There are a couple of words in the English language that are often suffixed - in speech - with a small “c”. One of these, catholic-with-a-small-“c”, means “universal, all-embracing, broad-minded, tolerant.” The other one is conservative-with-a-small-“c”. And this means - surprise, surprise - “tending to conserve (keep from harm, decay or loss, with a view to later use), averse to sudden changes".
In 2024, both of these words have a pretty bad rap. Blame the capitalised versions, but which brand today would dare to list “catholic” or “conservative” amongst its values?
No, brands today all want to be “progressive” - as an aside, this probably sounds more palatable than “activist” for some of the more conservative stakeholders. Progressive, advancing forward, open to new ideas, innovating all over the place, righting wrongs, acting with purpose, making agile leaps ...
And that’s fine, particularly for brands in tech, mobility, high fashion - and similar categories.
But I do wonder if, in this swarm of bright and buzzy continuous reinvention, a brand that’s unashamedly conservative stands out?
After all, people do look to brands for stability, reassurance and dependability. Particularly in categories like food and drink, banking and insurance - or even babycare and petfood. This comes from a sense of continuity, hanging on to what works, maintaining a consistent distinctiveness.
It’s well-known that the “modern mainstream” are less enamoured by progressiveness than the marketing community. Movement and change is not always in a positive direction.
And isn’t being conservative, by its very nature, more in line with sustainability? Conservation rather than constant updates, upgrades, pivots, redesigns and relaunches?
But doesn’t this all sound rather undynamic and stuck-in-the-mud? Far from it - after all, a conservatory is what allows tender plants to thrive.
And there’s a wonderful quote, often attributed to Gustav Mahler, Benjamin Franklin or Thomas More, but probably from French Socialist leader Jean Jaurès :
Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation (or passing-on) of fire.
3 comments:
Article on Lego, Tunnock’s, Chanel, Marmite and other brands that don’t have to go reinventing themselves:
https://www.thedrum.com/news/2024/05/06/we-ask-marketers-which-brands-are-too-good-rebrand?utm_campaign=newsletter_emea_weekly_recap&utm_source=pardot&utm_medium=email
And another article - this time about the ugly, bad - and good of the notion of nostalgia https://psyche.co/ideas/in-psychoanalysis-nostalgia-was-a-sickness-it-neednt-be?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email
Mark Ritson on consistency - don’t go changing ... https://www.marketingweek.com/ritson-consistency-secret-weapon/
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