Advertising tips from the homeless:
http://www.buzzfeed.com/copyranter/10-copywriting-tips-for-the-homeless
PERSIFLAGE: per·si·flage [pur-suh-flahzh, pair-] "noun, 1: light, bantering talk or writing. 2: a frivolous or flippant style of treating a subject..." An informal and irreverent discourse on the fast-moving world of marketing, advertising, social media, and visual communication. Intermittently humorous; invariably splendid. All words and opinions by George Frederick Sanders [except for any incorrect facts or unfunny jokes, which are categorically written by somebody else].
Wednesday, 13 March 2013
Thursday, 7 March 2013
Pizza Hut Delivery Campaign
Having worked at Pizza Hut as a teenager, I hold the company in high regard. I had a wonderful time working there and made a (relative to being a teenager) fortune in tips- often doubling my hourly rate. Sure, I sold my self-respect like a cheap side of horse meat, manipulated customers' heartstrings like a cheeky fiddler, and became childrens' hero to secure a fiscal bonus at the end of each meal- but it was a great work/reward environment and I sorely miss the bunch who worked there.
Thus, whenever Pizza Hut brings out a new advert the old memories come flooding back like free-refill Pepsi to an over-excited fat kid's party. Generally, without being unfairly harsh, the adverts are dreadful- they're never truly wrong, in most ways- they're just so cripplingly bland, unimaginative, and safe that they make absolutely no impact on the consumer. I can't think of an enjoyable Pizza Hut advert since the days of "Pizza Hut-Hut-Hut!" to the tune of 'Hot Hot Hot!' by Buster Poindexter (which must have been a marketing epiphany when someone first registered the similarity between lyrics and company name).[Also perhaps this gem too: Gareth Southgate at Pizza Hut circa 1996] However, the new advert is not for the "family-safe" Pizza Hut in-restaurant diners, it's for their delivery service- certainly a very different audience. [see diagram below]
Pizza Hut Delivery is a franchise owned by Yum! which is embarking on an aggressive expansion campaign, and these new adverts are supported by Yum!'s investment themselves. Indeed, they've already invested around £20m to open 100 new delivery-only shops by 2014. With this in mind they're likely to make an impact on the consumer to have Pizza Hut as the first option they think of when thinking 'pizza'. Right now Dominoes is the front runner on pizza delivery and Pizza Hut Delivery will have to work hard to capture that mind share. The advert works on a slogan "Hut it!" and good old repetition [see We Buy Any Car- at your peril] - see the advert here: Pizza Hut "Hut It" Advert. Arguably they're looking to capitalise on contemporary music taste- I'd say that the feel and tempo isn't dissimilar to artists like Daft Punk and LMFAO (even down to the person with the box on their head- ooo snap!). You can pretty much sing "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" to the advert- which I guess is ironic considering that it's advertising pizza... ["Heavier, Fatter, Fattest, Stroke"?]
Ultimately McCann Erickson Manchester have put together a sound advert; it's fun, it's catchy, and it's memorable. The message is clear to the audience- 50% off- and it will certainly appeal to the likely demographic of late-teens/young adults. Their slogan 'Hut it' isn't too contrived and certainly beats Pizza Hut restaurants shamelessly generic "Gather 'round the good stuff", "Now You're Eating!", "Your Favorites. Your Pizza Hut", "Make it great". This could well be the start of a Pizza Hut Delivery market takeover.
Thus, whenever Pizza Hut brings out a new advert the old memories come flooding back like free-refill Pepsi to an over-excited fat kid's party. Generally, without being unfairly harsh, the adverts are dreadful- they're never truly wrong, in most ways- they're just so cripplingly bland, unimaginative, and safe that they make absolutely no impact on the consumer. I can't think of an enjoyable Pizza Hut advert since the days of "Pizza Hut-Hut-Hut!" to the tune of 'Hot Hot Hot!' by Buster Poindexter (which must have been a marketing epiphany when someone first registered the similarity between lyrics and company name).[Also perhaps this gem too: Gareth Southgate at Pizza Hut circa 1996] However, the new advert is not for the "family-safe" Pizza Hut in-restaurant diners, it's for their delivery service- certainly a very different audience. [see diagram below]
Pizza Hut Restaurant's Key Demographic |
Pizza Hut Delivery's Key Demographic |
Pizza Hut Delivery is a franchise owned by Yum! which is embarking on an aggressive expansion campaign, and these new adverts are supported by Yum!'s investment themselves. Indeed, they've already invested around £20m to open 100 new delivery-only shops by 2014. With this in mind they're likely to make an impact on the consumer to have Pizza Hut as the first option they think of when thinking 'pizza'. Right now Dominoes is the front runner on pizza delivery and Pizza Hut Delivery will have to work hard to capture that mind share. The advert works on a slogan "Hut it!" and good old repetition [see We Buy Any Car- at your peril] - see the advert here: Pizza Hut "Hut It" Advert. Arguably they're looking to capitalise on contemporary music taste- I'd say that the feel and tempo isn't dissimilar to artists like Daft Punk and LMFAO (even down to the person with the box on their head- ooo snap!). You can pretty much sing "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" to the advert- which I guess is ironic considering that it's advertising pizza... ["Heavier, Fatter, Fattest, Stroke"?]
Ultimately McCann Erickson Manchester have put together a sound advert; it's fun, it's catchy, and it's memorable. The message is clear to the audience- 50% off- and it will certainly appeal to the likely demographic of late-teens/young adults. Their slogan 'Hut it' isn't too contrived and certainly beats Pizza Hut restaurants shamelessly generic "Gather 'round the good stuff", "Now You're Eating!", "Your Favorites. Your Pizza Hut", "Make it great". This could well be the start of a Pizza Hut Delivery market takeover.
Buster Poindexter; lookin' suave, suave, suave! |
Friday, 1 March 2013
Compare the Meerkat/Market Comparison
I've just read an interesting article on the Compare the Meerkat/Market advert; specifically:
"Perhaps there were, in fact, signs that the meerkat campaign was beginning to go unnoticed. In which case, there is nothing like absence to make the heart grow fonder. So, perhaps this is exactly the right response. Introduce a new character to rekindle consumers' love for the one it has replaced and get people talking.
Ultimately, this could give the campaign more legs. Creating a rivalry between Wigglethorpe-Throom and Aleksandr Orlov might add interest to the campaign and allow for a return to 'the Meerkat' with renewed freshness and interest. So, even if this execution doesn't hit the same creative high notes or become a longer-term property, it may still have a nice residual effect."
Certainly an interesting viewpoint and one that parallels the campaign by Coco Pops to rename the product Choco Krispies, which quite rightly prompted backlash. Sometimes consumers need to be reminded about what they love- like when a partner wears lingerie or grows a beard.
... Choco Krispies... what on earth were they thinking...
http://www.marketingmagazine.co.uk/news/1168567/Comparethemarket-lack-meerkat-mascot-comparison-sites-ad-prove-stroke-genius/
"Perhaps there were, in fact, signs that the meerkat campaign was beginning to go unnoticed. In which case, there is nothing like absence to make the heart grow fonder. So, perhaps this is exactly the right response. Introduce a new character to rekindle consumers' love for the one it has replaced and get people talking.
Ultimately, this could give the campaign more legs. Creating a rivalry between Wigglethorpe-Throom and Aleksandr Orlov might add interest to the campaign and allow for a return to 'the Meerkat' with renewed freshness and interest. So, even if this execution doesn't hit the same creative high notes or become a longer-term property, it may still have a nice residual effect."
Certainly an interesting viewpoint and one that parallels the campaign by Coco Pops to rename the product Choco Krispies, which quite rightly prompted backlash. Sometimes consumers need to be reminded about what they love- like when a partner wears lingerie or grows a beard.
... Choco Krispies... what on earth were they thinking...
http://www.marketingmagazine.co.uk/news/1168567/Comparethemarket-lack-meerkat-mascot-comparison-sites-ad-prove-stroke-genius/
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