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British Institutions function as Brand names

GWFH | 14.11.2000 15:52

Interesting article in Financial Times compares such establishment bastions as the army, Ch. of Eng. and the monarchy as corporate entities.

"... Commissioned by the business Superbrands Council, an organization created to promote and analyse brands sold in the UK, the report argues that the government, the Church of England and the royal family can be considered brands just as much as Xerox, Nokia and Sony...
businessmen think Lycra offers more wisdom than the British government... the royal family and the Church of England, whose image, the report says, has been damaged by well publicised scandals in recent years, appear as less reliable than brands like Siemens, the German engineering group, or Castrol, which produces motor oil... "

{FT, 13 Nov, 2K}

GWFH

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charities growing fat from branding!

14.11.2000 17:49

Homeless charities are the best rats at playing brand-name games. Centre point spin methods makes you think...if homelessness should be used as a wanker-name??

joram
mail e-mail: joram@geek.com


note to joram (above)

16.11.2000 15:48

I would like to refer you to article on Vance Packard just below this one. In his book of 1957, "Hidden Persuaders ", he goes into some detail about how the charitable sector is used to manipulate public sentiment, both as consumers and in the political sphere...

Billy Silly