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One of the trade secrets of the advertising industry is that what you remember consciously is the smallest chunk of what's effective.
In my defense :) Duracell did have a bunny, and that's where Energizer got its bunny, in answer, according to this article:
http://www.petcaretips.net/energizer-duracell-bunny.html But let's ask the guys who know what's effective in advertising: http://adage.com/century/icon05.html17 years! They don't keep broadcasting the same theme for seventeen years without the guys doing the numbers reporting back that it's effective in terms of profits:
Now let's blast our own "i-con" into the mind share of those who make buy decisions in its market.
--Alan Joe Pluta wrote:
From: Jeff Crosby Alan wrote:What's in an idea, a slogan? I bet almost everybody in this discussion could tell me what Duracell's slogan was/is, and it still bounces around in your head whenever you think of a long-lasting device. ...Keeps going and going....Wrong battery . . .And THAT is the root problem with any sort of viral marketing. You may well get someone to remember the ad, but forget the product. The farther the marketing is from solid product statements, the easier it is for this to occur. The PC/Mac is a great example of excellent advertising. The PC and the Mac are the prime characters and the issues they cover are real issues that buyers can identify with, but at the same time they're very funny and witty. An example of a useless campaign was those stupid Microsoft commercials with office people dumping water on each other. Zero content, all flash. I think marketing for the iSeries might help, but I'm still not sure exactly what that marketing needs to be (although the "attack of the servers" ads are pretty good). Joe
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