Archives: Cards and leaflets

The boring logo

Soteria logo

Let me seduce you into trusting me by being so bland, so innocuous that I will easily lull you into a state of blessed relief.

One might think that the function of a logo and associated corporate branding is to stand out from the crowd, to do a little dance and shimmy in order to catch the eye and make a lasting impression. A good logo is worth its weight in golden arches, able to connect instantly with its target prey… err, audience, and engender all those positive feelings of association, desire and, ultimately, consumption.

But not in this case. It would be a challenge to come up with a logo any more insipid or meaningless – and if you did, it would probably, perversely, be quite a bit more interesting. This has just the right degree of instant forgettability, the design equivalent of a backbencher’s speech (or a blog), existing for its own sake but barely noticed by anybody. But why?

God knows there are enough boring logos out there without anybody deliberately trying to add to the pile, but this one is so anonymous as to suggest it is part of a calculated strategy. And what of the brand name? I defy anybody to tell me, from the name alone, what this company is selling. It really is a mark of genius to come up with a name that evokes almost no connotations at all, neither good nor bad, positive or negative. It exists in its own perfectly poised bubble of meaninglessness.

I could say something about the colours too – a dominant blue and a highlight colour which is another… I dunno, maybe another kind of blue? We all know about blue though. Calming, safe, secure, reliable – so perhaps this gives you a clue as to where this is all going.

Let’s open it up anyway (it’s an A4 roll fold to DL size) and see the reveal.

Soteria inside copy

You see, that in itself is a kind of brilliance. Expert advice, solutions, experience… and still I have no idea what they are selling. It’s almost as if they don’t want me to know what they do. I might even have to call them up to find out. It’s got to be an arms dealer eh? Or a company that wants to take away my nuclear waste.

Soteria leafletOpening up the whole piece gives the game away immediately with a cartoon image of a man kicking a wrecking ball of DEBT while his family safely make their way home to a little suburban house. It’s about money – or rather that largely taboo topic of personal financing: debt. Crushing debt. Debt that is about smash our lives and destroy everything we’ve worked so hard to accumulate. Debt that threatens to annihilate who we are. An existential level of debt that consumes everything in its path.

Now it all makes sense; the low-key approach, the deliberate avoidance of any razzle-dazzle or blowing of trumpets. The key word here is stress; this is already a highly-charged situation (if you’re the person to whom this leaflet is speaking) so the goal is not to inject more emotion into the proposition, to hype it up, but rather to drain it all away. Make it seem totally normal, boring, manageable. Unremarkable.

The rest of the flyer is just text in the form of a letter which, again, is quite noteworthy for what it does. Nobody reads this much, do they? Not in an advertising flyer anyway. Even with the inclusion of four bullet points to break it up a bit, that’s a lot of words to consume.

Soteria text

The whole thing is crafted to be quietly soothing, professional and authoritative. Peace of mind is mentioned a couple of times. It speaks of helping people ‘who find themselves in mortgage stress’ as if, lo and behold, they suddenly woke up one morning and found themselves surrounded by a thicket of missed payments. Shit, where did all this fucking debt come from?

One sentence in particular is worth quoting, just for the way it breaks all the rules of snappy, incisive copy writing:

We understand how stressful it can be to be under financial pressure so we’ve developed a completely different business model that puts you at the heart of the process to develop a solution tailored to your unique situation that really works to remove the stress.

Wow. I don’t know what it means exactly but at the end of it I’m too exhausted to offer any resistance. Whatever it is they’re handing out, I want some of it.

I understand, too, how such word assemblages work, if only because I’m equally guilty of writing swathes of similarly meaningless buzzword-heavy text blobs which sound as if they’re groping towards an insight of staggering significance without, ultimately, really saying anything at all.

Just a side note – it’s interesting how often hyperlinks are preserved in printed document these days, underlined and in a different font colour, as happens with the company website address here. It’s probably because the document was originally created as a pdf which kept the link and its styling. We’re so blinded to it now nobody notices to take it out even when the functionality no longer exists.

Overall, I now have a vague idea about what Soteria does although the main take-away I get from this leaflet is that they are expertly skilled in tackling something that people really don’t want to have to deal with and then simply boring it into submission.

Yeah, I can relate to that.

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The die-cut man

The die-cut man

There’s an element of Mad Men with this figure, albeit reversed (black shirt, white body). It’s part of a die-cut on a promotional hand-out for a competition to win a trip to South Korea, using that time-worn appeal to ‘picture yourself here’.

Die-cut monochrome manI like it but then I tend to get a little tingly with any fancy die-cut, just thinking about how the concept and design have been developed, the skill of the printing, cutting and folding so that, in this instance, the silhouette man lines up exactly with the offer inside, obscuring and then revealing. It’s simple to look at, difficult to do well.

Does it work? Who knows. There’s nothing on this hand-out to record whether it is more or less successful at generating business than any other medium.

There was a web page too for the same competition which, funnily enough, featured a different silhouette man.

I do hope it is effective though, if only because, as a consequence, it might encourage more marketers to keep die-cut print as part of their ‘communications matrix’.

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The photographer’s postcard

Photographer's card

This is a postcard advertising the opening of a photography exhibition.

I like it because, typically, the temptation with doing publicity for a photography show is to go for the hero shot, the image that will entice and attract the casual eye. The name of the show? Sure, you can stick that on as well, maybe over the top or alongside, underneath, wherever looks good.

Photographer's card detail

This one however, as can be seen here, does the opposite. No hero pic, no statement image – just the title of the show and a hint of an image in the type which reinforces the meaning of the title.

It’s intriguing, it made me turn over the card to see what it was about and, as a result, I went along to the show.

Job well done, postcard.

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The fake bank notes

Fake bank notes

I found these two big pineapples lying around – oversize $50 bills offering discounts of various kinds. It’s not unusual to get them in the letterbox promoting something or other, which just shows the degree to which great marketing minds think alike.

Do they work? Presumably they do or they wouldn’t be circulated, although I’ve always suspected they are so hedged around with T&Cs as to render them practically worthless (plus I only ever seem to find them or remember them long after I need them or the offer has expired). Not worth the paper they are printed on, so to speak.

I like the fact that despite the fake notes being about twice the size of real ones and covered in logos and text, one of them is still stamped with Not Legal Tender, just in case anyone is fool enough to be taken in by such obvious copies. While the notes are required to be different sizes to the original, there is no legal necessity for them to include such a disclaimer.

Interesting too that only David Unaipon is reproduced whereas Edith Cowan, a noted campaigner for women’s rights, is ignored on the other side.

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The dog walker’s card

Dog walker's card

A cute business card from a dog walking service.

Without wanting to sound too dogmatic (cough) about it, I’m finding it hard to get a lead (cough cough) on the tagline – Walking all paws of life… I tried taking it down the street, round the block a couple of times and let it run free in the park but still I can’t make anything of it. Walking all paws… yes, I can see that. But ‘paws of life’? I don’t get it. What is a paw of life?

Anyway, it’s probably just me being a little petty (hack hack hack). Just look at those cute little doggies though.

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