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The quality instinct: how an eye for art can save your business

Maxwell Anderson (Principal at AEA Consulting, a New York and London firm specializing in strategic planning for the cultural sector. He holds a PhD in art history from Harvard University, taught on the faculty of Princeton University, has published widely on art and museums, was a curator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art from 1981‐1987 and a director of leading art museums for 16 years, most recently (1998‐2003) New York's Whitney Museum of American Art. Maxwell Anderson can be reached at: manderson@aeaconsulting.com)

Journal of Business Strategy

ISSN: 0275-6668

Article publication date: 1 October 2005

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Abstract

Purpose

This paper was written to help the lay reader understand how learning to look at art can be helpful in learning to evaluate business decisions. The lessons of sorting out the best from the very good in art are directly applicable to decisions in everything from product design to evaluating goods that are designed, manufactured, displayed, or sold.

Design/methodology/approach

The approach to honing a “quality instinct” involves developing visual literacy – learning to look at art – and moving on to learning to discern differences in the quality of art objects.

Findings

Consumers are growing more visually sophisticated, and it behooves business leaders to be one step ahead of their competitors and their target markets. Visual literacy is achieved through a combination of study and practice. Seeing past the different ways artists tackle the same subject to discover both their intention and your reaction can train you to look at mass‐manufactured goods with a discerning eye.

Value

Visual communication cuts across cultures, unlike the spoken word. It's immediate and visceral. Expanding visual literacy is necessary for effective communication in a global marketplace, and gives you an advantage in a market where competitors may come up short. By developing visual literacy from spending time looking at art and learning about it, you'll improve your instincts in making visual judgments – about product design, marketing strategies, business environments, and your company's overall image.

Keywords

Citation

Anderson, M. (2005), "The quality instinct: how an eye for art can save your business", Journal of Business Strategy, Vol. 26 No. 5, pp. 29-32. https://doi.org/10.1108/02756660510700500

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2005, Company

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