Filed under You should know

Brand-less cigarettes: tobacco companies not happy

Smoking Kids

Australia is about to become the first country in the world to ban tobacco companies from branding their products. As of July 1, 2012, no brand images or colors will be permitted in cigarette packaging design. Additionally, there are to be restrictions introduced online plus a 25 percent hike in excise tax bringing a pack of smokes to about $A16.70 or $US15.40.

In Australia where tobacco advertising is outlawed, the government described cigarette packaging as, “one of the last remaining frontiers for cigarette advertising.” And so it looks like Prime Minister, Kevin Rudd is about to take the big boys down. Only brand and product names will be allowed using a standard color, position, font and size making cigarette packs look similar to a prescription medication.

Of course this is a serious deal for tobacco companies going forward and let’s not forget the design companies that do their work who are paid extremely well but never publicize such relationships for fear that it would affect their own corporate brands. (I know because I worked for one of them).

Health warning on Australian cigarette packs: mouth cancer

The New York Times spoke to Imperial Tobacco who ludicrously responded by saying that there’s no evidence to support this action as effective in reducing consumption. Well, er, no…it hasn’t been done before so no, there isn’t evidence yet, but you just wait. And interestingly publicly trading tobacco giants Philip Morris (PMI) and British American Tobacco (BAT), Australia steered clear of stating the legal action that the industry could pursue but both wanted to put the possible case forward of there being constitutional issues relating to intellectual property and international trade obligations.

Clearly they’ll fight the ethical position and discard their social responsibilities, whatever it takes to get rich on the addicted and lure the young. Gotta love their passion. But as Susan Mercado, the World Health Organization’s regional advisor said in an emailed statement to the New York Times today, “Australia has taken a stand against all forms of advertising of a product that kills half of the people who use it.”

Currently Australian cigarette packaging carries health warnings as well as graphic photographic images showing the possible results of long-term smoking such as gangrenous limbs, cancerous mouths and blindness. (See above image).

So, what does the government intend to do with the $5 billion generated over four years that it forecasts to make out of this initiative? It will be reinvested in the national health care system. Take note America!

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/30/business/global/30tobacco.html

Anyone remember chocolate cigarettes? Well, you can still get them, frighteningly enough. In my opinion, these should be banned too. At least the ones below have health warnings about chocolate consumption!

Chocolate cigarettes with warnings

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Google shows that brand is a dirty word

Google graph showing key word search using 'brand' & 'design' in the US over the last 30 days.

Google is the most used search engine on the web, so referring to Google Trends is an interesting exercise to gauge interest in your business, regardless of industry. As Dezomo is a brand and design related Blog, it was interesting to see Google’s search results for the key words -  ‘brand’ and ‘design’. US results are above.

Searches for Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States all reflect surprisingly less searches using the word ‘brand’ than they do using the word ‘design’. And possibly even more surprising is that the US graph reflects less internet searches using the word ‘design’ than both the UK and Australia.

Google graph for 'design' & 'brand' as keywords in the UK.

Google graph showing key word search using 'brand' & 'design' in Australia over the last 30 days.

Questions worth asking are – (1) What is the correlation for design buyers between brand and design? (2) What and how effectively are design companies and agencies which offer design services doing to communicate the role of design to clients? and (3) What is the graphic design and corporate communications sector doing to remain relevant to clients and are these business strategies working?

Jamie Oliver wins Ted Prize

Obama and Jamie Oliver reshape America?

Let’s hope Jamie Oliver’s UK cool can rub off on America’s eating habits. His credentials are remarkable, and he is undisputedly deserving of a TED prize with -

  1. 12 television series in 130 countries
  2. 10 cookbooks translated into 29 languages, almost 24 million copies sold in 56 countries
  3. His School Dinners/Feed Me Better campaign pressured the UK government to invest $1 billion to overhaul school lunches
  4. Founded the Fifteen Foundation, a social enterprise and chef apprenticeship for 18-24 yr olds. Based in London, it has been replicated through franchising in Amsterdam, Cornwall and Melbourne
  5. A new TV series, Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution USA, is to air on ABC in 2010, bringing Jamie’s unique vision to America

Unfortunately, while Jamie’s focus is where it should be (in halting the obesity epidemic) – we, especially in the US, still calorie count rather than start with the right foods in the first place (fruit and vegetables, or just REAL FOOD). It’s simply a change of food perspective that’s needed.

2011 will see it law in the US to calorie-post. Good on you Obama, but this is such a superficial solution. Dunkin’ Donut, Burger King and the crowded stable of franchised fast food outlets must simply be avoided altogether. Their job is to feed your cravings; it’s the business of obesity. They don’t do healthy eating. Go home and make yourself a meal with real ingredients. And to top it all off people actually believe that calorie counts on these brand websites are meaningful? Newsflash! You can’t lose weight eating french fries and donuts no matter how hard you try.

The Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) says that the 25% of Americans who are considered obese will rise to 43 %, or 103 million by 2018 costing an anticipated $344 billion per year. Today obesity chews up almost 10 percent of US health care costs annually. This will rise to 21 percent by 2018. The World Health Organisation projects that by 2015 there will be  2.3 billion overweight.

So, what’s this got to do with my brand blog? I’m going to think about that one and add a new post later.

For the full story log on to http://blog.ted.com/2009/12/ted_prize_winne_4.php

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