In other words, thank you America, for compelling our elites to put the strategic back into strategic advertising.
See web-only content:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2009/06/burger-kings-horrible-creepy-ad-campaign-isnt-working/19870/
Gawker has been on this story for a while, and they point out that the advertisement firm in charge of creeping out the country was the award-winning team at Crispin Porter Bogusky. Unfortunately for BK and Crispin, they don't award marketshare at advertisement gatherings and in this most crucial category, the company is not keeping track:
McDonald's is a behemoth, so maybe catching up isn't possible, with or without a marketing campaign that seems designed to scare children. But really, the main lesson here is that people should stop trying to make fast food cool. It's a convenience, not a social indicator. But instead of doing something very boring -- advertising human food with humans and food, rather than an overgrown mannequin charming his way out of restraining orders -- BK gave us gems like the Burger King Flame Body Spray. Because what every young Americans secretly desires is to make possible this exchange:Between 2003 -- the year before Burger King hired Crispin as agency of record -- and 2008, Burger King's share of the burger-chain market fell to 14.2% from 15.6%, according to Technomic, while McDonald's share rose to 46.8% from 43.6%. McDonald's has posted average annual sales growth of 6.3% compared with BK's 2.9% gain during that period.
Girl: "What are you wearing?"In memorium, here's one of the worst commercials I've ever seen:
Boy: "Burger King."
Girl: "Marry me?"
See web-only content:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2009/06/burger-kings-horrible-creepy-ad-campaign-isnt-working/19870/
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2009/06/burger-kings-horrible-creepy-ad-campaign-isnt-working/19870/