Archive for the ‘metaphor’ Category

"Blocking and tackling"–the mother of all sports metaphors

Monday, October 6th, 2008
From Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary:

block verb1e: to interfere usually legitimately with (as an opponent) in various games or sports

tackle verb – 2 a: to seize, take hold of, or grapple with especially with the intention of stopping or subduing b: to seize and throw down or stop (an opposing player with the ball) in football.

Long-time readers of this blog will recognize my affinity with sports analogies and metaphors. So, recently, during the summer lull, I embarked upon a non-scientific study of the frequency of certain sports metaphors in business writing. And one popped up far more often than any other: “blocking and tackling.”

For those unacquainted with American football, blocking and tackling are two of the most basic skills of the game–necessary (but not sufficient) ingredients for winning. Teams that can’t block or tackle are doomed. For executives, blocking and tackling represent work that’s not glamorous but is important.

Here are some examples:

WSJ.com Marketbeat What’ll it take to fix Yahoo isn’t a mystery, and isn’t a magic bullet, Henry Blodget writes at Silicon Alley Insider. “It’s just blocking and tackling. And it will take time.”

Innosight blog Burberry has spent more than $100 million to improve its ability to ensure that the right products get to the right stores at the right time. These challenges of course require a fair amount of blocking and tackling, but there’s also ample room for fresh, innovative thinking.

NeuStar Q2 2008 Earnings conference call (COO Lisa Hook speaking): However, I asked to be on this call as a six month check-in, to assure that I am focused on delivering the basic, blocking and tackling necessary to meet our targets for growth and profitability.

This phrase was a recurring theme in executives’ earnings calls (here, here and here, for example). Of course, given the recent news in the financial markets, perhaps there was better blocking and tackling they could have done.

Other metaphors I looked for that were much rarer: “home run,” “unforced error” (which was popular in political writing), “icing the puck,” “letting off the hook.”

Did I miss any? What favorite sports metaphors do you have?

Related post:
Welcome to Sports Analogy week

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The deep attraction of the locally-produced

Sunday, July 27th, 2008

While reading a review of Rob Walker’s “Buying In,” in today’s New York Times Book Review, I got to thinking about why I buy a certain type of beer.

The review points out Walker’s description of the rebirth of Pabst, which after decades of decline began to grow again, led by young people seeking an unpretentious and less heavily-advertised beer to drink. Picking up on the weak signals, Pabst marketing shrewdly capitalized on the image by embarking on a low-profile campaign focusing on small-scale sponsorships of happenings favored by their market segment.

Yesterday, I took the kids and some friends and went on a tour of the Troegs Brewery across the river in Harrisburg.

I only drink local beers–Troegs, Stoudt’s, Lancaster Brewing. And reading the book review made me ponder why this was so. Local beer is fresh, sure. Brewed in small batches. It has more taste than the mass-produced beers. But this didn’t explain it all to me. To me, the local aspect is predominant.

Was there a “deep metaphor” at work here? With apologies to the Zaltmans, authors of “Marketing Metaphoria” and coiners of the phrase “deep metaphor,” I think so. Something deep in my psyche makes me yearn for Troegs Sunshine Pils and revolt at the thought of Miller Genuine Draft.

Similarly, we get our vegetables much of the year from Spiral Path Farm, a CSA farm located about an hour from here, which we’ve visited.

At any rate, if this is so, it perhaps explains another phenomenon–when a big national bank buys a local bank, within two years a new local one springs up to take its place. Or does that only happen in my town?

Related Post:
“Marketing Metaphoria”: Deep yearnings about the products we buy

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"Marketing Metaphoria"–the deep yearnings behind the products we buy

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

Father-and-son team Gerald and Lindsay Zaltman, authors of “Marketing Metaphoria: What Deep Metaphors Reveal About the Minds of Consumers,” assert that beneath our purchasing decisions lie deep, unconscious frames of how the world works. Companies who can understand these frames and connect their products with them can own key positions in their marketplace and build tremendous brand power.

Did you ever wonder why nearly every Budweiser campaign centers around guys drinking together? According to the Zaltmans, it is because they are reinforcing the brand’s association to connection, one of the seven heavyweight “deep metaphors” that account for more than 70% of the metaphor usage found in their research. The other “giants” are:

  • Balance
  • Transformation
  • Journey
  • Container (keeping things in or out)
  • Connection
  • Resource
  • Control

An example of deep metaphor usage is the Michelin advertising image of a baby sitting in the tire. The deep metaphor of container is at work here–high-quality, well-designed tires provide a safe cocoon for the occupants of the car. And by extension Michelin owns the safety position with tires. Other brands must find other metaphors to occupy within our brains (say, journey or control).

As a way of showing how understanding deep metaphors can help companies create innovative products, the authors describe how the hearing-aid company Oticon redefined its product category. Oticon interviewed hearing-aid wearers about why they frequently didn’t wear their devices. They learned that typical hearing aids were gawky-looking and prominent, thereby stoking users’ deep fears of being broken, ugly containers. The company then created a new product that was smaller and sleeker, resembling a high-tech cellphone device more than an old-fashioned hearing aid, and combined it with an advertising campaign reinforcing the “escape” metaphor.

The authors urge readers to use this type of “workable wondering” to reimagine their innovation approaches, not just to find new ways to package or promote the same old products. I agree. When marketers use psychology to understand customers deeply, and respond to those unspoken needs, they’re doing a service. (If they’re just trying to get into my brain to sell me more peanut butter, well, that’s just creepy.)

“Marketing Metaphoria” is a fascinating, fresh look at understanding how humans react to products beyond their functional attributes–a topic as old as advertising itself. But in connecting itself with the entire innovation process, it’s more than just a book about communication.

A video interview with co-author Gerald Zaltman, where he elaborates on deep metaphors and how they can be discovered, can be found here.

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Don’t kick the bucket: it’s got your unused cellphone minutes in it

Wednesday, March 28th, 2007

Finishing today’s roundup with breaking news from the Wall Street Journal (link): the word bucket has become the business world’s favorite metaphor. A delightful front-page article describes how bucket has supplanted other terms like silo (missile connotation = bad) and basket (too feminine) as a way to express organization or sorting of people, financial figures or other miscellany.

(The Journal seemed to run more of this type of story in the past. Am I the only one who thinks its recent makeover reduced its sense of humor as well as the size of the paper?)

One consultant is asked whether European cellphone companies will adopt the term to describe allotments of minutes included in a monthly plan, as American companies already do. “’They will adopt bucket,’ he says. ‘That is my strong feeling.’”

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