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Major ad campaigns debut on Web not
TV |
Continuing evolution of the Internet as a medium for advertising, a
perfume launch starts digitally.
(Reuters)
- If a television commercial
appears first on the Web, are people more likely to watch it?
In a new twist for Web advertising,
cosmetics maker Coty Inc. is betting just that, launching the commercial
for its new fragrance "Lovely" with actress Sarah Jessica Parker online.
Coty's Lancaster Group division ran the
commercial on Vogue magazine's Internet site Style.com this week, hoping
to attract the site's fashion and celebrity-obsessed readers well before
airing the same ad for a broader market on television during the winter
holiday season.
"It was a tactic to get higher visibility
and to tap into different media," said Dennis Keogh, Lancaster's vice
president of U.S. marketing. "No one has seen it otherwise."
The move represents a shift in prestige
for the Web. Many advertisers take commercials that appeared on
television first and adapt them for the Web, while some create video
meant exclusively for an Internet audience.
"It speaks to how far we've come as a
medium that it's important enough to run it first on the Internet," said
Elizabeth Stafford, head of marketing for CondeNet, the online division
of publisher Conde Nast which runs Style.com.
Stafford said several luxury goods
marketers were planning online campaigns ahead of the September fashion
shows. Style.com, with 1.2 million readers monthly, saw ad revenue
through August jump nearly 80 percent from a year earlier.
The "Lovely" campaign also gives insight
into what advertisers mean by "integrated marketing" -- tailoring a
commercial message for different media but ensuring the messages support
each other.
"Lovely" ads first broke in glossy print
form with scented strips in fashion and trend magazines. Entertainment
show "Access Hollywood" ran a segment about filming the ad, with a
discussion about Parker's makeup and pink Oscar de la Renta gown, and
directed viewers to the Style.com Web site.
In an example of entertainment
reinforcing a marketer's goals, former "Sex and the City" star Parker
graces the September cover of Vogue that just hit newsstands, refreshing
her image as a style icon in time for the perfume's launch. Stafford
said there was no connection between the campaign and Vogue's cover
choice.
"The key thing is that people are
planning in concert the different forms of media," said Sarah Kim, vice
president of media at interactive agency Avenue A/Razorfish. "It's more
about identifying who your consumer is and then determining the most
effective and unique way to reach that audience."
Choosing the right vehicle has become
much more of a gamble for advertisers as consumers shift media habits,
spending more time online, cherry-picking television shows and movies
and plugging into ad-free devices like the iPod.
In recent campaigns, American Airlines
produced scripted television ads under its "We Know Why You Fly" slogan,
then aired on the Web short home movies about family vacations and
special events, all of which required air travel.
Fast food chain Wendy's, known for square
hamburgers, crafted a Web cartoon about a "square" living in a world of
circles. The animation later appeared in TV ads.
"The true part of integration is being
iconic, using the best platform you have at your disposal and reaching
people unexpectedly," said Arthur Ceria, executive creative director at
WPP interactive agency OgilvyOne.
August 27, 2005
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