Just the other day I was reading about a very unique company tie in that Dr. Pepper was doing in relation to a CD by Guns N? Roses. For those who do not know anything about it, the band has been trying to make a new CD called Chinese Democracy for quite literally fifteen years or so. Numerous problems caused the CD to be delayed over and over again throughout the period. In fact, several release dates were set and then postponed over the years.
So what was the promotion? In March this year Dr. Pepper said that if the band actually releases their CD by the end of the year they'll give a free Dr. Pepper to everyone in the United States. Sure enough, the band set their release date for November and finally managed to meet their deadline.
In response Dr. Pepper made good on their offer, and everyone could go to their website and get a coupon for a free 20 oz. bottle (unfortunately by the time anyone reads this the offer will be over with).
Now, what can you do with this information? The nice part about the tie in was how odd it was, and how much attention it garnered. What exactly does a soda company have to do with a rock band, after all, and it did not really require the company to contact the band or set anything up for them to pull the event off.
Tie ins like this are a great way of getting people to talk about your company, and generating interest. This is the best kind of marketing you can hope for, and once you start the ball rolling you want to keep it rolling.
Consider for your color business cards mentioning some odd or interesting tie in on them. This will not take much room and you can make sure that many more people know about what you are doing. The bigger the tie in the more interesting it will typically be and the more attention you can get from doing it. Use this to your best advantage.
If you do have a very interesting tie in and you have it on your color business cards than you also have an instant conversation starter. When people see it they will have to ask you what prompted it.
Marketing has always been about catching a person's interest and using that time to deliver your message. The tie in is not the primary message you are sending but merely the way you get attention to deliver your complete marketing message.
I am sure if you step back and think about it you can come up with a number of unique tie ins to use with your company, and get people talking about your company. Nothing gives a company more personality than doing something unique.
We have the GSM and the Internet, while Coca-Cola Nigeria is already giving away iPods in some of its promotional campaigns. MTV has finally berthed in Africa courtesy of MTV base, the network’s 100th television channel worldwide, which promises to provide advertisers with a uniquely flexible marketing vehicle for reaching youth. Meanwhile not far from my domicile, a satirical film on the Lagos Bar Beach was the subject of a forum. The irony inherent in the film is the fact that a stone’s throw from the once serene beach is a tourist edifice where we are shown films like Spiderman, Goldeneye, Austine Powers, Be Cool, XXX, etc. What most of us probably do not know is that these movies made millions of dollars even before they were ever released! Have you ever dreamt of the time when most of our phones will be able to handle video content and serve as iPods? While branded content, digital media and the need for new economic models dominated discussions at the conference of the National Association of Television Programme Executives (NATPE) in Las Vegas toward the end of last year, the week of February 17, 2005 played host to the third annual Madison + Vine conference at Beverly Hills Hotel. One striking thing about the latter event was the fact that it brought together branded entertainment professionals from around the United States, who brainstormed on the many new available means of broadcasting electronic content across a broadening range of platforms and the opportunity for branded messages in such content streams (T.L. Stanley 2005). As iPods and other devices for storing and playing files in the MP3 audio format are proliferated in the U.S, a start-up like Odeo, based in San Francisco, would by now have embedded automatically generated audio ads within downloadable files. And because the files are chosen by consumers, the company hopes that consumers and advertisers might easily discover one another (John Markoff 2005). The convergence of the advertising and entertainment industries is one of the hot new trends in global marketing. It is a new form of experimental advertising characterized by long-form ad spots, which strive to be entertainment first, and advertising second (AM 21/04/04). It is about integrating advertising into entertainment. When you place an advertising message within the plot of a film or television show, it can reach a wider audience than would otherwise have been imagined. In the current dispensation, where ads are placed adjacent to entertainment, chances are like me, you try to skip the commercials and reconnect when you assume that the programme would have resumed. I do not blame you because most of our commercials are so boring and monotonous that we are understandably desensitized. With branded entertainment it is different because communication is more sophisticated, targeted and more widely seen than in traditional advertising methods ( Cocojambo 2004). Branded entertainment enables you to communicate more complex messages; because entertainment attracts audiences it is imperative that the entertainment industry creates quality productions. In 2004 branded entertainment deals in film and television took an unprecedented leap in the U.S with increasing amounts of money moving from traditional advertising to product integration. Already this year McDonald’s has agreed to become the sole sponsor of MTV “Advance Warming", the music network’s first global programme. The programme, which has commenced airing in 160 countries across Europe, the Middle East, Asia and Africa, focuses on emerging new musical talent in each of the countries. McDonald’s possesses exclusive content, promotions and sweepstakes for chances to win music exclusives as well as music news, food offers, etc. McDonald’s will feature on signages that appear at the beginning and the end of the show on a composite logo incorporating the MTV and McDonald’s “I’m Loving It" logos (Kate MacArthur 2005). On January 25 this year MasterCard International scored another plus in branded entertainment with its foray into scripted drama, a tie-in with the WB network’s teen drama One Tree Hill. A MasterCard logo is seen in one restaurant and actors twice use a MasterCard debit card as part of the plot. According to Ms. Betty McCoy, senior vice president of national buying at Omnicom Group’s GSD&M, Chicago, MasterCard’s media agency, the WB choice is perfect for reaching the younger viewer. She notes that 35% of viewers of the programme are in the 18-to-34-year-old demographic, while the debit card is a product popular with younger consumers (Mercedes Cardona 2005). That James Bond introduced us to the BMW Z3 Roadster in Goldeneye, that Spiderman almost got crushed by a Terminix truck and that the Mini Cooper was shown in Austin Powers Goldmember were no acts of coincidence. For example, it cost Burger King $15 million to have its products featured on MIB II! According to Rob Gowland the new product placement (branded entertainment) culture is about conceiving the very programmes themselves with an eye to servicing specific sectors of the market (The Guardian 06/10/04). And this reminds me of the film Be Cool, in which John Travolta is seen reprising his role as Chili Palmer, a Cadillac-loving gangster whose new De Ville DTS Sedan is destroyed in the opening scene. Throughout the rest of the story Chili Palmer wishes he could get back his caddy. The film, which features Cadillac’s XLR roadster, is the result of Travolta’s direct involvement with MGM and General Motors Corp. It should interest anyone that Queer Eye for The Straight Guy, a programme conceived to boost sales of male toiletries, cosmetics and fashion aids in the United States, records increased sales of the brands featured on it. According to Fortune Magazine, on the day after an episode of the programme men in the U.S are five times more likely to go shopping than women! (R. Gowland). For radio and TV programme producers in Nigeria the following tips might be of help: movie producers should seek out product placement specialists (if any) while at script stage for experts to assess the film’s placement potential; producers should develop entertainment properties that will seek tie-ins with consumer brands; specifically selected partners, e.g. lawyers, agents, actors and advertisers, should come together for the purpose of having the entertainment asset, the brand marketers and the marketing community become a force-multiplier that is relevant to consumers (Betsy Specthman 2005); advertisers should be willing to fund their own entertainment with all the benefits that it entails, e.g. a new revenue stream and customized audiences for marketing communications; advertising agencies should be ambitious enough to own entertainment companies, e.g. Interpublic has Magna Global Entertainment whose work includes reality show, The Restaurant for NBC. As MTV base becomes available to Nigerian viewers 24 hours a day via multi-channel operators, DST, Trend TV, CTL and FSTV, McDonald’s is already relishing its sponsorship of “Advance Warming." Other components enjoyed by the food company include a dedicated microsite across MTV Europe’s 11 local websites that will feature artist profiles and biographies, screensavers and wallpapers. Can we someday have a vibrant marketing communication industry in Nigeria?
Both Lynne Saarte & Yusuf Danesi are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
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