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Viral Old Spice Commercials by Weiden Kennedy Drove Sales Down by 7 Percent. Here's Why (race discussed)

Hello ladies, how are you? (thx to Seattle Videographer for the Tip Off)

Well, It's official. The Old Spice Viral Campaign by Weiden Kennedy actually drove sales down. The drop was an immediate 7 percent according to Warc, an industry research group. - (source)

The reasons are obvious if you were raised off the teet of the web (oft called net-natives). The web user culture is totally different from the newspaper reader culture of yester-year. Weiden + Kennedy was culturally out of touch. Ironically, if David Ogilvy was at the helm, I doubt this would have happened - even though he is a 1960's ad man.

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Why the Old Spice Viral Campaign Drove Sales Down

1. Stay Loyal to Your Core (warning: race discussion ahead)
If you have any market share at all, build on it.

Old Spice under Weiden + Kennedy created betrayal. Many of you are going to think the following words are nonsense but those who do aren't in my client demographic anyways so I'll spill the beans. Do you know what P&G Old Spice's Demographics are? I'm not sure but I do have a point sample of an idea. If you've been in any University Club, LA Fitness, or Equinox men's locker room with a bunch of naked dudes, and methodically stared at everyone's shopping cart every time you go shopping, you'd have a point sample idea too. It's a 50's and 60's crowd.

For a very small percent of the 50's and 60's white guys with some military background, "Mustafa" likely didn't go over well. I'm sure it's a small number but let's, for the sake of arguement, say only 2% of them were uncomfortable with "Mustafa." Then, from my subjective, non scientific analysis, these men in my gyms seem to be people who take themselves seriously. They range from old school executives to unionized blue collar workers. If the comical tone of the Weiden + Kennedy's ad only offended another 3% of their macho core, well, that would account for most of that 7% drop.

Personally, I have guy friends who are successful corporate African-Americans too. I know for a fact that a few of them use Old Spice. But after that silly messaging of a masculine product, I have a hunch they'd be as reluctant to walk through a checkout line with Old Spice as they would with a box of tampons. Are you on a horse?

How would the cash register boy react as one of my African American buddies tried to pay for his Old Spice? If you think I'm being silly, as a Korean American, my experience in the checkout line is occasionally different depending on whether I'm purchasing bread or rice. Do you have any idea how many times a checker asked me if I do kung fu; and 'what about Bob?' True story. 

The ad campaign made buying a regular brand embarrassing.

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2. If You Target Another Demographic, Rebrand

You buy products because they are exclusive to your psychography. Guys who wear Ed Hardy shirts will not wear Polo.

I can't think of any situation where the only way to increase your market share is to betray your existing base. If you want to bolt on a totally different demographic, you do so by totally rebranding. Nissan created Infinity because they didn't want to lose their core and make Nissans feel inferior. Honda created Acura. Toyota created Lexus. McDonalds created Chipotle. 

You'll lose your core if you diffuse your marketing - even more so with a viral campaign. If you insist on keeping one brand while going after two demographics, at least do what Verizon Wireless and Subway did. Get a race-agnostic spokesperson.

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Why The Heck Are They Addressing Women for a Men's Product Anyways?

3. W+K was so concerned with the medium that they forgot their message
The medium is just a medium. Whether you're on a street corner or in Carnegie Hall, the medium is just a medium. Focus on the message. Don't get distracted by the bells and whistles of the medium. W+K was in such a hurry to prove that their old-school culture was hip and relevant to "the parlance of our times" that they lost grasp of their message.

After a cursory review of any of their viral videos, it becomes clear that even their front line ad copy writers were confused as to who their target was. Mustafa generally begins his pitch, "Ladies." But the tagline is, "smell like a man, man."

Before you launch your next advertising or marketing initiative, let's talk. We might do well putting our heads together. Call 310 598 1606 or email bob.wan.kim@gmail.com 

CONTINUED: Actually, OldSpice Viral Marketing Raised Sales by 7%

Filed under  //   Old_spice   Warc   advertising   consumer   cpg   fail   kennedy   marketing   viral marketing   viral_marketing   weiden  


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Epic Google Voice FAIL.

I was just calculating web marketing ROI for several clients and I get a Google Voicemail. I checked.  

- Via http://sparkah.com

Filed under  //   epic   fail   google   google voice   voice  


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You Got 99 Mortal Sins a CEO Can Commit Online but (a b... ain't one.)

Harvard released a fascinating study on the most effective air-conditioner salesman ever. They realized that when geo-plotted over time, based on invoice date, a very simple data visualization, one thing became strikingly clear. This one salesman tripled his colleagues in sales because he sold to neighbors. His colleagues spent most of their time driving from neighborhood to neighborhood.

But upon closer examination, two other facts were discovered. The super-salesman's drive time was not significantly less than his mortal colleagues. Certainly not significant enough to triple sales. When a Harvard professor rode along with this salesman, he found that the super-salesman wasn't any better at the pitch or the close than his mortal counterparts.

The sublime mystery was solved when one proud owner of a new cooling system was asked why he called our super-salesman. "Jerry Simons, my neighbor was happy with him," the home owner replied.

Bad news travels much faster than good news. And online, badnews seems to be the only think that travels at all 

But here's the trouble. Bad news travels much faster than good news. And online, badnews seems to be the only think that travels at all. You're not going to find me writing a "#deltaWIN!" blog at 3 am in the morning. Honest. You won't.

But my, oh my, if you get me pissed off, I'll buy the domain name, pay for the 10 year premium registration, pay for the whole SEO tool kit, and linkspam every single blog that remotely mentions Delta. Hell, I'll drive to the local Chevron to buy 5 Hour Energy to continue blogging, tweeting, and comment spam even blogs that mention Delta's partners.

The beautiful part about Twitter is that if enough people complain, even happy people will see a "hashtag" in the Twitter trending list right smack dab on the home page. Then, bloggers will blog about it and since the NYTimes is suffering from severe blenis and twenis envy, they will "STOP THE PRESSES!," and write about it as well.

Yep, you are now living in the age where non news is the new news by virtue of social clamour on social media. There's no end to the things you can do wrong. AT&T has done over half. Delta keeps repeating the same handful. Apple just started to step over to the evil dark side. And you, will either have a FAIL hashtag made for your company or just totally stay out of the media.

You'll get a FAIL hashtag all your own especially if you stay out of Twitter 

Actually, I'm wrong. You'll get a FAIL hashtag all your own especially if you stay out of the media. People are now used to online Twitter based CRM. Yep. There's even a hashtag for it.

There is however hope. My sister uses this feminist quote in her email signatures, "In order to succeed, a woman has to do twice as much twice as well as a man. Fortunately this is not difficult." The same applies for you. In order for your firm to stand out, succeed, and maybe even convert your customers into your most vocal advocates, you have to be exceptional. Fortunately, this is not difficult if you work with a "NetNative."

You don't have to hire me. But you really would do well to hire somebody who knows how to create Jerry Simons. Please do. Nobody likes to a trainwreck.

How to hire me for your online business strategy and social media marketing: Call 310 598 1606. Ask for me by name. Bob Wan-Qi Kim.

PS. What did Zappos do that get them acquired by Amazon for nearly a billion dollars? They payed attention to and responded to THIS. The biggest difference between a net native and a non net native is that we are used to confronting faceless haters. We know how to shut them down and create virtual armies as well.

Filed under  //   business   fail   failure   marketing   sins   social media   social media marketing   socialmediadangersandopportunities  


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