The use of the word relationship is ubiquitous today in
advertising. It's commonly used
as the reason why things fail, for example the old classic - the relationship
broke down. Other uses in common parlance are – we are looking for a ‘new relationship’, a better one, one that is
more trustful, transparent, fair or based on understanding and so on. A relationship of best friends was sought is one I heard recently regarding agency and client.
The problem is that you can’t see the relationship, as such and
so can’t change it directly. What you observe is cause and effect, which the
term ‘relationship’ is explaining.
Let me explain.
Cows eat grass. So we infer that grass is cow food. Yet if we study grass we don’t see cow
food. The foodiness of grass is revealed in cows eating it. If nothing ate
grass then it wouldn't be food. The relationship between cow and grass is
indeed real but not exactly physical. How would you improve the relationship of
the cow and the grass?
Well you’d have to act on / change the two objects that have
the relationship. For example provide more or better grass for the cow so it
grows more or provide less cows so the grass grows more.
The farmer makes most cash from selling his cows not the grass.
So he feeds them the best grass he can buy until it is hefty enough to send to
market and make a profit.
But what if the farmer was confused in some way?
Say he weighed the cow to see its relationship with the scales.
He wants it to be heavier and so the most important relationship was between
the cow and the scales right? The
cow wasn’t changing in weight so he weighed it more and more and more often,
hoping for improvements in that relationship. He wasn’t happy. This was his true
goal - happiness.
So off he goes to a psychologist to discuss his mental issues
of not being happy. But nothing
seemed wrong. He was mentally stable, he was a nice sort, he looked after his
family and even his cows. All was
well, except it wasn’t. Humm.
Eventually in a state of despair realising he may have to sell
his cow cheaply due to the relationship breakdown between cow and scales and
his personal unhappiness, he decides to buy cheaper and cheaper grass and weigh
it even more often to see if the relationship was improving, it wasn’t. In the end he decides to put lipstick
on the cow hoping he may get a premium for a pretty cow.
Back to advertising...
Think I'm having lunch at Byron Burger today...
ReplyDeleteNow that's cause and effect.
ReplyDeleteit's called priming.
ReplyDeletebut this:
"How would you improve the relationship of the cow and the grass?"
what a brief!
whooooaaa!