How does a firm save its profits from the death spiral of competition? By
convincing the world (rightfully or not) that its mixture of corn syrup and water
is different from everyone else’s mixture of corn syrup and water. Coca-Cola is
not soda; it’s Coke. Producers of branded goods create a monopoly for
themselves—and price their products accordingly—by persuading consumers
that their products are like no other. Nike clothes are not pieces of fabric sewn
together by workers in Vietnam; they are Tiger Woods’s clothes. Even farmers
have taken this message to heart. At the supermarket, one finds (and pays a
premium for) Sunkist oranges, Angus beef, Tyson chickens.
Sometimes we gather information by paying outsiders to certify quality.
Roger Ebert’s job is to see lots of bad movies so that I don’t have to. When he
sees the occasional gem, he gives it a “thumbs up.” In the meantime, I am spared
from seeing the likes of
Tomcats, a film that Mr. Ebert awarded zero stars. I pay
for this information in the form of my subscription to the
Chicago Sun-Times (or
by looking at ads that the
Sun-Times is paid to display on its free website).
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