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SuperBowl 44

I am among those who watch the Super Bowl for the commercials. (Sorry sports fans.) I am usually under-whelmed, and this year is no exception. The hype and dollars spent just don’t live up to the reality. What I found was an overwhelming percentage of spots devoid of any real creativity and meaningful marketing messages, instead giving in to stereotypes of men, women, and generally stupid behavior. Don’t even get me started on the bipolarity of Anheuser Busch doing ads about partying once Budweiser pops into the picture, and then flashing a tiny “drink responsibly” tagline on the screen at the end.  There were a few bright spots, namely the Google “Parisian Love” search ad; it told a great story while demonstrating its functionality and benefits of the product (brilliant marketing!).

 

Makes me long for the days of Apple computer’s unveiling of the Mac computer. That was ground-breaking, trend-setting, interesting, and actually made the audience seem a little higher up on the intelligence scale than ‘beer=party=stupid’.  And while I initially found the Doritos’s dog bark collar spot funny, it still ultimately poked fun at a stereotypical jerky guy getting his comeuppance after teasing a dog. The beaver ad for Monster.com was funny and cute, but don’t we always see ads with humanized critters? Nothing new here.

 

I’m not sure if it’s the large billion-dollar clients calling the shots and directing financially at-risk advertising agencies to do these commercials, or just a total dearth of real intelligent marketing by these firms.  But I have hope that a continuously challenging economy will actually make people turn away from cheap stereotypical advertising and do something smart and interesting. Like Google did. There’s always Super Bowl 45, right?

 

 

 

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Yahoo Direct Mail 1Yahoo Direct Mail 2Omni received a direct mail piece from Yahoo! Search Marketing recently.  It’s a pretty slick piece encouraging advertising agencies to sign up and use Yahoo! and their team of experts for online marketing strategies.  The fun part is the push-button included in the piece that delivers the Yahoo! jingle, you know the yodel “YAHOOOOOOOO”.  Yahoo Direct Mail 3My co-workers love it when I continue to push the Yahoo button and that annoying, LOUD yodel reverberates through the entire workspace for all to hear (I can’t help myself, it’s too fun!).  I found it interesting to see new media (Yahoo!) utilizing traditional media (direct mail) to promote their services from business to business.  Even Yahoo! knows that traditional media is not dead, as many internet marketers would like to claim, but is still a viable option to reach the target audience. 

 

I also know that both traditional and newer media can be effective in communicating our clients’ messages, and we work to develop strategies using all different kinds and combinations of media that will be effective based on the marketing goals, target audience and client budget.   The only fault I find with this Yahoo! direct mailing is that we already utilize Yahoo! Search Marketing.  This direct mail piece probably cost quite a bit to produce and mail, and Omni already knows the potential and benefits of search engine marketing as part of an overall campaign strategy.  So maybe a little bit of Yahoo’s direct mail budget was wasted?

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