Susan Bell Research

  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Semiotic Insights
Semiotics research

A semiotic case study: understanding the meaning of the rose

Print PDF

A semiotic case study.....do red roses 'mean' love?

To understand the symbol or brand, start with the culture. Red roses only mean 'love' in cultures which romanticise love and commercialise love.

That is, people who live in cultures where people do not believe that love can be expressed through purchased gifts, would not use red roses purchased from florists as symbols of love.  Meaning is thus culturally-constituted.

To understand the symbol or brand, see it in different contexts. The 'love' meaning comes from the context in which the rose is given. Compare a man giving a  rose to a florist to buy, with a man giving the same rose to his lover  The rose does not mean 'love' in the florist context.  Usage gives a brand its meaning.

To understand the symbol or brand , find out what makes it different. Difference is at the heart of meaning. To someone who thinks that  red roses are indistinguishable from pink carnations,pink carnations would be 'love flowers' too.

For the sign or symbol to be interpreted in a specific way, it must first be perceived to be different.  Semiotic brand research is about understanding what makes the brand  different..

Do brands have images and meaning? Again the answer is no.  No brand has meaning in its own right; its meaning comes from outside, from the culture. from the context in which it is used, and from the network of differences in which it operates.  Semiotic brand research is about what gives the brand its meaning.

Susan Bell- original article 1994. Revised 2010 Susan Bell 2010 Susan Bell Research

 

 

Last Updated on Monday, 01 March 2010 11:55
 

Semiotics made easy

Print PDF

There are three types of semiotics research:

  1. Desk-based semiotic analysis of cultural values and brand positioning - conducted solo, or integrated into qualitative research
  2. Micro-level semiotic analysis of individual texts - such as ads, brochures or packs  - to reveal 'how they mean'
  3. Semiotic analysis of qualitative research transcripts, or other secondary data, to reveal  the cultural categories and narratives which shape consumer behaviour.

Semiotic thinking can be applied to a great many research problems.  For example, I am currently working with Sensory Solutions on sensory semiotics.

 

Last Updated on Monday, 01 March 2010 09:51
 

Susan Bell's social semiotics research

Print PDF

Evidence-based semiotics integrated into qualitative research
At Susan Bell Research, our aim is to integrate evidence-based semiotic techniques into qualitative and sensory projects to generate insights which our clients can use and understand. We are currently experimenting with different ways to achieve this.
For too long, semiotics has been an research off-cut - set apart from mainstream consumer research. Semiotics teaches us how culture influences our thinking, so it should be part of the fabric of research, not an off-cut.
Insights from culture
Semiotics is about culture and its effect on people.   When used in combination with other qual research methods, semiotics reveals:

  • The ideas that are so important in a sub-culture that people take them for granted
  • The emergent ideas within sub-cultures
  • How your customer / consumer reads the texts of their culture
  • The ways in which people use products and brands to reinforce their sense of identity and belonging.
Last Updated on Monday, 15 February 2010 13:08 Read more...
 

Academic consultant

Print PDF
Our academic consultant on semiotics research is Lynne Freeman, University of Technology Sydney