ChatterBank3 mins ago
If The Army Can't "be The Best" Who Can?
29 Answers
https:/ /news.s ky.com/ story/d efence- secreta ry-halt s-plan- to-scra p-be-th e-best- slogan- 1118365 1
Thankfully the defence secretary has seen sense.
Thankfully the defence secretary has seen sense.
Answers
Being one of several claiming to be the best is unlikely to impress, but that is also unlikely to deter those making the claim. It is simply a declared fact until disproved and because it is a desired fact the burden of proof is insurmountab le because no amount of proof will suffice. Discussing whether something self- declared as the best actually is the best is...
17:13 Sun 24th Dec 2017
Marks & Spencers’ ad campaign is directed towards people who have money to spend in their stores. They don’t pay for adverts on cardboard packing cases that rough sleepers use as a bed.
The Army’s ad campaign is directed towards people who will make good soldiers. As 3Ts says, those feeling “alienated” by an ad campaign that suggests they will be joining an organisation composed of “the best” are not really suitable as recruits. A change of tack might get more people through the door of their recruiting office but it is unlikely to result in more successful applicants.
The Army’s ad campaign is directed towards people who will make good soldiers. As 3Ts says, those feeling “alienated” by an ad campaign that suggests they will be joining an organisation composed of “the best” are not really suitable as recruits. A change of tack might get more people through the door of their recruiting office but it is unlikely to result in more successful applicants.
We're going round in circles.
If I was running the Army I would not want in it people for whom "The Best" does not resonate. It strikes me that the Army (or its advertising advisors) need to re-identify their "key audiences". Their key audiences should be composed mainly of people for whom joining "The Best" is an attraction not a deterrent. Fortunately it seems the Defence Secretary is thinking along the same lines. For once a politician is considering the real world and not the psychobabble and claptrap ridden version that advertising agencies and their associates dream up to encourage periodical "rebrands" . (Clue from the report (which I have read): "...the slogan and crest depicting crossed swords, a crown and a lion were to be dropped as part of a £520,000 rebrand exercise."
If I was running the Army I would not want in it people for whom "The Best" does not resonate. It strikes me that the Army (or its advertising advisors) need to re-identify their "key audiences". Their key audiences should be composed mainly of people for whom joining "The Best" is an attraction not a deterrent. Fortunately it seems the Defence Secretary is thinking along the same lines. For once a politician is considering the real world and not the psychobabble and claptrap ridden version that advertising agencies and their associates dream up to encourage periodical "rebrands" . (Clue from the report (which I have read): "...the slogan and crest depicting crossed swords, a crown and a lion were to be dropped as part of a £520,000 rebrand exercise."