April 2006
Remember how you stopped using italics because they looked so bad on web pages, but then when the operating systems started anti-aliasing you started using them again? Well, think again, my friend. They’re worse than ever on the small screen:
A team at Nokia is working on putting a web server (specifically Apache) into mobile phones. My first thought is that they ought to work on getting the client side working before they move on to the server and there are lots of obvious security and performance issues, but it’s mind-bending nonetheless and certainly ups the world’s “ubiquity quotient” in a hurry.
We are moving into a “behavior economy” where who you are is less and less about how you look or explicitly represent yourself and more and more about how you behave. Yes, I know that all behavior is self-representation, but posting a photo to flickr is pretty different, I think, from choosing an outfit. So, our cameraphone snaps, blog posts, Amazon reviews, email sigs all make up who we are. Even more so, when a growing number of our relationships are primarily online.
Instead of exchanging business cards or a handshake, we exchange vcards. Or, think about social networking profiles. They’re data-rich but personality-poor (there’s little so anti-social as reducing humans to lists of attributes and preferences), so, again, we have to find ways of inserting our personality into the cracks of the data structures (the tags we use, our AIM status messages and so on). But, despite this so-beautifully human resistance to dehumanization, we increasingly experience each other through the “voice” of our online behavior.
This is paralleled in the world of corporate branding with the (prematurely-declared, but still meaningful) “death of the logo” and the rise of experience as the measure of how customers and brands relate.
And this all works because we increasingly have the tools and ability to produce sophisticated messages. The means to create (and share) video, animation, graphic messages and audio are vastly democratized compared to only a short time ago (though there’s plenty of room to go there).
And we have so many outlets for online behavior. Indeed, the biggest problem I’m feeling is how distributed, how fragmented our online selves are. My friends are scattered across so many “dashboards” it’s hard to find the individual (though maybe that’s a truer picture of the “self” than the false one we grew up with).
So, what is your brand experience?