grizzlym
Premium Platinum
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2008
- Posts
- 93,140
- Reaction score
- 29,703
- Location
- Witness Protection
- AFL Club
- Hawthorn
- Other Teams
- ōllamaliztli
I respectfully disagree. There's a reason for the saying 'there's no such thing as bad publicity.' because in certain cases, it's true.
If this was a supermarket or similar then I would agree that it would trash the brand but as the tool who replied said 'they deliberately do not appeal to a wide audience' in reality they target a specific demographic (which happens to be large).
If you survey a sample of non apprentice tradies, even though they will all earn well above the average income, you will find none or very few of them will own BMWs/Mercs etc because they see them as 'pretentious and wanky'.
This store is that exact situation but in reverse. They want people who will think 'I'm exlcusive like *random "celebrety"*, I only wear the latest fasion etc, and I will pay outlandish amounts for fabric'.
They come off as pretentious, wanky posers. They want to appeal to pretentious, wanky posers.
I seriously doubt they'll be getting sacked if it is in fact a set up.
Very high risk communication strategy you're putting forward there. You could destroy your entire brand (and business too) with a misguided tactical foray.
Online media is the modern day equivalent of the personal recommendation. The sting in the tail is what was once a conversation is now regarded as a conversation with the whole world. There's some amazing stat like 80% of people will take a recommendation of an internet user over an expert (or the like).
You might get your name out there with this 'stunt' but I think you'd destroy your brand in the process. Online media, or viral, actually turns the notion of 'there's no such thing as bad publicity' on its head. There is. And there's plenty of examples where it has.
There's one other thing too that makes me suspect it was completely unwitting: viral is almost impossible to predict or script. There's no telling what makes people click on something. Ad agencies charge a heap of money to try to get it right, but really, seldom ever pull it off to a true viral level without support from a heap of traditional media.





