Snapshot Aesthetics and the Strategic Imagination
Invisible Culture, Issue 18, 2013
19 Pages Posted: 13 Jan 2014 Last revised: 5 Nov 2014
Date Written: March 31, 2013
Abstract
This paper is concerned with photography as strategic imagery. Strategic imagery consists of images intended to persuade, promote, or otherwise perform strategic intentions. Encompassing advertising, billboards, packaging, promotional brochures, point of purchase displays, viral media, and website design, strategic imagery comprises a large portion of contemporary visual culture. Pictures of people - models, celebrity endorsers, spokespersons, “average” consumers, managers and employees - make up a large part of strategic imagery. In turn, visual images constitute much strategy imagery for products and services, about economic performance, or designed to promote organizational identity. Within this purview advertising has long since moved beyond its traditional role of “showing products” or “informing” consumers. Much strategic imagery, of course, does not show products at all; instead, it encourages a range of aesthetic, cognitive and, emotional effects to promote a vision of a brand’s essential role in a good life. Much of this promotion depends upon visual style, how images appear, and how they fit into to broader trajectories of visual culture.
Keywords: advertising, branding, consumer culture, selfie, strategy, visual culture
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation