Students: Andrea Carrillo-Andrade Lecturer: Julie Harpley July 4, 2021 ESE, Florence
Students: Andrea Carrillo-Andrade Lecturer: Julie Harpley July 4, 2021 ESE, Florence
Students: Andrea Carrillo-Andrade Lecturer: Julie Harpley July 4, 2021 ESE, Florence
Executive summary
marketing strategies during elections. In this paper, three main theories —public
segmentation, perceptual process, and the creation of brand archetypes— are considered
to examine the campaign of 2021 of Guillermo Lasso, actual president of Ecuador. This
paper scans the evolution of the campaign under the premise that Lasso is perceived as a
Introduction
replace governments through free and fair elections. Then, citizens would vote according
to the candidate that represents them the most (social and political concerns, economic
policies and other issues that impact the population) and according to their ideology
Populism arose as a strategy (Weyland, 2001), a style (Moffitt and Tormey, 2014;
Roberts, 1995), ideology (Mudde, 2004) or speech (Ungureanu and Serrano, 2018) to
capture votes. Candidates often use populist rhetoric and practices that allow the
incorporation of other subaltern groups, with the risk of observing democracy from an
instrumental perspective. That is why scholars (López-Paredes et al., 2020) advice that
populism can privilege the access of an individual, group or family to resources, rather
than the collective struggle so that citizen equality becomes a reality. Populism has been
which politics are almost disconnected from policy (the substance of legislation) (Cervi
customer relationships” (Kother, Armstrong and Opresnik, 2018). We can translate this
“engaging” is about the creation of a candidate and a speech with whom most of the
population can identify, while “profitable customer relationships” can be translated into
voting and supporting one over the rest. Populism allows citizens to vote for someone not
because of the development of strong identification with them, but because the populist
candidate must be seen as an “empty signifier” (Laclau, 1996) where meanings are
emptied by heterogeneous groups, so they can adapt to citizens demands and needs, such
as a product.
In Latin America, populism has been normalized as a style for vote-catching. In 2021,
during the presidential elections, the candidate Guillermo Lasso become this “empty
signifier” in order to win. This document will analyze the consumer behavior strategies
Methodology
To achieve the aim of this paper, three main theories will be approached: public
understand the wants and needs of different consumer segments (Solomon, 2017).
In first place, in politics, market segmentation and product differentiation is widely used:
“product differentiation is the preferred strategy when demand converges for product
offerings, whereas, market segmentation is the preferred strategy when demand diverges”
(Baines et al., 2003). To do so, candidates run elections by presenting issues that they
consider important and that are capable of managing (issue ownership) and determine the
main concerns for segments of population (issue salience) to adapt their speech.
In second place, to vote for a candidate, it is necessary to call the voters’ attention. The
theory of perceptual process states that there are three stages of perception: exposure,
attention, and interpretation. The key for the first stage (exposure) is to make a conscious
become information seekers; so, effective messages can change their preferences towards
one candidate or another (Kaid, 2002). The second stage (attention) depends on the
pay attention to the candidate to whom they identify the most because of their personal
experience and their social group. However, the use of political storytelling to appeal to
feelings and build new meanings towards the candidates is widely spread (Seargeant,
2020). The last stage, interpretation refers to the meanings people assign to the stimuli
based on their schema or sets of beliefs (Solomon, 2017); here confirmation bias is a
In third place, the Brand Asset Valuator Archetypes Model relates brands to personalities.
In the case of politicians, “the brand identity is built to become ownable and all efforts
are expended to transfer this ownability to the masses” (Sood, 2017). To determine the
brand personality, this paper will examine Lasso’s advertisement through semiotics.
Analysis
In February 2021, general elections were held in Ecuador. Sixteen candidates presented
in the first run (some of them did not even reached the 1 % of votes); the two that achieved
the majority to compete in the second round were Andrés Arauz and Guillermo Lasso.
votes. Guillermo Lasso was nearly defeated by Yaku Pérez in a narrow margin (19,74 %
vs 19,39%). Lasso —right-wing candidate— is a former banker and this was the third
Figure N.° 1
Ecuador General Elections, 2021
First round
regions deserves special attention in the formulation of the political campaign. That is
why political advisers tend to develop differentiate advertisements for Costa (centered in
the economy), Sierra (centered in political schemas), Amazon and Galápagos starting at
the issue ownership (product differentiation). In the case of Lasso, during the first round,
he decided to sell himself as a capable person. This way, his slogan was “capability for
There are three important details in the slogan. First, the selection of “capacity” as a
vote” (D’Ancona, 2017). Second, when Lasso states that he is capable of changing, he is
developing a rival narrative against Rafael Correa. Correa was the president of Ecuador
from 2007 to 2017; in the last elections his candidate, Lenin Moreno, won the presidency
thanks to his support. In this context, Guillermo Lasso presented himself as the strongest
candidate against the officialism. That is why the advertisement remarks that Lasso means
change. Third, in the first round Lasso wanted to show the political alliance he developed
with the Christian Social political party. That is why he includes the “6” logo.
However, after the first round the statistics showed that Lasso has even less support than
in the last time the run: in 2017, he got 28 % (in 2021, 19 %). What happened is that new
faces such as Xavier Hervas (left-center wing) and Yaku Pérez (indigenous movements)
were the ones that got a great number of votes even they were not mass-mediated. In other
was the strongest rival for officialism. However, citizens did not feel represented by him
(interpretation); that is why he developed the message of being capable as the unique
After the first round, the numbers showed that people were voting for change and that
they were concerned about social and ecological issues, which ownership was of Hervas
Second round
Data showed that Lasso won just in two of the 24 provinces: in Pichincha and Galápagos
(Annex N.° 1). Besides, the margin with his opponent was higher in the Cost and Amazon
regions. Also, the polls showed that young people (from 16 to 35 years) voted for the new
candidates as they were concerned about feminism, LGBTIQ+ rights and ecology
Figure N.° 3
Second round advertisement for Lasso’s campaign
Figure N.° 3 shows the new messages that he developed. There are 3 key elements that
show how the evolution of the message. In first place, the removal of the “6” logo is
linked to the claim of renewal. As the Christian Social political party has already a lot of
interpretations among population, it was time to avoid its use. Besides, this political party
was especially strong in the Cost region, but it was demonstrated that it did not implicated
voting for Lasso. In second place, he developed a speech of union instead of more rival
adviser, that reflected that Ecuadorian society held politicians responsible for the
confrontational climate and identified this problem as the cause for not achieving
development (Primicias, 2021). In third place, the use of human elements (hands)
corresponding to male and female is an attempt to show a more human and inclusive
approach; besides, these hands as both are using bracelets is addressed to young people.
The problem is that as Lasso is very conservative, this kind of advertisements that try to
show a new perspective and an aim of negotiation still reflect the normative and
All in all, as the message became to be more humble, it had a better outcome: Lasso was
able to win elections in a voting process where the null and white votes achieve top
al., 2020).
Findings
one hand, its characteristics are to be confident, powerful, and energetic. This is linked to
which makes sense as a candidate must project an idea of future. On the other hand,
citizens understood this by its shadows (destroyer). Then, as political polarization has
been ingrained in Ecuador for the last 15 years, this strategy was not useful.
Recommendations
then, citizens begin to pay attention to mainstream, which is very dangerous for the
democracy. However, the way politicians develop their message is crucial to generate
Nowadays, as post-truth politics and populism are increasing, democratic procedures are
often questioned because marketing strategies are capable of giving power to a certain
person; nevertheless, politics should pretend to be about identification, about policies and
about strategies to achieve a state of well-being. In other words, it must be worrying that
politics has so many common elements with buyer behavior because citizens should not
be seen as buyers.
References
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