The Faces of Emotional Selling

Do you suffer from Halitosis?

In the 1920s, Listerine faced a problem. 

Originally invented in 1879 as a surgical antiseptic and later sold as a mouthwash, sales had stagnated at around $100,000 a year—respectable and established, but far from mass success.

That changed when Listerine launched one of the most influential ad campaigns in marketing history, which impacted not only sales but also society to this day. 

“HALITOSIS makes you unpopular” 

This is the headline of the ad that showed sad women and rejected men. The reason for their loneliness? 

Halitosis—a fancy and medical-sounding word for bad breath.

The term has been used only in clinical contexts before, but the campaign turned it into a national anxiety.

The sales skyrocketed fortyfold within a few years, and the message was clear: 

Use our product, or die alone.

Continue reading “The Faces of Emotional Selling”

Do What you Love

In 2011, I visited a design conference in Singapore. 

Leading creatives and artists were sharing their works, stories, and wisdom. 

At that time, I was working on my final thesis. It was also a time when I felt completely lost.

I couldn’t think of what to do after my studies.

Should I go back to my job as a fashion graphic designer? 
Should I apply to an ad agency? 

Apply to an ad agency?

No way felt right.

Continue reading “Do What you Love”

Creative Confidence

“We live in an outcome-focused culture,” Seth Godin writes in his book The Practice.

During industrialization, this made sense—outcomes needed to be fast and predictable.

But we’re entering an era of automated results and democratized, open-source knowledge

—all just a tab away.

The Last Human Advantage 

In the face of peak efficiency, one thing remains inimitable:

The process.

Not the generated one — the experienced one.
The unique, lived journey to the result.

That’s the place of personal growth, meaning, and creative confidence.

Continue reading “Creative Confidence”

Is AI Eating the World?

I’ve changed my mind about AI.

A few months ago, I read the statement: “AI is eating the world.”

Immediately, I had this image in my head—a robotic spider weaving a web around its prey, our world as we know it.

I don’t know why it popped up so quickly. Maybe because I was outside with my son that day, searching for insects. Maybe because of my lifelong fascination with spiders, which started with my first horror movie, Tarantula.

However, the real question I asked myself was:

Do I actually agree with this statement?

Short answer: no.

Continue reading “Is AI Eating the World?”