Every single person in the world expressed puzzlement last week at the news from Prague. In a marketing initiative that literally will alter the map of Europe, the Czech Republic is
rebranding itself Czechia.
There were two reasons put forward:
“Czechia” rolls off the tongue so much easier
than the cumbersome “Czech Republic” -- although it clearly does no such thing.
Dismayed after the Boston Marathon bombings that the Chechen
perpetrators were confused for Czechs, the country needed a way to distinguish itself from the semi-autonomous Russian republic. It did so by creating a near homonym for Chechnya.
As reported in the Guardian and elsewhere, the
authorities' process considered and rejected “Cesko,” which is the colloquial shorthand used by actual Czechs, and “Bohemia,” which is but one large region within the country.
Among the monikers apparently not given serious consideration were Czechostan, Czechtopia, Chexplex, The Nation Formerly Known as Half of the Former Czechoslovakia and of course, North
Austria.
What none of the bewildered could deny was the boldness of the initiative.
After all, people
scoffed when major consumer brands took on new identities, and yet has not Altria added “altruism” to your immediate associations with Philip Morris, previously limited to
“flavor” and “lying murderous scum?” When Research in Motion rechristened itself BlackBerry, the company’s declining fortunes immediately reversed and it now dominates
the mobile-phone industry worldwide. The media colossus Gannett spun off and anagrammed the non-newspaper assets either Tegna or Nangeta or GnatEat, I don’t recall. And, yes, when Kentucky Fried
Chicken became KFC, the grease immediately stopped soaking through the napkins.
So don’t be so dismissive. For one thing, Czechia is probably
significantly stronger than the Gannett approach, which might have yielded RebelzHiccups. The other thing is, instead of doubting Czechia, shouldn’t we be thinking about other countries with
non-trivial image issues that could also do with a little brand-identity spruce-up?
Russia: Plummetingoil prices and international
sanctions have crippled the economy and forced Vladimir Putin into creative new ways to become an international pariah, including, but not limited to, invading sovereign countries, buzzing American
warships in international waters, supporting mass-homicidal Syrian maniacs, murdering ex-crony oligarchs in their cushy exiles and doping athletes in every national sports team. Suggested rebranding:
“Meldonia.”
Turkey: Under the increasingly authoritarian grip of Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the country is clamping down on free press,
prosecuting a bloody war against its own ethnic minority, deploying special forces secretly abroad and using human refugees as a bargaining chip for concessions from Europe. Suggested rebranding:
“Russia.”
United States: With a growing economy, stable democracy, fertile environment for business, historically
unprecedented security from threats foreign and domestic, mammoth infrastructure, and ever-expanding human rights, it is in an uproar led by right-wing media, theocrats and xenophobic demagogues to
make itself “great again,” mainly by heavily arming fearful citizens and sifting out the brown people. Suggested rebranding: “NRAland.”
Bonus suggested slogan: “Have a Koch and a Smile.”