In this week鈥檚 roundup, we’re reading about an odd new anti-drug campaign, fast food chains having a (toy) meltdown of sorts and the possible automation of podcast ads
South Dakota paid Minneapolis ad agency Broadhead $449,000 for its new anti-drug campaign, which includes the slogan, 鈥淢eth. We鈥檙e On It.鈥 The campaign features photos of people alongside the motto, and Gov. Kristi L. Noem鈥檚 effort includes a request of more than $1 million to support meth treatment services and a website promising to connect residents to preventive and treatment resources. spoke with Bill Pearce, assistant dean at the University of California at Berkeley鈥檚 Haas School of Business, who said the Noem鈥檚 sincerity was lost by the 鈥減oor strategy and poor execution鈥 of the ad campaign. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 imagine this is what they intended to do; any good marketer would look at this and say: ‘Yeah, let鈥檚 not do that,鈥 鈥 Pearce told The Post. 鈥淚鈥檓 sure South Dakota residents don鈥檛 like being laughed at. That鈥檚 what鈥檚 happening right now.”
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Starting in 2020, Google plans to restrict the way political groups can target its users. Political advertisers will only be able to target people based on their age, gender and postal code location. Advertisers will still be able to use 鈥渃ontextual targeting,鈥 or targeting based on the types of stories people view. Previously, Google offered 鈥渂asic political targeting capabilities鈥 to verified advertisers that allowed them to show ads based on public voter records and general political affiliations. 鈥淭his will align our approach to election ads with long-established practices in media such as TV, radio, and print, and result in election ads being more wildly seen and available for public discussion,鈥 Scott Spencer, Google鈥檚 vice president of product management for Google Ads, .
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The Association of National Advertisers, in partnership with McCann, launched a new campaign to lure Gen Z to the marketing profession. Research from the two organizations found most members of the generation view marketing as 鈥渟imply ads and selling.鈥 The resulting campaign offers a look at the tasks that could fall under a marketer鈥檚 purview鈥攑articularly the more fun jobs, such as 鈥渘aming new cereal flavors鈥 and 鈥渁nalyzing trends in nail polish.鈥 for the campaign includes job openings at Sephora, IBM, Mastercard, Verizon, R/GA and more.
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Children of the 鈥90s clamored for McDonald鈥檚 Happy Meals to secure toys with their food, particularly when fast food chains partnered with brands like Disney, Nintendo and Barbie. But due to concerns over environmental impact, Burger King will cease to provide plastic toys with its kids鈥 meals in Britain and has vowed to melt leftover stock, and toys collected from bins placed within chains, and convert the plastic into playground equipment and tables for trays. McDonald鈥檚 is currently reevaluating the kinds of prizes they give away in Happy Meals and plans to keep a closer eye on its environmental footprint. This shift opens the door to explore digital giveaways and other inventive ways to cross-brand.
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Warby Parker served as an industry disruptor when it launched in 2010, cutting costs by offering lenses directly to consumers without the use of a middleman distributor. Now they鈥檙e planning to do the same with contact lenses. They will be priced slightly below current market rate and sold online or at one of the company鈥檚 鈥渆ye exam suites鈥–add-ons to retail stores. The company faces a serious marketing challenge in that while a good pair of glasses serves as a marketing tool in and of itself–potential customers see those glasses worn on others鈥 faces–contact lenses are basically invisible. Not surprisingly, there are no fashion trends in contact lenses to follow. Yet the company is hoping its lenses will make an impact by virtue of necessity.
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Podcasters might soon sell ads in much the same way they鈥檙e currently being sold on the internet: through automated purchasing and 鈥渄ynamic ad insertion,鈥 or targeted ads aimed at particular listeners. These changes arrive as podcasts are becoming essential to marketing and branding campaigns as a way to directly engage and build relationships with listeners. This marks a departure from current ad strategy in which the hosts read the ads on the recording or they鈥檙e edited into the file afterward. Automated processes better allow podcasters to reap monetary benefits from their back catalog, but many worry that once it becomes easier to insert ads, episodes will become inundated with advertisers and could turn off listeners. One success story is that of Vox Media, which earns eight figures in revenue by leveraging dynamic ad insertion.
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