"The way you communicate an idea is different than the way you communicate a product"
About this Quote
Frank Luntz isn’t offering a gentle reminder about clarity; he’s slipping a knife into the civic ideal that ideas deserve to stand on their own. “The way you communicate an idea is different than the way you communicate a product” reads like a neutral distinction, but it’s really a permission structure: politics can borrow the tools of sales without admitting it’s doing so.
The intent is tactical. Luntz, a pollster and message craftsman, is talking to operatives who want outcomes, not seminars. An “idea” implies debate, evidence, and a shared language of public reasoning. A “product” implies branding, frictionless desire, and the strategic minimization of doubt. By insisting these are different, he signals that political communication should be optimized for adoption, not understanding. You don’t “win” a product by being truer; you win by being stickier.
The subtext is almost cynical in its efficiency: voters are consumers, and democracy is a marketplace where attention is scarce and feelings close the deal. The line also launders the moral discomfort. If you’re not “selling out” an idea but merely “communicating” it appropriately, then the manipulations of framing, euphemism, and emotional priming become professional best practices rather than ethical compromises.
Context matters. Luntz rose alongside the late-20th-century shift toward disciplined messaging, focus groups, and slogan-ready politics, when “death tax” could outperform “estate tax” regardless of policy substance. His distinction doesn’t just describe the era; it helps build it, nudging politics away from persuasion as argument and toward persuasion as packaging.
The intent is tactical. Luntz, a pollster and message craftsman, is talking to operatives who want outcomes, not seminars. An “idea” implies debate, evidence, and a shared language of public reasoning. A “product” implies branding, frictionless desire, and the strategic minimization of doubt. By insisting these are different, he signals that political communication should be optimized for adoption, not understanding. You don’t “win” a product by being truer; you win by being stickier.
The subtext is almost cynical in its efficiency: voters are consumers, and democracy is a marketplace where attention is scarce and feelings close the deal. The line also launders the moral discomfort. If you’re not “selling out” an idea but merely “communicating” it appropriately, then the manipulations of framing, euphemism, and emotional priming become professional best practices rather than ethical compromises.
Context matters. Luntz rose alongside the late-20th-century shift toward disciplined messaging, focus groups, and slogan-ready politics, when “death tax” could outperform “estate tax” regardless of policy substance. His distinction doesn’t just describe the era; it helps build it, nudging politics away from persuasion as argument and toward persuasion as packaging.
Quote Details
| Topic | Marketing |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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