Friday, April 24, 2009

Vodafone - Creativity unleashed

Being no cricket fan, I feel IPL is a waste of time. But being a marketeer I also feel its a great platform for marketing brands. Airtel ads have always been my favourite, but this time during IPL matches its Vodafone IPL alerts which have been the centre of attention!

Maybe its bye bye pug for Vodafone as they are now experimenting with new campaigns . Their latest VAS campaigns called IPL Alerts use ZooZoo characters. These ZooZoo characters scream, laugh, have really cute voices and so expressive. They have managed to cut across age groups and break the clutter. These Vodafone ads are reportedly the most watched ads on IPL.
(Source - http://www.afaqs.com/perl/media/story.html?sid=23868)
These ads have certainly matched upto the cuteness of the pug.
Watch my favourite ad here




What I liked about Vodafone or O&M ( O&M has been the creative agency for Vodafone) is that they have managed to develop a signature style , most of their ads can be easily linked to the brand. Also the hero in their campaigns is usually not the product. Initially it was the pug, then came Irfan Khan and now the Zoozoo characters.
Vodafone has also proved that you dont always need a high profile SRK, Big B to endorse your brand. A spikey or chika could also do :) ( Spikey and Chika are names of the pugs used). Vodafone was also the first one to use Irfan Khan as ambassador when the other brands were fighting for Big B or SRK's time. Frankly I think all the other brands managed to add to SRK and Big B's equity with their commercials and not vice versa.

One major trouble that brands fall into in cases where the hero of the commercial is other than the product and the product itself plays a subdued part of the film, is that there is a danger of the hero becoming bigger than the brand itself. Let me explain . If we were to believe urban legend , then Coke created Santa Claus and then Santa become an independent entity, bigger than Coke itself and Coke had to abandon it. In case of Vodafone or Hutch , the erstwhile pug became very strongly associated with it. In fact the sales of pugs started increasing like never before. Nobody thought Hutch or Vodafone or whatever it is, could ever do without the pug. The brand did not matter only the pug did. But Vodafone successfully and very subliminally removed the pug from its campaigns. Initially Vodafone launched the pug and the girl campaigns and the "Pug representing the Customer Care" campaign. Experts and Ad pundits were convinced that the pug was here to stay. But Vodafone proved them wrong when they launched a series of campaigns without the pug and these campaigns again touched the consumers heart.
The ads brought out stories from each our school days childhood etc.
Vodafone has ensured that while its ads are endearing and has a strong message to convey through symbols or memories, the product itself is bigger than any of its ambassadors.

See the fountain pen chota credit ad here.




One more commendable thing about this service provider is the seamless integration through its journey of brands. Originally Maxtouch which became Orange, then Hutch and now Vodafone.
Each of the providers have managed to achieve a crossover between brand awareness, service offerings and commercials through a good execution style. With Orange , the company painted many a towns orange, Hutch coloured them pink and Vodafone washed them with its red colour. When I first saw the logo of Vodafone , I thought consumers are likely to confuse it with Airtel , but Vodafone has strived and managed its brand equity and logo very well and has managed to create a seperate identity for itself.


For now I 'm waiting to watch the next Vodafone Zoozoo commercial.



10 comments:

  1. Excellent post!.. I've always thought Hutch was for class..whereas Airtel for masses...when you look at the ads...Airtel..has more emotion,senti...In some of Hutch ads you hardly hear anywords..silently they communicate..I still remem the ad for night time smses something..and I believe they dont reach everyone..on the otherhand Airtel with it's magical tune and emotions has attracted huge no. of people in the lower strata also..
    The recent ad of Vodafone is cool..

    following u at twitter :)
    @just08in

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  2. Very nice post. Informative too. Hope to see a continuous flow of such interesting articles as well.

    Can you also comment on Aircel's ad featuring Dhoni? It is ZERO on creativity, yet it has driven across the point that Aircel has a lot of cool features to offer.

    I have a doubt. You say that SRK and Big B get the brand equity through these ads. How about the pug? Did it not also get brand equity through the Vodafone ads?

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  3. Will try to write about Aircel.
    Coming to your second point , yes the pug derived equity from these ads, but not to the extent of overpowering the brand itself. Everyone knew pug ads stand for Hutch, it was the primary key, however SRK and BIG B are not primary keys for any brands and therefore more than the brand deriving some value, its the reinforcement of these individuals themselves that happens to the consumers.

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  4. Please write about BSNL also :) seriously want to understand their rationale in advertising.:D
    SRK and BigB..are smaller when compared to the mighty "A.R.Rahman" ..u forgot him..

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  5. Well, they are cute ads and yes, very well pointed out that they cut across age. My mom enjoys it as much as my 5 year old niece. But, thats the cute factor for ya. The reason why sites like http://icanhascheezburger.com/ are alive and kicking.

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  6. Cool post........Indeed there was an emotional connect with the adds on the very first view...
    One more add which very well catches the current scenario is the Havells add.SHOCK LAGA....well we very well connect to that one too.:-)

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  7. very rightly captured the brand

    i would second the first person who has commented hutch/vodafone ads targets a niche market rather than the masses ,it will be intresting to see how O and M takes on the brand in the rural market.

    what airtel or most of the other brands are doing is targeting the masses..while its always a debatable topic weather to have a star endorse a brand or not,it seems to be working for most of the brands ..atleast in a market like india ...

    I personally like the vodafone add.. i think there is something unique about each of their adds..

    overall a very good post..

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  8. Hey great post!

    I really liked the part where you talked about how the pug dog became larger than the 'Vodafone Brand' itself. And from the way things are going and the way people are talking about the ZooZoos, they seem to be traveling the same road again.

    Oh yeah, just found out that these Zoozoos aren't animated at all.
    http://www.afaqs.com/perl/news/story.html?sid=23893

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  9. Hi Bhu,

    GRt post!!!!! I do agree with you with that Voda has been different from rivals and they have created a different place for themselves in the market and ppls minds. All points you mentioned have been very correct and I appreciate your general awareness as well.

    However, we all know that more than 60-70% revenue in fmcg, telecom comes from rural India and on that front I think VOdafone has failed to create an impact because even if after the successfull zoo-zoo campaign if you walk into a town place (leave alone a village) and represent vodafone, teh ppl there will call you a "dog-catcher" company!!!!! Believe me.... thats the image of Vodafone in rural India. The Ads that they understand are of IDEA. Do carefully watch IDEA ads, you will find every IDEA ad wears a rural look somewhere within itself.... The creativity, no-doubt is there; but I think it is not channelized properly.....

    Thanks!!!!

    Though I would again like to appreciate the post!!!!! Gud one

    Cheer!!!!!!!!
    Sumeet Shah

    http://sumeetshah.blogspot.com/

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