Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Typewriter Nostalgia Campaign

For our advertising plan, we decided to focus on attracting the younger generation by advertising the product at places where our generation like to do their shopping at. Not everyone can shop for designer clothes so we have to do the best with what we got the look the best with what ever item we can find where ever it may be like thrift stores. We can find old clothing and cut them into whatever fashion fits us best and still be proud of what we wear.

Our generation grew up when the computer was first booming so not many of us have used a type writer. Through social media, commercial, and bill boards we can build advertising campaign to attract our generation into being engrossed on the vintage, antique feel of a type writer.

Our social media aspect of our campaign would focus on consumers stories and their type writers. Long are the days where Facebook was only for the young generation and now has become the norm for many people to keep in touch with each other and network. We would ask consumers of old "What their story" is to get the young get more of a feel for what the product is like and how it has helped them on their journey through life and made it easier for them to write papers for class back in their young days. It would bring a nostalgic feeling to adults who reminisce about their days writing papers for class and let the youth know, adults were at one time just like them, care free and just trying to be successful. The younger generation would take interest in type writers just to have one even though it's not a necessity to have a feel for what their adults went through and how even though it's not as typing on a keyboard and printing the paper, their adult counter-parts were able to do it on a type writer that wasn't able to delete.


Our commercial would focus on an adult in his younger days writing on a type writer then finishing his last paper and turning in it to his professor getting a smile, with the professor telling him "Good job, you've not finished you're last college paper, get ready for the real world." It would then jump to his grandson many years later,who was having senoritas, typing a page on his computer and his grandpa coming up telling him the story of his day when type writers were all they had and how easy he's got it with a computer where they do spell checks for him and correct his grammar when he couldn't even delete the last letter without making it look bad. The grandpa would then grab his type writer and give it to his grandson and tell him to try writing his paper on this, where he'd then get a better feel for what his grandpa went through and appreciate the type writer fully, learning to embrace it.


Our third advertising campaign would focus on billboards and benches where people would be able to sit on a type writer itself, so they get the idea in their head and are more exposed to the type writer. It would show them the vintage feeling of it being black and white, and they'd ask themselves since it isn't so expensive, why not have one just in case their laptop or computer wasn't operable.

Harley Davidson

In response to the Harley Davidson questions
Brand communities bring a tighter family style setting for consumers to get more involved and stay loyal to a brand. When not only you but your group of friends or family share interest in the same brand, it demonstrates the bond you have with each other and portrays that you're part of something bigger. Thousands of people rally up with their Harley Davidson bikes each year at events all around the world, showing off their customized bikes or just that they themselves own one and want to show that they too are part of the crowd. It brings consumers who don't know each other together to show everyone has a point of interest, something they can communicate to each other with, and talk in full detail of the thing they love.

The Posse Ride brings creates a society for both men and women to get together and ride through the desert highways, hillsides, or in city areas to just ride among their peers and forget about the outside world for a second, as they ride with each other, they themselves are finding inner peace within themselves above the roaring engines of the many beside them. The Posse Ride lets consumers build a family around their brand, centering themselves around hundreds of thousands who enjoy riding their bikes, building a closer bond with their consumers.

The Harley Davidson brand is already a strong brand among many people and already has a strong hold on many of their consumers, so they'd have to have a bold plan if they were to change the brand. Doing some in moderation so that slowly their loyal consumers can not be scared of the change of resist but rather embrace is and see its not all too bad.

Harley Davidson attracts more of the 30-40 year old generation, so they don't have a very strong foot when it comes to the online social media, not many adults care for the internet and what it has to offer so if they were to grab a young generation into the Harley Davidson family, I feel they need to improve more on their online market, maybe with social medias like Instagram or Twitter, where young adults can show off their bikes and build their own new communities amongst each other. That would then catch the attention of the adults seeing the hip thing to do is take pictures of them and their bikes and post it online for millions of people to see and create an even stronger community.

Besides the 2-3 Harley bikers I'd see every now and then, I did experience one time when a gang member was slain and a gang of Harley Davidson bikers all joined  together and road along the funeral cars. They all revved their engines as loud of they can and road their way to the cemetery o bury their fallen comrade expressing their strong bond with each other and the sorrow they felt through their bikes as they went.


Monday, May 6, 2013

Interruptions, Interruptions!

With the rise of smart phones, tablets, and advancements in internet speed, we as consumers tend to turn our focus elsewhere when a commercial comes on. We like to just switch the channel or do a light task to fill in the time instead of engaging our attention to what people are trying to sell to us. Advertising agencies only focus on getting the product out there, instead of focusing on how the product should be put out there. If they found humorous or more unique ways of putting their advertisements people would actually pay a little bit more attention admiring the advertisement thus paying attention to it like the Super Bowl advertisements, some people watch the Super Bowl just for the advertisements because they know it'd be humorous.

For example, this 2013 Audi commercial didn't just have their car driving through a hillside, it showed them that their cars got class, and you'll feel better about yourself and in the end give you more confident to do whatever you want, and not even matter what the consequence was. It wasn't very serious, it showed the guy with a black eye at the end, smiling, not caring what just happened, but rather proud and laughed about it.



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Is TV the elephant in the room?
No I don't think so, not anymore with the rise of phones and tablets. TV isn't the only distraction anymore like it was back in the day when it was either sit home and watch TV or go outside and play. With the internet, people can watch whatever, whenever they want, without all the commercials. TV has just become another form of entertainment, not the only one.


Sweet and Salty Toblerone

For this week's assignment, we were asked to focus on Toblerone chocolate and *devise an advertisement campaign that would catch the attention of tech savvy young adults from ages 20-30 with the brand Toblerone chocolate.

In our group, we decided to focus on "Toblerone Moments" where we interact with the audience and have them get more grasp on what we're trying to sell

We decided to use Twitter, a popular social media amongst many others to promote Toblerone. The audience would tweet every time they bought a Toblerone chocolate with the hashtag #tobleronemoments and we'd have a raffle at the end of a certain time period and pick out a winner for every so often winning prizes that can range from many things.

Second, Instagram, a newer social media, but raised to popularity very quick would be focused for our advertisements as well. We'd have consumers post pictures of where they're at holding up a new Sweet & Salty Toblerone and decide who can take their photo in the most unique part of the world, from either the great Pyramids of Egypt or the Grand Canyon of Arizona, USA. Like twitter, we'd have consumers use the hashtag #Tobleronemoments so we can choose a winner amongst the many participants.

A third, not as popular social media, but it's intertwined with twitter, Vine, can be used for a way to get consumers to interact and show us how they feel about our product. We'd have consumers send us their 6 seconds to get some feedback from customers of how our new chocolate is doing, we'd then choose amongst consumers to come in and join us at our factory and let them see first hand how our chocolate is made, and of course hand them gifts for helping us get a better product out in the future.

These campaigns we've come up with are very simple, yet can get many customers to engage in a fun, active way in which we can see first hand how our customers enjoy our product and what more needs to be done.

Jeep advertising plan

In it for the long run is the motto of our planned Jeep campaign. Jeep is usually marketed as a car for the adventurous, but we wanted to adjust this angle and put a spin on it. Rather than marketing to only the adventurous at a a youthful age, we want to try to appeal to the adventurous at heart too, at older ages.

To accomplish this task, we want to concentrate on portraying family values through Jeep commercials by also demonstrating its durability. The plan for our commercial is to have grandparents up in a cabin house somewhere snowy, waiting for their children and grandchildren to arrive, with a Jeep parked in the front. The scene we want to portray will depict the grandchildren running to their grandparents, and embracing, excited to get into the Jeep for an adventure.



The cherry on top will be near the end of the brief commercial, where the grandparents open up the trunk to reveal presents stored in the spacious trunk, as well as revealing the impressive cabin space and decked-out interior. In order to make Jeep more suitable towards a larger market, our group chose to do so by marketing to the older range. To make this idea successful, we utilized love and excitement as the driving emotions.