I've been meaning to write a new post for such a long time. Blame it on my crazy schedule or my Mediterranean soul (that has its own time and pace), I really didn't have time to write one. This one is time sensitive, so I somewhat have to write this or forget about it.
This weekend, I was around Chicago Apple Store on Michigan Street. I wanted to see how the Apple fans were mourning. Consumers embellished store's window with multi-color post-its.There were flowers and half bitten apples on the ground. I was not surprised by Apple fans' creative acts of showing their sadness to these somehow expected yet still sad news. At the end of the day, these are the same fans who waited and camped around Apple stores for multiple nights just to be the first ones getting their Apple goodies. It is evident that, for some consumers, Apple is a lovemark in Kevin Roberts' words. The relation between the brand and the consumers is so intimate and strong. It was only expected that passing away of this iconic man would make Apple fans sad. Consumers posted personal notes to Steve Jobs in English, Korean, Arabic, Japanese, and in may other languages. (I had to add my Turkish one. REPRESENT! ;-)) Personal notes on these colorful postits were very enlightening interms of Jobs' impact on the lives of the consumers. I attach the photos of couple of postits I found fun and creative.
Please show grandmom upthere how to use an iPad |
Thanks! |
Probably nobody wants to read any more stories, blogs, or statuses about Steve Jobs. And, I hear ya! I do! I will not make this blog about Steve Jobs per se. I was more amazed by the two sets of consumer reactions happening at the same time. At one side, consumers were (and still are) fetishizing Apple's CEO Steve Jobs via many different ways. 10 minutes after Apple announcing his death, majority of my friends' fb statuses were about Steve Jobs. Next day his pictures were uploaded to many fb pages and blogs, many of my friends changed their profile pictures to Apple Logos with Steve Jobs as part of the Apple's bitten side. Twitter also responded very quickly with many hashtags that were trending worldwide in the blink of an eye. Couple days after, now I see more detailed stories and blogs about Steve Jobs. And, I just read that his black turtleneck is sold out on most retailers.
Thanks you changed our lives |
I wish I could bring you back, but there isnt any app for that |
Heaven just went digital |