M Akhdan Al Ghifari
Institut Seni Indonesia Surakarta, Surakarta, Indonesia

Published : 1 Documents Claim Missing Document
Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 1 Documents
Search

The Empathize Approach In Visual Communication Design: A Case Study Of The Poznan Company × Real Madrid Community Apparel Campaign M Akhdan Al Ghifari; Ipung Kurniawan Yunianto
JHSS (JOURNAL OF HUMANITIES AND SOCIAL STUDIES) Vol. 10 No. 02. (2026): JHSS (Journal of Humanities and Social Studies)
Publisher : UNIVERSITAS PAKUAN

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.33751/jhss.v10i02..212

Abstract

The visual identity of football fan communities constitutes a collective symbol system that, to date, has received limited scholarly attention within the field of visual communication design (VCD), particularly from an empathize-based perspective. This study aims to describe how the empathize stage was operationalized in the VCD process of the Poznan Company × Seputar Real Madrid apparel campaign, to examine how the identity and emotions of Real Madrid fans were translated into visual elements, and to assess audience response indicators as markers of visual resonance—rather than as causal evidence of marketing success. A descriptive-qualitative case study approach was employed, drawing on digital observation of the Seputar Real Madrid community, documentation of campaign visual assets, and engagement and sales conversion data as supporting evidence. Findings reveal that the empathize approach produced three identity-driven visual pillars: the Cibeles Monument and UEFA Champions League (UCL) trophy as iconic symbols, Spanish-language typography anchored by the slogan "SOMOS LOS REYES DE EUROPA", and a black-gold-white color palette. These visual elements appear to have resonated emotionally with the audience, as reflected in a cumulative reach of 288,000 impressions and an increase in orders from 15 units (conventional method) to 152 units in Batch 1 (10.05% conversion rate) and 297 units in Batch 2 (19.33%), noting that UGC and fanpage support also contributed to the Batch 2 increase. Taken together, these findings suggest that an empathize-based VCD approach correlates with the formation of a visual system that resonates with fandom identity.