Ever get the feeling you have been cheated?
Much of my PR experience has been in business technology so the opportunity to use a celebrity to endorse a product/service has been thin on the ground. However, I am fascinated how brands choose celebrities and what effect they then have on awareness/sales/buzz and also on why public figures choose to endorse certain products – apart from the filthy lucre of course.
There have been two recent advertisements that have really surprised me - John Lydon for some margarine or t’other and Iggy Pop for a car insurance firm. Two of the most anti-establishment figures around in their seventies heyday and possibly the least likely people to pop up on TV advertisements - who would honestly have picked them as brand ambassadors? Yet both ads have attracted a lot of attention, and according to Brand Republic the John Lydon one has been hugely successful, with an 85% increase in sales. If you had said to Johnny Rotten in 1977 that he would end up hawking margarine on TV he would have had some choice words to say to you. And he would no doubt defend his right to do so now, but he remains an unlikely brand figurehead despite the campaign’s success.
The same goes for Iggy Pop and whatever car insurance it is he is flogging. I am not even sure that Iggy Pop is famous enough to do an ad like this. Anyone that had heard of him and knew his music would be vaguely appalled at the thought, whilst everyone else would be wondering who that weirdo is, ranting about the ‘gift of time’.
It is rare to see credible celebrities doing work of this nature but if it works I guess the brands aren’t complaining. Are these former punks really so short of a few quid though, that they are willing to compromise their musical legacy? Do John and Iggy really use the products they are endorsing (I think Iggy’s insurance premiums would be off the scale, what with all the, ahem, lifestyle choices he has made)? In a way it seems unfair that say, Eva Longoria can advertise ice cream and people don’t think any less of her (not that she looks like a choc ice has come within a yard of her) but for musicians and/or ‘edgy’ personalities it seems much more of a sell-out.
Or maybe other people aren’t as sensitive about punks in adverts as me.
Tags: advertising, Brand, communication, PR
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Comments (6)
February 3rd, 2009 at 12:13 pm Posted by Nick
Can’t say I approve of anti-establishment figureheads taking the advertising dollar, but it’s their choice. However I actually find the use of bland celebrities in terrible, nauseating, constantly-repeated adverts more offensive. Woods, Federer, Henry, Gillette - yes I mean you. And I am switching to Wilkinson Sword immediately.
February 3rd, 2009 at 12:19 pm Posted by Paul Allen
that is an awful advert! But at least they are from that ’sell your soul for a few quid’ world…it somehow sticks in the craw when credible people do it.
I’m more surprised it actually worked - ‘Johnny Rotten likes margarine so I’ll have some please’, incredible. Bet the iggy pop one won’t though
February 3rd, 2009 at 4:25 pm Posted by Chris Lee
Well, what do you expect from a guy that did I’m a Celebrity…?
Not so rock n’ roll but I guess he’s got retirement to pay for…
My personal favourite was Noddy Holder being used for (the very palatable) Banks’ beer adverts in the West Midlands in the mid-90s (i was a student, a am NOT a brummie…just for the record)
February 4th, 2009 at 5:03 am Posted by PaulieA
True, guess he sold out a while ago….still upsets me though. I see even Bob Dylan has let one of his songs be used for an advertisement for the first time
February 4th, 2009 at 6:58 am Posted by Annabel
Speaking as one of the later camp who just had no clue who Iggy Pop was the advert was entirely wasted on me. In fact I don’t think I even noticed it was a car insurance ad. The use of celebrity may often be a clever advertising tactic but here I am just not sure it will work.
February 5th, 2009 at 7:10 am Posted by Popular People » Blog Archive » Ever Get the Feeling You have Been Cheated? - Dot Comms
[...] Much of my PR experience has been in business technology so the opportunity to use a celebrity to endorse a product/service has been thin on the ground. However, I am fascinated how brands choose celebrities and what effect they then …Read More [...]
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