A great deal of research has been conducted in order to discover precisely what motivates people to take action. The exploration of Abraham Maslow[1], Eric Erickson[2], Robert Kegan[3], and the extensive writings of C.G. Jung have gone a long way toward identifying and explaining twelve distinct categories of human motivation. By utilizing powerful, universally recognizable images and story-lines – some call them symbols, others call them archetypes – marketing experts like Margaret Mark and Carol S. Pearson have effectively applied the collective knowledge of those twelve categories of human motivation into a fairly simple process that, when followed, produces the desired results again and again.
Do you want your branding efforts to succeed? Don't ignore these categories. Find out what the categories are and what they represent. Then determine which category your brand belongs in. When you do this, new marketing ideas will come out of the woodwork and some of the things you've been thinking about doing will suddenly seem inappropriate because they don't "fit" your brand's category.
Speak the "language" of one - and only one - brand category in all your marketing materials. Choose every word and every picture, every way of describing yourself and every image, very carefully. Make sure that every way you tell your story is in perfect harmony with that category. Okay? Seriously, I mean it.
Comments or questions?
[1] Motivation and Personality, 1954
[2] Childhood and Society, 1963 and Identity: Youth and Crisis, 1968
[3] The Evolving Self, 1982
Monday, May 28, 2007
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2 comments:
Hey,
My wife, Sandee, knew an Aitkins family in Ft Worth--I was Richard Aitkins assistant at the time.
They had a young son called Jamie...Would that be you? He was quite a determined lad....I know by some close experiences!
It sounds like you have done quite well.
We live in Knoxville, TN.
Let us know!
Garvin L. Greene
Garvin found the same Jim Aitkins. Yes, I went by Jamie when I was a kid... until the bionic woman, Jamie Sommers, became popular on television.
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