New brand identity strategy for Haringey
"I am in"
Discuss.
CDC
Haringey Councillor
Liberal Democrat Party
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update to mark the 'soft launch' (click to enlarge):—
The £20,000 film, The Haringey Story
Tags for Forum Posts: I am in, Local Government, brand strategy, folly, identity, nonsense, vanity, waste of money
Thanks, Norah. But there's no point in replying to people who see online discussion as an opportunity for amusing themselves by insulting other people. DFTT
SINCE the 'soft launch' last Monday, staff are beginning to be seen wearing the Council's new brightly branded red lanyard. When seen close-up, it's printed with selected words of exhortation. They are:
The four words are repeated (like a chorus) around the lanyard.
In my original post (see topmost with link to the "new brand identity strategy for Haringey"), the related part is
6 The relationship with values
…
6.2 The council is launching four new values, as set out below:
Human: We make it easy to deal with us. We ask our customers what they think and listen to what they say. We are aware if our impact on others. We build trusting relationships. We are honest and supportive.
Ambitious: We push boundaries. We compare our performance with the best. We continually improve. We are curious and innovative. We look for different ways to do things. We are brave. We embrace change.
Accountable: We take responsibility. We deal with things without being told. We keep our promises. We give credit where credit is due. We spend taxpayer money as carefully as we would our own. We solve problems. We all do our fair share.
Professional: We are Haringey’s ambassadors. We resolve matters first time. We serve others as we wish to be served. We have the right skills. We take pride in what we do. We care about reputation. We are business focused.
Thanks, Clive, I haven't yet seen the new red lanyard. But I'd welcome the idea of councillors having to wear some emblem telling us which ones are human and which Progress Party holograms.
For staff, there's something very dubious about this so-called motivational stuff. Haringey (the council not the place) started doing it a while ago with framed posters in the toilets.
It seems a recent fashion. Anyone know when and why it took hold? I suppose it's seen as a cheap substitute for redesigning systems to improve services. And it places responsibility on individual staff and deflects attention away from incompetence in senior management and "leading" councillors.
It goes with other drivel like Mission Statements and straplines; more straplines; and even more straplines.
Many thanks Alan for the links to the Strapline-O-matic. If knowledge of its existence became widespread, it could de-skill and undercut some branding professionals.
Just as a lawyer of integrity might advise a client not to pursue a weak case, a public relations company might advise a Council not to embark on a re-branding strategy at the present time, due to the likely poor public relations, reaction and perception. But then, as another contributor has remarked, branding is lucrative.
There's no truth in the suggestion that the launching [of] four new values, is a response to the cabinet belief that Council Officers are lazy, lawless, amateur aliens.
but they are replacing humans with virtual servants - Do It All Online is the new mantra. (Well, if you can find a library with computers to spare, if home broadband is out of reach.)
Good point Pam. The attributes listed :
We ask our customers what they think and listen to what they say. We are aware if our impact on others. We build trusting relationships. We are honest and supportive.
– are indeed, human and not electronic.
However, there may be fewer humans employed, whether or not they have these attributes.
As for do-it-all-online: not everything can be done online. Everything that can be done online is not always accessible to the poor, elderly or disabled (no one matching these descriptions featured in the Council's £20K video. Apparently, those folk aren't "in" and aren't part of the Haringey Story).
The explanation for the airbrushing that was offered to the Ham&High, was:
A council spokesman said: “The Haringey Story is a celebration of the huge variety of people, locations and businesses that help to make Haringey the fantastic place that it is and features people from across the borough who are rightly proud to be a part of Haringey.”
Presumably this official statement was issued by a human. However, the PR function often does a fine line in bland, anodyne, even robotic replies. It may be a step towards the fulfilment of the famous Turing test, but in reverse: when human responses become indistinguishable from artificial intelligence.
How long is this fabricated outpouring of the outcast going to go on?
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