Building a Digital Branding Strategy for Arts and Culture Organizations

Building a Digital Branding Strategy for Arts and Culture Organizations

Understanding digital branding for arts and culture organizations

Digital branding is crucial for arts and culture organizations to connect with their audience and establish a strong online presence. By creating a cohesive digital branding strategy, organizations can effectively communicate their unique identity and engage with their target audience. This involves leveraging various online platforms, such as social media, websites, and digital content, to showcase the organization’s mission, values, and offerings. Through consistent and authentic branding, arts and culture organizations can enhance their visibility, attract new supporters, and cultivate a loyal community of followers.
arts and culture branding

Importance of a digital branding strategy

In today’s digital age, having a strong digital branding strategy is crucial for arts and culture organizations. It allows them to effectively reach and engage with their audience, create a unique brand identity, and showcase their artistic offerings in a visually compelling and impactful way. A well-defined digital branding strategy helps in building brand recognition, fostering audience loyalty, and standing out in the competitive digital landscape. It also enables arts and culture organizations to leverage various digital platforms to connect with new audiences, promote events, and ultimately grow their presence in the digital sphere.

Assessing the current branding situation

Before starting to build your digital branding strategy for your arts and culture organization, it’s essential to assess the current branding situation. This involves evaluating the existing brand identity, including the visual elements and messaging on your website, social media platforms, and any printed materials. Additionally, it’s important to gather data on your current online presence, such as website traffic, social media engagement, and audience demographics. Understanding where you stand currently will provide the foundation for developing an effective digital branding strategy.

Defining the target audience and brand persona

When defining your target audience and brand persona for your arts and culture organization, it’s essential to understand who your ideal audience is and what characteristics define your brand. Here are a few key points to consider:

  • Target Audience: Identify who your primary and secondary target audience are, including their demographics, interests, and behaviors. Understanding your audience will help you tailor your messaging and offerings to better resonate with them.

  • Brand Persona: Define the personality and characteristics of your brand. What values does your organization stand for? What tone of voice best represents your brand? Creating a clear brand persona will guide your content creation and help you connect with your audience authentically.

    Crafting a unique selling proposition

    Crafting a unique selling proposition involves identifying and communicating what sets your arts and culture organization apart from others. This proposition should clearly convey the value you offer to your target audience and why they should choose your organization over others. It’s about finding your niche and showcasing what makes your brand special in a way that resonates with your audience.

    Choosing digital branding channels

    When choosing digital branding channels for your arts and culture organization, it’s essential to consider the platforms where your target audience spends the most time. This could include social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter, as well as visual platforms like Pinterest and YouTube. It’s also vital to assess your organization’s strengths and resources to determine which channels are the best fit for your digital branding strategy. Remember that consistency and engagement are key factors in choosing the right channels for building a strong digital brand presence.

    Designing branding elements for digital platforms

    When creating branding elements for digital platforms, it’s important to consider the following:

  1. Consistency: Ensure that your logo, color scheme, and visual assets are consistent across all digital platforms to reinforce your organization’s identity.

  2. Adaptability: Design your branding elements to be adaptable to different digital formats, such as social media profiles, website banners, and email newsletters.

  3. Engagement: Incorporate elements that encourage audience engagement, such as interactive features or visually appealing content, to enhance your digital presence.

    Implementing digital branding strategies

    Implementing digital branding strategies requires a deep understanding of your target audience and the unique value your organization offers. Some key factors to consider when implementing digital branding strategies include:

    • Defining your organization’s brand identity in the digital space, including your mission, values, and unique selling points
    • Creating engaging and cohesive visual and written content that reflects your brand’s identity and resonates with your audience
    • Leveraging social media platforms and digital channels to connect with your audience, share your story, and build brand awareness
    • Monitoring and analyzing the performance of your digital branding efforts to make informed decisions and optimize your strategies for maximum impact.

It’s important to stay flexible and adapt your digital branding strategies to changes in technology and consumer behavior to ensure your organization remains relevant and competitive in the digital landscape.

Measuring the success of your digital branding strategy

To measure the success of your digital branding strategy for arts and culture organizations, you can look at various indicators, such as website traffic, social media engagement, and online reach. Additionally, you can assess the number of new followers, the interaction with your content, and the growth of your online community. Tracking these metrics will help you understand the impact of your digital branding efforts and identify areas for improvement.

Adapting and evolving the digital branding strategy

To keep your digital branding strategy effective, it’s important to adapt and evolve with the changing digital landscape. This means staying updated on the latest trends and technologies, and being willing to make adjustments to your strategy as needed. It’s also crucial to consistently monitor the performance of your digital branding efforts, and regularly analyze data to identify areas for improvement. By being proactive and adaptable, you can ensure that your digital branding strategy remains relevant and impactful in the ever-evolving digital world.

Branding 101: back to basics.

Branding 101: back to basics.

Oi! Today I’m going to discuss the core of why I even decided to launch this website: branding.

I don’t care what industry you’re in, whether you’re B2B or B2C, you’ve heard the word “brand” or “branding” being thrown around like an unwanted red-headed middle step-child (too dark too soon?). The reason I jumped into such a harsh simile is that those that speak of the “brand” do not understand the brand.

What I mean by this, we must clear semantic verbiage to understand what it is that we attempt to identify when we speak to any audience. Whether they’re stakeholders, executives, employees, or consumers. This is important people!

Before I dive into what makes a brand, I want to clear up what it isn’t along with other key definitions.

Identity VS Marketing VS Telemarketing VS Public Relations VS Advertising Branding

A brand is not a logo, but a logo is part of the brand.

  • Logo (Logotype) – a trademark made from a custom-lettered word.
  • Trademark – a logo, symbol, emblem, monogram or other graphic devices. It isn’t the brand itself, but a symbol for it.

A brand isn’t the what, but how. Branding isn’t what you tell people, but how you tell it and how they perceive it. It’s their gut feeling when they encounter it.

Let’s use courtship as a fun example:

  • Marketing – you say, “I’m a great lover.”
  • Telemarketing – you say via the telephone, “I’m a great lover.”
  • Public Relations – somebody for you says, “trust me, he’s a great lover.”
  • Advertising – you keep saying over and over, “trust me, I’m a great lover².”
  • Branding – the person of interest tells you, “I understand you’re a great lover.”

Branding is not what you say it is, but what they say it is.

The Brand as a Tangible & Sentiment

A brand isn’t your logo slapped on a business card or the header portion of your website. A brand is a collection of all points of contact a person or organization has with an audience. It is how the audience perceives that contact that shapes a brand. The combination of emotional stimuli with actual benefits or attributes of a product or service is the culmination of a brand experience.

  • Ingredients:
    Graphics
  • Customer Experience
  • Staff
  • Products
  • Services
  • Logo
  • Tagline
  • Messaging
  • Packaging
  • Signage
  • Website
  • Decor
  • Language

While the recipe varies from brand to brand, key components are who you are, what you do, how you do it, visual language & standards, virtual presence & physical interaction.

Who Creates It?

If you’re a business that exchanges value for revenue, you have a brand. While you’re definitely the creator, you don’t have to be the one to actively define it, because we’ve established that it’s shaped by audience sentiment. That sentiment is expressed by your value & service.

Branding is the voice that speaks about your company, its culture, unique value, and contribution to the greater good. But what makes for great branding?

Consistency in service.

Before I dove into this awesome profession, I worked my ass off in the high-end restaurant & hospitality chain industry to pay my way through college. Jim McVeigh, one of the most amazing GMs I ever had the privilege to work for, always told me “we’re only as good as our last plate.” Let me set the scenario and let you reflect on the following restaurant experiences:

1. Party of two, you walk in and there’s nobody at the host stand. You made reservations ahead of time, but they can’t find you a seat. The hostess forgets to give you the updated daily menu. Initial contact from your server takes over 5 minutes. They bring your guest the wrong order, and when do get it right, it’s cold…
2. Party of two, a friendly smile greets you and your guest. They made notes on your reservation and remembered that you preferred a booth. An amuse bouche is quickly prepared while you and your guest wait for your drink orders within 5 minutes of having been sat. Exquisite recommendations are made that neither of you can make up your mind. The server is timely at several points of contact without being overbearing or barren in availability. Damn good evening, was it not?

The point I want to make is that you can have an amazingly designed logo, but if your service leaves a lot to be desired, it doesn’t matter what that logo really was. That bad taste in your customers’ mouths is what’s imprinted in their emotional archive when they encounter your brand. So while you do create it but can’t define it, you can influence it.

Any brand designer or strategist that promises you to deliver a great brand for your company is full of it. You’re not the one that controls it. You simply get to influence and guide it. And this culture has to be fostered from within a company.

Positioning

Before anything, you must figure out what your compelling unique value proposition will be. Apple is not a computer company. They don’t compete with Dell. Apple is in the “lifestyle made simple” business. They don’t bombard you with ads about how much RAM & Processing speed their chips contain. Instead, they present their iPod with “20,000 songs, in your pocket.”

How beautiful is that?

Nike isn’t about selling footwear. Their brand is about action, “Just Do It.” It is about persistence in the face of adversity to overcome our own barriers and become the best version of ourselves. To become champions.

Design for the Long-term

Often, we make hasty decisions due to external & time-sensitive factors. Your company may have an upcoming trade show, conference, stakeholder meeting, or focus group session. And if you attempt to design a brand around these parameters alone, you’re setting yourself up for short-term wins at the risk of long-term failure.

Design Around Your Core Values

Say you’re starting a flight booking agency and considering the following names:

– Cheap Flights
– Bargain Flights
– Inexpensive Flights
– Frugal Flights
– Low-Cost Flights
– Half-Priced Flights

You may offer great deals to the price-conscious customer, but what do you do exactly? Who are you really, as a company? Is being the cheapest at the core of your unique value proposition? Maybe you and your team are experienced polyglots that can offer great customer service in many languages and are extremely in tune to the cultural nuances of social interaction with customers of different backgrounds that share the same thrill: travel. But you positioned your company as the cheapest of the pack and that’s the majority of potential customer attention you will attract: cheapskates. Do you now see how not properly investing in your unique core values can and will affect your brand in the long run?

How to Plan for the Long Run

Instead of cheap clients, who are your dream clients? Who are the raving fans that tell others about your product or service? Why you? What about you makes them gloss over your competition? The deeper you’re able to dig into this rewarding rabbit hole, the better you’ll be able to come out with a compelling brand story that will set you up for that monumental pivot point that will enable your brand evangelists to sum you up in three words or less.

What Are You Promising?

Recall earlier when I mentioned consistency.
– Apple – simplicity
– Rolex – timeless luxury
– BMW – German reliability

Consumers of these popular brands know what to expect. That’s what has attributed to their longevity. What is your brand promise? Many companies have generic mission/vision statements, but do they really know what it is that they’re promising, what they will deliver and over-deliver again and again?

Greed and desperation will entice brands to do it all. Price | Value | Speed | Service | Inventory. This is the instance where less, is more. Can you imagine a Used Lamborghini Parts Junkyard? Who would be caught dead shopping around for spare parts?

Don’t be afraid to be categorized. Allow the simplicity of your promise to be a quick identifier in the minds of your ideal audience. We all have to eat, but what restaurants come to mind when you’re:
– on your lunch hour – Subway
– meeting up a close friend for a quick bite – Panera’s
– out on a first date – Ruth’s Chris

All three companies are successful brands, but they’re conscious of the spaces within the food industry that they occupy.

That is why it’s important to know why they buy from you and what it is that they believe about you. So know your promise and keep it.

A Brand’s Triple Threat

Let’s play a game. Connect the brands to their taglines.
Nike
Because You’re Worth It
McDonald’s
Just Do It
Apple
Imagination at Work
General Electric
I’m Lovin’ It
L’Oréal
Think Different

Tell me you didn’t smile as you read them. You probably even heard the announcer’s voice in your head. There are three key components that make for award-winning brands.

1 Be Memorable

Think about the immediate emotion you felt when you read the above brands. How catchy were the taglines? Names like Yahoo, Bing, Google, & Yelp have a distinct persona that rolls off the tongue in a playful manner. Think about how succinct and memorable your own brand can be by brainstorming how sticky your brand name can be. In how many different formats can it be used? Successfully sticky brands are the ones that transcend their name and become verbs or substitute that product or service which they represent:
– Mind passing me a Kleenex, please?

– I forgot the meaning of that, can you Google that word for me?
– Our client needs it now. Be sure to FedEx it on your way out.
– Write the grocery list of what we will need on a Post-It.
– I’m starving, should we order Domino’s?
– Hey girl, want to Netflix & chill?

2 Be Duplicatable

Think of franchise brand. When Ray Kroc started, he had an idea bigger than himself. So when he approached the McDonald brothers in 1954, he had a main goal in mind: scalability. Many of his innovations to the food-service franchise model served this focused goal.

He was able to document, scale and repeat his progress to grow one of the most widely recognized brands in the world. He focused and tweaked his “secret sauce” to be able to rinse and repeat. Think about setting a detailed formula that anyone could walk in, review, and repeat it.

Of course, this particular step isn’t truly necessary in the strictest sense if you’re set on creating a personal brand. However, think about other aspects of your operation if you do decide to bring other people on board and build a team. How would you like them to interact with the public? In that sense, this guideline still applies.

3 Be Viral

There is no first rule of Fight Club. If you have an amazing business that sells outstanding services and products; you’re bound to have raving fans. Make it easy for them to spread your message farther than you could. Let them help you build your tribe by being accessible & shareable. Incentivize them with special deals, perks, product discounts, and early release access.

Combine all of these steps to let the brand take a life of its own and build on itself. Allow for that leverage to do the heavy lifting for you.

This isn’t an easy challenge, but it is a simple concept. Establish clarity of how you want to be perceived in your marketplace. You can’t do it all, at least not in the beginning, choose your strengths. Do this, and you’ll have a solid foundation to build your company brand name, tagline, and message.

Color symbolism in Hispanic culture, a lesson in Spanglish.

Color symbolism in Hispanic culture, a lesson in Spanglish.

Spanglish 102

El color es un elemento clave de la cultura hispana y latina. Desde la ropa y decoración hasta el arte y la música, el color transmite simbolismo y significado profundo. Los colores vivos y brillantes reflejan la alegría de vivir, la pasión y el optimismo que caracterizan a nuestra gente.

Uno de los colores más importantes es el rojo. En español decimos “ponerse rojo” cuando alguien sonrie o siente vergüenza. El rojo también representa la pasión, el amor, la fuerza y el poder. Es el color del corazón y la sangre. En celebraciones como el Día de San Valentín y el Día de los Enamorados, el rojo domina. When I think rojo I think of ripe strawberries, roses, rubies, fire, excelencia and corazones ardientes.

El amarillo es el color de la felicidad y la energía positiva. It reminds me of el sol brillante, limones frescos, and smiley caritas. In many Latin cultures el amarillo signifies esperanza for a brighter future. Some Catholic churches use yellow vestments during fiestas to denote joy and celebration. Amarillo es el color del optimismo.

El verde has complex symbolism in Latin cultures. It can represent both life and death, growth and decay. Verde is the color of nature, plants, esmeraldas. It also evokes envy and jealousy – “green wiith envy.” However, many Hispanic cultures use verde to symbolize independence and national pride. For example, la bandera de México is verde, blanco y rojo.

El azul evokes tranquility and peace. It makes us think of clear skies and ocean waves. Azul represents harmony, stability, confidence and wisdom. In fact, the term “thinking out of the box” is translated as “pensar fuera de la caja azul” in Spanish. Azul is associated with the Virgin Mary in Latino art and culture.

El morado or purple is traditionally the color of royalty, prestige and ambition. In pre-Columbian times, purple dyes were reserved for Aztec emperors and kings. Today, morado symbolizes extravagance, exclusivity, luxury and creativity. You see it during Quinceañeras to accent the birthday girl’s elegance and sophistication as she transitions to womanhood.

El rosado or pink has feminine connotations like flowers, romance and self-care. Rosado evokes the softness and gentleness of youth and innocence. It’s a playful, flirtatious color that represents girl power. Rosado even has its own holiday – el Día de los Rosados observed on April 9th.

Puedes aprender más sobre Latin American celebrations en nuestra otra publicación.

El negro is the color of mystery and elegance. It conveys seriousness, power, and sophistication. You often see latinos and latinas dressed to the nines in black during ritzy galas and glamorous events. However, negro also symbolizes mourning and loss when worn at funerals and mythology blended with Catholic imagery (because, Satan).

El blanco represents purity, perfection, safety and cleanliness. Novias wear white wedding gowns to show their virginity and new beginnings. Doctors, dentists and chefs use white coats to portray professionalism, hygiene and competence. Blanco is holy and sacred.

El café or brown connects us to mother earth, home, comfort and natural materials like wood and leather. Café relaxes, grounds and soothes. It speaks to lo natural, organic, humble.

As you can see, color speaks volumes in Hispanic culture. It allows us to express ourselves and connect more deeply with our heritage. Whether flaunting fiery rojo or tranquil azul, every shade and hue has significance.

¡Que vivan los colores!

Why do niche brands matter to the Hispanic market?

Why do niche brands matter to the Hispanic market?

A brand that is niche specific has several advantages over a brand that targets a broader audience and the list below will highlight some ideas so that you start looking like the freshly cut avocado that looks like it went to private school.

Be niche like you give a damn.

A brand that is niche specific has several advantages over a brand that targets a broader audience:

Better understanding of the target audience: A niche brand can tailor its products, messaging, and marketing strategies to a specific group of consumers. By focusing on a specific niche, the brand can gain a deeper understanding of the needs and preferences of their target audience, which can help them create products and services that are more appealing to their customers.

Without a specific niche, it can be challenging to create targeted marketing strategies that resonate with a particular group of consumers. This can result in less effective marketing campaigns and lower ROI.

Reduced competition: By targeting a specific niche, the brand can reduce competition from larger, more established brands that target a broader audience. This can help the brand stand out in the marketplace and establish itself as a leader in its specific niche.

Higher perceived value: A niche brand can create a perception of exclusivity and expertise in its specific area, which can lead to a higher perceived value among consumers. This can help the brand command premium prices and create a stronger brand image.

Increased brand loyalty: By focusing on a specific niche, the brand can develop a loyal following of customers who are passionate about the brand and its products. This can lead to higher customer retention rates and more word-of-mouth referrals, which can help the brand grow its customer base over time.

A brand that does not specialize may struggle to create a strong emotional connection with its customers. Without a deep understanding of its target audience, the brand may struggle to create products and services that meet their needs and preferences, which can lead to further reduced customer loyalty.

Lack of differentiation: A brand that does not specialize may struggle to differentiate itself from its competitors. This can make it challenging for the brand to stand out in the marketplace and create a strong brand identity.

Difficulty in expanding into new markets: Without a clear niche, the brand may struggle to expand into new markets or create new product lines. This can limit the brand’s growth potential and make it more challenging to remain competitive over time and become an industry leader.

Why should you care?

Even though Spanish is spoken by 595 million people in the world, including 43 million in the United States alone, you’d think that one entry on Google Translate and they’re in your pocket.

The truth is that there are dozens of dialects between Spanish speaking countries and even regions within those countries.

So what matters isn’t just that you speak to them, but how you speak to them.

That’s why it’s crucial that you have a bilingual native or advanced speaker in your team.

They will help you navigate the nuances in Spanish language, or at the very least, know where to look when your campaign is strategizing a tailored message to specific demographics within the Hispanic market.

Overall, not specializing can lead to a lack of differentiation, difficulties in creating targeted marketing strategies, reduced customer loyalty, increased competition, and difficulty in expanding into new markets.

When brands decide to rebrand and why this matters to the Hispanic consumer.

When brands decide to rebrand and why this matters to the Hispanic consumer.

For companies targeting Hispanic consumers, rebranding can be an impactful way to update their relevance, broaden their appeal, and show their commitment to evolving with this important market.

But it needs to be backed up by tangible actions and engagement.

Rebrand like you mean it.

There are a few common reasons why companies may decide to rebrand, especially when targeting the Hispanic market:

  • To modernize their image and appeal to a younger, more diverse demographic. As the Hispanic population in the US grows and evolves, brands may want to project a more contemporary, multicultural look and feel.
  • To unite multiple brands/offerings under one unified brand identity. As companies expand into new products or services aimed at Hispanics, rebranding can bring everything under one coherent brand umbrella.
  • To distance themselves from negative associations or controversy. If a brand has been criticized for stereotyping or lacking cultural awareness, rebranding can help signal a new direction.
  • To reflect a shift in company values or priorities. Branding communicates a company’s mission and values. Rebranding allows refreshing this to resonate with Hispanic consumers.
  • To differentiate in a competitive market. With many brands competing for the growing Hispanic market, rebranding can help a company stand out and create a unique, culturally-relevant position.
  • To communicate expanded offerings or new capabilities. Rebranding to expand beyond original products/services and appeal to Hispanics’ evolving preferences.
  • To enter new geographical markets. When expanding into new regions/countries, rebranding can help adapt and localize a brand for that audience.

As our society continues to grow more ethnically and culturally diverse, brands need to evolve their messaging, visuals, and values to resonate across multiple demographics.

An important first step is auditing your current brand identity and marketing – look critically at the language used, images depicted, and experiences represented. Ensure the diversity of your target audience is genuinely reflected.

From there, brands should involve cultural consultants and community figures to advise on cultivating an inclusive, multicultural brand. Work closely with diverse teams and creators when conceptualizing campaigns. Seek input from diverse focus groups, not just through surveys but in-depth conversations to truly understand modern cultural perspectives and values.

Not all Spanish means the same. We’ve spoken about this at length in other posts. The word “concha” is a delicious pastry in México, but you’ll catch some hands if you say it, especially without context, in other parts of Central/South America and the Caribbean.

When selecting spokespeople, influencers, models and partners, showcase diversity in ethnicity, age, body type, sexuality, ability, and background. Ensure representation goes beyond surface-level casting and has a tangible impact on creative direction. Strive for authenticity, not tokenism.

Engaged Peso Pluma fans speak differently than Bad Bunny fans.

Though there will certainly be overlap, the core fans are fundamentally different.

Messaging must connect across cultures. Avoid generalization and cliches. Lean into specific cultural moments and touch-points that organically resonate vs relying on tropes. Use market research to identify shared modern values and lifestyle aspects that translate across demographics.

The film Roma can easily be enjoyed without dialogue.

Visuals should feature inclusive settings and scenarios. Spotlight multicultural friend groups, neighborhoods, activities, and fashion without stereotyping. User-generated content and employee spotlights allow showcasing authentic diversity.

Commit to proactive, ongoing education on cultural sensitivity for marketing teams. Establish processes for vetting content, language and visuals to safeguard against misappropriation. Be willing to pause and adjust campaign elements that could be damaging. Own up to missteps sincerely.

Ultimately, multicultural brand relevance stems from internal decisions and representation. Ensure staff, leadership and core values reflect the audience you seek to serve. Progress cannot happen without diverse voices influencing every level of the process. Do the ongoing work to evolve.

How the Mexican film Roma used nostalgia to grip its audience.

How the Mexican film Roma used nostalgia to grip its audience.

Nostalgia is a powerful emotion that can evoke positive feelings and memories from our past. Brands often use nostalgia as a selling point because it can create a strong emotional connection between consumers and their products or services.

Nostalgia smiles in the mundane details.

Alfonso Cuarón’s 2018 film Roma is a nostalgic portrayal of 1970s Mexico City as seen through the eyes of an indigenous domestic worker named Cleo. The film effectively utilizes nostalgic elements to connect with audiences on an emotional level.

One way Roma evokes nostalgia is through its loving recreation of 1970s Mexico City. The film is shot in black-and-white which immediately gives it a timeless, nostalgic aesthetic. Iconic locations like the Plaza de las Tres Culturas and the Francesco I. Madero avenue immerse viewers in the city during this era. Everyday street scenes featuring classic cars, telephone booths, and record stores feel plucked straight from the past. The meticulous art direction and production design invite audiences to feel transported back to their own memories or imagined ideas of 1970s Mexico.

The focus on quotidian domestic life also taps into nostalgia. Much of the film simply follows Cleo going about her daily routines – cleaning, running errands, and taking care of the children. These mundane activities trigger nostalgia for the simple pleasures of everyday life. The absence of dramatic plot points causes audiences to find meaning in small moments, like Cleo washing clothes or driving the kids to school. Roma revels in the ordinary in a way that feels nostalgic.

Cleo’s relationship with the children she cares for also utilizes nostalgia. Her close bond with them and their innocent adventures together conjure up idealized memories of childhood. Cleo represents a nurturing, protective parental figure that audience members may nostalgically associate with their own upbringing. Scenes of her playing monster with the kids or singing lullabies touch on almost universal feelings of childhood nostalgia.

By portraying the political and social upheavals of 1970s Mexico City through Cleo’s apolitical perspective, Roma also elicits nostalgia for less complicated times. Cleo experiences events like the Corpus Christi massacre as bewildering disruptions to her routine, not as politically charged incidents. This apolitical point of view makes audiences long nostalgically for the days before they understood the complexities of issues like class struggle and oppression.

The film’s concluding scenes of Cleo in labor and on the beach with the children use strong visual nostalgic signifiers. The hospital scene recalls the 1970s through its medical equipment and Cleo’s floral housecoat. The closing shot of the ocean is an iconic visual image widely associated with nostalgic reminiscence. These strong visuals cue the audience to feel nostalgic themselves.

By using finely observed period details, focus on quotidian routine, emphasis on childhood, apolitical perspectives, and visual nostalgic signifiers, Roma immerses audiences in 1970s Mexico City in a way that powerfully taps into nostalgic emotions. Alfonso Cuarón harnesses viewers’ collective nostalgia as a means of connecting deeply with the story of Cleo and her world. Roma stands as an exemplary work of nostalgic filmmaking done right.

Responding to brands that use nostalgia as a selling point is often rooted in our emotional connections to the past and the positive feelings that those memories evoke.

Tap into the simple pleasures of your audience’s daily life.

When brands use nostalgia as a selling point, they are essentially leveraging the emotional attachment that people have to a particular time, place, or experience. By evoking positive memories of the past, brands can create a sense of familiarity and comfort, which can make their products or services more appealing to consumers.

In addition, nostalgia can be a way for people to reconnect with their past and their personal identity. By consuming products that remind them of happy memories, people can feel a sense of continuity and coherence in their lives. This can be especially important during times of change or uncertainty, when people may be looking for ways to feel grounded and secure.

Overall, nostalgia can be a powerful marketing tool because it taps into people’s emotional connections and creates a sense of familiarity, comfort, and identity. When brands are able to create this kind of emotional connection with their audience, they can create a loyal customer base that is more likely to choose their products or services over those of their competitors.