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    Abrdn’s Rebrand Reversal and a History of Corporate Missteps


    Hw cn brnds sty cl? Nt by drpping vwls, one of Britain’s biggest investment firms concluded this week, when it announced it was adding back the “e’s” to its name four years after dropping them.

    The 200-year-old company is now called aberdeen group, effectively reversing a decision to rebrand as abrdn in 2021 in a bid to pitch itself as a “modern, agile, digitally-enabled brand.”

    The decision four years ago was widely ridiculed. James Windsor, who took over as chief executive last year, said on Tuesday that it was time to “remove distractions” — less than two months after saying he had no plans to change the name.

    Corporate rebrands can be critical to signifying a strategy shift but they also come with risks when companies veer too far from their purpose. Aberdeen’s vowel-dropping rebrand was just the latest example of a company reversing course after a new name failed to lift its performance or its reputation with customers.

    Removing vowels from brand names or using a name with a deliberately misspelled word was not uncommon in the 2000s, especially among trendy technology companies. Businesses including Grindr, Flickr, Tumblr and even twttr, as Twitter (now X) was initially called, embraced the aesthetic. But today, that style can look out of date and embarrassing, said Laura Bailey, a senior lecturer in linguistics at the University of Kent.

    Often, when companies try to appear trendy, “by the time they get to it, it’s been around for too long,” Dr. Bailey said. “It’s like your parents doing it — it doesn’t seem right.”

    When it comes to financial companies, she added, another aspect to consider is: Do these businesses want to be cool, or should they go for a name that projects security and responsibility?

    Over the years, there have been several failed rebranding efforts. In 2009, PepsiCo U-turned less than two months after Tropicana, its juice brand at the time, introduced new packaging that featured a glass of orange juice instead of its famous orange with a straw poking out of it. Angry customers described the new look as “ugly” and resembling “a generic bargain brand.”

    A year later, Gap took even less time to reverse course after unveiling a widely panned new logo for its stores that dropped the famous white lettering on a blue background that the brand had used for decades. The retailer took about a week to go back to its original rendering. “OK,” the company said in a statement. “We’ve heard loud and clear that you don’t like the new logo.”

    Britain’s Post Office in 2001 was widely mocked when it renamed itself Consignia. The chairman, Neville Bain, said at the time that the new name would reflect that the office delivered much more than mail. Consignia lasted for about a year before the Post Office name was restored.

    Some corporate rebrands have been effective. In 2012, Kraft Foods chose Mondelez International as the new name for its snacking business — which includes brands such as Oreos and Philadelphia cream cheese — from nearly 2,000 names suggested by employees. “Mondelez” was an invented word that combined “monde,” the French word for “world,” and “delez,” a made-up word intended to suggest “delicious.” So, “delicious world.”

    In 2001, Andersen Consulting became Accenture after splitting from Arthur Andersen, the accounting firm. The new name was chosen from 5,500 options, which were whittled down to 500 and then 10 before the firm eventually went with Accenture “because it implies accent on the future,” The New York Times reported at the time. Despite some skepticism, the brand has endured and the company has grown into a consulting behemoth with a stock market capitalization of about $215 billion.

    Aberdeen has not completely gone back to its original name, choosing to keep its logo all lowercase. That puts it in line with a trend of teenagers not using capital letters when texting, Dr. Bailey noted.

    “It seems more friendly, or nicer,” she said, adding that companies sometimes try to change their names to be more informal to project a personal image, rather than that of a big corporation. Still, they risk setting themselves up for another scenario in which their name will look out of date in a year, she added.



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