IKEA reminds us to not forget the Brand Communication in our Brands.
Last year we featured a post on IKEA’s brand communication, and here the Swedish mass-design furniture and home-wares brand are popping up again. As a global brand, IKEA is well known for the budget priced, low-mid quality Swedish inspired, practical and functional furniture they design and sell. The interesting additional element to their successful brand strategy is design. IKEA have accomplished the not insignificant task of lifting the design bar for the average Joe (and Jodie). The secret ingredient to the IKEA brand DNA is their ability to bring an impressively high level of Swedish furniture design to the masses. So what better way to communicate that brand attribute than through delivering creatively designed brand communications along with it.
Posts Tagged ‘brand-gesture’

Over the past couple of years we have been witnessing the demise of the Qantas brand, with its business strategy dictating the brand’s terms of engagement. Every public gesture that the business has made, has reflected an unwavering commitment to taking cost out of its operations. There has been scant regard for the brand or the customer.
The Brand Art of Standing-Out.
Rotterdam-based artist Florentijn Hofman has created this wonderful work; ‘stor gul kanin (big yellow rabbit)’, his newest large-scale sculpture conceived for this summer’s Openart Biennale in öreboro, Sweden. Hofman’s work uses scale and context to challenge the function and purpose of the public space, this 13-meter high bunny explores the notion of scale and urban perspective by providing a new focal point in the open square. I cannot think of a better analogy for creating brand communications that both connect with your market and stand-out in your market than Hofman’s giant yellow bunny.
A great TED talk from Child prodigy Adora Svitak. Adora says the world needs “childish” thinking: bold ideas, wild creativity and especially optimism. Kids’ big dreams deserve high expectations, she says, starting with grownups’ willingness to learn from children as much as to teach. There are some great, big ideas in this clip - check it after the jump…
Chipotle has joined forces with Willie Nelson to create this beautiful animated short. Hauntingly covering Coldplay’s The Scientist, the short tells an emotional and beautiful story of the modern food production world. The message doesn’t directly advertise Chipotle’s product (creating hand crafted burritos that supports local produce and farmers) but rather supports their cause. While there are a growing number of organic, local farmer supported products, the cause is enough and this type of creative strategy is not only going to strengthen Chipotle’s brand but also their industry. And being a leader in a growing market is a good place to be. What’s more they have embraced the opportunity to create something lasting and with meaning.
Check out the beautiful animated short after the jump.
A Sneak Peek behind Apple’s Retail Brand
Apple has long been held-up as the benchmark as the brand for innovation and just plain creating cool stuff, but much of it’s unheralded work has been in the experience arena — specifically creating amazing retail places in which the brand comes to life face-to-face.
What Next for Rock-n-roll’s Branding Rockstars?
Rock Gods AC/DC have long been a major export brand for Australia. With earnings of more than $100m p.a. AC/DC are second only to U2 when it comes to earning the big rock-n-roll bucks. But contra=y to their hard rockin’ image, AC/DC are also the masters of leveraging their brand for commercial gain. The latest in a long line of band brand extensions see the release last week of AC/DC wine.

Absolut Bloody Ripper Brand Communications
Yes — we’ve written about Absolut Vodka’s great philosophy on brand communication before. Yes, we’re not the first and wont be the last to do it either. But if any other brand displayed the same genuine passion for creating unique and wonder filled brand campaigns we’d write about them just as regularly too.

Creating Unique Brand Visual Language
One of the toughest tasks for brands is creating unique brand visual language that touches the soul of their market. This challenge is increased by those brands who must continuously refresh their visual language as they develop new and ongoing advertising campaigns.








