| Language, Positioning and Cultural Relevance |
| Thursday, 24 February 2011 08:28 |
" In the Zulu language there is no way to say "A man got lost in the jungle" because Zulus do not get lost. Closest translation: He went crazy and is running through the jungle." Leon Russell Language is the framework for our perception of the world. To their credit, chiropractors and other "non-traditional" health professionals have decried modern healthcare as being sickcare. Not surprisingly, as boomers are aging many traditional hospitals are repositioning toward "wellness". Dentists traditionally sell tooth health, but now are positioning towards mouth and even airway health (creating some consternation in the ENT's who fix ENT problems but have not repositioned because asthma and allergies have kept them busy. (Today's irony:Two large studies showed farm children suffer less asthma. The reason: they are exposed to a wider variety of germs. It makes one wonder about modernity's obsession with cleanliness that began with Semmelweis' wisdom of delivery room cleanliness, and spread to antiseptic antibacterials in baby shampoo and soap.) Cultural and individual thinking is shaped by words and language, which is one reason marketing professionals know to describe FEATURES but sell BENEFITS- because people buy the benefit. As a profession, chiropractors are known for spinal manipulation- a good thing, but a feature of treatment. Looking at each side of the transaction:
It's not surprise that describing a profession in terms of it's feature (spinal manipulation) and defining it with a negative (no pain-no subluxation) has created problems internally and externally. Which is one of many reasons I promote using language to position a brand identity towards strengthening posture.
Greater Germ Exposure Cuts Asthma Risk, Wall Street Journal, 2/23/ 2011 Certified Posture Exercise Professional Training Course |
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$499.00
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