Fictional brand

Aspen beer, a fictional brand from the 1979 film Alien

A fictional brand is a non-existing brand used in artistic or entertainment productions, such as paintings, books, comics, movies, TV serials, and music. The fictional brand may be designed to imitate, satirize or differentiate itself from a real corporate brand.[1] Such a device may be required where real corporations are unwilling to license their brand names for use in the fictional work, particularly where the work holds the product in a negative light.[2]

More recently, fictional brands have been used for commercial purposes through the process of reverse product placement. Consumer attachment to those brands in the fictional world may be leveraged through “defictionalisation” or “productisation” in the real world.[3] It has been suggested that the fictional brands represent brand potential rather than brand reality; they are in effect, “protobrands” that can be leveraged and transformed into registered trademarks which can derive revenue for their owners through reverse product placement or, more accurately, reverse brand placement.[4] Examples include Harry Potter’s Bertie Botts’ Every Flavour Beans, now available as real candy manufactured by the Jelly Belly Company; Duff Beer, a beer brand now available for consumption in Europe which initially appeared in The Simpsons; and Staples' Dunder Mifflin paper, from TV show, The Office.

  1. ^ Robin Andersen, Jonathan Gray, Battleground: The Media (2008), p. 386.
  2. ^ Jean-Marc Lehu, Branded Entertainment: Product Placement & Brand Strategy in the Entertainment Business (2007), p. 144.
  3. ^ Virtual-fictionalbrands paper
  4. ^ Muzellec, Laurent; Lynn, Theodore; Lambkin, Mary (2012). "Branding in fictional and virtual environments". European Journal of Marketing. 46 (6): 811–826. doi:10.1108/03090561211214618.