Promo - January 2008 - (Page 8) 11 retail 13 Interactive 14 Experiential THE PLAYERS Viral but Virtuous Even ads that don’t look like ads need legal protections/Brian Quinton Brian For two years now, Internet celebrity Matt Harding has been dancing around the world: rocking in Rwanda, shimmying in the Shetland Islands and blogging and mounting video on his Web site, “Where the Hell Is Matt?” In 2006 both his persistence and his Web popularity convinced food maker Cadbury Adams USA that his far-flung footwork could benefit its newly launched gum brand, Stride, known for its tagline: “ridiculously long-lasting.” Cadbury also saw a good fit with the product’s target 18-to-24 demographic. So Cadbury opted to underwrite Harding’s attempt to dance around the world in exchange for some low-key advertising within his online videos. That video has had 8 million hits since its launch in mid-2006; a 2007 follow-up has been seen 2 million times. Harding has been interviewed by numerous news outlets and credits Cadbury Adams and Stride in each interview. A new video is in the works. But even marketing that’s designed not to look like marketing needs to take legal precautions. In this case, that included doing a thorough background check on Harding, Cadbury assistant general counsel Beth Kotran told an audience at the Promotional Marketing Association’s legal conference in Chicago in November. It also meant avoiding links to his site from the Cadbury site to stave off any possible trademark infringement claims, either from the makers of the “Carmen Sandiego” video games or from the “Today Show,” which periodically sends host Matt Lauer into the field under a similar title. (In reality, both Matts found themselves in South Africa at the same time and danced together for a video that made it onto the NBC morning program.) Kotran said the company tried to balance brand control with expressiveness and spontaneity. “It’s important that you not take away from what led you to viral marketing in the first place, which is the freedom this kind of content conveys,” she said. “When companies exert too much control, it becomes old-fashioned marketing.” One important consideration in forward-to-a-friend campaigns is making sure that the e-mails comply with the Federal Trade Commission’s CAN-SPAM requirements. Lisa Stancati, house counsel for ESPN.com, says ESPN. com was careful to scrub the list of submitted friend e-mails it its fall My Circle, My Picks college football promo against its in-house suppression list. The aim was to identify the e-mail messages clearly as ads and the sender as ESPN.com, and to offer an unsubscribe or opt-out mechanism. ESPN.com incorporated all these provisions, even though it’s not clear that “forward to a friend” promotions such as this are governed by CAN-SPAM. Meanwhile, the FTC has announced plans to rule on such viral programs. Finally Rich Taylor, counsel for Turner Entertainment Networks, outlined the legal safety nets erected for a multicity guerrilla promotion around “Parco P.I.,” a reality show on Court TV in mid-2006. Elements of the campaign included billboards from an enraged wife Emily to her unfaithful husband Steven, an online diary, a BMW spray-painted “Hope she was worth it,” and “Lost Dog” fliers with Steven’s picture posted around New York, Los Angeles and other major cities. The most important legal precaution? Making sure the ad agency had adequate insurance to pay for any problems that could have arisen, Taylor said. “When you’re running this kind of campaign, the damages could possibly run into the millions. So you need an agency that can indemnify you for that amount if things go wrong.” This billboard —for a Court TV reality show— For example, he said, those BMWs were rented. looks like revenge, but acts “The agency guaranteed us the spray paint would like buzz marketing. P come off,” Taylor said. “To our knowledge, it did.” l http://ESPN.com http://ESPN.com http://ESPN.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Promo - January 2008 Promo - January 2008 Contents Editor's Note Viral But Virtuous Slap Shot Power Chords Tuning In Auto Play Trekkies Unite Commentary Retail Report: Get In Here! Generating Store Traffic Yankee Candle Shopper Marketing What Seniors Want Cyber Stumping Party Hearty Q & A: Paper Trail Ambush Marketing The Agency Center Resource Center Back-End Foundation Index of Advertisers Promo - January 2008 Promo - January 2008 - Promo - January 2008 (Page Cover1) Promo - January 2008 - Promo - January 2008 (Page Cover2) Promo - January 2008 - Contents (Page 3) Promo - January 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Promo - January 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Promo - January 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Promo - January 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Promo - January 2008 - Viral But Virtuous (Page 8) Promo - January 2008 - Power Chords (Page 9) Promo - January 2008 - Power Chords (Page 10) Promo - January 2008 - Tuning In (Page 11) Promo - January 2008 - Tuning In (Page 12) Promo - January 2008 - Auto Play (Page 13) Promo - January 2008 - Trekkies Unite (Page 14) Promo - January 2008 - Trekkies Unite (Page 15) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 16) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 17) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 18) Promo - January 2008 - Commentary (Page 19) Promo - January 2008 - Retail Report: Get In Here! (Page 20) Promo - January 2008 - Generating Store Traffic (Page 21) Promo - January 2008 - Generating Store Traffic (Page 22) Promo - January 2008 - Yankee Candle (Page 23) Promo - January 2008 - Shopper Marketing (Page 24) Promo - January 2008 - What Seniors Want (Page 25) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 26) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 27) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 28) Promo - January 2008 - Cyber Stumping (Page 29) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 30) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 31) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 32) Promo - January 2008 - Party Hearty (Page 33) Promo - January 2008 - Q & A: Paper Trail (Page 34) Promo - January 2008 - Q & A: Paper Trail (Page 35) Promo - January 2008 - Q & A: Paper Trail (Page 36) Promo - January 2008 - Ambush Marketing (Page 37) Promo - January 2008 - Ambush Marketing (Page 38) Promo - January 2008 - Ambush Marketing (Page 39) Promo - January 2008 - The Agency Center (Page 40) Promo - January 2008 - The Agency Center (Page 41) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 42) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 43) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 44) Promo - January 2008 - Resource Center (Page 45) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 46) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 47) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 48) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 49) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 50) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 51) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 52) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 53) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 54) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 55) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 56) Promo - January 2008 - Back-End Foundation (Page 57) Promo - January 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 58) Promo - January 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover3) Promo - January 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover4)
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