Friday, March 12, 2010

The Winner

Watching kids dressed in USA Olympic uniforms deplaning amid cheers and then entering the opening ceremonies carrying the American flag, I thought, "What is this?"

The commercial continued with kids at a press conference, a young girl in a sparkling costume about to enter the skating rink, an Apolo Ohno-type boy eyeing his competition at the starting line, four boys grabbing a bobsled for a run, and a kid poised to start the downhill course. As the sound signaled the start, the scene shifted from the child to a mother in the crowd, holding her breath. The commercials ended with this written on the screen: "To their moms, they'll always be kids."

I was choked up, and I'm not a mom. "Wow! What a commercial! Who did this?"

The P & G logo plus those of many of its brands flashed across the screen.

I enjoyed this commercial each time that I saw it in its various forms over the two weeks of the Olympics. The second week, P & G introduced a second commercial, one with moms singing "You'll Never Walk Alone" as they helped their children grow up. That one ended with "Thanks, Mom." That one, too, choked me up.

I was impressed with these commercials for three reasons. First of all, they targeted their market. Their market was moms. These commercials demonstrated that P & G knew what moms wanted, and they communicated that understanding. If these commercials choked up a non-mom such as me, I suspect that they had a huge impact on moms. At the end of each commercial, along with the logos P & G called itself "Proud Sponsor of Moms."

This was giving credit to those in the background behind the athletes, their moms.

The second reason that I was impressed was the emotional connection that these commercials made with the viewer. Eliciting emotion is not easy. Commercials which do so are rare.

They are also very effective.

Taking this emotion and tying it to the event in which the commercials aired, the Olympics, gave the commercials greater attention and memorability. As much as the Super Bowl commercials are touted to be worth watching, I cannot remember any Super Bowl commercial which tied itself to the game and did so as emotionally as these P & G commercials did. Revisiting these commercials on YouTube, I found that I was not alone. The first commercial had had almost 200,000 views.

How do you translate this to your advertising?

I understand that you do not have the budget nor the staff of P & G. However, you can apply what P & G did. First, know your target market. Know what your target market wants. Know what gets your target market's attention. Use that knowledge in your marketing message.

Second, make an emotional connection with your target market. This is tricky and difficult to do. It will require some thought. Perhaps you will not find a way to do so. If not, you can accomplish P & G's third achievement. Connect with an event and tie your advertising into that event. Perhaps in doing so, you will find your emotional connection.

Either way, following P & G's example will get more attention and memorability to your ads.

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