A look at Product Placement, Part II…
Wednesday, October 1st, 2008As we mentioned in part I, good product placement is based on a few simple tenets: keep it subtle, make the product look enticing, and create a lasting image. Sometimes, however, you simply can’t be subtle, especially with certain products (or films, or television shows, etc.). Paid branding in movies and TV shows rose to $1 billion in 2004; those kinds of figures can cause some business owners to salivate, and lose themselves in the idea of “more is better”. But as we saw in the films named in the last posting, if you’re not careful, you can actually alienate the audience you’re trying to lure in. That’s where advertisers need to think outside the box, to bring in the next-level dose of “cool”, so to speak.
One of the first to do so was BMW, a company that has often sought to reinvent itself with respect to advertising. The minds behind BMW’s ad campaigns understand that they have a distinctly known product — consumers know to expect quality and efficiency with their cars, SUV’s, and motorcycles. And yet for BMW, this was not enough. That was why they pushed the creators of the Pierce Brosnan “007” films to switch James Bond’s gadget-filled car, from Aston Martin to BMW.
With the short film series “The Hire”, however, the company went even further. In a collection of unrelated short films, there were two constants: BMW, and the man who drove them, Clive Owen (known only as The Driver). In an ingenious move, the marketers approached numerous successful directors at the time, and had them structure short films around his character – a mysterious man for hire, who drove BMW sedans and SUVs with amazing skill. Not only did it highlight the power and beauty of BMW’s cars, it also showed just how cool they could operate under pressure (and gunfire, and oil spills, and car accidents). Rather than wait for some filmmaker to come along and showcase this, BMW chose to do it themselves, and the results were phenomenal. Beyond what any mere commercial could do, these short films turned the cars themselves into characters.
There’s one final example of product placement worth looking at, and that’s on the Sci-Fi channel original series “Eureka”. The product is Degree antiperspirant, and the genesis of the branding in this instance is simple: the show is about a town called Eureka, which is chocked full of genius inventors and scientists. One of the products they’ve supposedly created is an antiperspirant that is incredibly powerful against wetness and odor. This, of course, is what eventually becomes the formula for Degree. Seems simple enough, however the advertisers have taken this premise a step further: rather than merely showing the product in various scenes, they’ve actually shown it being created. In two episodes so far, the product has been an integral part of the show’s storyline (in a not-so-tongue in cheek admission that the town of “Eureka” needs the sponsorship dollars). In addition to the placement, the advertisers also run “Infomercials” during the ad time, that show various products created in Eureka. The first of these miracle products is, of course, Degree antiperspirant. All in all, a very clever way of pushing a product; the only problem is that, despite the crossover, these two episodes were simply inundated with all things Degree, and it became obvious and a little tiresome.
Such is the state of advertising these days. Branding will continue, in newer and better (and sometimes worse) ways.










