May 18, 2024

Advertising: A Shared History in Detroit Is an Ad Inspiration

The partnership unites Chrysler and “Motown: the Musical,” about the musical legacy of Berry Gordy and Motown, the record label he founded that is now owned by the Universal Music Group. The musical, scheduled to open on April 14 at the Lunt-Fontanne Theater, is the beneficiary of an elaborate promotional initiative by the Chrysler brand that supplements the show’s own efforts to encourage ticket sales.

The centerpiece of the Chrysler brand’s support is a television commercial that has been running nationally since December, featuring Mr. Gordy riding in a Motown Edition of a Chrysler 300C sedan as the seminal Motown song “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” plays on the soundtrack.

The commercial, created by a Chrysler Group agency, GlobalHue in Southfield, Mich., begins with Mr. Gordy at the original “Hitsville U.S.A.” Motown headquarters building in Detroit and ends with him arriving at the Lunt-Fontanne and declaring: “We are Motown. And this is what we do.” As Mr. Gordy enters the theater, the Chrysler slogan appears, altered to read “Imported from Motown.”

The words “ ‘Motown: the Musical’ on Broadway March 2013” appear, referring to the start of previews on March 11, and the address of the show’s Web site, motownthemusical.com, along with the Chrysler brand Web address, chrysler.com.

The commercial is believed to be the first time that a Broadway show has had such paid national television exposure as it prepares to open in New York. The commercial is in addition to a commercial that the producers of “Motown: the Musical” are running on stations in the New York market; the local commercial was created by SpotCo in New York, part of Reach4entertainment Enterprises.

The Chrysler brand will also buttress the show’s marketing with colorful signs to go up in coming days in Penn Station and Times Square. The signs display a Chrysler 300 Motown Edition, the Chrysler logo, the logo of “Motown: the Musical” and photographs of cast members of the show like Brandon Victor Dixon, who portrays Mr. Gordy.

The Chrysler Group is spending an estimated $6 million to $8 million to promote “Motown: the Musical.” The budget for the ads from the show’s producers, Mr. Gordy, Kevin McCollum and Doug Morris, is estimated at $2 million.

The automaker’s efforts extend beyond the product placement and sponsorship agreements that have become increasingly prevalent on Broadway as theater enters the realm of so-called entertainment marketing with television, movies and video games. Unlike the provisions of many of those deals, the Chrysler name is not being added to a lyric of a Motown song, nor are there plans to park a car in the lobby of the Lunt-Fontanne.

Rather, the partnership is about “merging both journeys, the journey of the Chrysler brand and the journey of Mr. Gordy and his music,” said Olivier François, chief marketing officer at the Chrysler Group.

“Motown is the most exported from Detroit of any music and, in this case, imported to New York,” Mr. François said. “It’s putting together the sound and the drive of Detroit. We were meant to meet.”

That thought is expressed in the national commercial, in which a narrator proclaims, “Because if cars are our city’s heart, music is its soul.”

That the partnership is centered on music is no coincidence. Mr. François, a producer of pop music in his native France in the 1980s, described the Motown catalog as “part of the American patrimony” that “will live forever.”

“And so is Chrysler,” he said hopefully. “Regardless of my passion for the Motown music and my respect for Mr. Gordy, I would not have pushed to tie a brand to Motown if there wasn’t this new Chrysler story,” Mr. François said, referring to “Imported from Detroit,” which was introduced in 2011 with a Super Bowl commercial featuring another famous Detroit music figure, Eminem.

“The Motown name has a huge value,” he added. “Does it have a huge value for any car? Maybe not.”

Mr. McCollum, whose Broadway credits include “Avenue Q” and “Rent,” invoked another musical to explain how the show and the Chrysler Group came together: “Kismet.”

“About a year ago, we flew to Detroit and sat down with Olivier and his team, and they pitched the idea,” Mr. McCollum said. “It’s about a collaboration between these two great American industries that came out of one place.”

Besides, he added, Mr. Gordy was “highly influenced by his early days working in an auto plant, learning that you have to put something out there people want.”

Mr. McCollum said he was glad to join Mr. François and Mr. Gordy in “celebrating Detroit when you’d think it’s contrarian thinking” to do so because Motown, Chrysler and “Motown: the Musical” are all about “the power of the American dream.”

The SpotCo campaign for the show — and a public relations effort by Boneau/Bryan-Brown in New York — play that up. The local commercial, for instance, extols Motown’s songs as “the soundtrack that changed America, the beat of a generation, the soul of a nation.”

The goal is “less transactional,” said Ilene Rosen, associate chief operating officer at SpotCo, and “more about synergizing the Motown and Chrysler brands to elevate both.”

As much as other Broadway producers would probably welcome a deep-pocketed partner like the Chrysler Group, the unique circumstances that produced the partnership may make it difficult to emulate, she added.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/01/business/a-shared-history-in-detroit-is-an-ad-inspiration.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: Soft-Drink Giant Wants Consumers to Be ‘Impressed’

“McKayla the not-impressed Olympian” sounds as if it might be the title of a song or a book. But as most Americans with access to a TV set, computer, smartphone or mobile device know, it is a reference to McKayla Maroney, an American gymnast at the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.

Ms. Maroney’s facial expression — a scowling kind of glare, or a glaring kind of scowl — when she learned she won a silver medal, rather than a gold, after a vault performance on Aug. 5 was captured in a photograph by Brian Snyder of Reuters that captured the popular imagination.

Soon, the idea that “McKayla is not impressed” turned up as a Tumblr page and became an Internet meme. Ms. Maroney even offered a version of the expression when she and the rest of the United States 2012 gymnastics team met President Obama in the White House — and the president joined in.

This week, the Dr Pepper Snapple Group will proclaim that Ms. Maroney has finally found something that impresses her: five new soft drinks that are entries in the lower-calorie category of the carbonated-beverage market along with Dr Pepper Ten, which the company brought out in 2011.

The “Ten” in the name refers to the fact that each 12-ounce serving of the soft drink contains 10 calories. Dr Pepper Snapple is adding 10-calorie versions of five additional brands: 7Up, AW, Canada Dry, RC and Sunkist.

Ms. Maroney is to appear in New York on Thursday in a section of Penn Station that Dr Pepper Snapple will fancifully rename “Ten Station” for the day. The promotional event will be focused on one new variety, 7Up Ten — which, when said fast, kind of sounds like a sports score.

Although planning is not completed, a tentative schedule calls for Ms. Maroney to meet the public from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Those meeting her will be encouraged to sample 7Up Ten and take photographs in which they share their “impressed” looks with her.

The goal of the promotional event is to “leverage the meme” and “turn it on its head, that we’re finally getting her impressed,” said Regan Ebert, senior vice president for marketing at Dr Pepper Snapple in Plano, Tex.

“What we’re hoping is the fact she’s finally impressed” will “get digital buzz across the Internet,” Ms. Ebert said.

Ms. Ebert was asked if she was familiar with what happened when Clara Peller, who became famous in 1984 for being unimpressed when she asked “Where’s the beef?” in commercials for Wendy’s, declared a year later that she had “found it” in a commercial for Prego Plus spaghetti sauce. Wendy’s fired Ms. Peller and her ad career ended.

Ms. Ebert said she recalled the incident and described the agreement with Ms. Maroney as different.

Other marketers “have approached” Ms. Maroney and asked her to declare herself impressed with their brands, Ms. Ebert said, “but she agreed to do it with us, exclusively for us,” because “she enjoys the products.”

Ms. Maroney’s fee is not being disclosed.

Ms. Maroney will not appear in an advertising campaign for the five new soft drinks, Ms. Ebert said, which is scheduled to begin next month. The campaign, by McGarryBowen, part of the Dentsu Network unit of Dentsu, will include commercials, coupons and digital ads.

A social media and digital agency in New York named Code and Theory will work with Dr Pepper Snapple on the promotional event on Thursday. The company also works with Ketchum, the public relations agency owned by the Omnicom Group.

Analysts at brokerage firms who follow the soft-drink industry estimate that Dr Pepper Snapple plans to spend more than $30 million nationally to expand the Ten concept to include the additional products.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/02/25/soft-drink-giant-wants-consumers-to-be-impressed/?partner=rss&emc=rss