
"I Hate Marketing" and Other Lies We Tell Ourselves
Explicit content warning
03/08/22 • 16 min
Previous Episode

How to Lose Friends and Alienate People: Betraying Your Audience Is The New "Brand Loyalty"
Brand culture, as we know it today, owes its existence to World War I propaganda. What if “brand loyalty” is authoritarianism in StoryBrand clothing? Join your host, Rachael Kay Albers, marketing muckraker and brand strategist gone wild, in a deep dive into advertising history and how branding legitimized itself. Before WWI, the advertising industry was on shaky ground, synonymous with snake oil salesmen and outrageous patent medicine claims that promised a product could cure all ails, while ultimately making its customer's problems worse. The war rescued advertising's reputation, proving to business and world leaders just how effective mass media and propaganda could be to shape public opinion. The world has never been the same. The goal of propaganda is to subvert an individual's reason and logic to promote a biased agenda. In the case of wartime propaganda, that agenda is national loyalty above all else. In the case of advertising propaganda, that agenda is brand loyalty above all else. But should it be? Maybe it's time to betray our brands and our audience's expectations of them. Maybe it's time to be disloyal. Research for this episode came from The Attention Merchants: The Epic Scramble to Get Inside Our Heads by Tim Wu and The Human Brand: How We Relate to People, Products, and Companies by Chris Malone, Susan T. Fiske. See show notes on the Marketing Muckraking website for the full transcript and list of sources. This episode was originally published as an essay on RachaelKayAlbers.com.
Next Episode

If Capitalism Can't Solve It, What Will?
Have you noticed your appetite for big ideas shrink in recent years? We like our solutions served in to-go cups: 15 second TikToks, 280 character tweets, 18 minute TED Talks. But when you bake down an idea to become bite-sized, you’re left with easy-to-swallow strategies, not for solving problems, but living with them. Join me, your host, Rachael Kay Albers, marketing muckraking director and brand strategist gone wild, as I explore what the Ideas Economy is doing to our capacity for problem solving. This episode is a love letter to Anand Giridharadas's book Winners Take All: The Elite Charade of Changing the World and what it reveals about who and what we lose in a capitalist economy that demands we only pursue win-win solutions.
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