The Old Spice Guy was just the beginning
Remember how you felt about computers from the ‘80s or cell phones from the ‘90s? You thought of them as ground-breaking, big ideas. Eventually, us marketers will start to feel that way about the recent “Old Spice Guy” media stunt, too.
You all know the story by now. During the Super Bowl, the Old Spice Guy sprung to life via a very creative series of commercials by ad agency Wieden + Kennedy. They featured a sexy, charismatic character – along with great writing and execution – that got people talking. The commercials became so popular that the character has gone on to develop a huge following on YouTube, Reddit, Facebook and Twitter.

So what was the agency and brand team to do with a commercial character that obviously struck a pop culture nerve? They did a simple and brilliant thing – they took the traditional, advertising format of a static, network commercial and turned it on its head by giving the campaign the appearance of being tailored for the consumer and the moment. They did this by hiring actor Isaiah Mustafa for two days to directly respond, in character, to select consumer, media and celebrity social media requests through a series of “almost live” mini commercials. From one studio location, the commercials were written, shot, edited and distributed in almost real time, allowing the agency and brand team to break through the preverbal “third wall.” Alyssa Milano, Demi Moore and George Stephanopoulos took the bait, and the Old Spice Guy ran with it.
The results were enormous. Old Spice body products’ sales rose 107 percent during the past month, the brand’s YouTube channels were viewed by more than 58 million people and Isaiah just signed on to appear in a movie starring Jennifer Anniston. But the big question for marketers is, “Where do we go from here?” It will be difficult for other brands to replicate this execution exactly since the stars truly aligned for Old Spice. It had a great commercial concept, a pop culture-friendly character and a developed social media fan base that responded to him.
So take a cue from the Old Spice Guy. It’s important for brands to think about media convergence now. A brand directly communicating to consumers in real time is a practice that has been happening for a while and continues to evolve. However, the big challenge will be transforming traditional marketing platforms, such as television commercials, and making what the Old Spice Guy did in two days, happen every minute, every-day.
How brands and marketers will exactly meet this emerging consumer interest in a tailored, real-time approach depends not only on technology but how creatively we use it.
-- Mark Malinowski, Vice President
Tags: campaigns marketing socialmedia advertising
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