Showing posts with label Lookalike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lookalike. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

Using the man as the spokesman: CEOs in advertising

Hey folks, long time no blog.

I've been driven to write after seeing the following spot for GM several times in the last couple days:



In it Ed Whitacre, CEO of General Motors, assures us that GM is back on its' feet, having repaid the government its bailout loan money with interest well in advance. I have to think that it's a great idea to use a "don't worry" campaign, regardless of how fresh Whitacre's news actually is, because it's still prime time to pounce on Toyota and try to win one for the domestic automakers.

Ironically in what I assume is unrelated news, GM dropped Chevrolet's ad agency this week. It's significant because Campbell-Ewald is the premier agency in Detroit (or at least the only one I could name there based on my rudimentary knowledge with no further research). Literally every Chevy ad you've seen ("Like a Rock," "An American Revolution," et all) has been the work of C-E.

But all that is neither here nor there.

The Whitacre spot reminded me of another CEO speaking on behalf of his company in TV spots, and maybe it did for you too. Remember Sprint's Dan Hesse?



These ads, ranging back to 2008, never did it for me. For one, they're pretty awful. Advertisers use spokesmen because people pay attention to celebrities (or so research somewhere suggests). When your spokesman is your smug new CEO, people have no reason to put down the Cheetos and listen (or even keep it on the same channel).

Secondly, all I ever took away from these ads was who the CEO was. Maybe it's because the GM spot is still fresh, but it seems a lot more respectable because it seems like a special message. Hesse was barking at me about the wireless revolution for more than a year.

I decided to look into this, and see if there was any way GM could have been influenced by Sprint in tossing their Chief Executive into the advertising. I didn't have to look far.

Turns out, Hesse and Whitacre are both former CEOs of AT&T, Hesse from 1997-2000, and Whitacre from 2005-2007. They were contemporaries in the wireless business for 20 years.


The executive sphere has certainly always been viewed as an Old Boys' Club of sorts, guys bounce from corporation to corporation and bring each other along regardless of industry knowledge. The last thing GM should want to do is remind people of that: it doesn't make people want to buy your products when they consider that you're making $60 million a year in a job that your old connections got you.

So here's my advice for General Motors and Mr. Whitacre: quit while you're ahead. You have a good thing going, with the worst of the economic crisis behind you. This advertising message is cute and I believe justified, but you toe a fine line when you personify the company with the CEO. Don't let Ed follow in Dan's footsteps and become just another commercial talking head, or worse, just another reviled, smug chief executive.

Friday, June 19, 2009

Before hiring commercial actors, think with your dipstick.

I forget what I was doing when I saw the following commercial for IBM to think what it reminded me of.



It didn't really compel me to think of IBM as messiahs, so that was out. Then, it hit me. The "doctor" that appears talking about medical images or some nonsense was familiar. But from where...?



Don't see it?



This is a real "you pay too much attention to commercials" moment.

UPDATE
Upon further review, the actor is the same person, and was also in the movie Beerfest as Mr. Schniedelwichsen (and more ironically appeared in an episode of Mad Men). His name is Bjorn Johnson.

Loading image

Click anywhere to cancel

Image unavailable

Friday, March 27, 2009

Mmm mmm mmm ... creepy



Not sure how I feel about it, Quiznos is clinging to life in a world which Subway thinks ain't big 'nuff for the two of us. If you like 'em long, skinny, and toasty, I guess the Quiznos Torpedo is the way to go.

More than anything, I'm happy Matt Leinart found meaningful employment after being benched by the Arizona Cardinals:

Note: NFL Quarterback and beer bong aficionado Matt Leinart does not, to my knowledge, endorse Quiznos subs.