October 21, 2004

personality feudalism

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Ah, so Apple does have some blog­gers. Not that it needs them, what with Bono thin­king they’re cool and everything.

Doc (and others) seem to feel that you have to be an “Apple Blog­ger”, wha­te­ver that is. What Apple has are blog­gers who work for Apple. We don’t pre­tend to speak for the com­pany, we don’t repre­sent Apple, and we don’t par­ti­cu­larly want to. I’m not an Apple blog­ger, either. I’m a blog­ger who works for Apple. Big dif­fe­rence.
And I find that ques­tion par­ti­cu­larly amu­sing given the con­text, where Doc riffs off on Hugh [that’s me] clai­ming that Bran­ding Is Dead. For such a clue­ful per­son, Doc has an inte­res­ting blind spot.

Accor­ding to Chu­qui here Bran­ding is not dead. Bran­ding is in fact alive and well. All my adver­ti­sing friends can now sleep easy etc.
To be fair to Apple, there’s no rea­son why they should have to embrace “blog­ging cul­ture”, the way Mic­ro­soft has. Apple’s main way of expres­sing itself is visually. Dif­fe­rent sch­tick alto­gether from expres­sing one­self con­ver­sa­tio­nally.
If Apple has anything inte­res­ting to say, 90% of the time it doesn’t need to be put into words. The occa­sio­nal pep talk from Steve Jobs is all well and good, but what the fans really want is… grape-colored IMacs, black iPods or wha­te­ver.
I think Bono is the per­fect spo­kes­man for Apple. He’s a rock star. He’s all about being on the stage, all the lights on him, with the com­mon folk stan­ding in the dark in their thou­sands, paying good money for the pri­ve­lege of being near him.
It’s show­biz, it’s thea­ter, it’s “Per­so­na­lity Feu­da­lism” etc.
Apple is not that different.

12 Responses to “personality feudalism”

  1. Hi Hugh.
    On this one occa­sion I believe that you’re wrong.
    Apple has an inc­re­dibly loyal user base, many of which are active Apple evan­ge­lists. Blogs are not the only way in which peo­ple make their views known. Forum par­ti­ci­pa­tion is still a more widely used out­let for many inter­net users.
    Apple sur­vi­ved the rough times purely because they had this loyalty to fall back on. Sure, Steve Jobs is a the figu­rehead giving Apple direc­tion but from a bran­ding pers­pec­tive this is lar­gely a cere­mo­nial post.
    The user counts. More so than with any other brand I per­so­nally know of.

  2. hugh macleod says:

    Oh, Apple are very good, Andreas. Espe­cially at being Apple ;-)

  3. John says:

    I for one am disap­poin­ted at how “bran­ded” all the Apple crap is. Sure they focus on user expe­rience, sure they build in a strong enter­tain­ment fac­tor based on the per­cie­ved needs of the user, both in their ads and user inter­face.
    Then they go stamp an apple in the top of your lap top. Up yours! This is so heavy han­ded it’s a joke. There are still some late adop­ters who see the nice meta­llic Apple and smile and con­gra­tu­late them­sel­ves on get­ting hold of the gol­den fleece. But dont tell me Apple’s inves­ted in the user. They have inves­ted in Apple, in Apple, in Apple. And Hugh I think youre dead right, Bono would be a good spo­kes­man. A bom­bas­tic, has-been rock star, res­pec­ted by late adop­ters who need to wrap them­sel­ves in a flag.

  4. Andreas says:

    John:
    The rea­son Apple brands hea­vily is to allow their user base to publicly show their pre­fe­rence of com­pu­ting plat­form. What good would it be if you couldn’t tell a Power­book from your ave­rage PC lap­top? It might sound silly to you (and the older I am get­ting the more I agree with you) but it is impor­tant to many.
    One of the dis­tin­guishing fea­tu­res of being an Apple user is that he/she is NOT a PC user. Like a tri­bal tat­too, the Apple logo stam­ped into the cover of the lap­top makes that point to the world.

  5. John says:

    Hi Andreas,
    I liek your point about tri­ba­lism, though I find the Apple brand stam­ping is need­lessly heavy han­ded. Do they really need to work so hard to have us suc­kle at their nip­ples?
    Apple Mar­ke­ting would pro­bably say so. But as a user that’s a for­mer Apple boos­ter, when res­ting in the shel­ter of Apples’s supe­rior arms, more & more I have the cree­ping fee­ling of being bea­ten, bound and branded.

  6. hugh macleod says:

    Well, first thing, Andreas– I think Apple is a great com­pany with great pro­ducts. All their suc­cess is deser­ved.
    A lot of the divide I think is gene­ra­tio­nal.
    Peo­ple get older. When that hap­pens the need to express one­self visually– via the trans­mit­ting of ciphers– dimi­nishes.
    And the need to express one­self ver­bally inc­rea­ses.
    No doubt some anth­ro­po­lo­gist could explain this bet­ter than I could…

  7. Andreas says:

    Age is a very defi­ning fac­tor, I agree. Youn­ger con­su­mers tend to make buying deci­sions based on what is exter­nal (how does the pro­duct make me look to the outside world) whe­reas older con­su­mers tend to make these deci­sions on what is inter­nal. (How does this pro­duct make me feel). I sus­pect that all three of us are in our thir­ties, when that pro­cess typi­cally begins.
    I for­got where I read this, but some­body said that the whole essence of adver­ti­sing can be boi­led down to the sim­ple fact that every man really is two men: The man he is and the man he wishes he was. (I hope I am not man­gling a famous quote here).
    PS: I’ve never used my white iPod ear­buds. Ever.

  8. hugh macleod says:

    Agreed. And when you’re young the per­son you wish to be– your aspi­ra­tio­nal self– takes up a lot more real estate.
    Apple know this full well and use it to their advan­tage. I would do the same.

  9. John says:

    OK this is now an old thread, pos­sibly too old. The aspi­ra­tio­nal self point is clear. Thanks very much, inte­res­ting dis­cus­sion. I can see the last com­ments by both of you, though I

  10. Roger says:

    For­get Apple: what about the car­toon? That’s the truth, man. The chea­pest place I’ve ever been is Huron, South Dakota. Chea­pass taps, and nothing to see except dirty car­pet.
    Howe­ver, college towns, espe­cially sma­ller towns with huge state colle­ges, tend to buck the trend in terms of cheap living ver­sus lots of attrac­tive women.

  11. Christian says:

    For someone who tries to pro­mote crea­ti­vity and indi­vi­dua­lity, I think that you’ve seriously mis­sed the boat.
    Aside from the iPod being a hugely suc­cess­ful pro­duct that has resu­rec­ted the under­dog, Apple is Apple. Plain and sim­ple. We “Mac Addicts” only repre­sent 5% of per­so­nal com­pu­ter users world­wide, and I can tell you that it has nothing to do with the iPod. The Mac is, in all sha­pes and colors, simply a bet­ter pro­duct.
    And I can qua­lify that sta­te­ment because, unfor­tu­na­tely, I am a Win­dows guru by day, and Mac Addict for life. For some rea­son, I get paid a lot of money to tra­vel the world ins­ta­lling and fixing our cus­to­mers Win­dows net­work. And before you ask, I do it because I can tra­vel the world on someone else’s nic­kel. And visi­ting 45 or so dif­fe­rent coun­tries in the last 8 years has made it worthwhile. But Win­dows is, without a doubt, the worst OS within the big four (Win­dows, Linux, Mac OS, and Unix.) Win­dows, in its current form, is one giant TPS report, and the cons­tant remin­der that it is are the never ending secu­rity patches requi­red to keep your boss off your ass!
    But enough about that. What Apple repre­sents is the abi­lity to do what you want to do, not to have to do what ever­yone else is doing. With the power of Unix and Open Source behind Mac OS, the pos­si­bi­li­ties are limit­less because there is no sti­fling of crea­ti­vity and deve­lop­ment. Apple isn’t out there buying or des­tro­ying the com­pe­ti­tion that comes up with a bet­ter, or more use­ful, appli­ca­tion. I use free­ware and $5 and $10 dollar sha­re­ware apps that blow away their $50-$500 dollar com­pe­ti­tors. But you don’t see Apple on a cru­sade to sti­fle them, do you.
    If the best course to keep Apple, and the Mac, alive is to ride the iPod like Seattle Slew, then so be it. The iPod is THE best MP3 pla­yer out there, so why not? They’re not doing it at the expense of the Mac, or the loyalty of the “Addicts”, so what’s the big deal? Actually, it’s only a big deal to the non-believers. So they’ve got the U2 iPod. Big deal! If that cash brings about a bet­ter Mac OS, then hey, ride that nag into the ground baby!!
    But if you all would rather suf­fer through the viru­ses, spy­ware, and an OS that gets pene­tra­ted more than Jenna Jame­son, that’s your choice. We’re defi­ni­tely con­tent not to have a sin­gle virus for our ope­ra­ting sys­tem, and a Unix fire­wall to keep you out. While you’re ensu­ring that your anti-virus soft­ware is up to date, I’ll be busy thin­king dif­fe­rently.
    p.s. I actually blog­ged about your HTBC a while back, recom­men­ding that peo­ple check it out.

  12. AcouSvnt says:

    You can’t auto­ma­ti­cally make a corre­la­tion bet­ween a brand and a customer’s deci­sion to buy the pro­duct. Peo­ple do some­ti­mes make infor­med purcha­ses based on things like the sta­bi­lity of the underl­ying ker­nel.
    Also … no, I wouldn’t buy an Apple t-shirt or bum­per stic­ker, but when I carry an iBook somewhere in public I do actually like the fact that peo­ple are seeing evi­dence that there are other options in the world.