1 / 21

Message Execution & Creative Insights

Message Execution & Creative Insights. MKT 846 Professor West. Agenda. Continuation with Message Execution Turning a strategic plan into a creative campaign Where do break-through ideas come from? Approaches for creative inspiration: Unique Selling Proposition Brand Image

Download Presentation

Message Execution & Creative Insights

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Message Execution &Creative Insights MKT 846 Professor West

  2. Agenda • Continuation with Message Execution • Turning a strategic plan into a creative campaign • Where do break-through ideas come from? • Approaches for creative inspiration: • Unique Selling Proposition • Brand Image • Inherent Drama • Lessons Learned Through Copy Testing – Purvis • Test your skills at identifying effective advertising

  3. The Execution • How do you transform a message strategy into an exciting, attention getting, and memorable idea? • What words, sounds and music, images, setting, and lighting will best convey the message? • Where do break-through ideas come from?

  4. Uncovering Valuable Insights • “Got Milk” Story (circa 1993) • Facing declining sales, particularly in CA • CA Milk processors formed a board and hired Jeff Manning • Manning hired Goodby, Silverstein & Partners • Objective: Increase sales, not image enhancement • Target Market: People who already drink milk, rather than nonusers

  5. “Got Milk” Story • Results: • In the first year sales rose 1.8 percent, an increase of 13.5 million gallons, or $34 million in retail sales. • The ads win almost every major prize on the ad circuit including the coveted Cannes in 1996, 1997, 2003

  6. “Got Milk” Story • How do you keep a good thing going? • 2001 Contest to produce your own “Got Milk” commercial • 2002 Peanut butter sandwich contest • 2003 Commercial

  7. Milk Story Continues • How does the mustache fit in? • National Fluid Milk Processors (Milk Pep) hired Bozell to change the image of milk in 1995. • Research showed that milk was viewed as unhealthy due to cholesterol and fat • Target Market: 25-44 year old women

  8. Milk Story Continues • The two campaigns were merged • Web Sites: www.whymilk.com • Grassroots: SHAKE STUFF UP TOUR, themed in conjunction with television advertising campaign encourages teens to Shake Stuff Up by drinking flavored milk.

  9. Sources of Creative Inspiration • Using a unique selling proposition (USP) Rosser Reeves • “Buy this product and you will get this benefit” • The proposition must be one that the competition doesn’t offer • The proposition must be strong (relevant) enough to pull new customers

  10. Sources of Creative Inspiration • Creating a brand imageDavid Ogilvy • “Every advertisement should be thought of as a contribution to the complex symbols which is the brand image” • The image or personality of the brand is particularly important when brands are similar • This approach has become the mainstay in for selling soft drinks, liquor, cars, perfume/colognes, and clothing. • Your target market must identify with the brand personality

  11. Nike Goddess • Nike has become one of the world’s greatest brand names. The Nike ethos is captured in the “Just Do It” slogan • The largest seller of athletic footwear and apparel with sales of nearly $10 billion in 2002 • While a leader in the $15.6 billion athletic market it looked for new growth opportunities by targeting women • Women’s footwear accounts for one-third of total industry, and over fifty percent for apparel but only 20 percent of Nike’s revenue.

  12. Nike Goddess • In 2001 Nike launched a new strategic initiative termed “Nike Goddess” with the goal of changing how the company does business with women. • Objective: To double Nike’s sales to women by 2005 • Learning how women conceive of sport • Spent time scouring trendy workout locations and listening to women talk about how fitness fit into their lifestyle

  13. Nike Goddess • Insights: • For most women, high performance isn’t about sports, it’s about fitness fitting in with their active lifestyles. • The difference between women and men is that women don’t treat athletes like heroes.

  14. Sources of Creative Inspiration • Finding inherent dramaLeo Burnett • Advertising should be based on a foundation of consumer benefits with an emphasis on the dramatic element in expressing those benefits

  15. Using Romance to Sell Coffee • Taster’s Choice “Brewing Romance” Campaign (circa 1990) • Product positioned as “tasting closest to fresh brewed” • McCann-Erickson was hired to kick up the emotional connection to the brand • Research revealed that Taster’s Choice drinkers were discriminating, self-assured, and sophisticated. • A spin-off of a British soap-opera style campaign (introduced in 1987) featuring two flirtatious neighbors, Tony and Sharon, was adopted.

  16. “Brewing Romance” Campaign • UK Campaign quickly adopted an avid following • British tabloids chronicled the series • Viewers wrote in for autographs and sent script suggestions • Campaign lasted for six years and 12 episodes • Sales of Gold Blend soared by 40 percent. • Ended with Sharon and Tony wedding and driving happily off into the sunset • The campaign was expanded to the US, Canada, Chile, Australia, New Zealand, and Japan

  17. “Brewing Romance” Campaign • US Campaign launched in 1991 • Generated a reaction similar to the UK • The debut of each new “episode” became a major media event, often premiering on network shows such as “Good Morning America.” • In February 1998, Taster's Choice ran a contest. The results were announced in Soap Opera Digest

  18. Advertising Effectiveness • Just because an ad is creative or popular does not mean it will increase sales or revive a declining brand • Alka-Seltzer’s agencies developed ads believed to be some of the best of all time… • “I can’t believe I ate the whole thing” • “Mama Mia! That’s a spicy meatball” • However they lost the account because sales continued to decline

  19. Advertising Effectiveness • Brand managers tend to be risk averse and want more conservative commercials than the creative people they work with, who want to maximize message impact • A major determinant of success in changing brand preferences is “likeability” or the viewer’s overall reaction to the message. • Ads that are well executed and generate emotional responses can create positive feelings that are transferred to the brand

  20. Lessons Learned Through Copy Testing • Offer a major benefit • Make it easy to follow • Establish audience identity • Attract by being new • Be believable • Stress what is unique • Be fresh • Reward the viewer/reader for his or her time

  21. Next Time… • Turn in Project 2 by Friday afternoon • If you are interested in knowing more about using the Digital Union… • Friday, 2/6 at 10:30 in Gerlach 355

More Related