Monthly Archive for September, 2006Page 2 of 2

be!Dazzled | a capella fest ‘06

If you’re into a capella music [pop-up warning], this is the event of the year.

Nanu rocks! Resonance aren’t too bad either. No Budak Pantai?

Click the following link to see the e-flyer:
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onebrandsingapore

The following extract is taken from an article in yesterday’s Straits Times. Apparently, Singapore has a schizophrenic image.

UNIQUELY Singapore. City in the Garden. Global City, World of Opportunities. These branding campaigns have been used at some point or other by various government agencies to promote Singapore, often with sterling results.

But there is just one problem: Having each agency brand Singapore based on its own goals results in a fragmented image of the country.

So Singapore is now embarking on a search for a single, solid brand that will present the country to the world.

A tender bid is being put up by the Government for a consultant for this umbrella brand positioning, which will guide all government agencies in their marketing campaigns.

Selection for the consultant will be at the end of the month. The cost for the exercise is capped at $3 million.

Straits Times Sep 2, 2006
Wanted: A single brand for S’pore
Government wants agencies to present a consistent marketing image

Whoa… whoa… whoa. Three million SGD? Will this turn out like the Marina Bay branding exercise? Will they conclude that Uniquely Singapore is truly our unique branding? I know it’s STB’s take but it happens to be the most visible branding to visitors. Surely this branding isn’t for locals. Unless it is something like: Singapore, we welcome talent.

(Please don’t tell me that I have to criticise constructively and provide an alternative. Hmmm… actually, I do have an alternative. Read on.)

We have four million smiles. We surely have four million takes on this. Each person, one suggestion for a branding. Or more than one, if you wish. This brand has to reflect Singapore and its people. Who better to come up with this?

So, fellow Singaporeans, what’s your branding for Singapore? Write in your blogs and tag it . If you don’t have a blog, comment here.

Personally, I don’t think we need a Unified Brand or a Unique Value Proposition. We’re not a product or service for consumption. Then again, we have been referred to as a company.

Perhaps that’s our branding right there: Singapore, Inc. Nothing new but neither is Marina Bay.

UPDATE Sudirwan of Coffee Banana writes about the branding of the lion (via tomorrow.sg) asking two fundamental questions: “whose voices and ideas should be consulted”, and “what is this new national brand going to change?”

Mohamad Rosle Ahmad, who remembers branding gaffes prior to Marina Bay, writes to the Straits Times Forum:

I REFER to the report, ‘Wanted: A single brand for S’pore’ (ST, Sept 2), about a $3 million exercise to search for and develop ‘a single, solid brand’ that will sell Singapore to the world.

Some time back, the Urban Redevelopment Authority spent $400,000 on a branding exercise for Marina Bay. The result? Retain the Marina Bay name because it has ‘a strong positioning (which) can lead to a powerful and distinctive competitive advantage for Singapore’.

A few years ago, the Singapore Zoo nearly underwent a similar rebranding phase which would have been as costly, had it not been for the public uproar at the sheer needlessness of it all.

There was also DBS Bank’s attempt to eradicate the POSB identity which was aborted after public protest.

One can only hope that this latest multi-million-dollar project will produce something equivalent to, if not better than, the legendary Ian Batey’s timeless ‘Singapore Girl, You’re A Great Way To Fly’ brand image for Singapore Airlines.

One aspect which I hope will be showcased prominently in the campaign is Singapore’s melting-pot character.

This facet was conspicuously absent in the television advertisements aired in Hong Kong, prior to the colony’s return to China in 1997, to woo the locals to migrate to Singapore.

Personally, I like the phrase ‘World of Opportunities’ which, according to the report, has been used before, ‘often with sterling results’.

Any brand guru worth his salt will tell you that if it works, keep it.

What I will add, though, is this: Whirl of Fun. Thus, Singapore - World of Opportunities, Whirl of Fun.

Singapore’s melting-pot character. This, on the day ST’s front page splashes “Singapore culture unlikely to emerge: MM”. The topic of another post, perhaps.

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The library next door

Bishan Community Library

When I used to live in Clementi, my parents would drive me to the Queenstown Library on Saturday afternoons. There I would get my fill of books. It was very much a ‘manual’ library. I had a paper membership card. Each book had a borrowing cards and a date due paper where the librarian would stamp the date I had to return the book.

Not that the date due mattered, I was usually done with my books in time for the following Saturday.

Those regular library visits ended when my family moved to Bishan. While the church we went to was near the Toa Payoh Library, I hardly went because it was closed on Sundays. And it felt very different. (This was before it was renovated. The renovated Toa Payoh Library is even more alien to me.) Queenstown Library - currently the oldest library still occupying its original building, if I am not mistaken - was cozy and comforting. I can’t explain why but that’s how it felt.

Why did I stop going to the library? Perhaps it was distance. Perhaps it was because it used to be a family thing. Perhaps because, when it happened, I didn’t like the ‘automatic’ library. Yes, tech-gadget-IT guy likes his libraries old-fashioned with high shelves that only the tallest adults can reach and books that have passed through the hands of many. Perhaps the Toa Payoh Library didn’t feel right.

It was with a sense of hesitancy that I visited the Bishan Community Library, which opened today.

It feels good. =)

Bishan Community Library

The library is compact yet spacious. And it seems so despite the crowd. The collection is small, which is fine given the fact that it’s a community library serving a similarly small (but central) estate.

There are four levels - five if you include the basement - and makes terrific use of ambient light. Quite intelligently, the window facades of the front and rear of the library face north and south, therefore not getting too much direct sunlight. Excellent design!

I really like the little personal spaces. I bet they will always be filled. The ones facing J8 are a great: living reading advertisements. I wasn’t sure whether I could take photos in the library, so I didn’t.

There are a few books I’ve earmarked for reading. Today, I borrowed two books. I doubt I’ll be able to finish them by next Saturday but I may just pop in to browse anyway.

P.S. Ivan, the library was buzzing!

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To boldly go where no Feedback Unit has gone before

So, the Feedback Unit’s new mission is… to get more feedback?

The Feedback Unit aims to better engage and involve Singaporeans.

It will start a month-long public consultation exercise in September to seek the public’s views on its new mission.

Key questions include how it can extend its reach to a wider public and how to cultivate a more active citizenry.

Members of the public can give their views through a number of channels.

Feedback Unit to seek public’s views on its new mission
By Farah Abdul Rahim, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 31 August 2006 1657 hrs

Here are my suggestions:

Monitoring these is a full time job. Naturally, the online sources should be used in conjunction with offline methods of getting feedback. Not everyone has a computer, internet access or the inclination to use either.

How to cultivate a more active citizenry? Now, I’ll have to give that some thought.

P.S. Actually, it will be quite scary if the Feedback Unit comments on blog posts:

Dear blogger,

Thank you for your unsolicited feedback. We have been monitoring the blogosphere to gather public opinion on this issue. Your opinion and suggestions - we only accept constructive criticism - have been duly noted. We will get back to you regarding this issue shortly. Thank you and have a pleasant day.

Regards,
The Feedback Unit

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UPDATE my sketchbook’s take

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