brand strategy analysis

Split-screen comparison: left side shows Apple's 1997-2002 Think Different campaign featuring black and white portraits of Einstein, Maria Callas, Miles Davis and other cultural icons; right side shows 2025 Apple advertising with soft-focus lifestyle imagery of people using Macs in pastel-coloured contemporary settings

Apple’s Advertising in 2025: All Polish, No Punch?

Great Ideas Start on Mac” campaign is beautiful, polished, and utterly forgettable. Voiced posthumously by Jane Goodall, it represents everything wrong with contemporary brand advertising: borrowed authority replacing authentic voice, aesthetic sophistication masking conceptual hollowness, and risk aversion trumping creative courage. The company that once dared audiences to “think different” now seems terrified of causing offence, however brief. In eighteen months, Apple has withdrawn four major campaigns following mild criticism—a pattern that reveals a brand more concerned with avoiding controversy than earning genuine connection. This isn’t creative leadership; it’s creative paralysis.

Apple’s Advertising in 2025: All Polish, No Punch? Read More »

Made by Google 2025 official promotional image showing Pixel phones, Pixel Watch, and Pixel Buds product lineup on minimalist background

The Manufactured Spectacle: How Google’s 2025 Pixel Launch Became a Masterclass in Missing the Point

Google’s Made by Google 2025 event promised revolutionary innovation but delivered forced entertainment. With Jimmy Fallon as ringmaster and celebrities queued like a talk-show green room, the company managed to obscure incremental improvements behind manufactured flair. What does this misstep reveal about Google’s deeper strategic anxieties—and what can digital marketing professionals learn from watching a tech giant perform catch-up in broad daylight?

The Manufactured Spectacle: How Google’s 2025 Pixel Launch Became a Masterclass in Missing the Point Read More »

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