Just wondering 🙂
Those con holographic bands - there are even still people who believe they work despite the slapdown 😆 😆
on-one frames - nothing special but seem to be revered by the STW masses.
apple stuff.
BMW
Audi
The North Face
D&G
Tommy Hilfiger
Apparently they're all "must have" aspirational brands.
Volkswagen
😳
BMW
Audi
The North Face
D&G
Tommy Hilfiger
I don't have any of the 'must haves'. 🙂
Most of the well known ethical brands like Howies, Innocent.
howies
on-one
cotic
appear to have somehow 'got there'
Okay let me clarify - rather than just listing the brands I was wondering more about inspirational methods used 🙂
The best piece of marketing/advertising ever produced by man. FACT!
Immediately banned by the advertising standards authority. As most good advertising tends to be
(for those of us who can't access youtube?)
The Tango ads.
Howies - sold to Timberland
Innocent - sold to Coca Cola
Pret a Manger - sold to Macdonalds
Rachel's Organic - sold by $11.2bn turnover American firm to €8,5 bn turnover French firm
All of them exhibit pretty good product marketing I'd say...
Any bottled water company.
Immediately banned by the advertising standards authority. As most good advertising tends to be
Was it I seem to remember it ran quite sometime.
VW
Guinness
Red Bull
Are 3 top marketing bods surely?
howies
on-one
coticappear to have somehow 'got there'
i guess 99% of the population have never heard of them, 2 of them have very little in the way of marketing, what little marketing they do i would hardly proffer as examples of 'fantastic product marketing'
Not [i]all[/i] bottled water companies pull it off though 🙂
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2004/mar/02/foodanddrink.marketingandpr?INTCMP=ILCNETTXT3487
Coca-Cola confirmed yesterday that the source for its new Dasani bottled water was the mains supply to its factory in Sidcup, Kent. It said that a "highly sophisticated purification process" meant that the product was "as pure as bottled water gets". Dasani costs around 95p for a 500ml bottle.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2004/mar/19/foodanddrink?INTCMP=ILCNETTXT3487
Coca-Cola's campaign to conquer the bottled water market suffered a further setback today, when the company announced it was withdrawing its new Dasani product from UK shops.
Dasani - the biggest-selling bottled water brand in the United States - was launched here amid a blaze of publicity earlier this month as "one of the purest waters around".But the entire batch was being withdrawn today after the drink was found to contain levels of bromate - a substance linked with an increased cancer risk - in excess of UK legal standards.
not all bottled water...
Dasani was launched in the UK on 10 February 2004. The product launch was labelled "a disaster",[5] a "fiasco"[6] and a "PR catastrophe".[6]
Early advertisements referred to Dasani as "bottled spunk" or featured the tagline "can't live without spunk". These slogans were used seemingly oblivious to the fact that spunk is slang for semen in the UK.[7][8]
Prior to the launch, an article in The Grocer trade magazine had mentioned that the source of the Dasani brand water was in fact treated tap water from Sidcup, a suburban development in London. By early March 2004, the mainstream press had picked up on the story[9] and it became widely reported that Sidcup tap water was being treated, bottled and sold under the Dasani brand name in the UK.[5] Although Coca-Cola never implied that the water was being sourced from a spring or other natural source, they marketed it as being especially "pure". This led the Food Standards Agency to request Hillingdon trading standards officers to launch an investigation into whether the claim was accurate.[10]
Richard May, Chief Publicity Officer of Dasani, was said to be disappointed that the water had not been more successful.
The media made mocking parallels with an episode of the well-known BBC sitcom Only Fools and Horses, in which protagonist Del Boy attempts to pass off local tap water as bottled "Peckham Spring".[5] Del's scheme fails when he pollutes the local reservoir, causing the bottled water to glow yellow.
On 18 March 2004, UK authorities found a concentration of bromate, a suspected human carcinogen, in the product that could be considered harmful if consumed in large quantities. Coca-Cola immediately recalled half a million bottles and pulled the "Dasani" brand from the UK market.[11] Shortly after, plans to introduce the brand to Continental Europe were announced to have been cancelled as well. Bromate was not present in the water before Coca-Cola's treatment process. During that process the bromate was produced from the water's bromide.
Coca-Cola intended to launch Dasani in France and Germany, although this never went ahead after bad publicity in the United Kingdom.[citation needed]
oooo. spooky 😉
I'm stunned by the recent (last 3ish years) fashion for drinking cider. For ages it had been viewed as a drink to get off your face on as a teenager then never touch again, or as the preserve of bench-based-boozers.
The marketing bod who turned that around deserves every penny he/she earnt.
Hoover - who better?
cel-o-tape
and any others who have managed to make the generic name of an item their trade name
People still bought it though.
A litre of bottled water costs about as much as a litre of petrol!
The methods used to sell cigarettes.
They make you stink. They kill you in a most unpleasant painful and lingering way. They destroy your quality of life in the meantime.
Yet people still buy them.
Surely that's fantastic product marketing?
The methods used to sell cigarettes.
What don't advertise them in anyway what so ever?
Not sure that'll work for many products.
Coca-Cola
It's the reason why Santa wears a red suit...
The marketing bod who turned that around deserves every penny he/she earnt.
That would be C&C in Ireland - one of my former employers. I did a nine month work experience stint there when I was at university. It was a niche Summer drink when I was there (1991) - drunk as Bulmers in Ireland and then launched as Magners here (with the backing of venture capitalists I think).
It's the reason why Santa wears a red suit...
Yes, very true 😉
they couldnt use the bulmers name here as that brand is owned by Heineken outside of Eire. Magners and Bulmers worked together but Bulmer kept the international rights to the name when the split it up again.
Is there a difference between branding and marketing?
Superfresco wallpaper - I still catch myself singing the tune in my head occasionally (although perhaps that points more towards my mental state than effective advertising). So basically a catchy tune > all, although admittedly I've never bought any...
I imagine the former is the act of creating the commercial identity whereas the latter is floggin it.
*you do the shake n vac and put the freshness back...
do the shake and vac and put the freshness back*
hands up who's got that in their heads now then? 🙂
It's the reason why Santa wears a red suit...
Yes that's right of course it is.
About 6 years ago we'd gone to Dublin for a mate's birthday celebrations. In a bar I saw a pump of Bulmers, not knowing what it was I assumed it was beer/real-ale and ordered it. The first sip induced teenage vomiting flashbacks...
Even now that it's been popular for a few years I still wince when I see someone drink cider.
Viral marketing for some drink or other...
Cravendale... Those Cow, Pirate and Cyclist ads are pretty much legendary.
Specsavers are very good too, from the Postman Pat ad to sponsoring football referees, very clever stuff.
you do the shake n vac and put the freshness back...
do the shake and vac and put the freshness backhands up who's got that in their heads now then?
Me, but only because of the wag who, when watching Poltergeist 2 (circa 1986) at the cinema started singing the tune when the Indian guy started sprinkling that powder around the family to protect them from evil spirits.
It kinda spoilt the scary mood in the cinema but it was hilarious.
The methods used to sell bikes.
They make you stink. They kill you in a most unpleasant painful and lingering way. They destroy your quality of life in the meantime.
Yet people still buy them.
Surely that's fantastic product marketing?
sorry!! 😆
I think facebook will be the biggest marketing success story of the last few years. It exploded through word of mouth and is worth billions and they haven't even scratched the surface of what is possible in terms of revenue.
Many peoples lives will soon be ruled by facebook, infact some big brands are taking down .coms and doing everything on social networking.
infact some big brands are taking down .coms and doing everything on social networking
Do you have any examples of this? I know some are getting vastly larger 'footfall' to their Facebook sites (such as Coca Cola) but don't know of anyone actually ditching their own site (would like to know if there are as it is good ammunition for our Social Media talks we do)
Power Balance.
Whoever got them on the wrists of a lot of people who should have known better was a bit of a genius, however he did it.
barcadi was one I heard was planning to today M_F, the basis being that customers don't use them and companies like Air Aisa are doing all their promotional stuff on there with a great deal of success
The Hovis bread/bike advert.
Christianity.
Do you have any examples of this? I know some are getting vastly larger 'footfall' to their Facebook sites (such as Coca Cola) but don't know of anyone actually ditching their own site (would like to know if there are as it is good ammunition for our Social Media talks we do)
Look at the adverts on TV - you will see many have replaced their own website, with a Facebook page.
Even the BBC is doing it!
What's happening is that 'Facebook' is becoming the new 'internet'. Traditional websites are, for many, becoming the peripheral edges of the web. Just in the same way, 'Google' was the internet for many people, it is being slowly replaced by Facebook.
Everything they need is on there - messaging communication, advertising/product information, social contact, arranging social calendars, etc.
Almost like AOL used to be, in the early days of dial-up...
Red Bull.
It is [i]exactly[/i] the same stuff as the supermarket own brand caffeine/taurine drinks, but by linking it to all sorts of adventure sports, they can sell it for four times the price.
Radiohead keeping their latest album "secret"... making all the fans slaver for a mediocre collection of guitar music and pay for it before they realised it was mediocre. 😉
Sofa King, Northampton.
Quote "Prices are Sofa King Low"
Its just epic for marketing
Saatchi & Saatchi :
[img] http://community.brandrepublic.com/photos/saatchi__saatchi_40th_anniversary_showcase/images/89580/420x420.aspx [/img]
Fooled millions. And the Tories promptly doubled unemployment after winning the election on the back of that advertising campaign.
Not sure if it represents pure genius or pure stupidity though.
Best ever marketing campaign was De Beers in the late 70s / early 80s, telling cinema audiences that the right amount to spend on a ring was 1 month's wages. Before that lads were happy to spend a week's or less on an engagement ring, afterwards they felt like cheapskates if they did.
Fantastic result, diamond sales went sky-high.
X Factor...that's just one long advert for a Christmas No. 1.
Pretty much everything that Reckitt Benckiser make.
You may not know them, but you'll know there products.
If you do know them, you'll now that thir corporate strategy is all about creating perceived value for their new products, value that you can't actually test for yourself...
Damn do I need some new powerball liqui-tabs for my dishwasher though!
Sofa King, Northampton.Quote "Prices are Sofa King Low"
Its just epic for marketing
Reminds me of a camping shop in Warrington having an end-of-season sale a few years back. Huge banner outside, "Now is the winter of our discount tents." \o/
Moses - De Beers marketing about diamonds started earlier than the 70s.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_Beers#Marketing
Nazism. they had the best marketing campaign ever, uniforms, films insignia, art, slogans etc.
Don't the Nazis usually lose in films MrSmith ?......sounds like pisspoor marketing to me.
Also I'm not convinced that they had the best slogans. Although "Die Juden sind unser Ungluck" did have a nice ring to it.
i presume you are not trolling and just a bit dim so i'll indulge you a response.
the nazi's used many top film makers like leni riefenstahl (famous for 'triumph of the will' to promote their ideology to the public
some info here:[url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_propaganda ]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_propaganda[/url]
'blood and earth'
"One people, one empire, one leader"
"work sets you free"
"justice for everyone"
I assume that you're not trolling ?
not at all, the Nazis ran one of the greatest marketing/advertising campaigns of the 20th century.
[i]"Winning people over to something that I have recognized as right, that is what we call propaganda," said Joseph Goebbels at a meeting of party members in Berlin in 1928. "Propaganda should be popular, not intellectually pleasing. It is not the task of propaganda to discover intellectual truth"
“The art of propaganda,” writes Hitler, “lies in understanding the emotional ideas of the great masses and finding...the way to the attention and...hearts of the broad masses.”
A massive advertising campaign--covering the entire political, social and cultural life of National Socialism--was developed to present the "benefits" of Nazism. The overall “target market” was the German people, but depending upon the “message,” specific “segments” of the market--for example, farmers, working class, petite bourgeoisie, women, etc.--would have specific advertising "targeted" to them.[/i]
the marketing campaign was a great success, thankfully the Nazis failed to deliver on their promises.
Indoctrination.. marketing? S'pose so.
the marketing campaign was a great success, thankfully the Nazis failed to deliver on their promises.
Makes you wonder why they couldn't win elections then.
In 1932 Hitler lost the presidential election to Hindenburg by a large margin. Neither did the Nazi ever win a majority in the Reichstag in free elections - the best they managed was a third of the seats. They did slightly better after Hitler passed the Enabling Act and had opposition politicians arrested, murdered, etc, but they still failed to win a majority of the seats in the Reichstag........288 seats out of the available 647.
And btw, the Nazis certainly did not "fail to deliver on their promises" if you happened to be Jewish.
MidlandTrailquestsGraham - Member
Red Bull.
It is exactly the same stuff as the supermarket own brand caffeine/taurine drinks, but by linking it to all sorts of adventure sports, they can sell it for four times the price.
And all those imitation drinks only exist because red bull created a Market...
MidlandTrailquestsGraham - Member
Red Bull.
It is exactly the same stuff as the supermarket own brand caffeine/taurine drinks, but by linking it to all sorts of adventure sports, they can sell it for four times the price.
And all those imitation drinks only exist because red bull created a Market...
this is advertising not marketing, i think you will find the best marketing campaigns are the ones that didn't use any advertising
And btw, the Nazis certainly did not "fail to deliver on their promises" if you happened to be Jewish.
i've seen schindlers list and the pianist, but you said "Don't the Nazis usually lose in films"
i'm really confused now 🙁



