Advertiser: David Ogilvy
Response 1:
David Ogilvy is by far my favorite historic advertiser, and
not just because we share a first name (although that can’t be overlooked).
What Ogilvy did, and I hope I am not misreading the information in the book in
thinking he was the first to do this, with personifying his ads was ingenuity
at its best.” The man in the Hathaway shirt” is the first we read about in the
book, and this was quite possibly the most memorable thing in this chapter,
just because of the way Ogilvy created this. The poetic style of this slogan
sticks in your head and immediately brings to mind the handsome eye-patched man
standing tall and proud, looking ever so good in the very product he is
selling. This repetition of use of the man (Ted Turner I believe his name was)
effectively burns the image in the consumer’s mind, forever imprinting the idea
of the man in the Hathaway shirt. Repetition with this is the key.
Again, he did this with the Schweppes ad. “The man from
Schweppes.” And using the classy, sophisticated, well-groomed man as the face
of the ad, it again burns the image of his face into the consumer’s mind.
Repetitive use of this face and the appeal it has to his audience, the “I want
to be just like him, so I’ll use his product” factor really makes these ads
effective. It is hard to say that one of these historic advertisers is better
than another, for they have all contributed so much to the industry and without
a single one of these men we would not be anywhere close to where we are today.
However, I am most particularly fond of David Ogilvy and the work he did with
putting memorable, distinct faces to his advertising.
Response 2:
I chose David Ogilvy as a vintage adviser whose advertising
methods were remarkable and stood out amongst his competition. His campaign “at
60 miles an hour the loudest noise in this news Rolls-Royce comes from the
electric clock” were ahead of his time when it comes to descriptive advertising
things stands out. When you hear the loudest thing in a Rolls-Royce, you can’t
help but think this car is fast with a soothing sound engine.
Ogilvy main advertising method was to write from one human
being to another human being. This advertising method is always something I
look for in an advertisement. The best advertisements appeal on an emotional
level to the consumer. If you connect on an emotional level, then you have the
consumer wanting more, and you know you have their attention. Ogilvy image
method was also the start of a new age in advertising. The Hathaway story is a
great example of Ogilvy using image, the images he chose made you want more.
Response 3:
My
favorite historic advertiser would have to be David Ogilvy. I personally enjoy
his method of advertising from one human being to another human being. I enjoy
his style of copy so much, that I follow this very method in my copy work.
Ogilvy also does an excellent job of making his advertisements easy to read by
filling them with humor. This keeps the consumer engaged and not just breeze
past the ad. The witty snippets he likes to include translate very well to the
viral nature of advertising in its current state. Ogilvy’s off the wall eye
catching ability is memorable at the very least, as well as highly effective.
Ogilvy is the kind of advertiser I want to be. He is fun, quirky, and memorable
in his work. Another reason I am drawn to Ogilvy is his individuality and
disdain for rules.
Advertiser: Bill Bernbach
Response 1:
Bill
Bernbach caught my eye when reading chapter one in the textbook, for his unique
way of capturing his audience. The
graphics on his pages were so different than anything else in that time,
especially the way they were positioned and sized on the page. He know how to
give his audience the maximum amount of impact. I personally like the approach
he took on Levy’s Jewish Rye Bread. The
headline on each ad was “You don’t have to be Jewish to love Levy’s” and each
page included a picture taking up the majority of the page of someone of an
obvious culture or social group, smiling while eating a sandwich. The ad was eye catching, and targeted
multiple groups of people.
Bill was
a visionary in that he found a way to point out a company’s flaw and turning it
into something positive. If a company
was number two to another company in the same business, Bill knew to point out
that they were number two because they were a smaller franchise. He relates a company to the average reader,
and makes them appreciate their hard work to get to the top. Each ad possessed an eye-catching graphic to
go with the copy. Additionally they had an attention-grabbing headline that
drew you into the copy. Bill Bernbach had a gift for being different and
realizing a negative can be turned into a positive.
Advertiser: Rosser Reeves
Response 1:
Rosser Reeves is my favorite historic advertiser. He is my favorite because he found something
unique about his product and focused his energy on that uniqueness. His way of promoting products was different
in its own way. I enjoy his M&M and
Colgate slogans. I believe they had a big influence on consumers back then
because the slogans would have made me want to buy those products. Which is why I like him even more, because
his 60-year-old slogans would still work today.
Along with that, I like his tactics because he was trying to
sell more than just the product it self, he was also selling the benefit of
that product. He would find something
his product had to offer that his competitor’s product could not or did
not. Then he capitalized on it. Also he came up with catchy slogans that go
repeated over and over in the consumers head, which created brand awareness and
recognition.
Response 2:
Rosser Reeves; author of Reality in Advertising, chairman of
Ted Bates and Co., and my favorite historical advertiser. I like the idea Mr.
Reeves had about finding a unique aspect of your product and finding a way to
put it out for the consumer to see or hear repeatedly. I think this is
effective because if you hear something over and over again it automatically
gets stuck in your head, and you start thinking about it at random times of the
day. If it’s a fun or catchy slogan or song, it’s fun to sing along or say it
along with the radio. For example, if it’s late at night and I don’t know any
numbers for a pizza place I automatically hear the pizza shuttle song in my
head and can get the number from the song, because it is played so much. In
Rosser Reeves case, he had the M&M’s and Colgate slogans so popular that
consumers automatically pared the slogan to the product.
Not only can you use slogans or jingles to catch someone’s
attention, you can also use characters that go with that product. An example of
using a character in an ad is the AJAX commercial, not only do you notice the
fun commercial but also the little elves advertising AJAX. Rosser Reeves also
believed that you couldn’t just make the ad different, you had to make it in a
new and interesting way to attract people to it. One of the things he said in the book was not
every ad has to contain fine writing but it needs to work effectively, that
really made sense to me and I respect that type of creative writing.
Advertiser: Leo Burnett
Response 1:
The historic advertiser that caught my attention based on
the readings was Leo Burnett. Beside the fact that “everyone loved Leo,” he
seems to be a guy who genuinely cared about what he was doing. His advertising
“showed love and respect for people” writes Bendinger, “It felt homegrown and
authentic,” which only makes me like Burnett more. When he started his agency,
people were telling him he would be selling apples on the street; he pushed on
and ended up with one of the largest agencies in the world. Burnett believed in
“inherent drama” that is, that the advertisement emphasizes the benefits of
purchasing a product and he believed in Middle America (who thought the way he
did).
His company had long-term campaigns that didn’t change even
when the creative team did. They stuck with the same brand images, freshening
them up to stay with the times. “The mission of the Leo Burnett Company is to
create superior advertising.” I think they have achieved this by making those
long-term campaigns that are still well-known today such as: Tony the Tiger,
the Keebler Elves, Pillsbury Doughboy and Charlie the Tuna. I think Burnett
believing in “inherent drama” and putting that to use in his advertisements
along with the brand images is a brilliant idea to go on. Not only does it make
a company/product grab your attention and make you want to know more, it is
memorable. To this day there are apples in the lobby of his agency in Chicago –
it’s like their own branding.
Response 2:
My favorite historic advertiser would be Leo Burnett. His
style worked with and aimed at hard-working Middle Americans, which I would
consider a lot of Kansas to fall under that category. Also his advertisements
were based on simple imagery and inherent drama. I feel like simple imagery is
the easiest way to get a message in front of your audience, and with
hard-working Americans I think it’s a perfect match. Middle Americans don’t
want sophisticated images and copy; they want to know that the product is
hardworking and simple like them.
When Burnett wanted his ads to have inherent drama, I think
he meant that the ad or image with the product could build upon itself for
years to come. After a while that imagery with that product would be known to
its audience that they almost don’t need to see the name of the brand but
instead see the ad and its style and know exactly what brand it was for. The
Golly Green Giant and Keebler Elf’s have been around for so long that I would
only have to see them on a paper or walk onto screen to know that I would be
seeing a green bean or cookie ad. This knowledge that this product has been
around so long and actually knowing what it is or where to get it, also builds
a trust between its aware audience and the product. I would think people would
be more likely to buy a product they know has been around for a long time when
seeing the elf or green giant in a store aisle rather than some random product.
Response 3:
My favorite historic advertiser
was Leo Burnett. His work was so profound that many of his company’s creations
are still in use today. For example, Charlie the Tuna, the Phillsbury Doughboy,
the Keebler Elves, Tony the Tiger, and the Jolly Green Giant are seen regularly
in advertisements. I liked that Leo used daring strategies that many were
afraid to try, like putting red meat on a red background. He also took chances,
like moving a cigarette company to Marlboro County and changing its British
name to Marlboro. He was not afraid to stick with ideas because he knew that it
would help create brand imagery (Marlboro Cowboy). Leo Burnett’s advertisements
are enjoyable because they are lively, memorable, and personality prevails
through the ads. My favorite Leo Burnett ad was the Altoids Wintergreen because
it was funny and reminded me of the classic movie “A Christmas Story.”
Leo Burnett is my favorite
advertiser because of the way he ran his company. He had everyone working
together on projects, even from different departments, because they would bring
different perspectives to the table. Burnett’s company always put the client
first. His company had fun, but also put in a lot of hard work. His company was
smart in the fact that they sold the “inherent drama,” which is selling the
idea through imagery. I as a consumer enjoy smart imagery in advertisements,
rather than reading text about the product. It is faster, simpler, and gets the
point across. I really love Leo Burnett’s company’s slogan because it really
pushes advertisers to not be afraid to go above and beyond. Here is that
slogan, “When you reach for the stars, you might not quite get one, but you
won’t come up with a handful of mud either.”
Response 4:
I really
appreciate Leo Burnett's advertising work. I noticed that a lot of his
advertisements are still very famous after over 75 years. They are a more
simple type of ad, yet remain very eye catching while still getting the point
across. I also found it cool that his ideas derived from others ideas. An
example of this came during the Marlboro ads. I found it cool to learn that
this all derived from the King Ranch in Texas, which I have some connections
with.
The fact that some of Burnett's advertisements are still the basis of many companies says a lot. He continues to live through his hard workers under a business built upon his ideas. Marlboro still will pull out a cowboy for a few of their ads and he Keebler Elf is on every single box and ad that they put out. I feel that Burnett's ads will continue to live and be the face of many companies today.
Response 5:
One of my favorite historic advertisers I have read about it
Leo Burnett. There are several factors of why I am a big fan of Leo Burnett
including his ability to stretch his boundaries. Leo wasn’t afraid to go above
and beyond to become who he is today. By doing such ads as putting red meat on
a red background; creating such characters as the Jolly Green Giant, the
Pillsbury Doughboy, the Keebler Elves and others. Leo’s great mind is still on
display today as most all of his characters he created decades ago still live
on to this day. What I love is most all of these ideas started out small, but
once they gained traction they just exploded into something huge.
What made Leo so successful was his ability to create “homegrown”
and truly “authentic” advertising. It was something that was friendly to all
and had plenty of strength behind it. Leo believed in “inherent drama” which
means he believed in going up against controversial issues and interpreting
reality in it. Leo’s ability rubbed off onto all of his employees. His agency
has immense teamwork, great client partnership, and long-term (and very
successful) campaigns. There is no wonder why Leo is considering one of the
greats of all time by many.
Advertiser: Claude Hopkins
Response 1:
My favorite historic advertiser is Claude Hopkins. The way he saw advertising was by not thinking of “people in the mass, but rather as an individual who is going to like what you are selling.” I liked that, because I feel like if you give a message as if you were talking to a single person, that person is more likely to like the brand or its message. I agree, of course, to a point where the message is not too intrusive to the person. His quote also reinforces what the book says, “talk to people, one at a time.”
Another reason of why Claude Hopkins is my favorite historic advertiser is because he invented “pre-emption.” I think that’s a real good advertising technique, because you get to play with a “product’s feature or a quality generic to the category.” One of the examples in the book is “It’s Toasted” which is a slogan for a cigarette brand. I think this technique is useful and gives results, and we know that by present brands using “pre-emption.” These are the reasons of why Claude Hopkins is my favorite historic advertiser.
Another reason of why Claude Hopkins is my favorite historic advertiser is because he invented “pre-emption.” I think that’s a real good advertising technique, because you get to play with a “product’s feature or a quality generic to the category.” One of the examples in the book is “It’s Toasted” which is a slogan for a cigarette brand. I think this technique is useful and gives results, and we know that by present brands using “pre-emption.” These are the reasons of why Claude Hopkins is my favorite historic advertiser.
Response 2:
Times have
changed quite a bit since the early 1900’s when advertising was just being
figured out. With the technology and knowledge of what has worked and what
hasn’t in the past, there are many admirable advertisers of today to look up
to. But who I admire the most was around since the beginning. Claude Hopkins
was a copywriter for the company Lord & Thomas in 1908. The words he put in
ads made millions for his clients, and he put his secrets into his own book
called Scientific
Advertising. In his
book Hopkins says gives great advice that stands true today. Don’t look at
people as a whole, you must think of a typical individual who wants what you’re
selling. He also says An advertising man studies the consumer and tries to place
himself in the position of the buyer.
Hopkins also
came up with the “pre-emption” technique in which you take feature of the
product or a generic quality it may have and make it yours, and “image”
advertising. While words were his strong suit, there is no denying that people
have a stronger reaction to pictures. One of his biggest “image” ad successes
being Palmolive soap, that we all know and love now, but at the time it was
just an unknown soap made of palm and olive oils. Another technique that helped
with his success were free samples and free trials. His ads for items just as
Sunkist orange juice and Van Camp’s baked beans are classic and will always be
a great source of inspiration and learning.
No comments:
Post a Comment