radarlove
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2005
- Posts
- 677
wndshr said:radar:
not that i agree with it or not, but jetblue does that to differentiate themselves from the rest of the industry. it is well known as "branding" so far it is working extremely well. take for instance starbucks. is it really a better cup of coffee than dunkin donuts? i don't think so, but all the desperate housewives have to have that cup in their hand with the green symbol on it while driving their fancy SUV. branding is what saved Valujet....or changing its branding!
why do you think jetblue pilots wear those blue shirts? branding. the public will know what a jetblue pilot looks like but not a (fill in the blank) airline pilot. branding! that can be good....and bad i think!
It's not "branding" as you describe. It's merely an incorrect version of proper English. "JetBlue" as one word with two capital letters? Ok, artist formally known as Prince. Calling secretaries "crewmembers"? Ok, I hope they're on the company DOT list for drug and alcohol testing, since they're "crewmembers".
Calling vendors "business partners"? Legally a business partner has an ownership stake. Do these?
It's not branding (well, maybe the "JetBlue"), it's just the hope that applying a term to something will somehow make it different. It doesn't.
Not to just bash Jet Blue, lots of other companies do the same thing. In the airline biz, Southwest is probably the worst for English usage. They capitalize all sorts of stupid things, it's like whoever writes their press releases never took high school English.