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We Can't Be Living In The Past.
"We need a new advertising slogan",
announced Symon, our marketing MBA whiz kid at Portable Holes' weekly
Monday morning management meeting, "which encapsulates our mission,
core competency, what we stand for, and how we position our product in
the market place".
Reading one of his text books again, I thought
snidely, and the others must have been thinking something similar. I
noticed our office manager and my number one Holdsidahl-deGedder,
Gloria, almost spilled her double mocha cappucino, while The Big Guy was busy
hiding behind adjusting his power tie, something he
always did when he was agitated and about to disagree with someone.
I could have interrupted him right then and there because we've all
been trying to beat Symon's fancy business school education out of him ever
since he joined the firm eight months ago, but I did agree our current
slogan, "You'll dig our holes", was too much of a throwback to
our first trade show in San Francisco back in the early seventies.
But I've learned to listen ever since I got married. Of course it took
some time since I'm a guy and women require rapt attentive listening
between the lines, something us guys are not used to doing, but I
learned the extra effort pays off in less grief and better perqs, with
my Bene anyways.
So I tried real hard to let Symon keep the floor with appropriate eye
contact with The Big Guy and we all listened, except Pronto our shipping
manager, who I knew was still tuned out trying to figure out how he was going to
ship 10,000 units of our top selling high altitude models to Boeing
without clearing US customs first.
"Damn The Big Guy for suggesting we buy these &!}*{(*&( (insert key
components here)?!! parts off
shore", Pronto snarled at me last Friday after having accosted me in
the company cafeteria where I was happily snarfing a bowl of Magda's great
chili with Carrie and Slide Rule.
"Yes damn The
Big Guy", I'd agreed, but these Cuban parts, &!}*{(*&( ?!! as they
may be, were still cheaper, and we're determined to
take sales away from our arch rivals, Stacking Pits & Cavities.
As Symon droned on I got thinking about price and advertising and
how in the world could those cereal companies charge so much money for
some fibre and a lot of air, or in my case, lots of fibre, damn that
doctor.
By now I'd missed the first part of Symon's presentation while
meandering through my thoughts, but I arrived back just after he said "and
those dynamic stop elements are integral to comprehension and retention
of a complete experience".
Now I wasn't going to show everybody how lost I was, so I just nodded
in unison with the rest of the room, although it was too late when I
figured out they might just also be falling asleep after what I had just
heard.
But everybody woke up quickly when Symon announced he'd need $50,000
dollars to engage a local agency to come up with a new slogan, which he
figured was a bargain compared to big city rates.
I had already foregone my annual trip to Kapuskasing and the new
plumbing at the cottage, when our controller Carrie Balance gave her
usual practical input.
"Why don't we simply search the internet and look through some
magazines and steal some neat slogans, or get out a Webster's dictionary
and look for unique words to string together"? "I mean where
do advertising agencies get their ideas anyway", she continued,
"whenever a good idea is dreamt up it becomes a trend as everyone
climbs aboard the bandwagon".
This seemed to me a great solution. Symon expends his creative energy to
come up with a new slogan and if he finds something that satisfies his
desire for a dynamic stop, I just might find out what that is. I also
won't have to worry about my septic tank backing up into my cottage
basement and ruining my summer, and in the end we can still decide to keep
the slogan we have.
So we voted to let Symon search the internet and a dictionary, and
suggested he should also look in Bartlett's Book of Famous Quotations.
Gloria volunteered to help him, which suits me fine as she was there in
San Francisco and originally came up with our slogan, so if there is
going to be a change, he’ll have to sell her on it first. And The Big
Guy stopped adjusting his power tie
Now
I'm hoping for a good week. The only impediment is figuring out
how to get rid of the Spanish words on those Cuban parts. Damn Yankees!
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