Saturday, October 24, 2009

Where powerful ideas in advertising come from















In advertising, powerful insights equal powerful ideas. Three brands that have succeeded in creating them? Australian TELCO Optus, Indian brands - Cherry Blossom and MRF tyres.

This post is about the thinking that went into these brands and how successful ideas were generated for them. They are based on conversations I have had with the people who happened to be in the room at the time or in the cases of the Indian brands, knowledge I gleaned on the brands while I worked at the agency that created them - one of the best - LINTAS India.

OPTUS - says 'yes' when its competitors say 'no'
Australia was a market dominated by a single TELCO Telstra for the longest time ever. In the late eighties it had its first taste of competition when Cable and Wireless Group launched a competitive brand Optus.

When Optus was launched, George Patterson Bates, the agency that held the account at the time, did research into consumers trying to understand how they felt towards the category and the incumbent brand Telstra.

One of the biggest issues consumers had with Telstra was their poor service ethic at the time. According to consumers, whatever they asked Telstra for at the time, the answer would invariably be "No".

The agency took this insight and created a simple but powerful concept for Optus - simply called "yes"! The whole idea of "yes" was to highlight how Optus was a much more service orientated brand and a better choice for Australians as a result.

The campaign captured the imagination of Australians and made the Optus brand a strong number 2 to Telstra allowing it to eat massively into its share. "yes" is a part of Optus advertising even today - over a decade after launch.












The perfect gentleman always wears a Cherry smile
One of India's most powerful brands is a shoe polish called "Cherry Blossom." The advertising for Chery Blossom was created and handled for decades by my ex agency (LINTAS) when I worked in India briefly in the mid nineties.

As far back as the seventies, the agency researched consumers to find out how they felt about the task of polishing shoes. Most viewed it as "dull, boring and mundane. It was hard work and they wished they didn't have to do it."

The agency leapt on this insight and used it to create an iconic campaign that featured comic genius Charlie Chaplin. The whole idea behind the use of Chaplin was to distance the brand from the category negatives that threatened to overshadow it. Chaplin made the task of polishing shoes seem a lot more fun than it actually was. In doing so he transferred feelings and associations that were a lot more pleasant onto the Cherry Blossom brand which became one of the biggest and strongest in the country - with ads that people always wanted to watch.

 The Cherry Blossom campaign ran unchanged for decades. A great example of a brand that intelligently uncovered an insight that it then translated into a powerful piece of work that anyone who grew up in India has fond memories off.


MRF tyres - tyres with muscle
MRF tyres are the number one brand of tyres in India.The campaign was conceived I believe by the great Alyque Padamsee himself (CEO and Chief Creative officer of LINTAS at the time and one of the all time Indian advertising greats).

The story behind its creation is this. The biggest user group of tyres is truck drivers. So Alyque went onto a major highway and interviewed truckies as they rolled into the numerous "dhabas" along the way set up to serve them food and drink. When he asked them what they wanted from a tyre, a number of them would flex their muscles and say "takth" which in Hindi means "strength."

From this simple insight was born the idea of a muscle man carrying a tyre above his head with the tagline "MRF Tyres. Tyres with muscle" - an idea that contineues to define the MRF brand even today - decades after its launch.

Powerful insights lead to powerful ideas 
A powerful idea is one that stands the test of time. It''s not an idea that wins a Canne or a Clio. It's an idea that captures the imagination of its audience and in doing so makes the brand it has been developed for -  succesful.

3 comments:

Mee said...

Hey your passion for brands come thru shining:) More power to you.

I can think of a few more brands to add here - Fevicol, Liril, Perrier

Btw- "takth" means throne in english, "takat" means strength:)

pat said...

Fevicol, Liril - couldn't agree more. The story behind Liril according to the Lintas Golden book - "Indian women fantasise in the bath. The reason - it's one of the few times they get a bit of privacy to themselves".

Hence the creative dramatised the benefit of "freshness" by showing the girl (Karen Lunel) under the now legendary waterfall.

Point noted on takat v/s takth cheers

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