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America is a Brand...But Does It Deliver on its Promise?

Marketing Muckraking

Release Date: 07/04/2022

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More Episodes

America is a brand. 

And if you are an American, you are an affiliate or brand ambassador. 

Theoretically, we’re paid in “freedom” and the benefits of living in this country. But are we being paid in full? 

As both consumers and ambassadors, the questions to ask ourselves are: 

“What is the value proposition? Does America deliver on its brand promise of freedom and justice for all? Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness? What are the benefits of my brand loyalty? And what are the costs of buying in?” 

In this episode of Marketing Muckraking, I’m exploring America the brand and the history of patriotic advertising, both for the country and its companies. 

Did you know that the Pledge of Allegiance was originally written by a Christian socialist copywriter for The Youth’s Companion newspaper in 1892 as a way to sell more newspapers? Readers who sold the most newspapers were awarded a free flag! 

The Pledge of Allegiance was advertising, first and foremost. 

Join me as we examine America the Brand through: 

  • Copywriting – there’s no brand with more consistent language around “freedom” and “happiness” than America.
  • Pain Points — the American brand appeals to our sense of scarcity and our fear of what would happen to us if we lived anywhere else. 
  • Opt-Ins — when we vote, we opt in to a sense of political efficacy that keeps us invested in what we’ll get in return. Do our politicians deliver? 
  • Accept No Substitutes — as schoolchildren, we’re taught that the USA is the greatest country on Earth and everything else falls short. Is it true? 
  • Brand Loyalty — branding is meant to justify a higher price because of our emotional connections. What price do we pay for loyalty to Brand America? Is it worth the extra cost? 

Branding, at the end of the day, is the engineering of a reputation. 

America The Brand has sold us on a reputation of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. 

If any other brand sold us this message and failed to deliver, we would stop buying. So why do we keep buying into this one? 

Join me as we explore the history of selling America and using America to sell: 

  • Colonial Advertising – America the Brand was sold to immigrants in order to populate the nation before it was even formally a country. Its free market was one of America's selling points, but the nation itself was its first product. 
  • Post-Industrial Revolution Advertising – After the Industrial Revolution, the message of mass production was that the best way to exercise our freedom was through consumption. The American public was taught to buy constantly through, what Edward Filene called, "The School of Freedom": advertisers emphasizing the patriotic call of duty to "do the shopping." 
  • WWI and WWII Advertising – War propaganda legitimized advertising as an industry and showed the powers that be that consistent and repetitive campaigns could shape public opinion. Advertisers sold American nationalism alongside star spangled corn biscuits and cigarettes. 
  • Commodity Activism in Advertising – In response to counterculture, the struggles of marginalized communities to gain civil liberties, and their fight for representation, brands evolved to ads that positioned America as a utopian paradise of unity and diversity, where world peace was as easy as "buying the world a Coke" or purchasing from companies who ran social justice campaigns. 

Ask yourself, "Does America deliver on its brand promise?" or does it simply offer layaway plans for freedom, asking us to keep making payments for a product it can't and won't deliver?