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Asia Minute: Selling Seoul in 2016

Tourism is a growing business in many parts of the world—including South Korea. And as part of its campaign to attract more visitors, the capital city has adopted a new slogan. But not everyone is celebrating. HPR’s Bill Dorman has details in today’s Asia Minute.

Branding has become a multi-billion dollar international business.  Companies, industries, and yes—even cities pay for these services.  One branding project over the past year or so: coming up with a slogan for South Korea’s capital city of Seoul.  The government ran a crowd-sourcing campaign and came up with nearly 18-thousand entries.  And then the professionals took over—as a branding agency narrowed the list to a mere 200.  A panel of Koreans and foreigners trimmed it to 20 - then an expert panel of brand consultants appointed by city officials narrowed it to three: Seoulmate….Seouling….and I Seoul You.  That was what the professionals came up with as finalists.

This fall an online vote of Seoul residents picked the winner:  I Seoul You… and no one seems very pleased with it.  “Terrible” and “confusing” are two relatively gentle terms used by critics.  That panel of experts has been a bit defensive, at one point releasing a statement saying new slogans can be awkward for cities - adding that “after a while, it will feel more natural.”  The Korea Times puts the cost of the branding exercise at nearly half a million dollars.

Bill Dorman has been the news director at Hawaiʻi Public Radio since 2011.
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