Branding Osama Bin Laden

kartik

Kartik Raichura
Staff member
Branding Osama Bin Laden.


An article by article by John Cook called "Branding Bin Laden" which was published in the April 2008 issue of Radar Magazine is the seed on which this week’s newsletter article is based.

Cook perceptively argues that Osama bin Laden has become a brand as universal as Coca-Cola, with Bin Laden T-shirts selling like hotcakes in Muslim countries. With their mastery of online marketing and social networking tools, Al Qaeda has disseminated their hate-filled but appealingly simple message to youth worldwide. Meanwhile, America's Muslim-centric PR efforts -- including a now-defunct teen magazine and a satellite news network no one watched -- have fizzled like New Coke. Cook sagely notes that the problem is message and credibility as well as method; America's efforts to win Arab hearts and minds are handicapped by Guantanamo Bay, Iraq, and its leaders' ignorance of the Muslim world.
Says Bonnie Walker

While we have been hearing a lot about how Sachin Tendulkar to Amitabh Bachhan is a brand, Tom Peters, a master at self branding advices each individual to become a brand, do you think branding Bin Laden is a conscious attempt?

Cook points to the growing use of Bin Laden's image in the Arab world (and beyond) as a symbol of anti-American sentiment, but not necessarily terrorism. To a degree, it has moved beyond Bin Laden as a person or even what he represents. His symbol is becoming a brand, similar to how the face of Che Guevarra that can still be seen around the world (though ironically it is often in support of global brands and exactly the kind of capitalism he once fought). It's not the people agree with the politics, necessarily (though certainly many do). They are taking an image and assigning a different meaning to it. Brand Bin Laden, Cook argues, has started to stand for defiance of America in any form.
Says Rohit Bhargava

Keeping the moral and the immoral aside, if you take this as a case study, it all boils down to building and destroying brands.

Assuming that you are on either side, how would you build Osama Bin Laden as a brand or Destroy It !?
 
AHuhmmm a few thoughts

1. So shall am i correct if I say the news channels have branded OBL?
2. Is it really so that no publicity is bad?
3. Is it that America's dominance and attitude fuels the brand OBL in some countries?

Or is it that Osma Bin Laden knows that the only thing he can ride on is the Anti-American sentiments, and then use it for all the cruel purposes!

The only thing you can do is to tell people if someone hates something that you hate, he is not necessarily your FRIEND!
 
Fascinating idea.
I would argue that an effective PR attack would be to continually throw a variety of memes out there regarding Bin Laden. Don't allow him to define himself, or be defined, as any one thing. Keep his message confused and muddled as opposed to repeating a single message - "terrorist" - over an over again, for as we know one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter.
osama as a brand is seriously hot i mean it i have sites to support it

Osama Bin Laden Video Promotes Fashion Brand
Osama Bin Laden Video Promotes Fashion Brand » Adrants

so i would differ my strategy depending upon how the man is accepted in that country a terrorist or as a god or freedom fighter,etc
 
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