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The balancing acts of national image

Every minute, a brand new venture or major product is being launched with huge fanfare in Asia. This is how it once was in the US and the West during the e-commerce boom of the nineties.

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Who are the new champion nations on the global stage delivering the finest performances and altering the course of branded imagery of goods and services? Where are the old traditional nations and what' happening to them today? The global shifts on image repositioning are causing minor quakes throughout various continents as brand new landscapes are erupting, while previously cherished perceptions are being swept away. The art of detection of these seismic tremors in advance, to pursue the balancing act for creating new imagery and brand positioning has now become a serious science.

Every minute, a brand new venture or major product is being launched with huge fanfare in Asia. This is how it once was in the US and the West during the e-commerce boom of the nineties. Now as things in North America and Europe begin to cool down, parts of Asia are still thriving on all fronts, leading the charge in industrial and infra-structural growth and a massive consumer revolution. The balancing act of mega image development, whether for a nation, corporation, a brand or any new concept are all being re-evaluated by the global populace.

Americans, though preoccupied with huge domestic problems, must still strive and take a very global view and participate openly in these new, fiercely fought battles for global image supremacy; once reserved for the handful of Western nations. Asia, the world' largest and most populated continent with four billion or 60% of the world’s population, with an aggressive manufacturing base and a booming service sector, the market is so large that over the upcoming decade, it could completely redefine the global economic balance.

Despite problems of poverty, the bustling middle classes and the zest of free enterprise and thousands of the top companies of Asia are determined to make their mark. This is further fueled by the global image positioning shifts and the rise in the nation's confidence level, leading them to create brands worth of regional and international appeal. This potent combination has created some great opportunities for the serious players in the arena.

In a recently released business documentary entitled "The Oblivion Syndrome", this message is clearly laid out. This movie can be freely viewed at www.metrostate.com The next challenge for the new gatekeeper of the national brands is the streamlining of global marketing and branding tools to achieve stardom in the fastest time, with minimal costs and maximum impact. Such issues have been fine tuned over time by the masters of iconic crafts.

What took centuries for countries to create a status of superiority is now being seriously challenged by the global populace. Booming new economies are redefining themselves under new images through improved performance, claiming high status under the superiority of their new ideas. This whole game of image positioning was once exclusively reserved for the small handful of Western powers. This turbo-charged and hyper-accelerated mode of global image repositioning is causing shifts and creating new chasms of divides among countries. There is a void needing to be filled with new players, new ideas and new global icons.

Then there is the Oblivion Syndrome, where one is convinced that their image positioning and branding identities are charging forward into global stardom, but in reality, are slipping into decreased visibility and an overall loss of sight of the path towards global leadership. In other words, total oblivion.

Out there is an undiscovered universe of a billion customers who don't have a clue who you are, and what you are capable of. As massive global shifts take place, this calls for drastic action. This subject is exclusively for CEO's who can bite the bullet and confront the issue of exactly where their images are headed.

We are not alone, as today, there are some



Naseem Javed, author of Naming
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