Feb
05
2010
0

Andrew Graff Walks Us Through the Anatomy of a Super Bowl Ad in Boston.com

GoDaddy.com has turned heads over the past few years with its raunchy, random Super Bowl advertising. To its credit, GoDaddy.com has stood out against behemoth advertisers - but do consumers know what product or service is being sold? Andrew Graff takes readers on a tour of a brand’s advertising objectives and motivations when it comes to the Super Bowl.

From the article:
According to Andrew Graff of Allen & Gerritsen, a Super Bowl appearance is a good way to change [low consumer awareness]. With “100 million captive viewers” and a bevy of media coverage devoted to Super Bowl ads, any company that shells out for airtime is going to get noticed.

But a marketing campaign cannot thrive on Super Bowl ads alone. “You have to make sure you have a strategy behind the one-time event,” Graff said.

For the full article, click here.

Feb
03
2010
1

Do You Buy It?

It’s that time of year again, when speculation runs rampant around which brands have abstained, which submissions are too risque or too conservative, and which have sunk a production budget that would make Cameron Crowe blush. This, of course, is Super Bowl season and the game is what happens in-between these breathlessly anticipated spots.

Agencies and industry thought leaders will be polling and prodding consumers to determine the ad winners – the funniest, the raunchiest, the greatest spectacle, the dud.

But is that really the point of our industry? Are we just making clever ads for ourselves, or are we trying to accomplish something greater? Being outrageous simply isn’t enough. Now, we’re not making the claim that advertising shouldn’t entertain. It should, while honoring both the brand (ROI) and the end consumer (transparent messaging).



Over the last 6 years, Allen & Gerritsen has asked consumers to rank the Super Bowl ads that are most meaningfulmeaningful defined as provoking sales. Now entering our 7th year of the survey, we have discovered a significant gap between meaningful and entertaining.

This got us thinking, in an era when world events have heightened our collective skepticism, there is very little that we “buy” or believe to be credible. Bringing this skepticism to the biggest advertising opportunity of the year - the Super Bowl – the big question is, what do people “buy” figuratively and literally? What do consumers believe in and what converts a laugh to a sale?

We want to open the conversation beyond industry insiders congratulating or mocking each other next Monday. We want to know whether or not you, as the consumer, buy it.

Do you buy that Weird Science, Flashdance, and Danica Patrick have anything to do with registering a domain name? Does it matter?
Do you buy the phenomenon of wise-cracking babies championing E-Trade?
Do you buy Bridgestone’s adventure vignettes, including whale-whispering and MadMax like encounters on the road?
Do you buy the ref’s call?
Do you buy the hype?
Do you buy it?

We want to know, tell us at #dybi

Powered by WordPress | Aeros Theme | TheBuckmaker.com WordPress Themes