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Papa John's possible new logo drops the apostrophe

Papa John's possible new logo drops the apostrophe
Posted at 9:39 AM, Sep 22, 2018
and last updated 2018-09-22 12:39:13-04

Papa John's is considering a sleek, boxy new logo that turns Papa John's into Papa Johns.

The company filed a trademark with the US Patent and Trademark Office in late August, but a company representative said that there are no immediate plans to start using the new logo.

AdAge first reported the filing.

It's no surprise that Papa John's is considering a fresh look. The company recently launched two ad campaigns seemingly designed to win back customers and employees disappointed in the behavior of John Schnatter, its founder.

Schnatter resigned his role as chairman in July after news broke that he hadused the N-word on a conference call. He had already stepped down as CEO months earlier, after he caused a controversy by blaming the NFL for poor pizza sales.

Since then, Papa John's has been distancing itself from Schnatter, who was once featured in the company's ads and whose face used to adorn its pizza boxes.

Tulin Erdem, a professor of marketing at NYU's Stern business school, thinks that the new, trademarked logo is "more streamlined, more contemporary."

Right now, the Papa John's logo, which features more traditional type in a domed frame, is "very traditional" and "maybe outdated," she said.

Papa John's filed a trademark for the logo, featuring two rectangles framing "Papa" and "Johns" in boxy font, with and without the company's "Better ingredients. Better pizza" tagline. Some versions are in red and green, and some in black and white.

They've "moved from a serif type to a sans serif typeface, which is perceived as being more modern,"noted Luke Wilson, clinical associate professor of marketing at NYU Stern.

Erik Gordon, clinical assistant professor at the University of Michigan's Ross School of Business, sees the dropped apostrophe as a subtle dig at the company's controversial founder, John Schnatter.

"I don't think any consumer will notice it, but he sure will," he said.

Schnatter declined to comment for this story through a representative.

A recent commercial, shot in August, features a diverse panel of franchisees and employees and echoes a message sent by CEO Steve Ritchie: Papa John's is bigger than one person.

"You've heard one voice of Papa John's for a long time," one employee says to the camera. "It's time you heard from all of us," said another.

At the commercial's close, a list of names scrolls to replace John's. Papa John's becomes Papa Kiersten's, Papa Brant's and Papa Daniel's.

Actually changing the name of the company would be tricky, Gordon said. "If you change your name, you maybe put at risk even more of the business."

Erdem said that when companies change their names, they lose valuable brand recognition.

"There's so much awareness around the name," said Erdem. "I think a company would do that only if really, really the brand is so tarnished, you want to be forgotten."