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Hub You - Wag the Tagline - The Rhetoric of Brand Messaging
The Importance Of Temperature Control For Your Business Stock on: Alteration of the form, stress, or intonation of a word.Does your company rely on controlling temperature to maintain its stock? Of course, most businesses are affected by the performance of heating, ventilation or air conditioning (HVAC) systems – one just has to think about working in a hot office during the summer weeks, and the effects on staff production. But, when stock is directly affected by temperature, such systems take on a wholly different importance.Monitoring becomes paramount; it can also be a mandatory requirement when it comes to handling chilled, frozen or hot foods. But, when there are a great number of different systems on the market (ranging from basic handheld models to complex set-ups), and there are monitoring services too, how do you choose a management package that fits your needs?Here are a few things you could be thinking about.Simple-to-use interfaces : Technology has come far enough for monitoring systems to be user-friendly. There’s no excuse for over-complex interfaces, and so what you buy should be accessible with just a small amount of training. This means more people can run the system, and it means you’re not reliant on contractors. Try to use a company that can provide training – and training on a wide range of different equipment brands.Maintenance package : It’s better not to wait for failures to happen before you act – always think prevention rather than cure. Signing up to a good maintenance service will always be worthwhile. By keeping an eye on your systems, you can pick up on potential problems w They’re g-r-r-r-eat! (Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes) Irony: A mode of expression that conveys a reality different from, and usually opposite to, appearance or expectation. With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good (Smucker’s) Metaphor: Compares two different things by speaking of one in terms of the other. Unlike a simile or analogy, a metaphor asserts that one thing is another thing, not just like it. The champagne of bottled beer (Miller High Life) Meter: The rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular accented pattern. The quicker picker-upper (Bounty) Metonymy: A form of metaphor in which a closely associated object is substituted for the object or idea in mind. Take a bite out of crime (National Crime Prevention Council) Pleonasm: Being redundant to express an idea, usually for emphasis. Extinct is forever (Friends of the Animals) Rhetorical Question: A statement formulated as a question whose answer is obvious or obviously desired and doesn’t need to be answered. Doesn’t your dog deserve Alpo? (Alpo Dog Food) Rhyme: The similarity between syllable sounds at the end of two or more lines. We mean clean (Bissell) Simile: A comparison between two different things that resemble each other in at least one way. Like a rock (Chevy Trucks) Synecdoche: A type of metaphor in which the part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, or in short, any portion, section, or main quality for the whole or the thing itself. You’re in good hands with Allstate (Allstate Insurance) Summary The art of tagline development is a similar to the writing of a lyric for a melody. It must adhere to certain conventions and constraints prescribed by the brand in order to work in close harmony with it. Since brand messages can be expressed on several levels (e.g., position, promise, benefit, differentiation, etc.), there is an expectation that taglines should multi-task. Although Don't Get Scammed The news proclaiming the demise of the tagline has been greatly exaggerated. As a matter of fact, the tagline is alive and well – just grossly underappreciated.I've got a confession to make... I was scammed by a company promising me I can stay at home and type data into forms and make over two hundred dollars a day.There are a lot of scams going on out there, these are just a couple of scams to be on the look out for.Scam #1 You Won The Lottery!This is an e-mail scam from a person or company informing you that you have just won the lottery. Payment is required to get your huge unsolicited lottery winnings transferred into your country/bank account. There are no 'winnings' .If you receive a "prize notification" from a suspicious lottery: • don't respond to the emails • don't pay any money in advance to collect a prize • don't reveal your full identity • don't reveal your bank account number or credit card detailsScam #2 Employment and JobLook out for these:"Local Representative Needed" "Shipping Manager" "Financial Manager" "Sales Manager" "Type from home"These headlines are from companies offering you easy money for just a few hours of work a week. Remember if it sounds to good to be true, then it is.If you encounter any of these scams or you were scammed please report the email or website to the following agencies:The Federal Trade Commission http://www.ftc.gov/The United States Secret Service http://www.treas.gov/usss/index.shtmlThe U.S.Postal Inspection Service http://www.usps.com/postalinspectors/National Assocation of Attorneys General Admittedly, not all taglines shine. Many are vague, awkward, pretentious, complicated, and ambiguous. They communicate unintended messages, and are guilty of using trendy or meaningless business jargon. They often devalue the brand they’re supposed to strengthen and support. As tools of aggressive advertisers, taglines often exhibit the subtlety of a sledgehammer. Novice marketers tend to use them indiscriminately as mere window dressing, and Internet sophisticates sneer at them as if they were quaint holdovers from the golden age of television. Given the lack of product loyalty these days, one wonders whether consumers could care less if Bayer works wonders or Avis tries harder. In Praise of Taglines Whether you like them or not, taglines still guide and influence consumer behavior, product preference, and company allegiance. They are, by far, one of the easiest and most effective ways to communicate a new or revised brand message. When properly applied, taglines can enhance the value and relevance of your brand, extend its reach, and give it renewed vigor. They can also be used to support pivotal objectives, such as launching a brand awareness campaign, differentiating a product line, or driving participation in an employee or third party program. A banner for all seasons, taglines confer marquee value on your central marketing message – putting the world on notice as to who you are, what you stand for, and why your customers should care. It’s a tall order, but the proverbial tagline is up to the challenge. The Haiku of Branding When conceived and crafted persuasively, a tagline can become an enduring symbol – elevating your brand message from the mundane to the memorable. Its task, though, is daunting: to distill the meaning of a corporate vision, competitive position, brand promise, product benefit, or customer experience into as few words as possible – less than seven or eight, optimally speaking. In this sense, the tagline bears a striking resemblance to haiku, which reveals its insights metaphorically and intuitively in a highly compressed form. The tagline is also akin to sculpture in the way it uncovers the essence of an idea after chiseling away all that is irrelevant. Of course, the best thing about taglines is that they’re not written in stone. They can be easily refreshed when internal and external pressures require a branding makeover. Within the constraints of this so-called nine-syllable novel, a kernel of truth (or myth) emerges that is often surprising, disarming, or uplifting. From the Practical to the Personal Taglines work their magic on a variety of levels. From a functional point of view, they can embrace your company’s mission, purpose, benefit, or competitive advantage (Works like a dream – Ambien; Built for the road ahead – Ford; Medicine with muscle – Motrin). Taglines can also convey the essentials of brand character, revealing your core values and the consistent qualities expected from your brand (Raising the bar – Cingular; Pleasing people the world over – Holiday Inn; Taking care of business – Office Depot). Or they can align your company with a recognized class or category to give it added value and credibility (The most trusted name in news – CNN; We move the world – DHL; Babies are our business – Gerber). Finally, taglines can focus on your audience’s deeply-cherished needs and aspirations, promising personal fulfillment or the attainment of a desired goal or outcome (Will you be ready? – Cialis; Don’t dream it. Drive it. – Jaguar; It’s everywhere you want to be – VISA). Effective taglines work beneath the surface like a mantra, gently nudging feelings and reinforcing opinions every time competing brands are weighed, measured, tested, and compared. Focusing on the Message Sadly, taglines are called upon to do the impossible, especially if they’re forged in a creative vacuum unrelated to, and unsupported by, other marketing and branding activities. Creating a tagline without aligning it to your core marketing message or ongoing communications program is like taking a diet pill at the expense of proper nutrition and exercise. In sum, there’s no such thing as a perfect tagline; rather, the true litmus test of a tagline’s suitability is whether its message is clear, consistent, and compelling – and whether it is integral to your marketing objectives and overall brand strategy. A tagline may only be the tip of the iceberg, but it can have a visible and lasting impact on your target audience. Given the short-term memory of a fickle marketplace, the tagline must rise above the din and clutter, vibrant and intact, like a battle cry or a flag waving in the breeze. As an essential part of your branding arsenal, a tagline can serve as a sort of mnemonic, sky-writing device that slips inside your prospect’s cloudy mind and pushes aside other conflicting messages. The successful tagline is one which communicates brand affinity – an ability to find common ground, stretch expectations, and appeal to basic needs for comfort, safety, assurance, excitement, love, acceptance, or, ultimately, self-actualization. Text and Texture We all know a good tagline when we see it, but what makes it great? Sure, it may be brief, clever, original, funny, ironic, simple, or elegant, but what makes it memorable? Apart from its ostensible message or promise, and the brand elements and benefits it reflects, I would like to focus on the ways in which a tagline’s message is crafted and executed to determine the source of its attraction and appeal. Like much of classic literature, commercial taglines and slogans are replete with rhetorical devices that their creators use, unwittingly or not, to give them a distinctive tone, image, style, and personality. After all, tagline development is all about wordsmithing – using the right words in the right combination at the right time for a desired effect. It’s requires being cognizant of the symbols, nuances, and associations they evoke, as well as the order and combination of sounds and images they conjure up. Tagline development is a way of communicating both textual and textural meaning while, at the same time, strengthening the specific brand aspirations of an organization, product, or service. The Rhetorical Gambits of Successful Taglines There’s something highly subjective about how a tagline strikes you. When its message, sound, and meaning work in harmony with each other, it has what branding strategists like to refer to as “legs.” It tells a story that transcends commonplace experience. It forms a gestalt that’s larger than the sum of its parts. The parts, however, can be dissected and examined. They are the building blocks of a tagline that make it artful, clever, and pleasurable. They are the rhetorical devices that amplify its meaning and crystallize its persuasive effect. You’ll fondly recall some of these devices from high school English class. Here is a brief sampling (1): Alliteration: The recurrence of initial consonant sounds, usually juxtaposed. Famously fresh (Planter’s Peanuts) Allusion: A reference to a famous person or event. The spirit of ’76 (Unocal) Analogy: Compares two things which are alike for the purpose of explaining or clarifying some unfamiliar or difficult idea or object. This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs. (Partnership for a Drug-Free America) Antithesis: Shows a contrasting relationship between two ideas by joining them together or juxtaposing them, often in parallel structure. The toughest job you’ll ever love (U.S. Peace Corps) Assonance: Similar vowel sounds repeated in successive or proximate words containing different consonants. A silly millimeter longer (Chesterfield Cigarettes) Colloquialism: An informal word or phrase of conversational language that brings color to everyday speech. Wassup? (Budweiser) Diacope: The repetition of a word or phrase after an intervening word or phrase. Always low prices. Always. (Wal-Mart) Double Meaning: A figure of speech similar to the pun in which a phrase can be understood in either of two ways. Take it all off (Noxzema) Epizeuxis: Repetition of one word, usually for emphasis. For fast, fast, fast relief (Anacin) Hyperbole: Deliberately exaggerates conditions for emphasis or effect. I’d walk a mile for a camel (Camel Cigarettes) Inflection: Alteration of the form, stress, or intonation of a word. They’re g-r-r-r-eat! (Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes) Irony: A mode of expression that conveys a reality different from, and usually opposite to, appearance or expectation. With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good (Smucker’s) Metaphor: Compares two different things by speaking of one in terms of the other. Unlike a simile or analogy, a metaphor asserts that one thing is another thing, not just like it. The champagne of bottled beer (Miller High Life) Meter: The rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular accented pattern. The quicker picker-upper (Bounty) Metonymy: A form of metaphor in which a closely associated object is substituted for the object or idea in mind. Take a bite out of crime (National Crime Prevention Council) Pleonasm: Being redundant to express an idea, usually for emphasis. Extinct is forever (Friends of the Animals) Rhetorical Question: A statement formulated as a question whose answer is obvious or obviously desired and doesn’t need to be answered. Doesn’t your dog deserve Alpo? (Alpo Dog Food) Rhyme: The similarity between syllable sounds at the end of two or more lines. We mean clean (Bissell) Simile: A comparison between two different things that resemble each other in at least one way. Like a rock (Chevy Trucks) Synecdoche: A type of metaphor in which the part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, or in short, any portion, section, or main quality for the whole or the thing itself. You’re in good hands with Allstate (Allstate Insurance) Summary The art of tagline development is a similar to the writing of a lyric for a melody. It must adhere to certain conventions and constraints prescribed by the brand in order to work in close harmony with it. Since brand messages can be expressed on several levels (e.g., position, promise, benefit, differentiation, etc.), there is an expectation that taglines should multi-task. Although Lovin' That Rubber Chicken! 6 Steps to Successful Networking nce to haiku, which reveals its insights metaphorically and intuitively in a highly compressed form. The tagline is also akin to sculpture in the way it uncovers the essence of an idea after chiseling away all that is irrelevant.Any entrepreneur knows that being an business owner is more about sales than anything else, whether it is hot tar roofing, algae scraping or pooper scooping. It doesn’t matter what you do, you must be a sales person to make a business work. One method that has continually proven successful for many businesses, including mine, is regular networking.Now I know what you all are thinking, “if I have to eat one more rubber chicken dinner with a bunch of people that I will never hear from again, I am going to poke my eyes out with a spoon”. Fear not, I have the magic steps to make networking one of your most successful investments.Do I have to eat the food?Ok, so the rubber chicken isn’t the best bang for your $50, but it isn’t the grub we are after is it? We want to see that cash in our pockets at the end of the month. We want to build our current client relationships and make new ones while they are all in one room, not by making 50 different cold calls to 50 different offices. So get your Imodium and your business cards ready!Here are 7 steps to make networking work for you!1. Sign up for at least 2 different networking groups and go consistently, says Jo-ann Vacing, Director of the Calgary Chapter of E-Women Networking Group, it will expand your contact base tremendously.2. Go with a goal of making contacts, not sales! Sales will not happen in your first visit and maybe not your second, you need to slowly build relationships on trust and a foundation of consistent appearances. People want to know they are not dealing Of course, the best thing about taglines is that they’re not written in stone. They can be easily refreshed when internal and external pressures require a branding makeover. Within the constraints of this so-called nine-syllable novel, a kernel of truth (or myth) emerges that is often surprising, disarming, or uplifting. From the Practical to the Personal Taglines work their magic on a variety of levels. From a functional point of view, they can embrace your company’s mission, purpose, benefit, or competitive advantage (Works like a dream – Ambien; Built for the road ahead – Ford; Medicine with muscle – Motrin). Taglines can also convey the essentials of brand character, revealing your core values and the consistent qualities expected from your brand (Raising the bar – Cingular; Pleasing people the world over – Holiday Inn; Taking care of business – Office Depot). Or they can align your company with a recognized class or category to give it added value and credibility (The most trusted name in news – CNN; We move the world – DHL; Babies are our business – Gerber). Finally, taglines can focus on your audience’s deeply-cherished needs and aspirations, promising personal fulfillment or the attainment of a desired goal or outcome (Will you be ready? – Cialis; Don’t dream it. Drive it. – Jaguar; It’s everywhere you want to be – VISA). Effective taglines work beneath the surface like a mantra, gently nudging feelings and reinforcing opinions every time competing brands are weighed, measured, tested, and compared. Focusing on the Message Sadly, taglines are called upon to do the impossible, especially if they’re forged in a creative vacuum unrelated to, and unsupported by, other marketing and branding activities. Creating a tagline without aligning it to your core marketing message or ongoing communications program is like taking a diet pill at the expense of proper nutrition and exercise. In sum, there’s no such thing as a perfect tagline; rather, the true litmus test of a tagline’s suitability is whether its message is clear, consistent, and compelling – and whether it is integral to your marketing objectives and overall brand strategy. A tagline may only be the tip of the iceberg, but it can have a visible and lasting impact on your target audience. Given the short-term memory of a fickle marketplace, the tagline must rise above the din and clutter, vibrant and intact, like a battle cry or a flag waving in the breeze. As an essential part of your branding arsenal, a tagline can serve as a sort of mnemonic, sky-writing device that slips inside your prospect’s cloudy mind and pushes aside other conflicting messages. The successful tagline is one which communicates brand affinity – an ability to find common ground, stretch expectations, and appeal to basic needs for comfort, safety, assurance, excitement, love, acceptance, or, ultimately, self-actualization. Text and Texture We all know a good tagline when we see it, but what makes it great? Sure, it may be brief, clever, original, funny, ironic, simple, or elegant, but what makes it memorable? Apart from its ostensible message or promise, and the brand elements and benefits it reflects, I would like to focus on the ways in which a tagline’s message is crafted and executed to determine the source of its attraction and appeal. Like much of classic literature, commercial taglines and slogans are replete with rhetorical devices that their creators use, unwittingly or not, to give them a distinctive tone, image, style, and personality. After all, tagline development is all about wordsmithing – using the right words in the right combination at the right time for a desired effect. It’s requires being cognizant of the symbols, nuances, and associations they evoke, as well as the order and combination of sounds and images they conjure up. Tagline development is a way of communicating both textual and textural meaning while, at the same time, strengthening the specific brand aspirations of an organization, product, or service. The Rhetorical Gambits of Successful Taglines There’s something highly subjective about how a tagline strikes you. When its message, sound, and meaning work in harmony with each other, it has what branding strategists like to refer to as “legs.” It tells a story that transcends commonplace experience. It forms a gestalt that’s larger than the sum of its parts. The parts, however, can be dissected and examined. They are the building blocks of a tagline that make it artful, clever, and pleasurable. They are the rhetorical devices that amplify its meaning and crystallize its persuasive effect. You’ll fondly recall some of these devices from high school English class. Here is a brief sampling (1): Alliteration: The recurrence of initial consonant sounds, usually juxtaposed. Famously fresh (Planter’s Peanuts) Allusion: A reference to a famous person or event. The spirit of ’76 (Unocal) Analogy: Compares two things which are alike for the purpose of explaining or clarifying some unfamiliar or difficult idea or object. This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs. (Partnership for a Drug-Free America) Antithesis: Shows a contrasting relationship between two ideas by joining them together or juxtaposing them, often in parallel structure. The toughest job you’ll ever love (U.S. Peace Corps) Assonance: Similar vowel sounds repeated in successive or proximate words containing different consonants. A silly millimeter longer (Chesterfield Cigarettes) Colloquialism: An informal word or phrase of conversational language that brings color to everyday speech. Wassup? (Budweiser) Diacope: The repetition of a word or phrase after an intervening word or phrase. Always low prices. Always. (Wal-Mart) Double Meaning: A figure of speech similar to the pun in which a phrase can be understood in either of two ways. Take it all off (Noxzema) Epizeuxis: Repetition of one word, usually for emphasis. For fast, fast, fast relief (Anacin) Hyperbole: Deliberately exaggerates conditions for emphasis or effect. I’d walk a mile for a camel (Camel Cigarettes) Inflection: Alteration of the form, stress, or intonation of a word. They’re g-r-r-r-eat! (Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes) Irony: A mode of expression that conveys a reality different from, and usually opposite to, appearance or expectation. With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good (Smucker’s) Metaphor: Compares two different things by speaking of one in terms of the other. Unlike a simile or analogy, a metaphor asserts that one thing is another thing, not just like it. The champagne of bottled beer (Miller High Life) Meter: The rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular accented pattern. The quicker picker-upper (Bounty) Metonymy: A form of metaphor in which a closely associated object is substituted for the object or idea in mind. Take a bite out of crime (National Crime Prevention Council) Pleonasm: Being redundant to express an idea, usually for emphasis. Extinct is forever (Friends of the Animals) Rhetorical Question: A statement formulated as a question whose answer is obvious or obviously desired and doesn’t need to be answered. Doesn’t your dog deserve Alpo? (Alpo Dog Food) Rhyme: The similarity between syllable sounds at the end of two or more lines. We mean clean (Bissell) Simile: A comparison between two different things that resemble each other in at least one way. Like a rock (Chevy Trucks) Synecdoche: A type of metaphor in which the part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, or in short, any portion, section, or main quality for the whole or the thing itself. You’re in good hands with Allstate (Allstate Insurance) Summary The art of tagline development is a similar to the writing of a lyric for a melody. It must adhere to certain conventions and constraints prescribed by the brand in order to work in close harmony with it. Since brand messages can be expressed on several levels (e.g., position, promise, benefit, differentiation, etc.), there is an expectation that taglines should multi-task. Although The Ready Fundraising Company , there’s no such thing as a perfect tagline; rather, the true litmus test of a tagline’s suitability is whether its message is clear, consistent, and compelling – and whether it is integral to your marketing objectives and overall brand strategy.There are many fundraising companies that are out there today, and one of the most well-known and successful of all is the Ready Fundraising Company. They are a fundraising company which began in the year 1909 as the manufacturer of Ready Jell, and this firm is one which supplies and sells fundraising programs to youth groups throughout the United States.Owned and operated by the same family for over four generations during a 90 year history, the Ready Fundraising Company has always been a wholesale distributor to the fundraising industry.What They Have to OfferNow, almost 90 years later, the Ready Fundraising Company is truly a leader in the national wholesale market of fundraising programs, moving incredibly far beyond its early days of selling gelatin desserts. Surviving the economic fluctuations of the 20th century is something which has been easy but the company has managed to do it, as solid business practices and a willingness to change with the times is what has really seen the company through. The Ready Fundraising Company offers wide variety of goods, including: biomat, coffee, cookie dough, Hershey, M&Ms, lollipops, candies, fall flower bulbs, calendars, and more.Employment With the CompanyThe company is always looking for active people who are interested in representing them in their communities, and they have many different men and women who are already recommending their programs to schools and organizations and who are making an incredibly good commission on those sales.It is in fact very common for p A tagline may only be the tip of the iceberg, but it can have a visible and lasting impact on your target audience. Given the short-term memory of a fickle marketplace, the tagline must rise above the din and clutter, vibrant and intact, like a battle cry or a flag waving in the breeze. As an essential part of your branding arsenal, a tagline can serve as a sort of mnemonic, sky-writing device that slips inside your prospect’s cloudy mind and pushes aside other conflicting messages. The successful tagline is one which communicates brand affinity – an ability to find common ground, stretch expectations, and appeal to basic needs for comfort, safety, assurance, excitement, love, acceptance, or, ultimately, self-actualization. Text and Texture We all know a good tagline when we see it, but what makes it great? Sure, it may be brief, clever, original, funny, ironic, simple, or elegant, but what makes it memorable? Apart from its ostensible message or promise, and the brand elements and benefits it reflects, I would like to focus on the ways in which a tagline’s message is crafted and executed to determine the source of its attraction and appeal. Like much of classic literature, commercial taglines and slogans are replete with rhetorical devices that their creators use, unwittingly or not, to give them a distinctive tone, image, style, and personality. After all, tagline development is all about wordsmithing – using the right words in the right combination at the right time for a desired effect. It’s requires being cognizant of the symbols, nuances, and associations they evoke, as well as the order and combination of sounds and images they conjure up. Tagline development is a way of communicating both textual and textural meaning while, at the same time, strengthening the specific brand aspirations of an organization, product, or service. The Rhetorical Gambits of Successful Taglines There’s something highly subjective about how a tagline strikes you. When its message, sound, and meaning work in harmony with each other, it has what branding strategists like to refer to as “legs.” It tells a story that transcends commonplace experience. It forms a gestalt that’s larger than the sum of its parts. The parts, however, can be dissected and examined. They are the building blocks of a tagline that make it artful, clever, and pleasurable. They are the rhetorical devices that amplify its meaning and crystallize its persuasive effect. You’ll fondly recall some of these devices from high school English class. Here is a brief sampling (1): Alliteration: The recurrence of initial consonant sounds, usually juxtaposed. Famously fresh (Planter’s Peanuts) Allusion: A reference to a famous person or event. The spirit of ’76 (Unocal) Analogy: Compares two things which are alike for the purpose of explaining or clarifying some unfamiliar or difficult idea or object. This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs. (Partnership for a Drug-Free America) Antithesis: Shows a contrasting relationship between two ideas by joining them together or juxtaposing them, often in parallel structure. The toughest job you’ll ever love (U.S. Peace Corps) Assonance: Similar vowel sounds repeated in successive or proximate words containing different consonants. A silly millimeter longer (Chesterfield Cigarettes) Colloquialism: An informal word or phrase of conversational language that brings color to everyday speech. Wassup? (Budweiser) Diacope: The repetition of a word or phrase after an intervening word or phrase. Always low prices. Always. (Wal-Mart) Double Meaning: A figure of speech similar to the pun in which a phrase can be understood in either of two ways. Take it all off (Noxzema) Epizeuxis: Repetition of one word, usually for emphasis. For fast, fast, fast relief (Anacin) Hyperbole: Deliberately exaggerates conditions for emphasis or effect. I’d walk a mile for a camel (Camel Cigarettes) Inflection: Alteration of the form, stress, or intonation of a word. They’re g-r-r-r-eat! (Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes) Irony: A mode of expression that conveys a reality different from, and usually opposite to, appearance or expectation. With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good (Smucker’s) Metaphor: Compares two different things by speaking of one in terms of the other. Unlike a simile or analogy, a metaphor asserts that one thing is another thing, not just like it. The champagne of bottled beer (Miller High Life) Meter: The rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular accented pattern. The quicker picker-upper (Bounty) Metonymy: A form of metaphor in which a closely associated object is substituted for the object or idea in mind. Take a bite out of crime (National Crime Prevention Council) Pleonasm: Being redundant to express an idea, usually for emphasis. Extinct is forever (Friends of the Animals) Rhetorical Question: A statement formulated as a question whose answer is obvious or obviously desired and doesn’t need to be answered. Doesn’t your dog deserve Alpo? (Alpo Dog Food) Rhyme: The similarity between syllable sounds at the end of two or more lines. We mean clean (Bissell) Simile: A comparison between two different things that resemble each other in at least one way. Like a rock (Chevy Trucks) Synecdoche: A type of metaphor in which the part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, or in short, any portion, section, or main quality for the whole or the thing itself. You’re in good hands with Allstate (Allstate Insurance) Summary The art of tagline development is a similar to the writing of a lyric for a melody. It must adhere to certain conventions and constraints prescribed by the brand in order to work in close harmony with it. Since brand messages can be expressed on several levels (e.g., position, promise, benefit, differentiation, etc.), there is an expectation that taglines should multi-task. Although Die Cutting Machines Die cutting machines are used to convert sheet or web materials into desired shapes. These are used to process rubber sheets, non-woven textiles and woven cloth. Basically, there are two types of die cutting machines - rotary die cutters and clicker presses. Automated die cutting machines are used for cutting dies with precise and minimal tolerances.Rotary die cutters, also known as roller press die cutters, are used in the high-speed processing of sheet and web material. The rotary die cutting machines press roller-shaped cutting dies against a web. Web materials are inserted into the rotating roller dies and then changed into desired shapes. Clicker presses employ manual conversion of web materials. This press consists of a wide plate or table with a smaller swing-arm head. For more difficult jobs, full head and traveling head machines are used. The cutting speed of the die cutting machine is controlled by an electronic inverter.Top performance, high-speed, reliable cutting results and high precision are the essential advantages of a good die cutting machine. The machines are available in several sizes and shapes for various die cutting requirements. Most die cutting machines offer a lifetime warranty and are able to provide a maximum pressure of 10 to 20 tons. The new generation machines come with excellent efficiency and high precision. There are high-speed hydraulic die cutting machines that can make 15,000 to 25,000 cuts in eight hours.Several common technologies are used by die cutting machines. Some of them are driven by pneumat There’s something highly subjective about how a tagline strikes you. When its message, sound, and meaning work in harmony with each other, it has what branding strategists like to refer to as “legs.” It tells a story that transcends commonplace experience. It forms a gestalt that’s larger than the sum of its parts. The parts, however, can be dissected and examined. They are the building blocks of a tagline that make it artful, clever, and pleasurable. They are the rhetorical devices that amplify its meaning and crystallize its persuasive effect. You’ll fondly recall some of these devices from high school English class. Here is a brief sampling (1): Alliteration: The recurrence of initial consonant sounds, usually juxtaposed. Famously fresh (Planter’s Peanuts) Allusion: A reference to a famous person or event. The spirit of ’76 (Unocal) Analogy: Compares two things which are alike for the purpose of explaining or clarifying some unfamiliar or difficult idea or object. This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs. (Partnership for a Drug-Free America) Antithesis: Shows a contrasting relationship between two ideas by joining them together or juxtaposing them, often in parallel structure. The toughest job you’ll ever love (U.S. Peace Corps) Assonance: Similar vowel sounds repeated in successive or proximate words containing different consonants. A silly millimeter longer (Chesterfield Cigarettes) Colloquialism: An informal word or phrase of conversational language that brings color to everyday speech. Wassup? (Budweiser) Diacope: The repetition of a word or phrase after an intervening word or phrase. Always low prices. Always. (Wal-Mart) Double Meaning: A figure of speech similar to the pun in which a phrase can be understood in either of two ways. Take it all off (Noxzema) Epizeuxis: Repetition of one word, usually for emphasis. For fast, fast, fast relief (Anacin) Hyperbole: Deliberately exaggerates conditions for emphasis or effect. I’d walk a mile for a camel (Camel Cigarettes) Inflection: Alteration of the form, stress, or intonation of a word. They’re g-r-r-r-eat! (Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes) Irony: A mode of expression that conveys a reality different from, and usually opposite to, appearance or expectation. With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good (Smucker’s) Metaphor: Compares two different things by speaking of one in terms of the other. Unlike a simile or analogy, a metaphor asserts that one thing is another thing, not just like it. The champagne of bottled beer (Miller High Life) Meter: The rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular accented pattern. The quicker picker-upper (Bounty) Metonymy: A form of metaphor in which a closely associated object is substituted for the object or idea in mind. Take a bite out of crime (National Crime Prevention Council) Pleonasm: Being redundant to express an idea, usually for emphasis. Extinct is forever (Friends of the Animals) Rhetorical Question: A statement formulated as a question whose answer is obvious or obviously desired and doesn’t need to be answered. Doesn’t your dog deserve Alpo? (Alpo Dog Food) Rhyme: The similarity between syllable sounds at the end of two or more lines. We mean clean (Bissell) Simile: A comparison between two different things that resemble each other in at least one way. Like a rock (Chevy Trucks) Synecdoche: A type of metaphor in which the part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, or in short, any portion, section, or main quality for the whole or the thing itself. You’re in good hands with Allstate (Allstate Insurance) Summary The art of tagline development is a similar to the writing of a lyric for a melody. It must adhere to certain conventions and constraints prescribed by the brand in order to work in close harmony with it. Since brand messages can be expressed on several levels (e.g., position, promise, benefit, differentiation, etc.), there is an expectation that taglines should multi-task. Although The Fundamentals of Book Printing on: Alteration of the form, stress, or intonation of a word.How to get published is the foremost issue that one should have to cope with when printing a book. It is said to be the most essential thing that you should think about in book printing. For some people book printing is an effortless task. But in reality it isn’t. It is a complicated process especially for a first-time publisher. It is a challenging job that you should face if you really want to have your book be read by your target market.Ideally, if you want to be sure about the result of your book printing project, you must look for a reliable printer who will handle your project. There are several book printers on hand. It is recommended that you go for the printer that offers book printing service are at a very reasonable price. It’s the best way to get your print jobs done and get your work out to be read by the public.Check out these basic steps to producing books on-the-fly.Step 1. Let a trusted book printing company take care of your project. This is very important. Entrusting your print jobs to a professional printer will allow you to eliminate high cost of production and also save time.Step 2. Check out some important guides on how to publish books. This will help you on how to meet your projects smoothly.Step 3. When printing your book, take into account the front matter. You should make it pleasing to the eye to attract the interest of the readers. It’s essential to analyze carefully on how you will present the information in your book.Step 4. Get in touch with your printer first before finalizing the d They’re g-r-r-r-eat! (Kellogg’s Frosted Flakes) Irony: A mode of expression that conveys a reality different from, and usually opposite to, appearance or expectation. With a name like Smucker’s, it has to be good (Smucker’s) Metaphor: Compares two different things by speaking of one in terms of the other. Unlike a simile or analogy, a metaphor asserts that one thing is another thing, not just like it. The champagne of bottled beer (Miller High Life) Meter: The rhythmic pattern that emerges when words are arranged in such a way that their stressed and unstressed syllables fall into a more or less regular accented pattern. The quicker picker-upper (Bounty) Metonymy: A form of metaphor in which a closely associated object is substituted for the object or idea in mind. Take a bite out of crime (National Crime Prevention Council) Pleonasm: Being redundant to express an idea, usually for emphasis. Extinct is forever (Friends of the Animals) Rhetorical Question: A statement formulated as a question whose answer is obvious or obviously desired and doesn’t need to be answered. Doesn’t your dog deserve Alpo? (Alpo Dog Food) Rhyme: The similarity between syllable sounds at the end of two or more lines. We mean clean (Bissell) Simile: A comparison between two different things that resemble each other in at least one way. Like a rock (Chevy Trucks) Synecdoche: A type of metaphor in which the part stands for the whole, the whole for a part, or in short, any portion, section, or main quality for the whole or the thing itself. You’re in good hands with Allstate (Allstate Insurance) Summary The art of tagline development is a similar to the writing of a lyric for a melody. It must adhere to certain conventions and constraints prescribed by the brand in order to work in close harmony with it. Since brand messages can be expressed on several levels (e.g., position, promise, benefit, differentiation, etc.), there is an expectation that taglines should multi-task. Although some taglines are better suited than others in assuming this burden, those that focus on a single brand message are generally more memorable and effective, and easier to grasp. Serendipity does play a factor in the creative process. Whether you call it inspiration or the fortuitous collision of disparate ideas, it usually occurs when impulse and intent coalesce to express a thought simply and effortlessly. Actually, this is how many rhetorical devices find their way into commercial taglines. For example, the person who created Apple Computer’s tagline, “Think different,” may not have been trying to intentionally break the rules of grammar (e.g., think differently). Most likely, it just came out that way, in the vernacular…and it sounded, well, different! The key thing is – its creator had the presence of mind to recognize the difference. The crafting of a tagline’s many variations and permutations is also an indispensable part of creative development. No matter how you slice it and dice it, you have to wag the tagline repeatedly until you hit upon the best way to express your message. And whether you’re conscious of literary tropes or not, a punchy and persuasive tagline derives much of its individual artistry and fluidity from the way it is expressed rhetorically. After all, where would RAID be if it didn’t “kill bugs dead?” And where would we be if Yellow Pages didn’t let our “fingers do the walking?” Oh, yeah, we’ve “come a long way, baby.” (1) Most definitions obtained from A Glossary of Literary Terms and A Handbook of Rhetorical Devices by Robert A. Harris. © 2006 Eric Stephen Swartz. All rights reserved.
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