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Chapter 1: Creativity

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Title: Chapter 1: Creativity


1
Chapter 1 Creativity
  • Unexpected but relevant selling messages

2
Creative ads are
  • Creativity is Unexpected
  • Relevant to the consumer and brand (understand
    how your clients brand fits into the lives of
    its target audience)
  • Persuasive, pushes the selling idea

3
Lets look at an example
4
The Grant
  • Reasonably priced condo in Washington D.C.
  • Well-made (granite, hardwood, appliances)
  • Near restaurants, bars mass transportation
  • The problem? The units are small, condo sales
    have declined recently. Price is the lure.

5
The Grant Two audiences/approach
  • Primary target audience
  • Young, first-time buyers
  • Earn 40,000
  • Currently live with roommates
  • Secondary target audience
  • Businesses providing housing for extended-stay
    visitors, long-distance commuters, etc

6
The Grants creative solution
  • Remind target of problems associated with renting
    and roommates
  • Message simple, unexpected and relevant
  • Entice target to go to the Grants website for
    more information and to schedule a visit.
  • All urls pointed to same bridge page
  • Advertise in alternative and gay newspapers, bar
    coasters and bus shelters
  • Beer coasters in local bars

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12
The Grant
  • Other headlines
  • StopLabelingYourFood.com
  • DoYourLaundryNaked.com
  • IWantSomeTaxDeductions.com
  • IAmTooOldToBeRenting.com
  • GottaGetMyOwnPlace.com
  • IHate2Rent.com

13
The Grant
  • Businesses were reached by an ad in newspapers
    and by direct mail. Visually, ads were same, but
    attitude is different
  • Washington Business Journal
  • www.AHotelIsNotAHome.com
  • Bridge page is sophisticated. Focus on them being
    disconnected from home

14
Creativity defined
  • Creative ads make a relevant connection between a
    brand and its target audience (we understand your
    problem we can help)
  • Creative ads present a selling idea (Rational,
    emotional or combine both)
  • Creative ads are unexpected (words, visuals,
    media, or all three)

15
Where to run the ads
  • Adidas promoted its soccer gear by painting a
    soccer scene on the ceiling of a train station in
    Cologne, Germany for the 2006 Soccer World Cup
  • LOreal Paris promoted its Mens Expert line of
    products by advertising on dry cleaner dress
    shirt hangers with coupons (Your shirt doesnt
    have wrinkles, why should your face?)
  • Just because you can run a message nearly
    everywhere, doesnt mean you should. (pg 7-9)

16
Inspiration from Customers
  • Invite them to create their own ads (Nationwide
    Insurance life comes at you fast MasterCard -
    Priceless)
  • Caution General Motors SUV. 2007 Chevrolet
    Tahoe. Gas-guzzler, global warming, warmonger.
  • Dont give detractors free ad space. Rules.
  • Win these challenges, jumpstart career

17
Humor Tips for effective use
  • Avoid jokes (punch lines wear out too fast).
    Humor has nuances that make you want to see/hear
    again
  • Relate to human experience, identify with people
  • Make product central to message, to remember it
  • Understand audiences sense of humor, dont
    insult
  • Avoid humor at expense of others, elderly, race
  • Have fun with product (dont make fun of it),
    Motel6
  • Use smart humor, dont expect a stupid audience

18
Celebrities The pros
  • Have stopping power. Cuts through clutter. Got
    Milk?
  • Tyra Banks 2 ads Seventeen and Sports
    Illustrated
  • Are idolized by fans. Hopes to transfer to brand.
    P. 20
  • People are fascinated by their lives Willie
    Nelson
  • Uniqueness communicates selling idea Yao Ming
  • Experts in their fields Connect to brand
    advertised

19
Celebrities The cons
  • Expensive, millions of dollars. Only for big
    companies
  • Often a quick fix, not a long-term strategy
  • May lack credibility, people think its for the
    money
  • May endorse too many products, Tiger Woods
  • May overshadow the product, Yao Ming and Visa
  • Bad press can hurt sponsor, Kobe Bryant

20
Advertising trade characters Pros
  • Communicate selling feature, AFLAC, Geico
  • Reinforce a brand name, Kellogs
  • Make a company seem more approachable
  • Dont age, so appeal to different generations
  • Emotional, part of the fabric of company
  • Advertiser has control over what they say do

21
Advertising trade characters Cons
  • Can seem gimmicky and old-fashioned
  • Trick is to make characters relevant to customers
  • MM characters makeover. Colors get personality
  • They may love character, but not love the brand.
  • Must be relevant to brand/consumer. Singing sock
    puppet from pets.com now collectible on e-bay

22
Jumpstart your career
  • Enter the award shows
  • Student ADDY Awards
  • Andy Student Awards
  • Athena Student Awards
  • Clio Student Awards
  • Others listed on page 16 of your book

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Some local Student ADDY winning entries.
25
Gold winner Alexis Bass Columbia Ad Club
  • Go cherry puckering
  • Mother Nature wants her children to look their
    best and we respect what she has to say. Burts
    Bees lip products are full of moisturizing
    vitamin E and dont include any chemicals or
    other metallic residues often found in lipsticks.
    And that peppermint tingleits just how we say
    thank you.

26
Silver winner Alex Grinton Columbia Ad Club
27
Ethical and Legal Issues
  • How far will you go to be creative?
  • Should profit or prudence prevail as surveys
    indicate women, Hispanic Americans and African
    Americans are prime targets for cigarettes and
    alcohol when most consumers are consuming less of
    both?
  • Should a commercial for a popular pain reliever
    reveal that the reason more hospitals choose our
    brand is that it supplied at a reduced price?
  • Should consumers who have no medical background
    be told to ask physicians about specific brands
    of prescription drugs?

28
Ethical and Legal Issues
  • How far will you go to be creative?
  • Should an automobile maker show a sports car
    outracing a jet plane in an age when speeding
    motorists are killed daily?
  • Should advertisers cast TV commercials using such
    imperatives as she should be blond or if
    brunette, not too brunette and pretty, but not
    too pretty
  • Is even a mock representation of violence and
    domination appropriate in commercial speech?
  • What about sexual innuendo? If sex sells, should
    there be limits?

29
Regulations
  • Difference between puffery deception (Puffery
    is an exaggeration or overstatement expressed in
    broad, vague, and commendatory language and is
    distinguished from false descriptions or false
    representations of specific characteristics of a
    product and, as such, is not actionable)
  • If you make claims, must substantiate it (FTC,
    FDA is watching you if you say your product is
    better than others)

30
Regulations
  • Dont copy creative ideas from others
  • Dont copy other peoples likeness (To resemble
    celebrities)
  • Respect other companies trademarks (Tony the
    Tiger and Exxon tiger coexisted for more than 30
    years until Exxon started using its tiger to sell
    food)
  • Watch what you ay in front of children
    (Childrens Advertising Review Unit)
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