Adidas pulled off a fantastic PR stunt yesterday at
the Westfield Stratford shopping centre (that’s ‘mall’ to my colonial friends).
They installed a photobooth and encouraged
people to step inside, whereupon… from the O to the M to golden-balls G –
there’s David Beckham waiting for them.
Brilliant work. Inspired. You want warm and
fuzzy brand association – there you are. You want to be seen as well connected
– help yourself. You want people to think your brand is cool – you got it.
So how come the other big
ticket sponsor brands haven't also done something interesting, different, entertaining..?
Don’t get me wrong, I am not for one minute
suggesting that anyone in their right mind would want to see Ronald McDonald
emerging from the darkness and coming toward them, least of all while they’re
in a confined space.
Yet, unless I’ve missed something, there
appears to be a dearth of other Olympi-brands dusting off their creative mojos
and winning the hearts and minds of the public.
There’s really no excuse in 2012 – it would
be as cheap as chips (which you can only buy from McDonalds, unless they are
served with fish as part of an authentic fish ‘n’ chips experience) to knock out a whole
rash of Facebook competitions and games, or do some cool London stuff via Foursquare,
maybe linked to previous London Olympics. Plus all the big brands have so much corporate sponsorship going on that they have more than enough potential strings to pull for a spot of A-list celebrity endorsement action.
Something. Anything. Anyone..?
It really wouldn’t be hard for these big
brands to create campaigns or one-off stunts that demonstrate they’ve actually
been listening to their customers through all the Facebook groups etc they have.
It makes me wonder what the point of it all is
(having a brand presence on Facebook, I mean) if you can’t then take everything
you’ve learned about interacting with your customers via a meaningful two-way
dialogue and put it to good use throughout all your PR, advertising, marketing
and comms activities.
I think that might be worth setting aside for another post.
Footnote: list of the London 2012 Olympic sponsors, partners and supporters here.
2 comments:
In my opinion, the majority of Olympi-brands have the most BORING advertising campaigns. Whatever happened to original/interesting/engaging advertising? Looks like name-dropping (i.e.: We're an Olymi-brand!) is the new cool.
As a consumer, this is absolutely boring. I want advertising I can enjoy, that engages me or entertains me.
Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment.
I agree, it's striking how the big brands associated with the Olympics seem to have missed a great opportunity.
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