ANY tac­tic we use in mar­ke­ting is focu­sed upon the same bioche­mi­cal goal (albeit some on a much sma­ller scale), but it just chills my blood to state it like this. Reminds me of the men­tal state of those zom­bies in “Resi­dent Evil.”

  3. bc says:

    Afraid you’re right, Eric. Accor­ding to Dante, anything good can be misu­sed, any love can be misap­plied and disor­de­red. It’s Maya and Sam­sara, we may as well get used to it and make our way as ethi­cally as possible.

  4. I only wan­ted to say that I like your work very much; I think it is quite cle­ver. Any­way, I also wan­ted you to know that I have used some of your ima­ges. Giving you all the cre­dit, of course.
    Neverthe­less, if you would pre­fer me to take down the ima­ges from my blog I will. Just let me know.

  5. Ben Wharton says:

    Not one of your bet­ter cards Hugh. Surely adver­ti­sing is easiest at the begin­ning — when you do believe — wha­te­ver you believe. It’s the abi­lity to keep on going in the face of the tiny amount of wis­dom you learn which is the soul poi­so­ner. Youth, igno­rance and a real strong desire to own a Porshe is what gets you in. Maybe trying to get out is the real test cer­tain peo­ple are put here on this Earth to endure.
    Mean­time crea­ting a new cult for your­self —  “We are here to find meaning” — is about the furthest thing from spi­ri­tua­lity as you can get. It’s spirtuality-lite. Buy-a-world-view. Pret-A-Perspective.
    Do I believe that peo­ple dif­fe­ren­tiate them­sel­ves by what they want to own/try to own/try to look as if they own from others because they believe that few will ever get past a super­fi­cial rea­ding of their being and need sterotypical-demographical dri­ven poin­ters to make the grey-areas just a little bit more char­coal towards the edges for those they need to impress? Sure. Do I believe that the right collec­tion of objects will trans­port these same deman­ding shop­pers to another plane of con­tem­pla­tion? Bollocks.
    Oh, your cus­to­mer may cut you off because you haven’t micro-niched his or her desi­res for that par­ti­cu­lar minute of that par­ti­cu­lar after­noon when they thought for a nano­se­cond they might try something NEW, but under­neath, they’re still run­ning on the same rule-set. Make me beau­ti­ful. Make me feel beau­ti­ful. Make beu­ti­ful peo­ple want to be with me. Make me feel beau­ti­ful in my choice.
    As long as that choice is to purchase.
    For choo­sing NOT to purchase, for NOT thro­wing something away, for NOT nee­ding appro­val through appea­ran­ces,  — well, I wouldn’t call it a spi­ri­tual move­ment, but I would call it one step clo­ser to “a big idea”.

  6. hugh macleod says:

    Well, Ben, we make choi­ces to NOT purchase every day, and to purchase. Life is messy and com­plex.
    Even higher beings are capa­ble of choo­sing the great taste of Pepsi over Coke ;-)

  7. Ben Wharton says:

    Not one of your bet­ter replies Hugh.

  8. hugh macleod says:

    Sorry, Ben. I must try har­der in future ;-)
    Seriously, though, you had some inte­res­ting points. But please do not think I’m trying to be some kind of marketing-is-vehicle-for-personal-salvation guru.
    My point in Hugh­train is simply this: “We humans want to believe in our own spe­cies. And we want peo­ple, com­pa­nies and pro­ducts in our lives that make it easier to do so. That is human nature.”
    Feel free to disa­gree with that, by all means. I’d like to see the argu­ments.
    Thanks for the feed­back, Everybody =)

  9. Jennifer B says:

    The late come­dian Bill Hicks had simi­lar things to say about adver­ti­sing. He said, “If you work in adver­ti­sing, please, kill your­self now!”

  10. Eric S. says:

    I think the pro­blem comes down to the defi­ni­tion of an “emo­tio­nal” reac­tion to a pro­duct and a “spi­ri­tual” reac­tion to the same. You can’t say you want the cus­to­mer to have a spi­ri­tual inte­rac­tion with your company/product while at the same time loo­king to bio­lo­gi­cally sti­mu­late their dopa­mi­nes. Call me fun­da­men­ta­list, but spi­ri­tua­lity is NOT the “drug of the mas­ses,” and you can’t subs­ti­tute Chris­tia­nity (or wha­te­ver reli­gion) for a Coke. Spi­ri­tual reac­tions are NOT the next level of emo­tio­nal ones.
    I will agree with you here, though: I want that cus­to­mer to asso­ciate grea­ter, newer, more dif­fe­rent and more intense emo­tions with my pro­duct than ever before.
    If I work for a beer com­pany, I don’t want them to just remem­ber how it tas­tes, I want them to remem­ber the inc­re­dibly hot girl they tal­ked with at the club last night over a cou­ple of bott­les.
    If I work for an air­line, I don’t want them to just remem­ber the in-flight meal (or lack the­reof), I want them to remem­ber how the flight atten­dent hel­ped them get their lug­gage through secu­rity in time to make their flight to Pitts­burgh, because this was the wee­kend they were pop­ping the ques­tion.
    If I work for Ger­ber (Hugh), I don’t want the mom to remem­ber “well, the baby didn’t spit up this one,” I want her to feel more secure that she’s hel­ping her child get the best start on life by giving his body everything it needs to grow.
    Yes, I want my cus­to­mers to have a gut-feeling deeply posi­tive emo­tio­nal reac­tion to my com­pany and my pro­duct. I just think that’s a com­ple­tely dif­fe­rent ani­mal than something spi­ri­tual.
    Wow. That was much lon­ger than I inten­ded it to be…