Multimodality, Meaning, and Institutions A Multimodal Investigation of the Institutionalization of Aesthetic Design as a Dimension of Competition in the PC Industry Article information (original) (raw)

The paper applies a multimodal approach to position aesthetic innovation, i.e. the strategic use of aesthetic design attributes such as color and shape, as an institutionalized aspect of competition, rather than as a firm-specific differentiation strategy, in settings that favor the symbolic meanings of products. Empirically, the paper offers a detailed case study of the Personal Computer (PC) industry to examine the institutionalization of aesthetic innovation as a dimension of competition across industry firms. The paper examines the color and shape of PCs over the 1992-2003 period and situates changes to these attributes in the competitive conditions that characterized the industry, paying particular attention to the introduction of the Apple iMac in 1998. Furthermore, it examines the discursive manifestations of aesthetic innovation by content analyzing reviews of PCs and interviews with industry executives. Findings demonstrate that, in a period coinciding with a decline in demand for PCs and an overall mature market as well as with the introduction of the iMac, the majority of firms engaged in aesthetic innovation and used a greater number of aesthetic words in describing their PCs.