This is the fourth post in a four part series. Start at the beginning with: Whimsical Branding Obscures Apple’s Troubled Supply Chain.
Despite the recent scandals regarding Apple’s business practices, it has succeeded at cultivating a brand to which we feel positive emotional attachment. In three previous posts, I showed that the company accomplishes this with commercials that associate its products with playfulness, sentimentality, and cool youthfulness. The most prominent theme, however, and I suspect the most powerful aspect of the company’s emotional branding strategy, is the hope it cultivates in each of us of who we could be by virtue of using the company’s products.
Taken together, the whole of Apple’s advertising campaigns suggest that, if we use their products, we will be our hippest, coolest, most creative, intelligent, adventurous, socially engaged, and admired selves. The idea of Apple users as standouts from the masses was introduced in the company’s first commercial that aired only once, during the 1984 Super Bowl broadcast:
In this commercial Apple attacks the “boring” IBM and its “mindless” users controlled by a televised ruler in an Orwellian dystopia. It also suggests that there is something special about the company and its products that will allow it, with the help of its customers, to change the course of history. A commodification of the counter-cultural ethos of the 1960s and ‘70s, this theme was prominent in the first few years of the company’s advertising, but went dormant during Steve Jobs’ 12-year hiatus. It was resurrected in 1997 when Jobs returned to the helm of the company. The now iconic and much revered commercial titled “The Crazy Ones” launched the company’s slogan “Think Different” into our vocabulary, and helped reposition the company, then floundering, onto its path to meteoric financial growth:
With ads like these, Apple doesn’t suggest that one will become Mahatma Ghandi, Amelia Earhart, or Pablo Picasso per se, but that daring to be different (by purchasing an Apple product) opens up the possibility for one to do great things.
This trend continues today in commercials that appeal to our desire to be valued and admired as artistically creative, culturally relevant, and intellectually engaging. Apple’s commercial for the iPhone 4S and Siri, titled “Rock God”, aired in 2012 and exemplifies this trend.
Others, like the “iPad is Amazing” commercial that introduced the device in 2010, speak to how iPad users will be intellectually, culturally, and professionally engaged and valuable people for using the device:
Commercials like these emphasize that Apple products are tools for self-development. By providing the opportunity to learn, create, and share, Apple products facilitate the expression of one’s unique, individual, and socially valued identity. In today’s digitally mediated world where social networking is the norm, the promise of such narcissistic pursuits and outcomes is a key part of Apple’s brand strategy. “Be your best 21st century you!”, recent ads seem to shout.
In this sense, Apple products offer consumers the opportunity to increase their cultural capital. Social theorist Pierre Bourdieu defined cultural capital broadly as one’s accumulated knowledge and skills. Commercials like those above for the iPhone and iPad suggest that Apple helps its customers bolster their cultural capital and raise their social standing. In a time when we are all tasked with marketing and selling ourselves to make it in the world, commercials like these amount to a message about personal and financial success. This is a powerfully seductive promise.
Is it any wonder that news of worker abuse, poisoning, and workplace suicide fails to compromise the company’s financial standing? In fact, in the immediate aftermath of negative reports about its Chinese supply chain in early 2012, Apple went on to post record sales of iPhones and iPads. Most recently, a report by China Labor Watch that documents unlawful, unsafe, and abusive work conditions at Pegatron facilities throughout China has been popularly interpreted by the tech community and mainstream journalists as exciting news that a “cheap iPhone” is on its way. As I pointed out in my first post in this series, Apple’s ability to obscure with its brand promise the environmental degredation and human rights abuses within its supply chain is commodity fetishism at both its best and its worst. Behind that beautiful fetish of aluminum and glass lies the reality of globalization.
Nicki Lisa Cole, Ph.D. is a lecturer in sociology at Pomona College. She studies the connections between consumer culture, labor, and environmental issues in global supply chains. You can follwer her at 21 Century Nomad, visit her website, and learn more about her research into Apple here.
Comments 37
PinkWithIndignation — September 7, 2013
Not to counter this article, but my ADD disorganized life did get amazingly organized when I got an iPad because I could take the calendar and notepad with me everywhere. This only increased when I got an iPhone and discovered Reminders were also awesome and could call businesses from Google searches when out and also of course the GPS (although it is far from perfect). So, it's not entirely hype! Probably would not help as much with people who were already organized or did not want to use the features (like certain relatives I know).
PokaDot Dreams — September 7, 2013
Why do I pay $600 for my phone? Why do I pay $3200 for my laptop? Why do I buy an iPad for $600? Why do I buy a $300 iPod? The truth is that I could get a free phone, a 1000 laptop and I could live without my iPad and iPod. I make under 50k a year and these are significant costs for me.
Apple products offer me more value for my money than any other brand. Value is admittedly a subjective term here, but I strongly believe in solid performance and beautiful design. Not, everyone does, and I don't have a problem with Dell and Android and Samsung and Microsoft, I just don't see their products as offering me the same value as Apple.
Maybe I have drunk the Apple Kool-aid, but maybe they make good products, that are impeccably designed, that actually do make my life better. Seems to me they do.
As for labor violations overseas, which are admittedly terrible, and must be addressed, perhaps the reason these do not affect the companies financial returns is because those of us who buy these products really do deeply value these products! Or maybe we are all mindless automatons seduced by the Apple Mind Control Ap! (Notice, however, that when Google or Microsoft or Samsung throw their Sledge Hammers at the APPLE Machine, they don't really ever seem to make a dent. ( see Super Bowl Ad from, and Novel by George Orwell: 1984)
A sociology professor — September 7, 2013
I would be interested to know if there are generational/class/race differences in who is purchasing Apple products, It could just be the people I know, but it seems like the main ones who purchase Apple products are either baby boomers or milennials, while the majority of 13th gen (gen x) people like me avoid them. But then the boomers and milennials I know are more well off then us 13th gen people. It would be a niche study, but given my generation's purported resistance to advertising it might provide some interesting findings.
Village Idiot — September 8, 2013
My first computer was an Apple II, followed soon after by an Apple IIe. Got the first Macintosh when it came out, used it until I sold it before hitting the woods in order to escape from civilization (for my first attempt, that is; turned out it was real hard and I came back after seven years).
Upon my return, since I had access to electricity again I was given a laptop with Windows XP on it and got on that newfangled internet thing for a while and learned Windows. It eventually broke after 5 years then I got an iMac since I was sick of dealing with malware and viruses and such. I'm still on a Mac but plan on abandoning Apple products as soon as I have the time/money to get a new computer and learn how to run Linux/Unbuntu/something open-source on it.
My reason for dumping Apple is one I don't see mentioned very often: They're closing in the walls of their "walled garden" tighter and tighter so that at some point it appears highly likely that once you're "in" Apple products you will be hard pressed to get back out, at least with all your data intact to the degree that it can be incorporated into new hardware and software without having to pay a lot of money or spend days and days migrating/reentering it.
This is a serious problem when it comes to things like financial/accounting data, proprietary media file formats, and the increasing rate of essential (and costly) "upgrades" that must be installed or functionality will be broken thanks to Apple dropping support for prior versions much faster than has generally happened in the past.
Consider Apple's failure to renew the license for the Rosetta app in OS X 10.7 and 10.8; now all those PPC-based Mac programs we paid for and fortunately got to use in Snow Leopard won't work if we "upgraded" to the latest OS, as many shocked and horrified customers discovered after they "upgraded." And since they're living in Apple's walled garden of overpriced delights they were also probably just as shocked and horrified when they discovered how hard it has become to leave if that's what they'd decided to do.
They might make some fine and useful products, but it's like a honeypot that locks you inside if you indulge and while being trapped in a honeypot that's stuck in a walled garden might not seem so bad now, it'll probably look a lot different when the honey turns to vinegar and corners must be cut to appease shareholders (which is inevitable).
This isn't Steve Jobs' Apple anymore and will only become less so over time if recent trends are any indication.
Reason — September 8, 2013
All you apple fanboys and fangirls are missing the point. In fact, every comment seems to be about whether or not apple products are good. This is not the point so here's help:
Every time you purchase, promote, use, mention, talk about, or think about using an apple product, you are explicitly putting your signature and stamp of approval on apple's abuse and murder of it's employees oversees. Furthermore, you are authorizing your current employer to abuse, poison, and murder you once global morality is the whole of the law.
EVERY TIME YOU CLICK "I AGREE," YOU ARE AGREEING TO THE ABOVE.
And all you sheeple can think about is angry fucking birds.
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Shanta Brown — November 12, 2020
The article Apple and Social Claas talks about social mobility and the new accomplishment of ipads and iphones in rergards to commericsals that use their products with playfulness, sentimentality, and cool youthfulness in hopes of acquiring the hippest, coolest, most creative intelligent, adventurous, socially engagedand admired customers with the idea of Apple users as standouts from the masses being introduced in the company's first commerical that aired only once during the 1984 Super Bowl broadcast.
This is one of my absolute favorite sociological topics. Have you - 100% Original Papers — February 4, 2022
[…] Apple’s Seductive Brand Promise: Cultural Capital & Social Mobility […]
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Tony Anstatt — September 17, 2022
We need more of Sacha Baron Cohen‘s takes on Apple products: free adverts, for the masses! ‘When you’ve reached parody status, you’re onto a winner’.