Almost Imperfect: Moved to recaptured.in

Advertising, Marketing, Strategy and Photography

Thursday, 31 January 2008

Do you know your dentist's brand preference?

Have you seen the Colgate toothbrush advertisement on television with dentists telling us that Colgate is the toothbrush most dentists use?

Now I couldn’t care less which toothbrush my or any other dentist uses. But there’s something wrong with this commercial. And looks like it’s everything.

Let’s begin with the strategy: what is the ad trying to position the product as? A toothbrush dentists use. But isn’t that already taken? Oral B already occupies the seat of “the toothbrush dentists use themselves” in our minds. So what is Colgate trying to achieve with this attempt at occupying this unavailable position? Beats me. Add to that the fact that the moment you decide to do a me-too campaign trying to position yourself in a spot your competitor already is occupying, it is to be taken for granted that the prospect would inevitably be comparing your communication with your competitor’s, and the odds are it would not be favourable towards you. You are, after all, copying your competitor’s idea.

Oral-B, in its ads, uses Rob the dentist, whose face is always hidden, to stand for all dentists that supposedly use Oral-B toothbrushes. Their commercials even state clearly that they can’t show the face of the ‘dentist’ because he is a real dentist (rather than a paid actor). This makes it believable. Sure on the cognitive level, the prospect would think that it is obviously staged since it is an advertisement. But on an affective level, the claim that it is a real dentist seems believable (Why else would they not show his face?)

Here Colgate falter. They show the faces of their dentists, smiling, holding the brush and talking to camera selling the product. Can medical professionals appear in paid communication endorsing products? I don’t think so. These are paid actors. And it is evident. We have seen these actors in other commercials. Yes sir, Colgate has come out as a liar, trying to pass off actors as dentists. What good would the certification from the dental association be if you are undermining your own credibility this way? Sure all ads use paid actors and we know that, and sure all oral care ads have shown actors dressed as dentists, but did those ‘dentists’ directly promote any brand (as opposed to just educating you about dental hygiene) on the basis that the community of dentists (which is real, rather than the fictional character the dentist in the ad is) prefer. That is a serious claim!

And in the end, what is happening to copywriters? Lines like “अगर स्वस्थ मुंह चाहिए तो कुछ और क्यूं?” (why anything else if you want a healthy mouth?) and “मैं कोलगेट की सलाह देता हूं क्योंकि यही इस्तेमाल करता हूं, और बाकी डेंटिस्ट्स भी इसी की सलाह देते हैं (I recommend Colgate because I use it, and rest of the dentists also recommend it) are only weakening an already doomed campaign.

I think the folks at Gillette should be celebrating the way Pepsi folks were celebrating way back at the launch of New Coke. To make the market leader forget their strategy and instead launch a me-too campaign based on your positioning is a compliment to the marketing department of your company. The Oral-B strategy is just right, now if only they stick to it and not let themselves squander based on “country-based research-based strategy”.

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Tuesday, 29 January 2008

Contesting


keys
Originally uploaded by recaptured

This is my entry to the Orkut Photography Contest for the running fortnight (Theme: musical instrument). What do you think?

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Monday, 28 January 2008

Classics Revisited: Tata Safari DiCOR

After reading the content of the last ad-dissection post someone on the same Orkut forum recounted a favourite ad of his - the Tata Safari DiCOR ad, the one we are familiar with as the "Reclaim your life" ad, and requested a writeup on that. Guess what? I also love that ad, and loved writing the following.


Company: Tata Motors
Brand/Product: Tata Safari DiCOR
Tagline: Reclaim your life
Storyboard link: courtesy agencyfaqs!

What is this advertisement selling, if it does not talk about the mileage, the grip on the road, the boot space, the leg room, the head room, the interiors, the paint, the look? It does not talk of the car at all. What is it trying to get at?

Maslow's hierarchy of needs places esteem (not the car from the Maruti stable) at the fourth level, above physiological needs, safety and love/belonging and lower only to self-actualization. What needs does a car satisfy? There is a basic (call it physiological if you will) need, which Kotler calls "core benefit", of transportation, and there is safety - you would prefer a car to a motorcycle to a bicycle because it is safer to the latter options. Lastly, there is one need that a car satisfies, more in the younger crowd, and that is esteem. A 14-year old is thrilled about getting to drive a car, and a 24-year old is thrilled about owning one. The world over, a car is one of the most treasured possessions of a man. Your car in a way defines you. Why else would wannabe playboys drive around in big shiny sportscars hoping to impress the women?

With the economy moving the way it is and with the average age of the first car buyer coming down (with the result that people are buying their first cars at 25 rather than 35, which was the norm 15 years ago), along with the fact that more and more younger professionals are getting their dream jobs with dream salaries, dream locations etc. (with the result that even the first car can be a B+ or C segment instead of the earlier 800/Alto/Santro class), it is a good idea for a SUV to focus on the young professionals as their consumer segment.

So what this ad does, is that it takes the aspirations of young and otherwise successful people, people whose parents would no doubt be proud of them, and shows that the 'normal' life is keeping them from pursuing what their heart desires. They would rather be doing something else.

Now what works here:

1. The positioning - bang on. The car for the young successful professional who wants to be a maverick. With the new-style Safari, the designers at Tata successfully moved away from the boxy Bihar/Jharkhand-road chhaap Sumo image and delivered a sleek, sophisticated looking SUV.

2. The immediate connect - if you are a young successful professional, you definitely have a wish to do something extraordinary with your life which you are unable to do right now because of the rat race you are stuck in. You have to identify with the faces in the ad.

3. The tagline - reclaim your life. This urban life with the 9 to 5 job and pressures of the family etc. have taken away your life from you - the life that actually belongs to you, which you should be able to live your way. You should now get up and reclaim it for your sake. Notice the direct call to action - it's not a 'buy now' or 'hurry till stocks last'. It is so much of a non-hardsell line that it appeals to you much less like an ad but more like a caring friend or a movement that you're part of (why am I reminded of Woodstock?).

4. The production - there are two parts to the film: the first where the people talk about their unfulfilled dreams, and the second where the car is shown. First you feel connected to the people and as soon as you feel comfortable, a high-speed unstable film appears with a powerful SUV negotiating tough roads like you would like yourself to be doing right here right now. The director of the spot has done his job brilliantly in getting both parts of the film to talk properly to the target audience.

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Atheist for President?

Can an atheist get elected President in the U.S. of A.? That does not seem likely, but Scott Adams has some ideas on his hypothetical Presidential campaign, and the first issue he addresses is the old faith one. Here.

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Saturday, 26 January 2008

Two photographs


Ain't it the truth?
Originally uploaded by sepultura

The joy of not being sold anything (found on the Core77 blog)


And now, a photograph from my photostream:

sulking sparrow
Originally uploaded by recaptured

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Friday, 25 January 2008

Work - Foostor

I have been doing some work for this e-commerce site called Foostor. They build custom e-stores for IT companies for their employees to shop from.

So far I've worked on three banners (animated and static), and I'm on a major project with them (details to be disclosed later).

Do leave behind your comments about these:

   

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Thursday, 24 January 2008

Classics Revisited: Asian Paints

A few days back while I was asking the people on a community on Orkut related to advertising to get out of the "list any ads that come to your mind" mode and instead give some thought on analyzing and trying to find what made those advertisements click with the audience, one of the people there asked me to start. Someone had written about the "Waah Sunil babu..." commercial on that thread, so I picked it up for analysis and posted the analysis there.

Now for the benefit of readers of this blog, here's what I had written:


Brand: Asian Paints
Product: External emulsion
Storyboard link: courtesy agencyfaqs!

The things in the advert that work in its favour are:

1. Demonstration - the ad demonstrates the USP of the product being offered - longevity. The paint lasts longer than your car, your wife's figure, even you!

2. Dramatization - the demonstrations were dramatized, exaggerated to grab attention. Who would believe that a house once painted around the time of a young man's wedding would still look the same when he is dead and his wife has found a new lover?

3. Taboo - The wife's new lover. People love taboo topics, especially when handled with humour, because then the social stigma of the taboo topic is masked by the "we're just sharing a joke". Had the ad stopped at just the car being bad and the wife being fat, the impact would not have been that much - the ad simply dragged it too far - it lasts longer than you - so much that your wife and her new lover would enjoy it after you're gone!

4. Simplicity - the events are pretty simple. The man gets married, gets a new car and gets his house painted at the same time. The name - Sunil - is a very common name, much less than a Rahul or Rohan, for the middle-aged family people it targets. We haven't seen many lead characters in Hindi movies named Sunil (only KHKN - and none other than SRK at that! - comes to mind at this time). The punchline can be delivered to anyone named Sunil (or not) in jest... people started speaking in the same tone to their friends and acquaintances wherever they met them. It is simple, it is believable as something a regular neighbour says to another neighbour in the morning on whatever things he sees at the moment - the new house, car and wife (incidentally the three essentials for middle-class people in India).

5. Humour - don't need to explain that do I?

6. Execution - the art, the music, the acting of the cast - especially the person delivering the lines, the props - the motorbike, car, the clothes etc. have been taken care of well enough.

What do you think?

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The Big Bang

Yes. The blog is up and running now.

Let there be light and all that jazz :)

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Wednesday, 23 January 2008

When?

When will this blog see the light of the day, I wonder.

peedit of three providers - BSNL (my ISP, through their Cellone GPRS) which would put a snail to shame, Net4 (my IPP, providing the hosting for my site) and Google's Blogger (which is my blog service provider), I have been struggling for around a week now after having written the first post of the blog. Blogger scored over Wordpress for the choice of blogging service because my hosting provider charges extra for MySQL, but its software has been timing out ever since in trying to reach my FTP server.

Counting...

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Monday, 21 January 2008

Phoenixed.

A big hi to all!

I am back. Well, I never was here to begin with. There was no here before this post either. I am just back to the blogosphere.

Yes the last blog I wrote sort of means that I could not continue… there. Anyways, it was time to move on to a more robust solution, and as of now Blogger seems to be a good choice.

One of my half-a-month-since-new-year resolutions is to be more serious and regular about my blogging.

Amen to that.

Having said that, one might wonder why there is a period in the title of this post. I have been reading a couple of marketing and advertising books lately, where I got to revisit the fundamentals and the mavericks of advertising, and when you talk of them, what do you remember? “Think Small.” The advert that was a departure from the Exclamation style and heralded the Period style - controlled emotions, matter-of-fact statement.

When I started writing this post, I had put a “!” after Phoenixed. But it just seemed like a nice idea to put a period instead to show how much yours truly has matured since ;-)

Adios(whit?) till next time.

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