Thursday, April 29, 2010

AriZona Iced Tea - Caught in the Crossfire

AriZona iced tea is wishing they were in Utah right now. Or maybe Canada...

As Todd Wasserman of
BrandFreak writes:
Iced-tea maker AriZona is experiencing some collateral damage in the immigration debate over a new law in the state of Arizona. Since the law passed, making it a crime for illegal immigrants to be in the state and requires police to check citizens for evidence of legal status, opponents have called for a boycott of the state. On Tuesday, a comic writer named Travis Nichols suggested—jokingly, we think—that consumers should also boycott AriZona iced tea because it's "the drink of fascists." For whatever reason, others took Nichols up on the idea, even though the brand, now owned by Ferolito, Vultaggio & Sons, is based in New York.

"For whatever reason, others took Nichols up on the idea..." I'll tell you why - it's because people are sheep (read: morons) and see only part of the story without looking into context. Sometimes I just want to shake them! Grumble, grumble...

Good thing the chairman and founder of the company addressed concerns immediately, noting AriZona's proud standing as an American company.



(Courtesy of BrandFreak)

Wednesday, April 14, 2010

2010 Census Advertising Recap

Did you get your 2010 Census form and answer the ten questions? Did it only take you ten minutes, as all the advertising promised?

We all saw the commercials ("We can't move forward until you mail it back...") and after looking into it a bit further there's some interesting information out there regarding all the paid advertising surrounding the 2010 Census.

Here are a few nuggets for you to chew on:
For three decades after the 1970 census, mailback rates fell sharply until the 2000 census. That was the first time the Congress authorized the Census to launch a paid advertising and public relations effort to help slow this rate of decline. We exceeded expectations in 2000, and we not only halted the decline but the American public increased their response rate. As a result the Census Bureau later in 2000 returned to the federal Treasury some $305 million in savings, partly because of this renewed civic engagement. The Congress and our oversight agencies generally applauded this effort in 2000, and encouraged us to do more for 2010 to help get a better count, improve accuracy, and hopefully again save the government some important funds.

We’re advertising again. The management equation on this is pretty simple. For every one percentage point we increase the mailback rate, we save about $85 million dollars of followup costs. This is a business proposition. We seek ways that get the message out, even if it is unusual for a Federal agency to do so. We spent about $85,000 on the Alaska trip to kick off the census, but garnered an audience from publicity (85 million) that would have cost 300 times as much in paid media (see earlier blog entries on the Noorvik trip). We will advertise on the 2010 Super Bowl, as we did in 2000. The Super Bowl is the top-rated and most highly anticipated television event in the U.S. An ad running once in the Super Bowl has the potential to reach 45% of adults over age 18. A thirty second spot on the top-rated regularly-scheduled show in America, American Idol costs $450,000 and is viewed by just about 9% or 10% of all households watching TV. The Super Bowl reaches 100 million viewers at a very efficient price compared to other shows.
To check out the rest of the blog post on the Census website, just click here!



(Courtesy of http://2010.census.gov/)

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Sexiest Lamborghini Ad Ever

Yeah, I don't really need to say much else about this one. Check it out for yourself:



(In honor of my Lambo-loving brother, who I hope never looks as ridiculous as Frank Reynolds does in his Countach...)



(Courtesy of the Lamborghini Channel on Youtube)