Necromarketing: when unexpected and unwanted impact notoriety.
Rosca, Vlad
Abstract: The research tries to find out how death of people
influences the brand of the organization they represent. The paper is
based on a ease study approach, the purpose being to find out if there
is any correlation between tragedy and branding, and if it is, how does
it manifest. A limitation of the paper is that, it does not offer any
measurements which to indicate the influence on the brand capital.
Keywords: necromarketing, notoriety, death, brand capital
1. INTRODUCTION
The idea of the article came after realizing what an impact Steve
Jobs' death had in mass-media. The research tries to find out if
there is any correlation between Jobs' death and the Apple brand.
On October 5, 2011, the day Steve Jobs passed away, seven of the twenty
hottest topics on the Internet that day were related to the Apple
founder. The most searched topic on Internet on October 5th, 2011, was,
nonetheless, the "Cupertino Shooting", where an employee
opened fire and killed three coworkers, thus also a tragedy. But then,
the second hottest topic was "Abdulfattah John Jandali", Steve
Jobs' biological father. His name was so fiercely searched on the
Interact because people didn't ever before think about Steve
Jobs' family. They were only interested in Steve Jobs and his
business, and, suddenly, after his death, while searching for
information in order to find out more about Steve Jobs, people realized
that he also had a father, about whom almost nobody ever knew anything
before, simply because the father didn't stir interest. Now, the
existence of the father was like a discovery to many people. They were
so shocked about their discovery that they wanted to find out even more,
and thus began searching more intense for information about Abdulfattah
John Jandali. The third most searched topic on the web was
"pancreatic cancer", the disease that caused the death of the
Apple founder, and then, only on the fourth position, was Steve
Jobs' name, with people wanting to find out about the person, not
about his family or disease. Fifth most searched topic was then
"Apple", the company. The Top 20 included other three Steve
Jobs related topics:
--Mona Simpson (11th rank): Steve Jobs' biological sister;
--iSad (14th rank): a pun between "iPad" (Apple's
music player and one of the companies most popular products) and the
word "sad", having the goal to show how Apple fans and not
only felt about Steve Jobs' death;
--Bill Gates (18th rank): this time people were not interested in
the Microsoft founders' personality, but in his reaction to Steve
Jobs' death.
Then, also in the Top 20, other three topics were related to
tragedies:
--Charles Napier (6th rank): famous American actor, starring in
"The Silence of The Lambs", and who passed away the same day
Steve Jobs did;
--Lisa Irwin (15th rank): a missing Missouri baby;
--Shareef Alman (20th rank): the man who opened fire in Cupertino
and killed three coworkers, and who was eventually shot dead by Police.
Out of the top twenty searches on Internet on October 5th, 2011,
eleven (55%) were related to tragedies. As earlier seen,
"Apple" was the fifth most searched topic on October 5th,
2011. An explanation is that tragedy has immediate effect to brand
connection, as there isn't any rational thinking whether to accept
the brand or not. People connect directly to the brand because emotions
dictate them to do so. Tragedy touches people, making them more
sensitive. Feelings lead to emotions, and emotions connect people from
all walks of life to the brand which is affected. People reacted
emotionally to Steve Jobs' death. Then, they began talking of it.
Not only face-to-face. Their dialogues about Steve Jobs and Apple were
amplified by e-mails, text messages and social media tools, which lead
to a higher reach. Once something about Apple Inc. was displayed in
social media, it took only seconds until it got all over the world. It
was the consumers, shocked and touched by emotion, who now did the buzz
and the marketing for Apple. Meanwhile, as a company of its dimensions
should have done, Apple kept discretion. Consumers acted as ambassadors
of the brands. They were not only simple consumers, but what Roberts
(2004) calls inspirational consumers: people who love a brand so much
that they want to communicate their emotions related to that brand to
other people as well.
Tragico-emotional brand connection was also reflected by other
gestures that people, toched by Steve Jobs' death, did:
--in front of Apple stores world-wide people have laid, next to
bunches of flowers, bitten apples, reproducing the company's logo;
--iSad: a pun expressing people's feelings;
--a logo of Apple was created in which the bite in the apple has
not a linear shape, as usual, but is actually a carving of Steve
Jobs' face in profile (HotNews, 2011).
As a matter of fact, Steve Jobs' death had such an impact that
it rebrought the bitten apple, Apple's logo, into attention. On
October 6th, if searching the word "apple" on Google, a
internet user could find out that all the images displayed by the search
engine on its first page were related to the Apple company, no single
one having anything to do with the fruit. Sixteen of the twenty two were
variations of the Apple logo, the other six being images of Apple
products: three pictures of the iPhone, two of the MacBook and one of
the Apple Tablet. The company became more popular than the fruit. It is
what marketing calls "generic trademarks": when a name becomes
the generic description of a product or a company, and stops being only
an indicator which has the goal to help the costumer link the name to a
particular company. Next to Apple, generic trademarks include the likes
of Xerox, Thermos, or Heroine. With each innovation brought to the
market, Apple began being more than only Jobs' property: it was
also becoming its consumers' property. With each innovation, Apple
and Jobs melted together. When Jobs passed away, consumers felt like
they lost a part of their property. They turned to Apple to seek
alienation. Apple was the friend they were looking for in times of
despair. Steve Jobs and Apple evolved to synonymous brands. Each
mentioning of Steve Jobs was linking to Apple. Thus, the notoriety of
the company increased even further when personalities such as Barack
Obama, Bill Gates, Arnold Schwarzeneger, Larry Page, Spike Lee, Norman
Foster and many others publicly brought their tribute to Jobs. The
growth of Apple's popularity after Steve Jobs' death was also
driven by Facebook. According to the statistics provided by the Internet
traffic monitoring site www.alexa.com, Facebook was the third most
searched query for Apple's official website, acquireing 1,66% of
the days' Internet searches (Alexa.com, 2011). Query is a phrase or
a word that drives traffic to a site. This means that 1,66% percent of
the search trafic on the Internet was directed to finding the official
Facebook profile of Apple. These 1,66% were redirected to the link on
the official Apple website that gave access to the Facebook profile.
Moreover, on October 6th, 6,75% of all Apple official website visits
were preceded by Facebook visits, and 8,94% were followed by a Facebook
visit. Many of the website visits were driven by accessing the links
shared by worldwide consumers on Facebook, and also that, after visiting
the company's webpage, many users wanted to connect on Facebook,
mostly for leaving messages in the memory of Steve Jobs. More than 100
profiles labelled "RIP Steve Jobs" were created on Facebook
within two days of his death (Phillipine Daily Inquirer, 2011), while
millions of users changed their profile pictures to a real apple or the
Apple logo, and more than 3000 videos were uploaded onto YouTube (New
York Times, 2011). The estimated percentage of global pageviews on
www.apple.com rose by 12,2 percent in the day of Steve Jobs' death,
as compared to the previous day, the estimated percentage of global
Internet users who visited the website rose by 18 percent, and the
visits that consisted of a single pageview rose by 8 percent (Alexa.com,
2011). Shortly after Steve Jobs' death, 20% of the messages sent
via Twitter contained the word "Steve Jobs" (Mediafax, 2011).
One day after his death, 5.9 percent of all Twitter messages contained
the word "apple" (Trendistic, 2011). According to Roberts
(2004), people connect with brands becuase brands make them feel better,
relax and enjoy. Through his leadership, Steve Jobs reached the feelings
of the Apple fans. Jobs' vision of a mobile phone without buttons
materialized in the iPhone, the first touchscreen phone in the world, a
gadget that reached the emotions of people through texture and sight.
His vision of buying music from the Internet and not anymore on
CD's, materialized in the iPod, a gadget that reached people
through sound. Jobs made consumers love Apple products because of their
usefulnes and of the added entertainment-value these products brought to
their lives. Once Jobs died, many people felt like they have lost a
close friend, and much of their attention turned not only to Jobs, but
to Apple as well. It was only now that many people realized how much
innovation Jobs brought into the products he created. People began
thinking of the iPod or the iPhone as some sort of particular products
which revolutionized the world. Although these products existed on the
market for several years now, consumers paid more attention to them
after Jobs' death. And when consumers thought about the products,
they also thought about the company that built them. As a result,
Apple's notoriety grew. This effect did not occur only on
individual level, but also on mass level. Televisions and newspapers
started reporting more and more about Apple, bringing the company in the
public attention.
2. NECROMARKETING
Necromarketing happens suddenly. It is not expected and then, out
of nowhere, it happens. Or, even if a death is expected, it is not
wanted. Steve Jobs' death was expected, as his health worsened
continuously, and he even resigned as Apple's CEO in August 2011.
But nobody wanted to think about his death. It was only after his death
that news were produced and books were published. The boundary between
ethic behaviour and reality is thin. When a tragedy occurs people
suddenly feel attached to a brand they may have not even paid attention
to in the past. Being overwhelmed by the emotion released of the
breaking news announcing the death, human behavior becomes irrational
and it connects to the brand only on emotional basis. Emotions are a
strong connector (Duffy, 2003; Travis, 2000), as they may make the
consumer forget possible imperfections a brand may have. As a
consequence, the notoriety of the brand raises. This is reality and it
cannot be hidden, it simply occurs. Ethic behaviour would mean not
trying to capitalize on the tragedy by launching planned, directed
marketing campaigns, aiming at attracting new consumers and improving
brand notoriety, by using the tragedy as a driver. Reality just does it.
Necromarketing is the type of marketing that does not need any marketers
in order to work: it simply attracts the attention of masses and makes
them exchange information about the brand without even being exposed to
advertising or public relations. It is the masses that automatically
market the brand by talking about it. In an overcrowded media
environment, where there is so much noize, so many TV channels, radio
stations, news websites and newspapers, tragedy suddenly attracts
attention and makes the headlines, because of the shock that comes with
it. No exquisite marketing decisions are even needed.
3. CONCLUSIONS
The figures presented in the paper show that there is a correlation
between tragedy and notoriety, as people pay more attention when
receiving shocking news. After Jobs' death, the Apple brand was
used in various ways in order to commemorate its founder, while social
media interactions boosted. A limitation is that it does not provide any
correlation indicators, like the Pearson correlation coefficient.
Therefore, further research could concentrate on testing the statistical
or econometrical correlation between the two variables, death and brand,
by using specialized software, like for example SPSS. Another research
could investigate if and how above the line and below the line marketing
respond to tragedies.
4. REFERENCES
Duffy, N. (2003). Passion Brandind Harnessing the power of emotions
to build strong brands, John Wiley & Sons Ltd., Chichester, West
Sussex, ISBN 0-470-85052-3.
Roberts, K. (2004). Lovemarks, powerhouse Books, New York, ISBN
1-57687-204-1.
Travis, D. (2000). Emotional Branding, Prima Publishing, Roseville,
ISBN 0-7615-2911-X.
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