MAM
The Typing Revolution in Cyberspace
At the early dawn of the office cubicles, the expensive and elegantly dressed secretarial pools were eliminated as grown-up executives were ordered to type and lick stamps. This great cost savings certainly pleased the CFOs, but quietly halted the intellectual interactions that such pools had offered, while keeping most adults pretty dumbfounded and sluggish for a decade.
Certainly mesmerized by keyboards, now after decades of torture and misery, most of us type and are masters of the two-finger tango. At this point, we are all heavily engaged in a global war of e-commerce, in which somehow everyone is forced to type. It’s type or else.
Type, Type, Type
This “Typing Revolution” of the recent past has surely taken control of the mainstream, creeping up on us, from basic keyboards to pocket devices that control our behavior in an almost bionic form. Type, type, type. Type in the morning, type in the afternoon, in the evening, in cars, in elevators, in bedrooms, restrooms, dining tables, picnic tables and sometimes all day in the office, too.
The same fingers that did all the walking in the Yellow Pages have now learned tap dancing. Klika-ta-klick, klika-ta-klick… Ole!
Those twisted business names and complicated URLs that everyone is forced to remember are of particular concern, demanding absolutely correct spellings, like Axcioum, or Qununantum, or Progexys. (None of these exist so far on Google, but you get my drift.)
One mistake and you end up in a strange La La Land: From whitehouse.gov to whitehouse.com — what a contrast! Dot-gov takes you to Lincoln’s bedroom, while dot-com will take you to Lolita’s.
Without precise spelling, one can spend all day searching through thousands of not quite identical names on a search engine.
Revolutions Make for Evolution
There were also other similar major revolutions during the last century, each creating a culture and a society entirely based upon that revolution of the period, including:
- “Print Society.” Expanding reading and literacy.
- “Radio Society.” Listening, dialogue and music.
- “Telephone Society.” Conversation, spiel, telemarketing.
- “TV Society.” Better sofas, centrality of the living room and visual knowledge.
- “Computer Society.” Organization and planning.
- “Telecom Society.” Globalization and surfing.
- “Cyber-Society.” Decentralization, intellectual-anarchy.
- “Broadcast Society.” It’s next. Be prepared.
The latter is fueled by the “Broadcasting Via Web Revolution” that will bring anchoring and broadcasting from every basement and every floor of office buildings around the globe. Make-up, lights, camera, action. Hello, CNN. (Adapted from: Sunrise, Day One, Year 2000, Naseem Javed, Linkbridge, 1996)
Keyboard, a New Battleground
Today naming is all about search ability and search engines. Spelling and cognitive associations control corporate names. Business listings have gone through the roof: A two-inch directory of the past is now a two-mile-thick book.
The masses, with their strained ability to memorize, are frustrated with typing mangled names with strange dashes and slashes. The human brain with its own pace of evolution is simply stuck somewhere just slightly ahead of the Jurassic era. The brain has no power or incentive to store and remember weird business names by the hundreds.
Positioning a name for maximum impact in global e-commerce is the new game. No one really cares about logos and colors anymore, only the name and how it relates to the business. After all, it’s only the name that everyone talks about, remembers, types, chats about, refers to, calls, praises or curses. Leave it to the Germans to come up with the longest domain name in the world. Roughly translated, the 63-space Web site means: “Just how human humans are is shown by how they treat their mother tongue”:
http://www.WiemenschlichMenschensindzeigtihrUmgangmitderMutte
rsprachefrsch.de
Are keyboards now the real battlegrounds where the next marketing fights will be won or lost? Is this typing revolution finally creating a hyper-global-hyper-secretarial-hyper-typing-pool? Ole!
Is typing replacing logos? Has pure memorability of the precise name become more critical then the entire design and packaging campaign? Will recalling an easily type-able name make more money then blindly spending millions of dollars on abstract market research to approve some abstract branding strategy? Why will simple names like Sony.com survive, while names like Exproptroxtron.com won’t?
Why not have a national holiday and declare it a Global Typing Day? Klika-ta-klick, klika-ta-klick… Ole!
MAM
Hyphen launches sunscreen campaign featuring Kriti Sanon as SPF Police
Campaign drives SPF habit; Blinkit tie-up enables instant sunscreen delivery.
MUMBAI: No SPF, no mercy Kriti Sanon is out patrolling your skincare routine. Hyphen has rolled out a new campaign film starring its Co-Founder and Chief Customer Officer Kriti Sanon, who steps into a playful alter ego as the brand’s “SPF Police”, turning sunscreen reminders into a full-blown public service announcement with a wink. The campaign kicked off with a cheeky social media tease suggesting Sanon had “stepped down” from her role, sparking chatter online before the brand revealed the twist: she hasn’t gone anywhere, she has simply taken on an additional avatar, one dedicated to ensuring people do not skip sunscreen.
The film leans into humour to drive home a serious point. In a slice-of-life setting, Sanon intercepts a gym-goer about to step out without sunscreen, promptly handing over Hyphen’s ‘All I Need Sunscreen’, which arrives instantly via Blinkit. The message is clear: forgetting SPF is no longer a valid excuse when it can be delivered in minutes.
Beyond the laughs, the campaign taps into a well-known gap in everyday skincare habits. Sunscreen, despite being one of the most recommended steps, is often the most ignored. By gamifying the reminder through an “SPF Police” persona, Hyphen aims to turn a routine into a reflex.
The multi-stage rollout from intrigue-led teasers to the final film has been designed to spark conversation while embedding the brand into daily behaviour. It also spotlights Hyphen’s quick commerce partnership with Blinkit, positioning accessibility as a key enabler of consistency.
Sanon, who remains closely involved in product development and brand strategy, noted that the idea stemmed from a simple insight: skincare works best when it is easy, habitual and hard to ignore. The campaign reflects that philosophy equal parts science, storytelling and a nudge you cannot quite escape.
The film is now live across Hyphen and Blinkit’s digital platforms, with further activations expected to extend the campaign’s reach and perhaps keep the SPF Police on duty a little longer.








