One of the great
deceptions of our age is something called “the case-study video.”
It seems that every day
about a million 90-240 second blathers of stock footage are produced by
American ad agencies. According to those videos, every business in America is
growing exponentially and gaining new customers like sorority girls gain cold
sores.
Everybody is getting everybody else to tweet, taste, dance, share, laugh and kvell about products and services that in real life elicit no such responses. I’ve seen videos where people go apeshit over a bank made with gingerbread, or who crochet entire billboards in Times’ Square.
Also these videos
involve a lot of throwing paint and jumping in the air and doing a backflip.
Also, spontaneous dancing, usually while wearing a fedora.
In short, according to
these videos, America—and the world—exists in a sort of interactive Elysium
where people can’t wait to get their hands on your product and fricken tweet
about it.
In fact, I suppose with
a nod to David Letterman and also Reality TV, the whole of the world—according
to the case-study video—seems to be engaged in some version of “Stupid Human
Tricks.” People replace their teeth with bottle-openers, cook sausages on the
back of a flatbed truck while racing down a highway, or upload pictures of
themselves to salutary effect.
Years ago a client of
mine was positively gushing. We had run a single ad and, according to him,
sales were up 400%. I pushed him about his data—data that would have made a
great case study. The single ad had upped sales from one unit to four.
Here’s a sample script—what
these videos usually sound like:
VO: Breakfast is changing.
People
are fast-moving, hard-charging.
They
no longer have time for a sit-down meal to start the day.
So
our client “The House of Toast” was suffering.
Same
store sales of toast had decreased by 3% a year for six years running.
Toast
sales were plummeting.
White
toast was down an aggregate 26%.
The
situation was even worse for pumpernickel.
House
of Toast came to us for answers.
We
came up with a multi-channel campaign
designed
to make toast a destination again.
A
series of “twoasts,” targeted tweets to lapsed toast eaters.
A
targeted campaign of stickers on toasters urging people to “toast toast!”
And
wild postings that put toast on everyone’s lips.
And
it worked!
Toast sales did more than just pop up.
Toast sales did more than just pop up.
They
soared.
Rye
up 19%
Whole
wheat up 31%.
And
sourdough up a staggering 49%.
But
our toast renaissance didn’t stop there.
Knowing
our market had changed,
that
both moms and kids wanted a faster toast alternative,
we
brainstormed “Tube Toast.”
Toast
on the go for today’s on the go consumer.
Tube
Toast became the fastest growing entry in the Fast Moving Toasted Goods (FMTG) category.
Redefining
breakfast.
Redefining
toast.
Redefining delicious.
Redefining delicious.
So
let’s do what all of America is doing once again.
LET’S MAKE A TOAST!
LET’S MAKE A TOAST!
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