Showing posts with label ASA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ASA. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Sainsbury's: a Fading Christmas Star?


It all started so well.  Sainsbury's launched their 2014 Christmas TV advertisement online on 12 November, and then premiered it on ITV the following day.  As we were first commenting on it, the ad was getting 150,000 hits an hour on YouTube.  At the time of writing (23 November) it has been seen 11.6 million times, an average of a million views per day.  Not as impressive as John Lewis's 17 million viewings, but streets ahead of all other supermarkets.  Even the companion film, the making of our Christmas ad has been seen over 300,000 times.
The Sainsbury's advertisement: image from the Metro

Sainsbury's announced the ad on their Facebook page on 12 November.  The reaction was immediate, with the post clocking up nearly 8,400 'likes' to date, 888 'shares' and 631 comments from fans. Once again, though, comparisons with John Lewis put these figures into perspective:  Monty the Penguin had nearly 150,000 'likes' on Facebook, 156,000 'shares' and nearly 13,000 comments.

So, what is the problem with this campaign?  As we noted at the launch, choosing the subject of war for an advertisement was always going to be risky. In the initial few days the critical reaction, in the mainstream press at least, was favourable, but there was little of the viral link sharing that we had seen around the John Lewis campaign.

Part of the problem may have been popular confusion: people just did not know how to react.  Most agreed that it was an emotional film with an uplifting theme.  But Monty the Penguin was a compelling, emotional narrative with a happy ending.

Within a few days a muted counter-reaction started becoming evident in the press.  The Guardian's Ally Fogg denounced it as "a dangerous and disrespectful masterpiece".  Ellen Stweart in the Metro called it "distasteful at best and exploitative at worst".  Sainsbury's were accused of hypocrisy by the Independent, the Daily Mail and the Metro.  

The Guardian's tweet about Fogg's piece was retweeted 114 times and favourited 69 times.  Stewart's article scored just 15 retweets and 12 favourites.  So although the original Sainsbury's campaign was muted by comparison to John Lewis, the counter-reaction was fairly slow coming also.

More worrying, perhaps, was the fact that by November 16, just 3 days since the ad was first broadcast, the Advertising Standards Authority had received 240 complaints from viewers,  "most citing the cynical use of 'World War One themes/imagery to promote a supermarket' as 'upsetting' and 'disrespectful'" according to Adland.

Sainsbury's itself seemed to lose interest in the possibility of the campaign going viral.  Although it reminded its Facebook fans of the campaign on 18 November, there was comparatively little re-engagement, with a mere 136 likes, 3 shares and 18 comments.  However, their piece on the same platform on that day about the campaign-themed chocolate bars drew 4049 likes and 513 shares.  Another reference to the ad on 19 November, the last to date, scored a dismal 56 shares and 280 likes on Facebook.

Since the launch the official Facebook postings have used the hashtag  #ChristmasIsForSharing just once.  By contrast, a 21 November posting about range of turkeys in store had 93 shares and 3245 likes, 59 comments.  Almost all postings from Sainsbury's on Facebook since 18 November have been food related.

The Sainsbury's campaign appears to have engaged on an emotional level with audiences, but that engagement has not translated itself into any of the sustained interactions with the brand that John Lewis has demonstrated.  Most of us like the advertisement, we think it is worthwhile, but we don't know what to do with it.  By contrast Monty the Penguin makes millions of us laugh and cry: we identify with him, and by extension with John Lewis.  Most importantly we want to tell our friends and family.


Wednesday, 12 November 2014

Littlewoods: #CelebrityWishes


Image from Event Magazine
Celebrities feature in the 2014 TV commercial from Littlewoods.  The ad's theme is one of pantomime, as the characters appear to be acting out Aladdin on stage, complete with celebrities Myleene Klass and Christopher Biggins.

This creative execution is likely to be less controversial than their 2011 offering which received more than 450 complaints.  The ASA, the UK's advertising regulator, refused to investigate, and a lively debate started online about the merits of the campaign.  Most of the comments were negative to Littlewoods. Audience engagement, yes; a social media meme, perhaps not.

Many people watching the ads will be unaware that Littlewoods no longer has a presence on the High Street having started closing stores in 2004-5 and moved to online trading.  It is now in a highly competitive sector, up against slick online-only operations like Amazon as well as the online trading sites of other retailers.

The 2014 advertising, both on broadcast TV and online, links closely to the firm's shopping portals.  The ad itself is full of products and gift ideas.  Klass has a role as a fairy magically transforming gifts (something happening in this year's advertising from M&S which features two fairies). Klass's role in transforming wishes is part of the message to be developed on social media, themed around #LittlewoodsWishes (see below).  Biggins is there for comic relief.

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The TV campaign started on November 7, during the commerial break for Coronation Street, something which should have given Littlewoods around 7.5 million viewers.  At the time of writing the Youtube video had a respectable 350,000 viewings. A punchy soundtrack is delivered by Sam and the Womp's Bom Bom.  Littlewoods don't appear to have any plans to commercialize this in the way that Asda and John Lewis have done, where specially recorded tracks have been made available for download on iTunes and other platforms.  Myleene Klass is a talented classical musician in her own right, but her appearance here has more to do with her role as a 'brand ambassador' and fashion designer for the store.

The pantomime theme is not a random creative choice.  It highlights Littlewoods's deal with the Ambassador Theatre Group where Littlewoods are sponsoring pantomimes in 10 UK locations.  Tied into this is an ambitious 'Christmas Wishes Tour' which will travel to the cities involved (including Birmingham, Liverpool and Glasgow) with a themed combination of entertainment and retailing designed to put Littlewoods back into city centres.   The designers claim that  "This is a great example of experiential and digital out-of-home working hand-in-hand to drive customer engagement with the Littlewoods brand. The immersive nature of the activity, along with on-site technology and prizes, brings the brand to life and into consumer’s hands."

The tour will give Littlewoods the chance to develop a social media campaign around the hashtags #ChristmasWishes and #LittlewoodsWishes.  M&S is doing something similar with its #FollowTheFairies campaign.  Both campaigns are interesting examples of where retail brands are combining broadcast messages with online narratives linking into real-time, face-to-face engagement. Littlewoods is going further than most by using NFC technologies at their events to entice customers into their online stores via their smartphones.  We would expect to see Littlewoods using Klass and Biggins at these events.

Littlewoods have made brief reference to the new campaign on their Facebook pages, where they have approaching 200,000 fans.  Similarly, there has been a half-hearted promotion of #ChristmasWishes and #LittlewoodsWishes on Twitter where they have a more modest 39,000 followers. Myleene Klass is far more active in this medium, and tweets almost constantly to her 450,000 followers, including linking to her work for Littlewoods.  Christopher Biggins is quiet by comparison although this might change as #LittlewoodsWishes is ramped up.

Overall this is turning out to be an imaginative campaign with the various elements carefully thought through.  The mix of online and real-world, shopping and entertainment, should work well.  Currently, though, the focus is very much on engagement equaling transactions, and the social media elements have yet to get going.