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Showing posts with label rebranding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rebranding. Show all posts

Thursday, February 3, 2011

They call it a rebrand.



Via Brandchannel.com, looks like short of a logo change, Denny’s is taking its cues from Subway by hitting the price angle hard as part of a rebrand. Cute campaign and all, but for the record people, I have never ordered ANYTHING in a restaurant by price, you? Part of the reason I go to Denny’s is because I already know imma get a lot for the money. Isn’t that like going to Walmart and wondering if I’ll be able to get anything for $4.88? I THINK YOU CAN. The nostalgia angle is tapped hard in as much as old school manners go, when waitresses new your name nicname. ‘America’s diner is always open’ isn’t a bad tag, but then, what does that make IHOP? I’m currently in the land of “Hun/Hon,” (and not a pluralism for raiding hordes either), and IHOP is my 24/7 omelette-burger connection, served with a smile and a dollop of “Bless your heart!”

(Agency: Gotham.)

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Yea! New Starbucks logo!

















The mermaid formerly known as... Saw this on AdFreak and while Tim asks if people like it, I think in the current climate of fear that most brands find themselves, it doesn’t, and it won’t, matter. Social media gives them an out to change it back if the outcry is too much too handle. If you like it? Win! If you hate it though? Well, we were just *floating* the idea out there, so we’ll change it back. Another win! Which equals... win-win! I suspect the biggest gripe will be walking away from the use of the word Starbucks. Now, all the focus is on her, removing her possibly too much from the context people were familiar with. Will *brand advocates* care about that since they already live the brand? Probably not. (I was sad to see her belly button removed long ago.)

Friday, December 10, 2010

Comedy Central introduces new logo – boosts chiropractic industry by 20%.









See... neck... upside down... ANYWAY, it’s in the rules: Anything having to do with a new logo or rebranding must be posted here. Comedy Central is the latest brand with makeover fever:

“10 years, that was the last time we did anything this meaningful,” said Bob Salazar, senior vice president/creative director, brand creative for Comedy Central. “If you think of social media, videogames, and the conventional competition, it has changed dramatically in the last 10 years. Even though the brand has never been as strong, we felt that refreshing it in our promotion and our branding, was something that we felt this moment in the network’s history would be the perfect time for.”

Whatever. I suppose there’s a worse time to try it. Shows are doing well. Ratings, good. It’s not a move that hurts more than it makes you wonder if changing things up because things are going well is a good enough reason.


(Via Agency Spy.)

Saturday, November 27, 2010

A going out of business rebranding party is the new...



Since it’s be nice to everyone week – just made that up – all I’ll say about Toronto shop Blammo Worldwide and their GJP makeover charity auction rebranding reveal is, nice self-promotional trick. Cheers!

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

AOL’s freshtastical new look.












AOL’s logo redesign felt like so many other attempts these days, where the brand hopes to correct – or ignores –  core problems with its product by slapping a fresh coat of paint on it. That look in the context of their new site makeover, seems to be lost. That screengrab is from their corporate site, but I actually like that look – for an agency site. The main site though has less life to it. AOL hasn’t abandoned it’s love affair with the portal approach either: They give you access to all the areas of your life they think you care about. That’s fine, as the New York Times’ redesign showed. Except, both layouts sure look similar, even if the Times’  has less of a splash of color that AOL is rocking. But is an AOL audience ready to get more serious, because that’s where they’ve positioned themselves.

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

A brand retreats as social media nation cheers.














Yea! everyone *passionate* about social media! (Least that’s what their Twitter profiles say.) Fist bumps all around for making a difference! See, behold the awesome power of social media! (Hope I’ve covered off the requisite number of social media exclamation points!)

I’m one of those @holes however, who thinks the Gasp Gap should’ve told everyone to chill because they’re sticking with their logo. If you believe that a logo change or rebranding isn’t the answer for a company with other problems, then it really wouldn’t matter, right? Sure collectively, a lot of people hated it — I thought it was generic, no hate — but were you going to not shop at the Gap anymore because of it?

Really?

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Rebranding Hope?









So the Democratic party is rebranding itself. A serious look for serious times. The problem is, a new logo can’t mask a bad product or lousy customer experience with said product. Try as they will, that fundamental principle of advertising and marketing hasn’t changed since, forever. The worst part of this has to be a renewed focus on a message of Change though. Why? This was Obama’s focus that the GOP has hijacked this past year in local elections to instill life into their campaign efforts. Pick a campaign as of late and see if “It’s time to change Washington!” doesn’t pop up. I guess you can look to key moments in a race that determine the outcome. For the GOP, it’s the hijacking of their party going on by the TP’ers, causing Republicans to confront their party’s core beliefs. For the Democrats, this rebranding could be one of those moments: either cementing that message of change among a base that voted for it (and that still believes in it), and those unhappy with the way the country is headed.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

McD’s toys with, wait for it... rebranding.










“Yo, imma see you at the M.”

That’s not here yet, but, you could see that ad happening soon enough. Yes, second Golden Arches post in as many days, but this one popped up on the no-rebranding zone radar. Looks like they’re going with *just* a single M in Austria as part of a rebranding effort there. I was never a fan of changing the name of a company to reflect what customers call it casually. (The Hut. The Shack.) If people have a nickname for your brand, fine, but I like having the core name there for people to play off of and call it (whatever they want). Legos aren’t L. Coke ain’t C. Drivers may call a BMW a Beamer, but at then end of the day, it’s still BMW on that marque.

Brands who cave may say they’re just responding to what their customers call it anyway, but I call it letting some of them dictate things a little too much for the rest of us. I hope they don’t do it here. The brand appears to be back in a groove with help from a massive ad blitz and the McCafe vs. Starbucks push. Rebranding like that here, now, throws that off.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

The best part of Comcast’s new logo and identity?






Is the accompanying caption under the logo:

“The company announced today that the new name will be premiered next week.”

Uh. You. Just. Premiered. It. Great new look—same great company! SAME GREAT SERVICE TOO! You think I enjoy pointing this stuff out? I GET NO JOY. I do it to serve and protect you... so that it never happens again. Okay, where was I?

Oh yeah:

“Comcast spokeswoman Jennifer Khoury said the rebranding was not an attempt to distance the service from the Comcast name. “This is about our product. It is about providing our customers with products that just keep getting better.”

Sorry... what? In this case, given Comcast’s approval rating, which may even be lower than Obama’s, xfinity comes off less a rebranding and more like witness relocation to make people forget the baggage of the old name, make no mistake.

The next best part:

Comcast will remain as the corporate name, but the company will emphasize Xfinity in advertisements and on 24,000 service trucks and thousands of employee uniforms.”

Sorry... what, WHAT? I may not be a fan of unnecessary rebranding, but if you’re gonna do it, go all the way and rename everything, no?

(Tip, anon.)

Sunday, October 18, 2009

Rebranding potatoes.



Change perceptions, or, the perception of change. Great talk from Rory Sutherland at TED via Hee-Haw Marketing. It highlights the difference between work that’s crowdsourced (or user-generated) and agency-created. Someone posting this doesn’t need to think about changing anything.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Well, it’s not often you can schedule your rebranding, is it?











Rebranding time once again. But here’s what I don’t get. Fox has how many different reality shows, arguably inventing the modern* version of the genre with COPS and now running the table with American Idol. Yet somehow, not five years after it started, it wants to rebrand and possibly do away with its reality channel. File this under why? While not the most amazing of logos, NOBODY is looking at it, let alone cares. They’re watching the trainwrecks you program each night. It doesn’t even make sense from a “branding” point of view. The name says it all. (Unlike Court TV, which morphed into TruTV. There, it no longer covered just trials, but had branched out into reality fare, so the move made sense.) Just leave it alone. You’re on auto-profit.

What’s next, the Rebranding Channel?

*Don’t make me school you on Candid Camera.

Sunday, September 27, 2009

MTV, please, just rebrand and get it over with.









Tim has a post on MTV which spurred a thought. Much as I hate the current rebranding epidemic, it’s way past time for them to change their name. Obviously they stopped being just music a long time ago. Pick a reason.

The ascendency of digital music and filing sharing as a means of spreading the word on new bands? As good as any. Regardless, people just don’t need MTV to break music for them the way they once did. Music videos? Don’t need them for that either.

Whatever its past, it’s clear they aren’t the same network they once were. Yet they still cling to that music legacy. Other cable channels have since rebranded like Syfi and truTV, formerly Court TV. Two moves though that I really question the need for.

But not MTV. Much as I love reality shows like Gs To Gents or Pranked, They’re in denial. Call it RTV for all the reality shows they have, whatever. But the connection to music is hanging on by a VMA thread.

Or is just me?

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Yahoo says it’s You.













I should just cut and paste the AOL rebranding story.

So, Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle* (Yahoo) rolled out their new campaign, putting the Eww in You? I KID. As you read the background on the new campaign, they don’t have plans to get rid of the “Yahoo!” shout, just “dust it off a bit” and freshen it up. They haven’t really improved their core product beyond improved search features. The main message here seems to be telling people they own the net.

Am I right? Because if I’m missing anything, lemmee know.

Regarding search, improvements are nice, but why steal Bing’s thunder? (Bing has increased its share of search to 9.3% up from 8% of the market while Yahoo has 19.3% to Google’s 64%.)

Regarding the message: Don’t people already “own” the net? Haven’t we all been running around self-empowering ourselves? (Ouch.) Granted, internet years don’t compare to any other category, but refreshing old icons works better when the brand has some heritage behind it, not the 15 Yahoo has under its belt since launching in 1994.

As for the Yee-HAW, I guess the devs were too busy pushing envelopes way back when to notice the Hillbilly quality to the battle cry may have been off in the first place. (As it is, they don’t seem to be addressing special cousin Flickr and its unintuitive, Facebook-like user experience.)

The use of the exclamation point already has some mileage on it courtesy of E! and feels forced with the you graphically.

The main imagery? Feels perfectly fine. 10 years ago. In Kohl’s. I haven’t seen the TV yet but I imagine XM covered off this theme better a few years ago too. Everyday people are nice, don’t get me wrong—I’m one you know—but it’s also nice to have Bowie on your side when you’re starting a pop culture revolution.

No time to get cheap and rely on stock photos: Get some celebrities on your side. That’s not just PR talking. If your position here is that the net belongs to the people, it isn’t taking into account the migration happening from TV to the net and how celebs have gotten over the perceived stigma of appearing online.

Yahoo’s problem goes beyond colorful backgrounds in my expert opinion. It’s the core problem any brand needs to address:

What are we?

Right now, they need to ask themselves that same basic question: “Are we search or former web portal turned cultural destination and community?”

Regardless of what bloggers say though, the brand will convince itself that the negative buzz already popping up is a mirage, like GM believes.

*Yes, that’s the actual meaning behind the acronym.


AOL plans to, wait for it... rebrand.













Yep. Forget Swine flu, rebranding will affect more people this year* including AOL. Cue target-rich marketing speak environment:

“The New York company has decided to keep its iconic yellow running man. The image is a powerful one that consumers associate with AOL, says Bill Wilson, the company's president of media. As part of its rebranding push, the company is seeking a new CMO.”

Again, one more company looking to branding to bail them out.

In this case, it’s not even negative PR that they have to overcome, rather, they need to be relevant again. No, AOL Chat ain’t enough. They need to offer something people really need and want.

As a brand that helped usher in the online community portal—and flood your mail with beautiful CD wall art—they are in effect the last brand from the first dot com era to survive intact today.

Unless they focus on giving people a new experience they can’t get anywhere else, they’re over before they begin. They’ve also been eclipsed in two other areas they once ruled: Email and instant messaging. There are just too many alternatives for people now to say they need AOL the way they once did.

The change they need to win back people requires a level of innovation that built the company in the first place. Steve Jobs has engineered it into Apple. Others like Google, Amazon and Twitter all have it too. They also have leadership that has essentially remained intact.

But when you have a change at the top as you have with AOL, it’s difficult to maintain consistency. As such, I think what happens here though is that they just throw on a fresh coat of paint and run new TV spots. (Even though rebranding typically means new artwork—not hanging onto existing icons—that little guy will be on everything.)

Saving the best for last however: Hiring a new director of marketing after you rebrand.

Yep. Makes sense to me.

*Save your emails. I know the only thing killed by rebranding is good taste.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

FUEL or FAIL—Wheaties *gasps* rebrands.













[UPDATE: Wheaties FUEL Twitter bot/intern let me and a bunch of other people know that this was not a rebranding, rather, an addition to original Wheaties. This probably should be made a little more obvious in the marketing instead of one line in a New York Times’ press release article. All the things I commented on below still make sense in the context of a new product launch, however, it still seems like a line extension here will cannibalize the core product’s audience.]

Aka, the taste of win. Speaking of: Fuel. Win. Evolve. YEAH! Gladiator action taglines unite! I saw this over on BrandflakesForBreakfast, and Darryl’s perfect Man Cereal title notwithstanding, can’t help but wonder if this is a Gatorade “G” in the making. While the site lists the reason they want to “evolve” the brand, there’s something to be said for consistency, of being able to count on a brand over time.

But something else seems to be at work.

It’s as if the marketing directors at major brands are toying with rebranding makeovers more frequently, and specifically, microtargeting or segmenting certain demos out of their broader audience.

Here, it’s obvious they’re going after athletes who identify with a high-performance message. There’s a series of videos put out by Saatchi & Saatchi that feature top athletes discussing the formula with Dr. John Ivy from Wheaties.

But this is what G thou..., sorry, Gatorade thought too. Slumping sales? Change out the box. And before that, Tropicana when it evolved its look to be something more contemporary. At least what they perceived it should be.

Both moves subsequently turning out to be fails.

That’s not saying this won’t work. If it fails, it won’t be because they didn’t spend the money. They’re blowing this out across every possible media channel with the top athletes in their respective sports. Oh, and even a Facebook page.

It’s worth noting though that many brands have certain demos using their products that they might prefer to downplay an association with, let alone deciding to change their core product’s formula as Wheaties has done here.

(Range Rover and Timberland have an urban demo that is definitely missing from their general mass media advertising.)

In this case, the brands will take the bump in sales they get, even if it’s from demos clearly at odds with respectively, the elitist world traveler driving over through the peasants in exotic locales or construction workers.

I know moms used to do the shopping, but walking away from 40% of your market in favor of focusing on the other 60% who they claim are male athletes is what they’re gambling on.

There was this All-American simplicity to having a single athlete on the cover, someone who had earned the right to be there, much like a winning Super Bowl quarterback heading off to Disneyland or little chocolate donut-loving track & field champion.

Don’t get me wrong. I love the new, sleek look—for a video game title. I suppose kids will too. But a brand making revolutionary changes under the guise of evolving the brand needs to consider walking away from the heritage of their formula, name and look all at once.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

For your consideration, human frailty
and exploitation.
















Oh, and profits.

It’s that time of year, when Favre is retired, not retired, retired... and TV shows make their push for Emmy consideration. Not just Stewie, but reality shows are out in force too, one of which is A&E’s Intervention. And, if I may, I think A&E deserves a special Lifetime Achievement Award for rebranding.

Who knew the arts and history programming that the channel was once known for could be so successfully swapped out for human desperation? Score! And they did it with such in-depth soul searching as Parking Wars and Flip This House. Now I don’t use this phrase often, but, kudos! C’mon gang, the foreclosure and incest index cards are still on the wall as far as remaining show topics go. Better hurry before TLC jumps all over them.

Best cinematography though? Hmmm. Only one reality show should get that: Deadliest Catch. 40-foot waves in a freezing Bering Sea while crab pots fly around? Not sure how filming mom and the rest of the family tell dad it’s time he got help is as dangerous.

Monday, August 17, 2009

NFL makeover 2.0: Michael Vick vs. T.O.







Because they always do
...

Rebranding doesn’t matter if the core product is...

I know it may be a little too soon to check in with the fellas, but I haven’t been this excited about a makeover since Courtney Love hit the cover of Marie Claire. So how’s the PR onslaught going?

Well, I caught a few episodes of his reality show, named, um, The T.O. Show (apt name given what he brings to teams), and have to say, if this was on before his stays with the Cowboys, Eagles or 49ers, I’m feeling bad for the guy.

Troubled childhood with father never attending games. Mom loves him. Grandmother with Alzheimer’s Disease. Willing to go back and speak to his high school football team. What’s not to love! Oh, yeah, the regular season thing. Team cancer rep or not, the dude did play a Super Bowl with a fractured leg.

Then there’s the other Michael making headlines this year.

Having watched this week’s 60 Minutes segment with Vick, and having spoken with two diehard Eagle fans, I can report to my viewing public that no pun intended, this signing don’t fly. And not just with them either.

One of them is also a diehard animal lover, and she’s ready to stop watching the team over this. The other, a regular commentor here (phillybikeboy), posted his two cents here.

Each brought up the same things separately. Namely, who deserves a second chance and doesn’t everyone “deserve” to earn a living? Even though T.O. supported Vick’s reinstatement, I have to say I’m willing to give Owens a fourth chance before giving Vick a second so quickly.

Yes, everyone has a right to earn a living, but Vick did this to himself. To be fair, he admits this, But, Vick was also the one who fooled everyone while animals were stolen, tortured and trained to fight.

It’s a little disingenuous to say he deserves a second chance like he was late for a few player meetings, especially when he blew such a great first chance in such a terrible way.

The ingrained behavior he displayed isn’t something you shake after two years and a few mea culparitas. Watching 60 Minutes, “It was wrong” is not the same as “I’m sorry,” the latter words he never ended up saying.

We forgive people for a lot of stuff, as long as they apologize. I see him hitting all the right notes for sure, but I’m just not feeling it. If as he says, money doesn’t matter, then maybe forgoing most of his $7 million would help sway opinion.

Another thing flying under the radar here even though tangential: Vick has only had two winning seasons in his previous six seasons. (47-48-1, as well as going 2-2 in two years of playoffs. More irony: His last NFL game before being convicted was a loss to Philadelphia.)

While not as large as Eli Manning’s recent mega deal worth $15.27 million annually, $7+ million over two years ain’t bad. The point is, the NFL valuates players based on potential almost as much as analysts overinflate the value of social networks like Facebook or Twitter.

But, back to the game. So far, T.O. leads 14-0.

You?

(Images: Owens, Vick.)

Monday, August 10, 2009

The Hut, The Shack, The Whatever.













Hey look, more rebranding! Actually, it’s more like a newly discovered sub-species of the genus branding: The name change. But not a witness protection name change, rather, the customer-dictated name change.

So The Shack™ replaces Radio Shack, The Hut™ replaces Pizza Hut (sorta), the Sci-Fi Channel recently went SyFy, and before that, Dairy Queen went DQ.

What’s next, The Bell™?

I’m on the fence somewhat when it comes to renaming madness. Whenever I hear about a company rebranding, alarm bells go off because they’re trying to make you forget how bad their service is by slapping a new logo on things.

But then, it works when it works, as in the case of DQ. Shortening Dairy Queen down to two letters just sounds better phonetically. More importantly though, the brand doesn’t have the baggage that Radio Shack does. Besides, who doesn’t love ice cream!

In the case of ShaqHut though, it feels forced.

It’s one thing to acknowledge that your customers refer to your brand using a certain nickname—it’s another to crash the party and make that alternate name the permanent face of the brand.

That’s pretty much like your parents chaperoning your dates—when you’re 20. The brand is trying to be cool, because, well, if cool people call it that, and brands want to be cool, then that’s what they’ll do too. See? Now they’re cool too.

Forgetting the work itself though, I’d rather cover why companies focus on such a big move.

Brands seem to be giving in to consumers.

Changing your name to suit a demo as SyFy did by going after more female viewers is slightly different than changing your name to the one consumers know you by. (I’d argue though that they lost the core theme of mystery they had going by walking away from “if” in Sci-Fi, but I digress.)

No matter the reason, the net effect is the same: Fans now dictate your name. Yes, they’ll call it what they want regardless of your branding efforts, but you don’t have to help them.

I’m old skool/new skool on a lot of things, so I recognize the changes in the advertising paradigm, dynamic, zeitgeist or whatever else you want to call it.

Consumers are more “empowered” than ever and all that. However, there’s something about a name that doesn’t change. Ever. There’s permanence in that.

A name based on skewed questions in a focus group? Not really.

Brands can evolve their look and run different campaigns from year to year, but having a consistent name in place to play that off against creates an anchor for consumers. It gives them a happy place to come back to. No matter what, there’s still a name to rely on, comforting you like a Tommy Boy brake pad guarantee.

Lee Applbaum, CMO of RadioShack, says the company has used brand name shorthand for years. “If you can latch onto a brand truth, it’s a really wonderful thing.”

Hurts just reading that.

All brands have internal naming conventions. Everything from conference rooms to logos to nicknames for specific brands. But, that’s why that stuff is called “internal.”

As for brand truth? A consumer truth, maybe. Between customer and brand or in the customer’s own life, yes. Like, how they tend to shop, or how they feel about something at a certain age. Much as the Team on the brand side wishes it so however, consumers don’t care about internal brand mantras.

Yet it’s this brand perception vs. consumer reality that creates disconnects.

Rebranding by committee.

I tend to give agencies a pass here because it’s not usually their fault. Not saying that’s what happened with ShackHut, but I know how zealous some brands get with their internal brainstorms.

They go off on a 4-day off-site planning session, then force their agencies to use the theme they came up with—even if it feels wrong to everyone but the brand.

Regardless, you can still refer to a brand by its nickname in ads without taking the final step of actually changing the name. Consumers are always changing their minds anyway, so today’s Hut might end up tomorrow’s... who knows?

Would you jump off a bridge if the King did?

Some examples of brands using both nicknames and their regular names? Burger King may be known as BK for short, but they still run the full name in the logo. “Mickey D’s” or “golden arches” still has McDonald’s to play off of. Did Timberland suddenly become Tims overnight just because it got urbanized? Still looks like Converse All Star to me, not Chucks All Star.

Then there’s the Gubernator. When Arnold Schwarzenegger first hit Hollywood, he went against conventional wisdom and took a pass on changing his name to something a little easier to pronounce, certainly something more “American.”

He wanted to force people to remember his unique name. His logic being that if they did, it’d be a household name. And, well, it is. (But, he also backed it up with a string of mega action hits. If all those movies tanked, he’s just another never-was.)

Which leads to the second point:

A new name will not change the perception people have of your brand.

Especially if they’ve had a bad experience with it. Yet this is the main thing marketing directors seem to rely on now when trying to spur brand growth. Pull it off and you make a name for yourself. Fail, and it’s on to the next brand. Still, it’s as if most think a makeover is the only component of branding that matters.

It ain’t.

Consumer experiences with your brand play a huge role. Earlier, I said consumers shouldn’t be involved in something like dictating a name change, but they still play a major part in branding for this reason alone. Why?

Because branding is one-half client/agency input and one-half customer experience. You need both halves.

Customers are already involved with your brand when they purchased your product or dealt with your customer service. And if those things were an epic fail, and you did nothing to address them, who cares about your new name or logo?

Brand makeovers had better first start with fixing or improving the customer experience.

If you’ve read any of the comments on The Shack’s new look in that AdFreak article, you know the sentiments that people expressed about their stores and staff. Unfavorable at best.

I know mine are.

The majority of visits I’ve made to RADIO Shack were for things that I knew I needed, like a camera battery or speaker wire, etc. I didn’t go there looking to be educated on new products or having to rely on them to recommend something. I’m also not the only one to operate under the following core understanding of The Shack:

Basically, they sell the accessories for the electronics you buy elsewhere.

Just tell me where batteries are and I got this. Cable ties over on the left? Fine. It’s in this role that they’re perfectly suited. They know where all their items are in the store. Other than that, nope. I’ve received my share of poor advice when it came to things like cell phones and accessories, despite what the Einsteins spot implies.

(This raises another underlying issue relative to the industry in general: The effect of big box retailers on the consumer dynamic. Before the Best Buys of the world, you knew Radio Shack only sold Radio Shack products. Likewise, Sears selling Craftsman and Kenmore. Nowadays, salespeople have a lot of brands to keep straight, let alone explain it all to customers.)

And the final thing...

If everyone calls themselves The “Whatever,” then what sets them apart?

If you truly need to change your name, then do it for very specific reasons: You’re a cell phone company that merged with another telecom firm. You’re related to Hitler. You have Enron on your resume. You witnessed a mob hit.

These are perfectly valid excuses.

Otherwise, the move to The reeks of me-too, flavor of the month desperation. Unless your name or look are hopelessly out of date, what company that’s doing well ever needs to rebrand, let alone change its name?

Friday, August 7, 2009

Guess Kennedy never got the email on the name change?














I have a weekend riff planned on the recent rebranding madness sweeping the nation, but I caught this local KFC knock-off yesterday and felt like it fit in somehow. I know they’re a tri-state chain, but this one takes it further with a brilliant use of the red and white color scheme! Imitation, flattery? Check! Why, it’s almost as good as the original. Almost.

Saturday, July 25, 2009