LegendOfKage
Member
As someone who has worked in customer service for years, I see things very differently. Insulting a customer's worldview is just about the last thing I'd want to do, and one of the most unprofessional and self-defeating things I can imagine doing. So why should that be any different for advertisers?I value a product based on its benefit for me much more so than whether their ads align with my views. Corporations aren't your friend. If you ever thought they were, at any point, you had the wrong approach to all of this.
Its a product. Its a bunch of suits in a room talking about how to try to coerce you to buy that product. Ignore all of it and things become a lot more convenient for you. I csnt say I've ever boycotted a product because I didn't like an ad campaign. I cant say I've supported a product because I liked an ad campaign, but rather because I liked the product itself.
I think about Chick fil A. The dudes running that company are probably not guys id get along with. But the chicken is darn good.
If a company is so arrogant that they think their place is questioning your morals or your worldview, that's not a company that will ever have my business. Even if I agree with them, that's not their job, and they're being grossly unprofessional. Like I wrote earlier in the thread:
If that's not an established and widely accepted and understood term, it needs to be. Hate Marketing - When rather than welcoming new customers and growing your brand through being genuinely inclusive, you reject and insult your existing customers while trying to win favor with potential customers.