Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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An Infographic Look At The Fake Brands That Connect Your Favorite Movies And TV Shows

An Infographic Look At The Fake Brands That Connect Your Favorite Movies And TV Shows | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

Shared universes. They're so hot right now. Long before the deep bench of Marvel superheroes started jumping into each other's movies, however, there was something else that united the far-flung worlds of many different movies and shows: fake brands.

Call it product displacement. When the producers of a movie or TV show prefer not to shell out money to get a real brand onscreen, they opt for the unreal.


Marlboro-lookalike, Morley Cigarettes has been tarring the arteries of fictional characters for years, while the preferred chip of cinematic snackers is often Let's. It turns out, however, that many more movies and shows share the same fake brands than one might expect. British-based freelance hub fivesquid has just released an infographic about this phenomenon that shows which brands and products indirectly fueled some unlikely crossovers.

Some are obvious. Anyone who's seen a Quentin Tarantino movie, for instance, knows that Big Kahuna Burger is a thread throughout the self-contained Tarantino-verse. It should come as something of a reality-testing surprise, however, to see the same beer brand appear in both Star Trek and Brooklyn Nine-Nine. I mean, come on: The U.S.S. Enterprise would have its own microbrew, for sure. Weird that this is the first thing that's ever been unrealistic about Star Trek.

Have a look at the other fake brands in movies and shows in the infographic below....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Here's the best of the fake TV brands you may remember. Fun!

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101 Elements of a Complete Product Page

Is there a concept like ‘a complete product page’?


Chances are if you have ever found yourself on an eCommerce product page you have figured out the basic elements

  • :The Headline
  • The Product Image
  • The Product Specifications
  • Pricing
  • The Call to Action buttons
  • The Payment methods.


Shouldn’t that be enough to make a sale? The user lands on your product page, a self explanatory title to the product he wants finds him, he reads the specifications (color, size, material, make, model, related features), after a glance he starts to look around for the payment methods. He likes it, presses the CTA button and bam! Sold! Works like the good old brick and mortar stores, or not?


The better question is; Is there something like complete shopping experience?


The answer is ‘Yes’. There are 101 elements to put together on a product page to complete that experience. If you are one of the lazy lot like most, there’s a quick checklist to save at the bottom of this page....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

List of 101, count 'em, product page elements so that you don't have to look elsewhere to get the best conversions from your product page. Don't try using these all at the same time in your next product page at the office, LOL.

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