Thursday 10 November 2011

Character archetypes and patterning

Thanks to Dr Janis Wilson from Archetypology for a fascinating presentation at Wednesday’s Language Consultancy Association event, The Archetypology of Brands.

Archetypes are derived from neuroscience, psychology and classical studies. Essentially they are groups of certain personality traits and behaviours that can be recognised, categorised and expressed as a persona.

These personality traits and behaviours are laid down in the subconscious brain as ‘loose patterns’. The power of these loose patterns is that the brain is programmed to respond to stimuli that are a close fit. If your message is a close fit to the pattern, it triggers a response that requires fulfillment. If your brand offers this fulfillment, then the loose pattern is reinforced in a feedback loop that is now conditioned by your brand message.

In simple terms, you can use a structure of 12 classic archetypal characters – Innocent, Regular guy, Caregiver, Explorer, Hero, Outlaw, Lover, Creator, Ruler, Sage, Jester and Magician - to describe both your customers and your brand. In theory, if you know what your brand character is, and whom you want to talk to, adopting the correct tone of voice for a conversation between the two archetypes triggers this patterning and helps you to deliver your message. The key is to use the appropriate language between brand and audience archetypes to trigger the loose patterning in the subconscious.

Where it gets interesting is the knowledge that people move through all 12 archetypes at different life stages (although they will have a preferred archetype that they return to), whilst successful brands tend to stick with the same archetypal character.

Then it gets more complicated.

Each archetype has a number of sub-archetypes, and within these are a number of different, sometimes opposing behaviours.

So character archetypes can have a dark side. When a brand expression loses its way it tends to exhibit these opposing behaviours. This could explain why successful brands, for example, British Airways, BP, Coca-Cola, Gap, sometimes get it so wrong. The message no longer resonates as it disrupts the expected pattern. Returning to their archetypal character normally sees the brand refreshed and revitalised as the fit with the audience archetype loose pattern is restored.

As brand strategists, brand managers and copywriters, you can leverage these patterns to connect with and influence your customers.