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Ads: the good, the bad, the legendary

This is a brief rant in reply to Rohit Bhargava’s blog post on 5 World Changing Ways to Avoid BS And Be More Believable in marketing.

Here are Rohit’s 5 ideas:

1.  Share the truth, not the facts.

2.  Let actions speak louder than words.

3.  Use real people.

4.  Go off script.

5.  Be legendary.

1.  Personally, I like seeing facts, but like everything, it depends on what is being advertised. In a persuasive advertising strategy, I can see if the product is a new technology or practise it might be  wise to be more factual. However, Rohit says that facts aren’t emotional and basically sound manipulated, but I think they can be emotional, and if presented fairly, can provide believable informational appeal. Coke’s recent Coming Together ad demonstrates this.Here are my opinions, focusing on television advertising:

2/3.  I’m going to lump these two together and say, yes, if it is a real moment. This is similar to the “are the facts real” scenario above in that the event has to be believable! I really agree with Rohit in that essentially stories tend to “speak much louder than [facts]”, because lets be real, that is how people learn from one another, through sharing experiences. GE Stories sums up my thoughts exactly.

4.  PLEASE! This is deadly important, if I see “real” people and its scripted, it drives me nuts, even if it really isn’t, I can’t help but wonder: (Febreze, I don’t like them because I don’t believe it).

5.  YES! If it is funny, epic and worth seeing again, obviously a job well done, of course, that depends on the target market and what kind of perception companies want people to have about their brand. The best examples to me include Red Bull and Old Spice.

 

Images:

Red Bull: http://logoshistory.blogspot.ca/2011/01/all-red-bull-logos.html

GE: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:General_Electric_logo.svg

 

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Amgen’s Aranesp Mishap (not actually a mishap, it just sounded good for a title, its actually a scandal)

I would be surprised if there aren’t many other students posting about the December lawsuit over the improper marketing of Amgen’s anemia drug. What did they do (other than pay a lawsuit of $762 million)? Well, they advertised the drug as being ok in higher doses than what was recommended, told people they could use it as a cure of things it couldn’t, and bribed doctors to prescribe more of the drug than needed. But hey, they made sales of $2.3 billion in 2011 and in Amgen’s company values they include being ethical, trustworthy and ensuring quality…

There is clearly something mighty wrong with this whole scenario. Now, I’m not here to discuss this particular issue, its more the moral of the story I’m somewhat more concerned about, specifically, how on Earth could something like this happen? This is meddling in people’s physical wellbeing! How anyone could be so careless as to market and promote potentially harming large numbers of people for profit is beyond me, especially in the “developed” world such as it is.

The worst part to me is that how many people do you have to have on board for such a thing to operate so successfully? All the doctors, execs, the marketing team, the list goes on. This is only one of several examples I’ve been able to find. I find it unnerving, how can people know what is safe and what is just false marketing? I certainly wouldn’t recognize the difference. What also concerns me is how can it be assured that companies won’t try these practices again? The government likely can’t cover the costs of heavy regulation, so where is the solution? I find it shocking how the only consequence of this and other incidents has been fines, perhaps its time for harsher penalties?

 

Image Site:

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505123_162-42843360/aranesp-suit-what-did-amgen-ceo-sharer-know-and-did-he-read-it-in-his-companys-powerpoint-slides/

 

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