Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Bombs or Ads?

john walker | 5:15 PM | Be the first to comment!
The City of Boston was seriously disrupted today by ads that looked like bombs. Reuters has the story of blinking devices placed on bridges throughout the city as a marketing ploy for the popular cartoon, Aqua Teen Hunger Force. From the story:
The billboards, encased in dark plastic, consisted of blinking lights wired to an electronic circuit board to project an animated cartoon image in an outdoor promotion for a show on Turner's [ala Turner Networks] Cartoon Network called "Aqua Teen Hunger Force."
NPH has been meaning to write something about outdoor advertising for some time now, so here ya go.
Read more ...

It's Gotta Be The Shoes

john walker | 6:30 AM | Be the first to comment!
NPH is probably behind the curve here, but we've only now just learned about TOMS shoes (thanks to a tip from Cool People Care). Started by 30 year old Blake MyCoskie--a former Amazing Race contestant--the shoe company donates one pair of its Alpargata shoes to a needy child for each pair that it sells. MyCoskie got the idea when he was in Argentina. This is what his website says:
Inspired by a traditional Argentine shoe and challenged by the continent's poverty and health issues, I created TOMS with a singular mission: To make life more comfortable. TOMS accomplishes this through its unique shoe and my commitment to match every pair purchased with a donated pair to a child in need . . . no complicated formulas. You buy a pair of shoes and I give a pair to a child on your behalf.
NPH thinks this is brilliant. We looked it up, and there's a local shoe store where we can get these. We're all over it.

Here's the trend we're noticing: charitable donations on behalf of consumers. Like the Product Red campaign, TOMS doesn't ask affluent western consumers to do anything other than what they're already doing, namely shopping and consuming. But it's the ultimate if-you-can't-beat-'em-join-'em strategy, where you make their consumption into a vehicle for good work. This is the entrepreneurial innovation the world needs more of.

Read more about TOMS shoes here and here.
Read more ...

Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Do You Really Want To Win?

john walker | 5:41 AM | | Be the first to comment!
Forbes magazine has a piece up about the mechanics of American Idol exposure for those who compete. Particularly of interest is the cut that producer Simon Fuller's production company takes from contestants' subsequent record sales, which is upwards of 50% when the industry standard is 15%. Further, contestants are sworn to secrecy regarding what they're actually paid by Fuller's company (19 Entertainment), whether in record sales or in revenues from live concert appearances. Tellingly, most of the past winners have severed ties with 19 as quickly as possible.

Also of interest is this chart from The Church of The Consumer, laying out the viewers and voters from year-to-year compared to actual album sales. Obviously, the former consistently go up and up, while the latter don't do the same. What determines how many records a given winner sells? Could it have something to do with the way 19 Entertainment mis-handles and mis-markets the Fantasia Barrino's and Taylor Hicks' of its competition?

Note: this post previously said that 19 Entertainment was Simon Cowell's production company and not Simon Fuller's. Thanks, Matty, for the correction.
Read more ...

Monday, January 29, 2007

Super Bowl Pre-Game

john walker | 7:42 AM | Be the first to comment!
Bob Garfield of Advertising Age and On The Media gives the pre-game report you're really interested in. Interesting tidbits: the secrecy surrounding the ads, the vulgar content of the ads, and the price of the ads. Enjoy it here.
Read more ...

Mini Madness

john walker | 7:16 AM | | Be the first to comment!
Ever drive past a billboard advertising a product you use and feel a surge of pride? "Hey, that's my cell phone"; or what about, "Hey, that's my car."

Mini Cooper is banking on it. Starting this week, four American Cities (New York, Miami, Chicago, and San Francisco) will test run Mini Cooper billboards that send personal messages to Cooper owners as they drive by. The billboards use Radio Frequency Identification (or RFID) technology to send a signal from your key to the billboard. When it receives the signal, the billboard will flash something like, "Tom: king of the road." Mini owners completed surveys that will provide fodder for message content.

A lot of discussion about the billboards is centered on the safety issue. However, NPH is more interested in the marketing tactic itself. It's a great example of using a brand to create what Douglas Rushkoff calls "social currency." A brand offers itself to consumers as a way to belong to the community of its users. In an increasingly isolated culture, brands as social currency provide an acceptance and belonging that most people are not getting from traditional vendors of such things: neighborhood, civic involvement, church, even family. So the brand positions itself as your community.

While the billboards are aimed at current owners, they're no doubt part of a strategy to attract new consumers. "See," they say, "You could be on the inside of this. You could be part of the billboard message community." All you have to do is sell your soul to the brand.

Note: in Get Back in The Box, Rushkoff singles out the makers of the Mini Cooper for marketing practices that are exemplary, especially when compared to the folks who redesigned the VW Bug. What he found good about the Mini was the attention paid, first of all, to the quality of the product and not the slickness of a marketing campaign. In fact, the only marketing BMW did for the Mini Cooper was to get it in a movie ("The Italian Job") and do drive their cars around on the tops of semi trucks.

NPH wonders if this new step is in continuity with those exemplary practices or a departure from them.
Read more ...

Sunday, January 28, 2007

No, Seriously

john walker | 3:21 PM | | Be the first to comment!
This is the kind of mail solicitations that come to NPH's church.
No joke.


Read more ...

Friday, January 26, 2007

Food Network Subliminal Advertising?

john walker | 11:50 AM | Be the first to comment!

NPH is part of a Yahoo group called "Media Squatters" that serves as a forum to discuss media. Today somebody alerted us to this, a one-frame McDonalds advertisement "subliminally" tucked into the content of the Food Network's "Iron Chef America." Real? This guy's not the only YouTube user who caught it and uploaded it. This guy did too.


Read more ...
Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More

Search

Pages

Powered by Blogger.