https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purple_Cow#/media/File:Burgess-cow.jpg |
Did you know that the original purple cow was black?
A short poem with a long life
Back in 1895 Gelett Burgess published the nonsense poem in The Lark:
I never saw a Purple Cow,I never hope to see one,But I can tell you, anyhow,I'd rather see than be one.
Interestingly, the various texts of the poem capitalize "Purple Cow, and most insert commas as rendered above, though some also put in semi-colons at the end of lines and end the declaration with an exclamation point instead of period.
However, the way it first appeared with this illustration as shown here, you see no punctuation at all, and all the letters were capitalized. You have to possess my kind of curiosity and obsession with the mechanics of writing to take note of these things.
What would strike most people is the more obviously striking point that the cow in the illustration is not purple -- likely because adding in the color would have rendered printing rather too pricey. ing up this blog, I saw the Purple Cow live!
the Morgan Library. The explanation on the exhibit says this:
GOING VIRAL IN 1895
I never saw a Purple Cow, / I never hope to see one,
But I can tell you, anyhow, / I’d rather see than be one!
Burgess became famous in 1895 when he published these four lines of verse with an illustration of a cartoonish cow in the first issue of his humor magazine The Lark. Despite the periodical’s modest print run, the poem went viral. Journalists reproduced it across the country and in Europe, sometimes changing the words to suit specific situations (think memes).
Purple Cow branding
Purple Cow ice cream since 1934 |
As Hank Mejer says in the video above, his father, Fred, loved the poem and decided that it was the name he must use for the ice cream shops within the Mejer stores back in 1960. The Purple Cow Creamery dates back even further to 1934 and lives on in ice cream today. Alas, those quaint ice cream shops are gone.
From the flight of fancy of a poet in the 19th century and to an enduring brand name for ice cream sold in specialty shops in the 20th century and and a way of visualizing positioning to marketers in the 21st century idea, the purple cow concept certainly has legs. One may even say four of them!
Related:
Ask a marketer about a purple cow, and you likely will elicit a proud reference to Seth Godin, the marketing maven who published Purple Cow: Transform Your Business by Being Remarkable in 2003. Based on the premise that you either stand out or remain invisible, Godin's declared that you must aspire to be as different as a purple cow.
But why that animal and that color? He could have said a pink horse or a green dog. Had he written a bit later when billion dollar startups were granted their own mythical animal, he may have even opted for the unicorn. But the thing is that he didn't dream up the image of a purple cow. It was already kicking around for over a century.