Monday, May 20, 2019

Great State Wheat Flakes Can’t Be Beat

Betty, who has been employed for three years as a copywriter for HK&M, a mid-size publicise agency specializing in consumer packaged goods, has been feverishly working for the past week on a new ad try for Great States stalk flakes, a regional breakfast cereal. The account has been with the agency for several years. Although Charlie, the brand jitney on this cereal, has been pleased with the agencys work over the years, the old positioning, which stressed adjudicate attributes and fun-filled family breakfasts, has become tired and dated.Marketing research shows a high degree of consumer wearoutpeople argon tired of the campaign, sluice annoyed with it, and are furbish up for something fresh. Bettys task was to rejuvenate the brand via repositioning it to take advantage of and tie into the health and well cosmos trends, specifically the interest in eating good-for-you food as well as in physiologic fitness. The brand was to be pitched as an important part of an active, healt hy lifestyle.Betty thought she had come up with the perfect theme draw and quarter Great States wheat flakes will give a great expound to your active day, and she had developed what she believed were some clever scenarios for TV and print ads featuring the product being consumed after workouts in health clubs, following a morning jog, after a snowboarding expedition, to power up before rollerblading, and even period zipping along on a scooter (Look Ma, no hands ). However, upon reviewing her proposals, Charlie said that while the vignettes were on target because health-conscious customers would relate well to them, the slogan was off base.He wanted something much specific and sonorous hitting, and so Charlie developed the theme line, Great State Wheat flakes cant be beat. No new(prenominal) wheat flake offers you more vitamins and minerals and fewer calories. Betty tried to kindly tell Charlie that this was misleading because it implies that Great States brand is healthier t han most, if not all, of the others, whereas actually all wheat flake cereals are parity products they are virtual photocopies of each(prenominal) other in terms of taste, texture, and, most important here, composition and therefore nutritional value.In fact, blind taste tests have shown that between 70 and 80 per cent of consumers cannot identify their favorite brand of wheat flakes and that loyalty levels are low with price incentives consumers will readily switch brands. Charlie, obviously irritated, explained that his tag linewas an honest exaggeration, what the advertising trade termed puffing, and that consumers are expected to see through it. He felt that it offered the point of difference essential to increase brand loyalty. Betty, feeling uneasy, later that day approached her boss Steve, the copy chief at HK&M, asking his counsel.Steve explained that Charlies suggested slogan is what is called an implied superiority claim. Steve explained that much(prenominal) claims are commonly made for commodity brands. They stake out a parity position, which does not claim to be superior to, but only as good as, other brands, while using copy that suggests or implies superiority for the named brand. He cited several current and classical examples, such as Nothing else cleans better, The maximum fluoride protection in any toothpaste, You cant beat the savings, You cant buy a more effective pain reliever, and Nothing is proven to work better or last longer. In effect, these brands are claiming that they are unsurpassed. However, none claims to be truly better than their competitors. Betty, recalling several other such implied superiority claims she had recently seen, realized that it was, indeed, a popular technique. Steve reminded Betty that there is a distinction between deceptive advertising, which nominates false impressions and misleads a consumer acting reasonably, and trade puffing, which is exaggerated praise of the product (e. g. , Almost Home cooki es are the moistest, chewiest, most perfectly baked cookies ever Nestle makes the very best chocolate).Puffery is viewed as acceptable in a society of the superlative. Consumers are assumed to see through the exaggeration or at least apply in a willing suspension of disbelief. He explained to her that whereas deceptive advertising is illegal, the Federal Trade bearing (FTC), which monitors national advertising for accuracy and fairness in claims, views puffery as legitimate. Whats more, Steve concluded somewhat sarcastically, using your line of reasoning, Betty, we shouldnt at all advertise any parity products, since all brand advertising is designed to create a brand distinction in the buyers mind.Advertising is necessary to differentiate yourself from the pack of imitators. And, it helps a small, underdog brand the likes of Great State get a leg up on the big, deep-pocketed companies like our rivals. Betty thought that, in fact, Steves taunting comment might, indeed, have som e merit. In fact, she feared that it might force Great States competitors to improve and differentiate their cereals, thereby benefiting consumers (but harming Great State). Nonetheless, she still felt uneasy.It seemed to her that the implied superiority claim crossed the bound from puffery over to deception. QUESTIONS/EXERCISES 1. Identify the ethical issues facing Betty regarding the nature of the proposed Implied superiority advertising claim. 2. What are the ethical issues Betty encounters with extol to organizational relationships and conflicts? 3. What are the possible decision alternatives Betty could devise, and what are the ethics of each alternative? 4. Which alternative would you advise to Betty and why?

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.