Brands, empathy, and racism

Please note I wrote this first thing on 5/30 and I will be updating this post with more brands that are authentically addressing issues of systematic racism. Thanks to those who have sent me links (Deb, Maggie).

What a horrible week for our country.

I am heartbroken at the violence across the country, including multiple incidences here in Oregon. We are better than this. Aren’t we? Who can lead us out of the current situation and help us start to address issues of systematic racism? It sure as hell isn’t our government.

It comes down to brands. Brands and empathy.

Brands have a choice–to either take a stand against racism, or to sit this one out. It’s so easy to sit it out, isn’t it? To think that racism is so far outside of a brand’s wheelhouse as a rationale for not addressing what is now seen as a pandemic in our country.

And this is where empathy comes in. Brands that understand how people are feeling, how current events strike many of us to our very core, how so many of us are struggling with the idea of ‘what can we do’–these brands can help us, as individuals, find our voices to start to address the systematic racism so embedded in our country.

Nike did it.
Read more about it at Adweek in an article written by our colleague Doug Zanger:
here
Adweek also shared which brands are decrying racism on social media: here The list includes Ben & Jerry’s, Def Jam records, and several Minnneapolis-based professional sports franchises.

Target, another brand based in Minneapolis, issued a statement in support of communities affected by this pandemic and pledging financial and moral support for those affected.

Reebok spoke out simply about the role of black people in our country here.

These brands all have deep roots in addressing issues in the African American community and  of financially supporting organizations that address racism. Their words are authentic and courageous. This isn’t going to work for every brand. And brands shouldn’t expect to see any kind of financial reward.

But the bigger reward–the reward of encouraging people to think about these issues in an empathetic way, and to help people figure out what they personally can and will do to address this pandemic is priceless.

 

 

Opinion: The Purchase to Donate Model Needs to Stop

MABR student Shealy Long shares her perspective on this model.

I recently read a tweet by Sarah Rogers (@sarahnrogers) stating, “Please god, ban the phrases ‘in these uncertain times’ or ‘in this together’ from commercials indefinitely. Burger King isn’t your friend, it’s a f*cking fast food chain.”

I agree with Rogers’ tweet. Everything brands are saying sounds rehearsed; nothing seems authentic. Their messaging shows how the advertising industry needs brand responsibility executives to help navigate crises, so they don’t receive eye rolls from consumers.

To piggyback off of Rogers’ tweet is the purchase to donate model companies initiated during COVID-19. I can feel my face heat up because this model makes me angry and frustrated. I want to call the CEO up and say, “Don’t do this, issue a retraction…” If I had that kind of power, I would not be angry with companies during “these uncertain times.”

I see it as an ultimatum: if we’re going to donate, you need to buy products from us, or we won’t do anything.

It’s also a slap in the face that companies can donate but won’t until they make profits from consumers. I understand they have to pay their employees, but a lot of people have lost their jobs, are struggling with putting food on the table or keep a roof over their head.

Rothy’s is a women’s clothing company that makes products, like shoes and bags, made from 100% recycled plastic. Their shoes have a high price point for shoes advertised as comfy versus designer. In April, Rothy’s announced they were sourcing non-medical masks for frontline workers, but they would only donate supplies with a purchase of their shoes.

Their community, and potential clients, criticized the half-assed attempt to help frontline workers, while still making a profit.

On April 13, 2020, Rothy’s issued a statement on Instagram stating, “We’re listening. […] While we normally pride ourselves on moving quickly, this time it led to a misstep—and we are truly sorry for that. We want to get masks to essential workers as fast we can. Therefore, we are removing the purchase-to-donate component of our program. While we had the best intentions at heart, we agree that wasn’t the right approach. We are working rapidly to source 100,000 non-medical masks to make a bulk donation […].”

Rothy’s is not the only company doing this. I checked out my Instagram stories and a blogger who I follow posted about Verb Energy Bars. This blogger makes her living as an influencer, and her husband is a first responder, so I was surprised she endorsed this.

Her Instagram story stated, “They [Verb Energy] are donating 500k verb energy bars to healthcare workers and first responders. They are donating 1 bar for every 2 bars purchased!”

If Verb Energy can donate 500,000 energy bars to healthcare workers and first responders, then why tie it to a purchase-to-donate model? Like I stated above, it is a slap in the face.

Healthcare workers and first responders put their lives on the line to help people because they made an oath. Companies should be celebrating with donations, not purchase-to-donate models. It’s like waving a lollipop in a child’s face, but not giving it to them.

I see it as Verb Energy saying, “Oh, we have 500,000 energy bars that could help you get through 12-hour shifts, but we need people to buy bars before we do anything nice for you people putting their lives on the line every day.

I am tired of this pseudo-help mindset companies are flaunting, so consumers can think they are great companies doing amazing stuff during these unprecedented times. If a company can donate items, they should be donating them, not tying them to a purchase-to-donate model.

Shealy Long has a B.S. in Integrated Marketing Communication (IMC) from Winthrop University. She has a strong background in communications, marketing, and media. As an IMC major, she got the strategy side of marketing and the creative side of mass communication. She is currently attending the University of Oregon as a graduate student in the Advertising and Brand Responsibility (MABR) program where she is learning how to define brand responsibility, design effective brand responsibility strategies, and analyze consumer concerns about societal issues. The MABR program is giving her the skills to not only succeed in the advertising industry but change it for the better.

 

Understanding Chinese consumers

Today, MABR student Austin Willhoft shares some insights on how marketers can tap into the Chinese consumer psyche.

One of China’s paramount leaders once said, “it doesn’t matter whether a cat is black or white, if it catches mice it is a good cat,” while explaining the difference between China’s version of capitalism compared to in Western culture (Foreign Policy). The leader, Deng Xiaoping, explained it as “socialism with Chinese Characteristics,” meaning free enterprise ideals incorporated with socialistic principles. Now, Deng’s is regarded as transforming China’s economy from agrarian to service-industry, and also uplifting millions of citizens out of poverty. Much to his credit, China’s system rests on a state-sponsored capitalistic model, in which the government acts as a bulwark in setting standards and granting permissions. For commercial advertising, it is a ubiquitous circumstance in China where consumers, advertisers, and decision-makers tussle over the balance between Chinese tradition and Western culture. Such a tussle permeates because of China’s complex relationship and complicated past with the West, including foreign ownership of large swathes of Chinese sovereign land from the Qing Dynasty’s fall in 1912 to the Chinese Communist Party’s declaration in 1949. Chinese consumers, however, grow up in an authoritarian system where advertising determines citizen-consumers’ attention and sentiments towards brands. Most of these values center on projecting an individual’s social status, which motivates brands to advertise how a consumer will feel elevated purchasing one of its products. All in all, what drives consumer culture in China correlates with brands advertising a sense of modernity, instigating consumer nationalism and cooperating with the Chinese government and state.

A sense of modernity in Chinese advertising and for brands radiates Westernness; however, it also reinforces the individual. As noted in Advertising and Consumer Culture in China, a critical component worth noting when it comes to China pertains to Orientalism, referring to “cultural and ideological expression and representation of the Eurocentric construction of the Orient,” or China (Li, 17). Incorporating or following Western principles functions as a structure “to either emulate or overcome,” because it not only reasserts the individual as modern in approach and style but also provides a contrast to Chinese traditions in meaning and spirit. When it comes to brands and advertising firms, many Chinese businesses tend “to dump their Chinese ad agencies and hire multinational ad agencies once they grew larger or planned to expand” into overseas markets because it puts them among global recognition (Li, 31). Brands operating in China must weigh in the cultural nuisances for individuals wanting to parallel western methods and strategies because without, there is a likelihood consumers and firms would not want to engage due to a lack of foreign experience. Chinese brands have the reputation of “lower quality and are less desirable and modern, leading to a general trend that Chinese products often sell at lower prices than global brands,” and thus remain less competitive on both local and domestic markets (Li, 132). On the contrary, it is pivotal, including two instances of Chinese brands that succeeded with an acclaimed international reputation. Haier, a Chinese electronics brand, achieved global praise not only for its low-cost devices, but the fact its product quality reflected modern assurance (Li, 131). On the domestic level, the brand included the record sales in foreign markets, and as a result, Chinese consumers flocked to stores buying Haier. International success translates to acute brand awareness among Chinese consumers, especially if quality assuages in the individual wanting to assert his status. Another instance revolves around a real-estate strategy in creating “foreign-sounding names” to the likes of “Vancouver Forest, the Victoria Harbor, Yosemite, the Laguna Garden, and the California Garden” as a means of attracting buyers (Li, 120).

For advertising firms and brands, eager to expand to the Chinese market, navigating consumer nationalism corresponds with the purchasing power of an individual. Selling both “nationalism and cosmopolitanism” centers on the primary strategy, which “resonates with dominant Chinese values.” While also relying “on the appropriation of Chinese symbols, images, rituals, historical heroes, and China’s anti-imperialist” history (Li, 23). In the context of this paper, cosmopolitanism refers to the book’s definition stating the concept focuses on “inner life of virtue and thought” in one’s life (Li, 21). In front of modernity, it is a strategy honing in on the global appeal for successful cosmopolitanism in capitalizing on Chinese consumers’ hunch for “integration with the West,” mostly due to the imagination tapping into modernity crave an individual intends on asserting (Li, 24). Many domestic brands partnering with Chinese advertising firms understand when it comes to Chinese consumers’ psyche, the key rests in comprehending one’s prior education, all of which happened under an authoritarian system where patriotic education provided the means of drilling in positive messages about the state. As such, brands and advertising firms create an underlying sense of a “narrative of patriotism, loyalty and national glory,” integrated into campaigns (Li, 109). Xinhua Insurance Company acts as one of the successful brands which highlighted the importance of family but also tying its’ message to protecting the nation. The company released a video teaser in connection to the 2008 Beijing Olympics celebrating Chinese culture, national events and relationships, which each citizen bonds and relates to on a deeper level. Despite traditional Chinese culture prioritizing the country before family, the brand triumphs in emphasizing the substance of each person’s family (Li, 117). By accounting for the individual, brands earn a positive consumer review in helping them reinforce personal identity in a competitive society. Nevertheless, it is essential to remember the competitiveness radiating within Chinese society causes many advertising professionals and brands cooperating closely with the government in order to work in tandem because of “national pride” not “commercial” interests (Li, 78).

Brands, along with advertising firms keen on pursuing the Chinese market, need to foster robust cooperation with the government. Staying on the positive side of the Chinese government stands imperative, principally because state policies factor “a huge role in shaping the structure and practices of advertising in China,” thus making media commercialization an essential tool for the Chinese government communicating messages to the billions of consumers (Li, 65). To say the least, the government not only sets the regulations governing the country but also started licensing advertising professionals in 2007 in order to monitor who and what disseminates messages to Chinese consumers. The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security now specifies and grants “certificates for the titles of ‘assistant advertising expert,’ ‘advertising expert,’ and ‘senior advertising expert’ through annual exams,” aimed at ensuring communicators remain loyal to Chinese Communist Party dogma (Li, 167). China, due to these stringent ramifications, stands as the only country with government certifications for advertising professionals working in the country. For the advertising professionals working with firms and on brands, standards and regulations neither can moderate and exclude any images associated with the national state. It does not permit an advertiser applying “superlative words such as ‘state level,’ ‘the highest grade,’ or ‘the best,’ due to the Chinese Consumer Association implementing a strict mixture of “laws, ethics and moral code,” in order to ensure public stability (Li, 170). As anticipated, issues arise with austere laws. What is problematic about complying with Chinese advertising regulations focuses on the inflexible vagueness the government uses when arguing against violators. Since the Advertising Law states advertisements must not interfere with an individual’s “‘normal use of the internet,'” many do not understand the explanation from the government (DeMarco Lawyers). Such a reality “leaves ample room for local authorities to interpret and implement laws, creating inconsistency across regions that have different moral codes” and cultures (Li, 171).

In conclusion, what drives consumer culture in China correlates with brands advertising a sense of modernity, instigating consumer nationalism and cooperating with the Chinese government and state. Underneath the pursuit for modernity, many Chinese consumers simultaneously feel a desire “to revive Chinese culture as a defensive mechanism,” due to an underlying awareness of always chasing prestige, but never achieving it (Li, 229). Chinese consumers, especially wealthy and middle-class individuals, permeate a feeling of exigency when it comes to the sensitivity placed on public perceptions of brands. The sensitivity remains rooted in asserting one’s social status, and thus, selling a narrative rested on the physical appearance of a person. A national consciousness on staying proud of Chineseness attributes to the “proactive production and reproduction of China’s history and contemporary events and the reinterpretation” of China’s alternating geopolitical stance (Li, 108). Brands, including advertising firms, operating in the region must consider such cultural viewpoints, while also amalgamating with the Chinese government in terms of regulations and messaging framework. Overall, advertising professionals and brands tread murky waters while in China, some of which rests on the state’s interpretation of right and wrong.Works Cited

Lawyers, De Marco. “INTERNATIONAL ADVERTISING LAW.” International Advertising Law – Regulation in China | Judicature, De Marco Lawyers, 2020, demarco.com.au/de-marco-thinks/international-advertising-law-advertising-regulation-in-china.

Li, Hongmei. Advertising and Consumer Culture in China. Polity Press, 2016.

 

 

 

Hey brands! A small request. Show people wearing masks.

One story of the Covid-19 pandemic is the story of masks. At the early stages of the pandemic in the United States, the story was on the value of masks for health care professionals. This quickly moved to  stories of who had masks, who didn’t, and how do we get masks to the people who need them? Next came stories of brand efforts to produce masks along with grassroot efforts to create homemade masks for family, friends, neighbors, and communities. In some ways, masks became a symbol of something that binds us together—one thing that we all need to fight the monster that has invaded all of our lives.

But now masks have been politicized, with some in our community believing that wearing masks encroaches on their freedoms.  While I support anyone’s right to protest, it angers me to see mobs of protesters, without masks, gathering in public places. It hurts my heart to see people threatening to boycott CostCo because of their mandatory mask policy.  And I worry about retail employees being threatened by patrons when employees have  to enforce state-mandated mask rules.

Wearing a mask isn’t a political statement, in my opinion. It is a sign of empathy and resilience. Empathy because I wear the mask not for me, but for you.  If I have the virus but am asymptomatic, my mask keeps you from being exposed.  Resilience because I believe that together, we can move past this crisis and rebuild our lives and our communities. But we can’t move past this crisis without all of us doing our part.

Brands can play a big role in normalizing the wearing of masks. Brand spokespeople can wear masks in all public-facing activities. Ads and social media messages can show people wearing masks—everybody, not just health care workers.  Messages can connect masks to ‘we’re all in this together’ messages, changing what is becoming a superficial platitude to a strong call to action.  How about a mask free with purchase? Or one mask mailed as part of every Amazon or Chewy delivery?

Brands have done this in the past successfully.  Cheerios’ ads celebrated all all kinds of families, including those where parents are from different racial groups.  Subaru  and Ikea were two of the first companies to specifically target lesbians and normalize same-sex couples in society.  Advertising is a powerful force in normalizing a variety of behaviors in our society.

Brands, show us your empathy and resilience.  Show people wearing masks. And I promise, I’ll wear my mask with pride.

 

Our newest whitepaper: the state of travel

Kelly Kondo took the lead on this new report about what consumers are thinking about travel–where they want to go, when they are thinking about going, and how the pandemic is influencing their behaviors. [embeddoc url=”https://blogs.uoregon.edu/mabr/files/2020/05/MABR-Whitepaper-Travel.pdf” download=”all” viewer=”google” ]