T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3528.1 | huh??? | GRANPA::JWOOD | | Thu Nov 24 1994 23:23 | 2 |
| I saw it, but I didn't get it...
|
3528.2 | | WMOIS::CONNELL | I will do thee mischief in the wood. | Fri Nov 25 1994 06:56 | 7 |
| To MTV'ish. My Brother-in-law and I were watching the game. When the ad
came on, I said "Oh yeah, the Digital ad." He thought it was a NYNEX
(his company) ad. I said, "No. I've seen it in a meeting. It's
Digital." He was a little surprised at that, but had no other real
reaction.
PJ
|
3528.3 | thumbs down | ALOSLS::HOULIHAN | | Fri Nov 25 1994 10:17 | 22 |
|
I was not impressed with the ad. I agree with .2 -- it was too loud,
too fast, too MTV-like. IMHO, it was the wrong ad to the right audience.
I like the fact that we are entering the TV advertising market, but I
thought the reason was to get us some more name recognition. This ad
did not even get close: who is going to understand "Digital 15, Grim
Reaper 0" except those of us struggling to keep the company alive?
I believe most people who viewed the ad came away from the ad (if they
were able to keep up with it at all) without any greater understanding
of Digital or the products and services we sell.
I would have much preferred a more "gentle" ad which lets people know
who we are and what we do. How about an ad centered around the theme of
"Our name is Digital Equipment Corporation, but our friends call us DEC"
or something to that effect?
Trying to recover from too much turkey and stuffing and pumpkin pie in
Albany, NY..
Tom
|
3528.4 | This ain't no magazine. | DEMON::PILGRM::BAHN | Curiouser and Curiouser ... | Fri Nov 25 1994 11:32 | 22 |
|
I missed the first ad but saw the second one ("Generation Gap").
Except that I find the text "signs" of our ads a bit hard to
read, I liked it ... including the MTV approach.
Much of the advertising in the electronic media revolves around
"guild by association." (Yes, I meant the word that refers to
gold.) The point is not so much telling people what you're up to
as having your name stick in your head. Does anyone really
believe that drinking beer will make you young, beautiful, and
sexy?
We want people in CompUSA and/or Sam's Club to see our nameplate
on our PCs and ask the salespeople about them. In some cases, it
doesn't even matter whether the name is connected with the right
product until point of sale. Well over half the people who I've
asked guess wrong about which battery the Energizer Rabbit is
selling ... but, he's always pictured with the correct ones in
the stores.
Terry
|
3528.5 | It is a START, so what OYOs.. | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I AXPed it, and it is thinking... | Fri Nov 25 1994 11:44 | 14 |
|
So what, big deal, who cares.... we digital are on TV. A media for the
masses. IT IS A START. Repeat after me, it's a start. Cut the whining
about the message. The message is, digital is on TV. Cut the whining
about the tone. The tone is, digital is loud, and making noise. Cut
the whining about the understanding, the understanding is, it is a
start.
Digital is advertising on TV. I say nice job, good move, let us see
more.
A pretty picture, it is.
-Mike Z.
|
3528.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 25 1994 11:50 | 5 |
| I saw both of the ads (thank goodness for VCRs and fast-forward).
I liked them both, but thought the music used in the DVN preview was
better (more attention-getting).
Steve
|
3528.7 | just a thought - or two | DABEAN::REAUME | my 2 vices - GTS and coasters | Fri Nov 25 1994 11:58 | 29 |
|
I liked the "generation gap" idea.
I thought the music was OK for the theme.
I don't think the general public "got" the grim reaper idea. The
contracts we've won isn't a bad way to promote business though.
I'm glad we left the "hell has our number" theme off the Thanksgiving
ad schedule. We don't want to give anyone indigestion trying to figure
that one out.
I've got about three ideas that I think are better than some of the
stuff they came up with. If they use this I want a check sent to my home
address, or a job offer from the advertising company.
Show the Alpha chip itself. The general public can understand this
because Intel has been bombarding them with "flying" Pentium ads.
The you say "Because it's based on the Alpha chip - It's very fast" You
could ad specs that the public could comprehend. Then you do a nice
transition into a shot of an Alpha system (better yet a whole group
of them like on one of our catalogs - 150's on up to 1000's) Then you
zoom into the Digital logo on one of the newer systems and follow
with "And because it's from Digital you can count on it to run your
business".
I like this because it shows the hardware, pushes the speed
advantage, and has logo identity (yes the ad they ran did do that).
FWIW - I don't mind if they keep the Lenny Kravitz music!
-John R-
|
3528.8 | I liked 'em... | NODEX::ADEY | they look down at the ground, missing... | Fri Nov 25 1994 12:40 | 7 |
| I say it's about time we did stuff like this.
My only criticism is that the 'digital' logo is black - not the
standard burgundy color.
Ken....
|
3528.9 | Description | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 25 1994 12:44 | 48 |
| I just watched the ads again - the music was the same as from the DVN.
I don't know why I thought otherwise.
Here's what they looked like...
[First ad, "Grim Reaper"]
Start Lenny Kravitz music. Solarized, multicolor, fade in from white,
shows text as if it was written on Dymo Labelwriter tape (same concept
used in print ads). Each line is a new cut. No voiceover.
SOME OF THE CONTRACTS WE'VE WON LATELY
NAVISTAR
US WEST
AUTOLOGIC
QUAKER OATS
CATERPILLAR INC.
AMERICAN MEDICAL RESPONSE
DUNKIN' DONUTS
CHICAGO STOCK EXCHANGE
BLOCKBUSTER ENTERTAINMENT GROUP
BANK OF BOSTON
FIRST DATA CORP., HEALTH SYSTEMS
STAPLES INC.
UNIVERSITY OF MIAMI
GREATER HARRIS COUNT 911 EMERGENCY NETWORK
ROCKWELL
TODAY'S SCORE
(hold, fade to white)
(brief image of Grim Reaper)
DIGITAL 15, GRIM REAPER 0
Digital logo appears with various effects
[Second ad, "Alpha", starts as before]
THE ALPHA CHIP
WE'RE ON OUR SECOND GENERATION OF 64 BIT CHIPS
MOST COMPETITORS
HAVEN'T COMPLETED THEIR FIRST
(hold)
THERE HASN'T BEEN A GENERATION GAP THIS BIG
SINCE THE 60'S
(image of 60's dress girls go-go dancing)
(Digital logo appears with various effects)
Steve
|
3528.10 | | WMOIS::CONNELL | I will do thee mischief in the wood. | Fri Nov 25 1994 13:05 | 9 |
| I wasn't whining in .2, I was just giving an oppinion. I've been
waiting for years to see DIGITAL ads in places other then trade
journals and PBS. Just not my style. I did see the tape of the ads and
how they came together with the firm that produced them. They will be
attention getters. Maybe they'll help. It's a wait and see thing for
me as I'm not involved in the sales/marketing/customer service end
directly.
PJ
|
3528.11 | Hyperactive Sega ad | LACV01::ROMANO | Don Romano - LACT IM&T | Fri Nov 25 1994 16:27 | 27 |
| Well... sitting in Florida with a whole bunch of people who are
interested in buying PC's (just found that out over dinner) but who
thought Digital makes CD players and watches... the ads did not do a
thing. Who was the audience for the ads? Not corporate America, not
introductory PC buyers... the only idea I have is gearing the ads
towards the "Internet" crowd. It seems like you had to have an "inside
understanding" to get anything out of the ads. Questions I received:
"What do you sell?", "You must be like Sega or Nintendo", "You're in
the music business?"
I kinda liked them only because I have a slight clue about what Digital
provides. :-) I didn't know anything about the contents before seeing
them and I was really surprized but the energy and approach taken. But
I didn't see a message... unless it was sublimintal. :-)
The thing that pointed out the quality of the ads to me was how
Microsoft had an ad following ours and the people in the room said...
"at least we can tell that they make computer software". But, then
again, Microsoft has name recongnition where I am and Digital does not.
Nice try... hope they get better...
Don
P.S. Anyone want to fill in a naive person with the grim reaper
analogy? Is it Digital's state of health being paradied? Didn't
really get it.
|
3528.12 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 25 1994 16:32 | 7 |
| The grim reaper ad pokes fun at the widespread notion that Digital
is about to go out of business. The ads you saw are mainly "image"
ads - to give us an image since we certainly don't have one at present.
If they get people to talk about Digital, they'll have done their
job.
Steve
|
3528.13 | | LACV01::ROMANO | Don Romano - LACT IM&T | Fri Nov 25 1994 16:38 | 5 |
| The image that I got is that we're having a seisure. :-)
Actually... I guess they'll get people talking. I'm not in the
marketing field so I'll leave it up to the "experts". I hope that
Beavis and Butthead want to buy a PC. :-)
|
3528.14 | | CTHU22::M_MORIN | A dead mean with the most toys is still a dead man. | Fri Nov 25 1994 16:49 | 5 |
| Can anyone post the schedule of when these ads will appear on TV?
Thanks,
/Mario
|
3528.15 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Nov 25 1994 20:46 | 4 |
| See recent replies in 3452 as well as "Digital Today" and probably
VTX IR and LiveWire.
Steve
|
3528.16 | So...we can spend money on TV...so...? | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Nov 25 1994 22:24 | 8 |
|
They were ads - no better or no worse than the rest of the junk
Corporate America puts on the tube. Would have preferred we were
selling something though, even if it was saying "buy our PCs". Sorry,
nobody at our house (10 adults, 6 children) had much of a response -
but it was a great football game for three full quarters!
the Greyhawk
|
3528.17 | a thought X2 | DABEAN::REAUME | my 2 vices - GTS and coasters | Fri Nov 25 1994 23:05 | 18 |
|
RE: .. the last few replies.
EXACTLY! The GP (General Puplic) doesn't know who we are, or that
we are striving to stay in business. Maybe, at the least, we will create
some name recognition.
BTW - I saw the ads today during the Nebraska/Oklahoma game on
ABC tv. More sedate and very mainstream, but let's give both approaches
a chance. Time will tell, but I hope we don't stop advertising. We used
to sell on name alone, but that doesn't wash anymore!
Let's show the consumer market the difference between "value" and "cheap"!
-JR-
|
3528.18 | Grim Reaper?? | MLNAD0::ANTONANGELI | The Customer is always left! | Sat Nov 26 1994 06:44 | 7 |
| re.: <<< Note 3528.9 by QUARK::LIONEL "Free advice is worth every cent" >>>
Thank you for posting a description for the ad for those who don't work
in US.
Sorry, what is "Grim Reaper"?
�AA
|
3528.19 | But that's just me... | CAPNET::PJOHNSON | aut disce, aut discede | Sat Nov 26 1994 07:22 | 9 |
| Perhaps a leap of faith, but I assume that the ad firm has plans for
product-related material once this "notice us" stuff has run its
course.
Personally, I think IBM was always very smart to provide timing at
athletic events and I especially liked the "You Make the Call" spots
they provided during football games.
Pete
|
3528.20 | | GRANPA::JWOOD | | Sat Nov 26 1994 09:43 | 8 |
| re.18
The Grim Reaper is a morbid looking death figure who represents the
person or thing that takes life from the living. TGR carries a large
scythe which represents the instrument of death in the reaping life
from us.
I do not know the origin of TGR.
|
3528.21 | nice job! | CSC32::PITT | | Sat Nov 26 1994 22:40 | 17 |
|
I thought the grim reaper ad was a morale booster for employees...gave
me a shot in the arm (ok, a VERY SMALL shot in the arm)....might affect
customers who HAVE heard of us, in the same way. It was catchy and BOLD!
Folks who have never heard of us still have no idea WHO we are or WHAT
those 15 big name companies are buying from us, but at least they know
that we're still putting up a fight...whoEVER we are!
I didn't like the generation gap commercial too much. Can't put my
finger on why not....maybe I was waiting to be pumped up
again....instead I see some fuzzy dancing girls.....that one missed
it. Too abstract.
Was nice to see 'digital' on tv at all though....I always got bummed
out watching IBM and Microsoft ads while dec stock dropped thru the
floor and no one up top seemed to want to break the advertising taboo!
|
3528.22 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Nov 27 1994 15:04 | 6 |
| I showed the ads to my wife - she liked the Grim Reaper ad but said
that the "Generation Gap" ad sent her the wrong message - that Digital
wanted to be identfied with the "airheads of the Woodstock generation".
I see her point.
Steve
|
3528.23 | Where did the grim reaper come from | GIDDAY::THOMPSONS | | Sun Nov 27 1994 17:36 | 5 |
| > I do not know the origin of TGR.
The grim reaper was used in Australian AIDS Compain in 1985, to
great affect.
|
3528.24 | And I didn't have to watch a football game | FUNYET::ANDERSON | Avoid clich�s like the plague | Sun Nov 27 1994 19:26 | 6 |
| I saw the Grim Reaper ad just before 60 Minutes on WHDH Boston (channel 7).
I'm not sure it's a good idea to let folks who have never heard of us know that
we were in trouble. But I must say, the colors and sound sure caught my
attention and was thrilled to see the ad before a highly-rated show.
Paul
|
3528.25 | A few ideas for the next ones? | GOTIT::harley | Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain... | Sun Nov 27 1994 20:47 | 13 |
| I saw a few ads over the holiday, and I think that they all lacked the
following:
- URL for our WWW server(s)
- email address for more info
I also didn't see a phone #, but I don't know if I saw all of the ads,
so I'll leave that out :^)
Once we have our new WWW home page, maybe our next ad(s) can include
it, maybe even showing it in action on one (or more) of our boxes?
/harley
|
3528.26 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Sun Nov 27 1994 21:27 | 6 |
| How are people going to write it down before the ad goes off the
air? No, the ads are not intended to make people pick up the phone
and call us (or e-mail us or whatever) - they're intended to make
people think more positively of Digital.
Steve
|
3528.27 | "Speed" ad was good; rest... so-so | WRKSYS::LORD | Our forgetteries are in fine working order. | Sun Nov 27 1994 21:50 | 23 |
| I saw several ads this weekend. I like the one about "speed" (and
the loud, fast music goes well with it) and the generation gap one is
ok. Grim reaper is too far-fetched for me. And I'm just waiting for
the reaction to the "hell has our phone number" ad, when that one runs.
Generally, I think we need to focus more on what makes us special
and what our products are. Some of the ads seem very defensive to
me, like we've got a chip on our shoulder or we're trying to prove
*something* (it's not clear *what*...) to someone... (Digital 12,
Grim Reaper 0...hahawegotcha.. but no one cares).
On another note, the veryveryvvery best ad I saw all weekend was for
RC cola (the two fishing boats filled with teams of competing fishermen,
one with Pepsi as the bait, the other with Coke; people swimming like
big tunas jumping out of the water, going after the bait, then shown
hanging like dead fish back at the dock; message is that there *is*
another cola choice, you don't have to take the same "bait" all the
time... this description doesn't do the ad justice, but I laughed right
out loud when I saw it and I definately remember the product being
promoted).
Best computer ads... Lotus (for their Notes/Changing Faces ad) and
Microsoft's most recent crop.
|
3528.28 | I guess it's a start. | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Mon Nov 28 1994 07:16 | 24 |
|
I saw the ads too......seemed to me that they were aimed at
our competetion and NOT Customers. May be old fashoned, but
I thought we could do a LOT better......like how bout:
We're DIGITAL. We don't make watches, we don't make CD's
but what we do make, makes sense! Go through a product line
or two, and then share a vision with the 'CUSTOMERS'!!!
And if we use ONE ACRONYM, then fire the person doing the
advertisement. If anyone say the ad about digital 15 grim reaper
0 commercial, it would ONLY Make sense to our direct competetion
in the area....(US west and a couple others were ours from the
Video business) and no one I spoke with knew what the commercials
were about, let alone if they were successful. Personally, I was
insulted, but that's another story.
Come on folks, it's a good start, we are 'thinking TV and advertising'.
now lets start thinking smarter. Seems that the generation that the
ads are targeted for don't know that it's for them, and if it were
they couldn't afford a PC from us anyhow.
p/t
|
3528.29 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Mon Nov 28 1994 08:07 | 14 |
| Yes, this is a start and I'm glad of that. I do believe that the
ad campaign will get more detailed on what it is we are trying to
sell as it progresses. I hope so anyway.
I was more impressed with the new Microsoft adds though.
I agree we need to have our url, phone number and email address
somewhere in the ads. Perhaps in one of the corners throughout each
ad.
BTW - I'm not overly impressed with the new home page. I can't vote
on any of them as they are all basically the same.
Jim C.
|
3528.30 | | GOTIT::harley | Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain... | Mon Nov 28 1994 08:26 | 12 |
| re .26
> How are people going to write it down before the ad goes off the
> air? No, the ads are not intended to make people pick up the phone
> and call us (or e-mail us or whatever) - they're intended to make
> people think more positively of Digital.
>
That's whay I suggested that the URL/email stuff be included in the
next wave of ads.
/harley
|
3528.31 | | MROA::SRINIVASAN | | Mon Nov 28 1994 09:44 | 5 |
| I did not see the Alpha Generation logo in any of the Digital
Advertisements, but the Intel inside logo was shown. Why ?
Jay
|
3528.32 | | LACV01::ROMANO | Don Romano - LACT IM&T | Mon Nov 28 1994 09:48 | 21 |
| Two thoughts...
I think that someone before mentioned doing something about putting up
Alpha vs. Pentium. Something like having the Pentium chip racing along
at xxx mhz... then looking to the rear and seeing a small speck gaining
quickly, then the Alpha chip passing (at xxx+ mhz) and then moving into
a small speck in front of the Pentium... and then the Pentium trying to
speed up and blowing its engine. :-) Add color, sounds, all that fun
stuff.
how about Digital sponsoring an Infomercial? I personally hate the
things but they seem to work. Our points are difficult to make in
15-30 second flashes... maybe 10 minutes+ would help. Stressing our
openess, Internetworking, processing power, world-wide support, etc...
using flashy and interesting demonstrations.
I love the fact that we're doing advertising. I've only seen the
MTV-like ads and am looking forward to seeing follow up ads which will
(hopefully) add some substance/message to what has been shown.
Don
|
3528.33 | Are we serious about Alpha Generation ??? | MROA::SRINIVASAN | | Mon Nov 28 1994 09:52 | 52 |
| Following is the actual message sent to Corporate communications, who
were responsible for Promoting Alpha Generation logo. However the idea
was shot down since the Corp Communication felt that this will upset
Intel Inside folks ( PC Group) and PDP, VAx teams ???!!!
Are we really serious about Alpha Generation Logo ?? Nahh ;-(
------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: MROA::SRINIVASAN "Jay" 14-JUL-1994 12:55:11.33
To : XXXXXXXXXXX
CC: SRINIVASAN
Subj: AlphaGeneration Logo in PBS's Nightly business report
I mentioned the following yesterday, in the AlphaGeneration meeting.
Last week while I was preparing the AlphaGeneration presentations for CpOEM
sales meeting, my nine year old daughter saw me playing with the
AlphaGeneration logo in my PC. On seeing me putting AlphaGeneration logo in
all my slides, she asked me few questions on AlphaGeneration logo etc.
I think she got interested in the logo, since she has been trying to peel
the Intel Inside sticker from my Pentium at home.
I explained to her briefly what the logo is etc etc. Apparently all she got
registered in her mind was this is something like INTEL INSIDE and the
Intel's commercial on TV.
I did not pay much attention to her interest at that time. However this week
I was watching the PBS Nightly Business Report, and when the Digital logo came
up as a sponsor, she asked me why there is no AlphaGeneration logo with the
Digital logo. I was stunned by her comments, particularly since we never
discussed this in any of our meetings.
I mentioned this incident to the AlphaGeneration team yesterday and they were
equally surprised as to why we have not thought about this till now.As you
know PBS's NBR reaches millions of home every day and Digital logo is shown
twice ( In the beginning of the broadcast and at the end of the broadcast ) .
Today we have the PUTTING IMAGINATION TO WORK message. My suggestion is that
we should replace this message with AlphaGeneration message and logo.
XXXXX and XXXX took the action item to make sure this happens before the
next meeting ! Finally we have some way to communicate our message on a daily
basis through mass media without spending any additional money !!! I am sure
this will create lot of awareness/interest in the market place.
You may want to follow up with them to make sure this happens.
Best Regards,
Jay Srinivasan.
|
3528.34 | Missed my calling. | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Mon Nov 28 1994 09:52 | 11 |
|
Heres another idea......what about having a pentium chip strapped
down on a slab of granite, and an alpha being swung back and forth
lowering as it goes, and then slicing into the pentium cracking it
open?
Kinda like the 'Pit and the Pentium'????????
Well, it's better than the grim reaper!
chet
|
3528.35 | keep it up | KOALA::HAMNQVIST | Reorg city | Mon Nov 28 1994 10:31 | 19 |
| I saw one of the ads this weekend and was only modestly impressed. If
this is going to work at all we need to continue to hammer the audience
with Digital ads much past the holiday season. You can only recognize
what you have already seen ...
During the same timewindow I saw several Intel ads, and one IBM ad. I
can't say that they were very good either. But as they have been
broadcasting their's for much longer, they only have to do positive
light subliminal name re-inforcement. I hope that we can be in the same
position as them, with respect to recognition, by Christmas of 95.
Curiously enough, one Digital thing that caught me more this weekend
was seeing the large plastic feature sheet attached to one of our
printers at Lechemere. The other ones just had the boring standard
Lechemere 3x5" product facts glued to the side or to the shelf. It
really made our's stand out from the others. Ship sets of those for all
our consumer models to our retailers if we aren't already doing it.
>Per
|
3528.36 | Use The Roadrunner!! | STRATA::BARBIERI | God cares. | Mon Nov 28 1994 10:36 | 25 |
| I think Digital should have gotten the rights to the
Roadrunner. Zoom down on a cartoon version of various
semiconductor chip lines. Show the Roadrunner and have
him blaze by and then stop and have them give his 'zoological
name' (alpha something). Then show Wyle E Coyote chasing
him. Slow him down and he's 'adversarious rectus' or something
like that.
Basically show the roadrunner running along the chip lines
and totally outrunning the coyote. Show the coyote stop and
be stooped over in exhaustion. Have the roadrunner stop, do
his "beep, beep, beep!" and then run off.
Then say something like, "Digital Alpha...blowing away the
competition!"
I have other Warner Brothers related ideas all centering on the
common theme of the roadrunner representing the alpha chip.
WE need to imprint in the minds of the market an image that is
just seared into their conscioussness and that evokes the ideas
of success, unmatched speed/performance, and a sort of happy
feeling. All of which I think the roadrunner gives.
Tony
|
3528.37 | Glad "we" were on, however... | MEMIT::MMCCALLION | | Mon Nov 28 1994 10:37 | 12 |
| I thought we could have known when the ad would have been on instead of
having to watch over 2 hours of a football game and then miss the
beginning of the ad since there was no voice over. I did not know the Ad
was on untill I looked up and saw flashing words that didn't make any
sense followed by the black and white digital. I would have been
paying attention if I heard "digital", it would have been a first!
What exactly are we selling? I didn't see any product on the screen.
Do folks that are not our customers know what we sell?
Didn't we pay a fortune to change colors from blue to burgandy?
|
3528.38 | "A couple of comments" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Nov 28 1994 10:59 | 20 |
|
re: Previous notes, a couple of points.
The logo is properly used in either a burgundy or black implementation.
The background of the ad lent itself to use of the black
implementation.
We are running 25 to 30 spots per Sunday - with as many as 4 spots per
show.
The music is original music - it is NOT the music used in the DVN
broadcast, which was a prototype implementation.
re: Intel Vs. Alpha.
DIGITAL sells both implementations as systems, and the marketing
positioning reflects that as complementary positioning. However,
without naming names we are clearly positioning Alpha as the
performance leader.
|
3528.39 | | AIMHI::FLATHERS | | Mon Nov 28 1994 11:30 | 10 |
| > EXACTLY! The GP (General Puplic) doesn't know who we are, or that
> we are striving to stay in business. Maybe, at the least, we will
Oh yes they do !!! I've had countless people over the past two
years say to me; "You work for DIGITAL huh ? Is your job safe ? I
heard they're on the skids." ........etc.....etc....
The Grim Reaper ad is a good one.
|
3528.40 | bad | NPSS::NPSS::BADGER | Can DO! | Mon Nov 28 1994 11:36 | 7 |
| I wasn't going to say it, but I am disappointed. I saw an adv sunday
at 9:36PM I didn't know it was a digital adv until I saw the logo in
the end. the music was awful, and I haven't the slightest idea what was
being sold. Kinda like the old Infinity advs, only they kept you
guessing in a pleasent way. the dec adv makes you want to change the
channel to get rid of the noise. Confussion was the word left in my
mind after the adv. and disappointment.
|
3528.41 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Survive outsourcing? We'll manage... | Mon Nov 28 1994 11:39 | 20 |
|
Re .34:
Another idea for an ad -- admittedly a lot more arcane than "The Pit
and the Pentium" (ouch!).
Problem:
4195835 - ((4195835/3145727)*3145727) = ?
Solution:
AlphaGeneration processor: 0
inexpensive handheld calculator: 0
IntelInside (Pentium) processor: 256
Message:
Alpha blazes past Pentium -- and gets the right answers to boot!
|
3528.42 | Or how about... | WHYNOW::NEWMAN | Systems Upgrade Marketing - DTN 293-5360 | Mon Nov 28 1994 11:45 | 6 |
| Or how about
Digital...
Where 4195835 - ((4195835/3145727)*3145727) ALWAYS equals zero!
|
3528.44 | My $0.02 worth... | FROM::FERJULIAN | PK03-1/R11 DTN:223-4887 | Mon Nov 28 1994 11:55 | 26 |
| I too was one of many to see the TV advertisements this weekend. Yes
they were hard hitting and caught my attention. We can all give
our comments on what was good and what was bad but that won't change
a thing.
The most important point is that we are on TV advertising, screaming
that we want to be heard. The adds don't complain that we're being
picked upon but that we have something positive to say.
I too would have changed the way the adds look. My hope is that as
this evolves the adds might become more polished.
One thing I hope to see, in response to (*.35) about Christmas.
In "USA TODAY" one of the cover stories in the financial section is
about the rush to buy PCs for Christmas. They say that 40% of PCs
will be sold during the holiday season. Since we now have a generic
product line in places like "SAMS CLUB", let's show this product in
some of the adds. I hope we don't wait until after the Christmas
rush to begin to advertise these products nationally.
One final note. I would have rather seen the logo at the end as a
fine line that rubber band snaps back to the Digital logo, with a
a voice over explaining, "Snapping Back", rather than a logo out
of control.
-Bruce-
|
3528.45 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Survive outsourcing? We'll manage... | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:02 | 9 |
|
Re .43:
Yes.
Some details in a Boston Globe business section article some time over
the long Thanksgiving weekend. (Sorry I can't be more specific -- the
weekend is one big blur...)
|
3528.46 | I watched the news about it. | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:05 | 14 |
|
Regarding .43.....YES! Intel this weekend just acknowledged a bug in
the pentium chips that causes celestial mechanics problems. JPL is
illuding to be loosing faith in Intel as a result of it. And the
average PC geek running multimedia will never notice. Returns will
be looked at one at a time and only ffolks that need the new chip will
be credited.
The news article stated that if you were measuring the distance to
the sun, you would be less than a foot off......Now multiply that
by the distance across the galaxy and now you begin to understand
why the heavy scientific community was upset!
chet
|
3528.47 | re: .43 YES...we should get some mileage outa it! | TRLIAN::GORDON | | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:09 | 1 |
|
|
3528.48 | not impressed ...yet | NYFS05::CHERYL | Cheryl Hamm, (215)943-5380 | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:15 | 10 |
| I saw two different ads during the movie last night. One was on the
Alpha and the other Internet. I thought they were new ads for the
rock radio station in town. There is a local (Philadelphia) radio
station that has similar types of ads.
Not impressed at all...but hope they work.
cheryl
|
3528.49 | Finally some good advertising... | TALLIS::DARCY | Alpha Migration Tools | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:19 | 18 |
| It was *great* to see Digital ads on TV. It has taken many years
but we've finally did it. Horray!
Re: as one other noter pointed out, at this point in time, our Intel
and Alpha chip based systems complement each other. We're targeting
Intel-based for the client and Alpha for the server.
While not wanting to hurt sales on Pentiums, there is nothing to
prevent us from loudly advertising the speed of the Alpha (1 BIP) -
so fast we're in the Guinness book of records.
I'd still like to see either an "Alpha Generation" sticker on every
Alpha, or perhaps a "Warning: Alpha On Board" sticker with a speedy
looking font (akin to those yellow diamond-shaped "Baby On Board"
signs you see in car windows).
/George
|
3528.50 | Here's my entry | CSC32::HADDOCK | Saddle Rozinante | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:31 | 22 |
| Commercial:
Two "hot rods" setting on race track revinng engines. Drivers looking
at each other and snarling. One hot rod painted PENTIUM, one painted
PowerPC.
Narrator: "We here today to settle once and for all the dispute
between Pentium and PowerPc. Who has the fastest, most powerful
computer chip... etc, etc."
Starting light flashes down and turns green and...
EEEEEEOOOOWWWWWWWWHHOOOOOMMMMM. Something blasts through between
the two cars. Screen fills with smoke. Smoke clears to reveal
the two hot rods setting at the starting line with engines dead.
Flaming tire tracks lead off into the distance. Driver's faces are
covered with smoke and soot. One driver looks to the other and says,
"WHAT was THAT"!
DIGITAL logo and 1-800-DITIGAL flash on the screen and announcer
says, "Ask us. Digital Equipment Corporation".
fred();
|
3528.51 | congrats .50..... | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Mon Nov 28 1994 12:55 | 6 |
|
That was a GREAT one Fred.
Say, how do we go about changing careers?
chet
|
3528.52 | Another 2 cents... | PATE::LEWIS | Michael Lewis | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:00 | 13 |
| FWIW... I saw both the ads and I liked them. My significant other works for a
design agency which specializes in image type advertizing and she thought that
the ads were very well designed, worked well to get peoples attention, and left
you with a question needing an answer: "What was/is that?"
Also, it seems that many of the replies were looking for more info in the ads,
E-mail, URL, phone #'s, products, etc. Doesn't it make more sense to approach
it on a step by step basis: ie image, company profile, then specific products??
I think the general public would get more from a campaign that took a minimalist
approach on each step.
Michael
|
3528.53 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:06 | 11 |
| re: trash Pentium commercials
That's a great idea for somebody like Apple to compare PowerPC to
Pentium, but for us:
x86 business: makes profit for Digital, 23% of revenue.
Alphas business: loses millions for Digital, 19% of revenue.
...perhaps not the wisest thing to do?
kb
|
3528.54 | | POWDML::AJOHNSTON | beannachd | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:07 | 18 |
| When I saw the DVN of the new ads, I thought ... I just don't know.
But, since the Dallas game [and later the OU/Nebraska game] I've talked
to friends and family who saw them and were extremely enthusiastic
about them. They liked the brashness, they liked the humour, they liked
the 'cutting edge' feel for the Digital ads. A couple folks even asked
why the PC ads weren't as slick? [those were the quieter, more refined
ads running during the OU game]
My husband [development manager for a start-up] knew _immediately_ that
the Digital ads were ours because of the Dymo-label format he'd seen in
the press. He thinks the ads are fabulous and will build name
recognition. He also believes that these grabby Digital ads make the
PC ads more impactful. [bzzzz. buzzword detector]
Annie
|
3528.55 | Football-type score? | DELNI::GILBERT | Flog it; I golf | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:24 | 17 |
|
Just a question that I was curious about -
What does the score of
Digital 15
Grim Reaper 0
represent? Is there a significance to the number 15?
Why not 14 or 16? If the ad is trying to play to the football
audience by flashing a score, why not have a more common football
score, like 14 - 0 or 17-0? During football games, most of the ads
have some football content, just as during a hockey game the ads tend
towards hockey. Why not ours?
Mike
|
3528.56 | Talk about a large "CACHE::".... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:29 | 24 |
| re: Trash Pentium commercials.
Nothing at all wrong with Pentium. Something seriously wrong with Intel.
In glass houses department....
About 12 years ago I experienced a similar problem with a VAX 11/780
with an FPU that was going south. It would toss precision of
operations only once in millions and millions of floating point
operations. Not a problem for a spreadsheet. Big problem for
non-linear finite element analysis.
The good news that I long ago learned *NOT* to trust such complex
systems of hardware and software. Every night that I ran a set of
new analysis, I would resubmit one large problem with a known answer.
When that came back different one night, I knew something was up.
Of course, not everyone was so suspicious, so it took me about two
weeks to convince others that there was a problem. (Instead of
trusting the regression test that I was running giving a bad answer,
folks insisted that I must have changed *something* to get the wrong
answer. It was only when a "DIR" spit out a floating point divide
by zero that folks *really* believed me.)
-mr. bill
|
3528.57 | My take. | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:32 | 11 |
| There were fifteen 'wins' in the list of companies doing business
during that ad. That's how I took it.
But the real question, is, according to the late TFSO's, what was
that grim reaper number again?
I know I'm missing the point, but so aren't a lot of folks who don't
understand and aren't told the meaning until 'they' have to go in and
clean up the mess!
chet
|
3528.58 | My vote: 2 thumbs and 2 big toes down | KELVIN::SCHMIDT | Cynical Optimist | Mon Nov 28 1994 13:35 | 21 |
|
[Moved from topic 3306 - sorry, didn't see thin one until later]
Didn't watch football on Thursday (sorry to be unAmerican), but
saw two of the new commercials on Sunday. In a word: dreadful.
No words to draw attention, poor images with brief superimposed
text (apparently companies we're doing business with) that washed
out to a white screen, ending with a two-line "scorecard" of
"mumble 15 (or was it 17?)"
"Grim reaper 0"
and finally a 1-2 second Digital logo materializing out of the fog.
So what was all that supposed to mean?
I didn't get a clue as to what we made, so the commercial must be
aimed at the multitudes who know exactly what Digital does!
Sure did not make me proud to be a Digital citizen. How come we
can make such superb newspaper ads and such awful TV commercials?
Peter
|
3528.59 | Info-mercial | ISLNDS::KAMINSKY | | Mon Nov 28 1994 14:12 | 8 |
| Anyone see Apple's 1/2 hour infomercial on Sunday? I thought it was
pretty good. Basically showed how the whole family got into using it.
At the end they told people how to contact the nearest Apple retailer,
etc. I bet it helps them sell. If people watched it, they learned
what they might actually do with a computer.
Ken
|
3528.60 | Liked the ads! | GRANPA::JBOBB | Janet Bobb dtn:339-5755 | Mon Nov 28 1994 14:26 | 27 |
| Saw several of the ads during football games Sunday (FOX football
coverage). I had seen the ads in the DVN so looked up when I heard the
music.
I liked the ads during the DVN and I like the ads now. At first I was
concerned that we didn't mention company or product names until the end
(didn't see the PC commercial), but then started watching the other
commercials and in most cases they don't give product/company name
until the end of the ad, either.
I assume these ads are for NAME RECOGNITION and will get people talking
about Digital. Now that Digital products are showing up in CompUSA and
other shop ads, having seen the name on TV will help (IMHO). The next
wave of ads can give more product info. But, we need people to
recognize the Digital name first.
Of course, my best measurement for success will be if my Mom or Dad
says - "hey, we saw your commercial on TV" and it really is us and not
a digital watch, digital clock, etc.... :^)
Good work to those responsible and lets keep those ads out there in TV
land!
janetb.
ps - I like the race care ad mentioned in a previous note... maybe you
guys should be in another field!
|
3528.61 | More VOICE | DPDMAI::SODERSTROM | Bring on the Competition | Mon Nov 28 1994 14:47 | 13 |
| The ads were okay, but not great.
How about a voice talking about Digital, maybe along with the music.
The present ads kind of reminded me of the PC ads on nebulous
networks that had no pizazz.
Needs more pizazz with a VOICE.
Let's wake up to the 90's....
|
3528.62 | Easy to forget me-too ads | KOALA::HAMNQVIST | Reorg city | Mon Nov 28 1994 15:04 | 5 |
| By the looks of this string of notes, at least the ads are
controversial .. so perhaps the name will stick in the minds
of the viewers.
>Per
|
3528.63 | "Voiceover as needed" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Nov 28 1994 15:17 | 3 |
| A voiceover will be used as it makes sense in the TV advertisements.
|
3528.64 | 2 thumbs up! | JRFVAX::HODGES | | Mon Nov 28 1994 15:37 | 8 |
| I liked the ads (could have done without the grim reaper reference at
the end!) and I'm *thrilled* that we are *finally* advertising on TV.
But then, I'm probably the target audience because I'm *hooked* on
football on TV!
Maryann
|
3528.65 | ... A shrill shill ... | CPDW::CIUFFINI | God must be a Gemini... | Mon Nov 28 1994 15:57 | 21 |
|
There are two questions ( well, actually three.. :-)) that need
answering:
1. Exactly what was the target audience for our ads?
{ Retail Buyers? Corporate Buyers? Our competition? First time
buyers? IT Managers? }
2. What did we provide in our ads?
{ Entertainment? A message? A safe, secure 'partner' to buy from
or do business with? }
3. Which 'digital' was that? { To answer this question, open a
metropolitan phonebook and search for 'digital' mumble-fritz. }
Personally, if those were my commercials that I did for my 8th grade
audi-visual project, then I'd be very proud!
jc
p.s. Would you want to do business with someone competing against
the grim reaper? ( Other than your doctor? :-))
|
3528.66 | I liked 'em. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Mon Nov 28 1994 16:00 | 17 |
| I like the ads, especially the one about the election in California.
We should have put up our URL in that one for sure.
Next up (here we go again) we need to take that rocking attitude
towards a stock car. Hows this for a commercial?
Normal Ford Thunderbird going 55mph. Says Intel on the side of it.
Suddenly get's blown away by Digitals Alpha Thunderbird doing 180mph
and the camera picks up on the stock car.
"Hows this for a speed comparison?" Lenny music would probably work in
this add too, or it can turn on as soon as the stock car shows up.
While the street car is driving they can have some sort of um-pah-pah
music or something. :^)
Microsofts new deal is cool too. Hey, 83 days until the Daytona 500.
Hope to see us there.
|
3528.67 | I liked what I saw, too! | RAGMOP::FARINA | | Mon Nov 28 1994 17:25 | 25 |
| I caught the end of one when my brother turned on a football game for
the score late Thursday. I don't know which ad it was, because I only
noticed when the logo was appearing on the screen. I was thrilled to
see the Speed ad during Earth2! I liked it. I'm happy to see Digital
ads on television, and I'm pleased that this is strictly a
name-recognition set of ads. We need that first.
I agree with the person who said, "at least everyone is talking about
them." I think that's the point!
Lately, I don't remove my badge from my purse the minute I get to my
car. A short time ago, I did, because everywhere I went, people would
say, "Oh you work at Digital? Are you okay? Are you going to lose
your job?" Even the clerks at Walmart! And even a kid in my nephew's
6th grade class! Now I don't feel so awkward about answering that
question. I say, "Well, we're not done downsizing, but things are
beginning to turn around. I hope I can be part of it!"
I can't wait to see more ads, even it *I* hate them. (BTW, do the
folks in this file realize how young the average MIS manager is
these days?)
Susan
|
3528.68 | | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Mon Nov 28 1994 17:32 | 28 |
| Everyone who keeps asking/saying "What are they selling?" "Where's the phone
number?" "I don't know what the products are!"
These are image ads (not ad's, adds or add's). Their purpose is instill the
name "Digital" in the viewers' minds and attach something to that image.
Namely that "Digital" has recently done business with some well-known companies/
organizations lately, and, contrary to what some people may have heard, we're
alive and competitive. Also, that we have a fast something-or-other - oh yeah -
computer chips and workstations.
re: .65
I can't imagine anyone running to the phone book to look up Digital* to see
what company the ad may have been for. Have you ever done that for any
commercial
you saw on TV?
The ads are meant to be somewhat more subtle than that. The purpose is just to
sort of leave a Digital logo-shaped "footprint" in the viewer's memory and some
positive or valuable association, "fast," with the Alpha ad; "tough," with the
Grim Reaper ad; "hip," with the California Election/Internet ad, etc.
The audience is people who watch the Sunday morning news programs and NFL
football: 1) educated, business people and those who are likely to buy and/or
influence a buying decision, 2) home PC buyers (a much larger group).
Just my opinion,
Bruce
|
3528.69 | Ad suggestion | PFSVAX::MCELWEE | Opponent of Oppression | Tue Nov 29 1994 00:26 | 30 |
| Re: .26-
>How are people going to write it down before the ad goes off the
>air? No, the ads are not intended to make people pick up the phone
>and call us (or e-mail us or whatever) - they're intended to make
>people think more positively of Digital.
How many technoids have the commercial on video tape? If truely
interested they will play it back finding NO phone nor Internet info.
This is bad...
We should be "introducing ourselves" in the network TV forum rather
than pretending to be known. Example: The following text is voice while
images flow through computer evolution from paper tape to CD-ROM..
"Digital largely invented network computing. We are well known in
the commercial market as the leader in mixed vendor interoperation
across diverse protocol and hardware platforms.
Digital introduced and enhanced 32 bit VAX/11 systems to provide
migration options to 16 bit PDP11 customers. This legacy continues with
the highest performance 64 bit technology available- ALPHA. ALPHA runs
Windows NT, OSF-1, and OPENVMS.
Digital provides leading edge hardware and software technology for
PC, server, and mainframe environments. Call us."
Phil
|
3528.70 | Information isn't the purpose | CAPNET::PJOHNSON | aut disce, aut discede | Tue Nov 29 1994 05:24 | 14 |
| This is all personal suspicion, but I think that the purpose of this
wave of ads is simply name recognition. I *hope* there's a plan to
follow with informational ads.
Remember when "Hair" first came out? The first TV ad was a long-haired
guy's face -- no accompanying sound. You looked at that face for 30 or
60 seconds, waiting for him to say something or for some sound at all.
You sat and stared until the silent spot ended. You had no idea what
it was for, but you never forgot it (at least I didn't).
I trust these ad people know what they're doing. Without trust, what
is there?
Pete
|
3528.71 | Some of us don't even trust in GOD no more! | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Tue Nov 29 1994 06:48 | 12 |
| come on Pete, that last statememt was uncalled for!
Many of the folks at Digital have NO MORE CHEEKS to turn!
But as far as the ad being name recognition only, I concur
that it is it's sole purpose. Maybe it'll work, maybe not.
It is a start at advertising that's been missing. But go through
this file and tally the votes for appearence.
I'll give em a shot, but trust em? That's another story.
chet
|
3528.72 | | WRKSYS::BCLARK | Where can I rent a cone-of-silence? | Tue Nov 29 1994 07:26 | 9 |
| The adds during football on Sunday were pretty pathetic in my opinion.
A kindergarten kid could have done a better job. I think our marketing
department oughta fire whoever paid for them!
Why not try something just a little more aggressive, like...
With Alpha, our numbers add up! (unlike Pentium)
get real will ya?!?!
|
3528.73 | | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Tue Nov 29 1994 07:57 | 9 |
| many of the previous replies have said "it's a good start" in one way
or another...
seems to me that Digital has a recent history of many "good starts" ...
only to reverse direction MUCH too soon to accurately measure results.
I hope this isn't another instant replay.
t.
|
3528.74 | Phone # needed ... | MSDOA::BELLAMY | Ain't this boogie a mess? | Tue Nov 29 1994 08:22 | 7 |
| Well, at first I thought ... "Why put in a phone number. Any
semi-alert business person or consumer would know to call
800-555-1212 and ask for Digital's 800 number."
So, I tried it. They gave me 800-354-9000. That's the number used to
log service calls, and it has no menu options that say anything
about sales.
|
3528.75 | | POBOX::RILEY | I *am* the D.J. | Tue Nov 29 1994 09:53 | 14 |
|
It's the same ol story time after time.
Why don't we advertise?
Why don't we advertise?
and then when we do, it's complain complain complain.
Get over it.
Sheesh!
Bob
|
3528.76 | | REMQHI::NICHOLS | | Tue Nov 29 1994 10:28 | 8 |
| Just to add another opinion here: I saw the Generation Gap ad on
'This Week With David Brinkley' and then again during one of the
football games (think it was Fox). I like the GG idea, and I think
the tone of the ad fits in well with a football broadcast, but I'm
not so sure it works for the Sunday morning news audience - even for
members of the audience that watch football games. I agree with
the 'nice to see our name on the tube at least' sentiment voiced in
many preceding replies ('got to be in it to win it', etc.).
|
3528.77 | Lenny Kravitz | BUMP::MMARLAND | | Tue Nov 29 1994 11:04 | 21 |
| My first impression was "Oh great what are we trying to convay now". But after
reading thru hear and hearing all the different opinions. I have changed my
view. First most of us seem to remember the jist of the commercial. Great that's
all the ads are intended to do. Get our attention. After each play we pick
up and additional kernel of info from the ad.
Last night while watching Monday night football I tried to concentrate on the
commercials. Watch one, ok nice message by Nynex, next ad, next ad, next ad,
back to football, couldn't remember one Ad I just saw except the Beer
commercial with Black Sabbath and skiiers.
So next time we hear Lenny Kravitz we'll take notice that's it's a Digital ad.
In 30 sec's you need a quick hit, not all sort of numbers and WWW pages to
clutter the Ad.
Mike
|
3528.78 | Not in same league as Intel Inside | DV780::BROOKS | | Tue Nov 29 1994 11:12 | 28 |
| Not being an Advertisizing expert, I will decline to offer advice
on what the ads should look like. However, I will comment on my
general perceptions.
1) I was hoping for an ad in the same class as the Energizer Bunny,
or Intel Inside. This is probably an unrealistic expectation,
but it is probably safe to say that our ads are not in the same
league.
2) I think that recent ads I have seen for the IBM Aptiva and HP
Printers are better done and more memorable than our ads.
3) Given that the companies in 2) are some of our competitors, I
believe that we could do a lot better in our ad campaign.
4) Given that I am 40 something, maybe I am just not in the target
audience for these ads....to which I would respond that really
good ads, such as the Energizer Bunny and Intel Inside, manage
to appeal to most age groups that use their product.
I will say that I am very encouraged to see our ads running on TV
and I am taking a "wait and see" attitude. I would like to see the
ad campaign run its course before I make my final judgement. At
this point in time, I am a little disappointed and see room for
improvement.
my 1� (rightsized from 2�) :-)
|
3528.79 | I like 'em | PRMS00::HANBURY | It is interesting to note | Tue Nov 29 1994 11:21 | 19 |
| I was stoked by the ads, though I only saw the Grim Reaper and the
Generation Gap. I think it's exactly the type of add we need to run
for the next few months. Sure, we can sneak in a few ads with content
about our PCs - later, once the name recognition thing has been
established. But we don't just sell hardware, we have to get name
recognition for our consulting/systems integration, client/server
products, messaging, etc.
I don't understand why so many people are bitter about Intel and
Pentium PCs and want hot rod ads where we blow them away in drag races.
Understand, they are not our competion - we are. We have been a victim
of our own poor marketing for years. And these adds are the beginning
of the end.
If there must be a competitor, make it HP, Sun, IBM, EDS, Anderson
Consulting.
Marketing: Keep up the good work!
|
3528.80 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Tue Nov 29 1994 11:48 | 12 |
|
Good, bad, or indifferent, the Digital ads are making you talk.
They are also making customers and potential customers talk. Most
are saying "What's up? I thought they were dead?"
These ads are at least bringing our name to the table. Be glad
for that. I think that's the intention.
Please oh advertising guru's just follow thru with more..
mike
|
3528.81 | "Not Lenny Kravitz" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Nov 29 1994 11:52 | 14 |
|
I'd like to be clear that while we are using scintillating rock music,
it is NOT Lenny Kravitz - it is music composed for DIGITAL by a music
house in New York that we see as having more legs and build potential
than any of the other music DDBN reviewed, including the Kravitz "Do
you wanna go my way?", that was explored and ultimately not used.
This campaign has been designed to integrate with the print ads that
have been running for about 5 weeks in newspapers, IT trades, and
business magazines.
Stay tuned for new spots Sunday.
|
3528.82 | legs?... build potential? | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Tue Nov 29 1994 12:07 | 6 |
| re: .81
"music... that we see as having more legs and build potential"
Bill, what's this mean?
Bruce
|
3528.83 | Liked them enough to post to comp.sys.dec on thanksgiving.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Tue Nov 29 1994 12:23 | 4 |
|
What do you know, Terry Shannon (aka Charlie Matco I) liked them.
-mr. bill
|
3528.84 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Survive outsourcing? We'll manage... | Tue Nov 29 1994 12:38 | 43 |
|
Re .82:
I was going to ask the same question.
Then it dawned on me (of course, I may be the slowest person in this
conference) that AKOCOA::TROY has been adding a unique -- and, it would
seem, well informed and familiar -- perspective to advertising discussions
in this conference for some time. So I decided to learn more about this
individual.
$ ELF FIND BILL TROY
Common Name: BILL TROY
Search Surname: TROY, Troy Search Given Name: BILL, WILLIAM,
WILLIAM FIDELIS, Bill, William Generation: III DTN: 223-1018,
244-6219 Telephone: 508-264-6219 Intrnl Mail Addr: AKO2-2/C11
Location: AKO Node: AKOCOA Username: TROY
Org Unit: WW BRAND COMMUNICATIONS, Advertising, Communications
Position: Advertising Strategy Mgr.
Zounds! A *manager* in this conference, keeping us well informed on
advertising plans and issues, gracefully suffering the slings and arrows
of the unwashed, and perhaps even (dare we hope?)... listening!
That is more astounding than all the Digital ads broadcast on commercial
stations this past weekend!
Thank you, Bill, and welcome to the ranks of the few, the proud...
...the electronically communicating managers.
----------------------
Which of course brings me to a much more interesting question:
Are you open to some of the damn good ad ideas that appear periodically
in this forum, and can you do something with them, or are we still
participating in group mental self-abuse?
|
3528.85 | TV Ads are good but can't stand alone | ASABET::EARLY | Why plan a comeback? Just do it! | Tue Nov 29 1994 12:58 | 31 |
| I think the ads so far are great as a first step because they:
o Get your attention
o Are memorable
o Get discussed ... "did you see (the great/that wierd) ad
on TV from Digital? I thought it (was terriffic/sucked)."
o Give a rapid-fire set of information in defined categories,
like:
-- these are some of our customers
-- this is what we can do/projects we won
o Then they give the name of the company and go away
(sort of like ... "time is money, thank you for your time.")
only a lot less conservative fer shure.
I would look for this type of awareness/brand recognition campaign to
continue long enough to have an impact and then begin to get more
specific - either thru TV or print media.
This way the recognition of the name Digital (even if you don't like
the music or can't see the sense in the TV ads) gets linked up with
something positive and very specific in a magazine or newspaper you
read which you CAN relate to and are driven to act on. The TV ads are
not designed, IMHO, to make anybody do anything. Follow on campaigns
should have action as a key goal.
/se
|
3528.86 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Nov 29 1994 13:20 | 6 |
| Re: .85
Have you not been aware of the already-started print ad campaign which supports
the TV ads?
Steve
|
3528.87 | Can't hum the music, though... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Tue Nov 29 1994 13:34 | 21 |
|
Well, my turn.
Having now seen all three ads several things (stuff?) come to mind.
1) They are memorable. Be they bad (the Grim Reaper is strictly an
industry insider's ad) or good (the Generation Gap), they do
reach out and grab you - one way or the other.
2) They are different. My old Marketing Prof in grad school once
said this was the *only* criteria for a successful
name-recognition mass-media campaign.
3) And they are a start.
Go marketing folks, keep the heat on, don't let 'em fold
your cards, and stay the course - you get the drift.
the Greyhawk
|
3528.88 | "A couple of points" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Nov 29 1994 13:44 | 23 |
|
re: .84 - Thanks. Since Advertising is a favorite topic for people, it
seemed natural to see varying points of view. The notes file has pros
and cons, but it is one way people receive information; when there are
points that can be quickly made to clarify what is going on - it is
also very timely. We do see the WWW, DIGITAL Today, Reader's Choice
memos, Livewire as the best places to get reliable information -
we have used extensively to communicate about the campaign (except WWW
until now - stay tuned).
Time is very scarce with a lot of advertising copy reviews etc so I
will drop in and make a comment as I can.
Regarding suggestions for copy. Frankly, we hired a world class agency
DDB Needham for developing copy based on business briefings, competitive
intelligence, recent wins, etc. We can work from ideas and detailed
backup information, but writing copy isn't a DIGITAL forte.
re: .82 What I meant was that the music is malleable - we can lengthen
it, have it build in the sense of more and deeper instrumentation to
serve as an exclamation point, etc.
Bill
|
3528.89 | Is this "our" music? | WRKSYS::SCHUMANN | UHF computers | Tue Nov 29 1994 15:23 | 9 |
| >> re: .82 What I meant was that the music is malleable - we can lengthen
>> it, have it build in the sense of more and deeper instrumentation to
>> serve as an exclamation point, etc.
Are you saying that this music will be used as our musical trademark, a la
"We're the one for you New England -- NYNEX" or similar frequently repeated
jingles?
--RS
|
3528.90 | "No jingles here" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Nov 29 1994 15:58 | 10 |
|
I think we will use the music for Trade shows, sales meetings, etc.
For example, we plan to run the commercials as the lead in for some
DVN's before air time. Such uses mean we might need to remix the
music, lengthen it, etc.
We are NOT talking jingles, but hopefully the music will signal
"here comes DIGITAL" as we proceed for this wave of TV.
|
3528.91 | | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG2-A/R05 pole AA2 | Tue Nov 29 1994 16:10 | 20 |
| I agree with previous responses regarding the success of the ads.
This is the first time I can remember when folks were talking about
Digital doing advertizing that actually gets attention. Even NPR did
an editorial this morning about it -- and that didn't cost Digital a
dime!
Frankly, when it comes to advertizing, I don't care *what* folks say so
long as they are talking about Digital. I am also very impressed that
someone who actually has something to do with the advertizing is
participating in notes and reasonably discussing some of the behind the
scenes decisions and such. Bravo!
All I can add is basically to keep it up (if we can). Even the whining
in notes indicates that the campaign is successful by my measure. If
nothing else, we can probably all agree that whereas before there were
only a few folks asking, "Who the h*** is Digital?" ... now there are
apparently *lots* of folks asking, "Who the h*** is Digital?" I think
that's good ...
Steve
|
3528.92 | | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Tue Nov 29 1994 16:40 | 6 |
| was it Mae West that originated the saying that goes something like:
I don't CARE what people are saying about me... as long as they are
TALKING about me!
|
3528.93 | | ASABET::EARLY | Why plan a comeback? Just do it! | Tue Nov 29 1994 16:44 | 15 |
| RE: .86
Yes I am aware of some of the current print ads that have already
started running. My point was (as someone previously noted) we
need to keep up the TV spots long enough for it to have an impact.
In the past I've seen us run TV ads for a time but we stop
them before they have a chance to make any substantial impact on
recognition or awareness. I'd like to see these ads (and/or follow
ons) run long enough to make a difference in recognition and awareness
and then be sure that there is a matching print campaign (or new TV
campaign) at that time.
That doesn't make the current print campaign a waste. In fact, I think
it's good that we are running those ads now.
|
3528.94 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Nov 29 1994 17:22 | 4 |
| From what Bill Troy has been saying, the TV ads will continue and even
increase.
Steve
|
3528.95 | here today, gone tomorrow? | SCAACT::RESENDE | Mission Critical Attitude! | Tue Nov 29 1994 18:31 | 9 |
| re: .17
> a chance. Time will tell, but I hope we don't stop advertising. We used
Problem is, I understand, that this is a 100 day campaign, starting from the
print ads of a few weeks ago. We're well into what I fear may be a '1-shot'
all or nothing campaign. What we need is SUSTAINED VISIBILITY, not a flash
in the pan.
|
3528.96 | "Integrated marketing for long haul" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Nov 29 1994 19:22 | 10 |
|
IF the issue is television presence in the U.S. there will be a
continued presence including PC marketing. I will not share details
here.
There are a number of product campaigns being launched with DDB needham
very soon. We plan to roll out the Corp Campaign more strongly
internationally also. the 100 day campaign idea is not the plan today
- it has evolved. Stay tuned. Stay positive. Don't dismiss the
integration of print and tv that is happening.
|
3528.97 | Can't be everywhere at once, but... | GEMGRP::GLOSSOP | Low volume == Endangered species | Tue Nov 29 1994 20:11 | 8 |
| I was also a tad disappointed to get my PC World today and find no Digital
ads at all - not even a 1-pager with a phone number. For someone that
sees an ad on TV and decides to look up Digital in a magazine they get -
only to find nothing - this could be a bit of a turn-off... (If Digital
never advertised there, it might be different, but we have in the past -
and now when people might be "reminded" to take a look... FWIW - this
isn't just "idle curiosity" either - I'm actually thinking about potentially
upgrading or buying a new system.)
|
3528.98 | Cool Music, Dude ! | ANGLIN::WOOLLUMS | Russ Woollums | Tue Nov 29 1994 23:25 | 17 |
| Just to echo numerous other replies, These ads are great AS LONG AS WE
FOLLOW UP WITH SOME REAL CONTENT LATER. Good, bad, or indifferent its
refreshing to finally see our logo on mainstream TV. In fact, one ad
that wasn't mentioned was one of the those "Brought to you by ..."
variety that was run after a TV timeout during one of the college
games, (I forget which one). These ads get our name in front of the
audience after the typical bathroom and/or frig visits during timeouts.
As far as the music is concerned, I thought it was outstanding. In
fact, I felt the music may have actually carried the ads. You have to
admit it catches your attention whether you love or hate it.
If we wanted an ice-breaker, these ads fit the bill. To make them truly
successful, we need some good, substantial follow up advertising.
Just my .02,
Russ
|
3528.99 | Advertising 101 | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Wed Nov 30 1994 03:56 | 17 |
| I, too, find it pleasurable that Bill (Troy) is taking the effort
to give us insights into the marketing campaign. I also conjecture that
we could give Bill and his Band of Merry Needham a little more
credit in assuming that they really do know the Basics of
Advertising 101:
- Build Awareness (Hey, that's Digital, I've heard of those guys)
- Build Content (Hey, that's Digital, they make computers)
- Build Followup (Hey, that's Digital, they make damn fine computers,
think i'll buy a couple, now lemme see where did I put that CALL DIGITAL
number..oh yeah that's 8 0 0 C A L L D I G I T A L...(or whatever)
Up to now it seems as if we're (Digital) finally working with someone who
demonstrably has followed Advertising 101...and as such we're fully
focussed on achieving phase 1.
re roelof
|
3528.100 | | NPSS::NPSS::BADGER | Can DO! | Wed Nov 30 1994 08:09 | 3 |
| Remember the WANG adv flood. did them a heep of good.
maybe they failed because of the lack of that crazy music.
|
3528.101 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Wed Nov 30 1994 10:45 | 14 |
| RE: .100
Oh please Ed... Ever the cynic. Wang croaked because it had
1. Lousy management (yea, worse than ours! Fred Wang, a manager??)
2. No product (other than its imaging stuff)
3. No plan to migrate all the Wang word processor customers. No
follow-ons.
4. Spending too much on things like twin towers and country clubs.
mike
|
3528.102 | | NPSS::NPSS::BADGER | Can DO! | Wed Nov 30 1994 12:06 | 15 |
| Oh please Mike... I am disappointed that people who present a
different viewpoint get labeled as cynic, or worse yet whinners here in
this notesfile. It's a great way to discourage discussion.
I agree that I may be harse in my review of the adv on tv. But I
haven't heard anyone yet explain why dec employees buy gateway, have HP
printers and the like. If we can not sell a PC to OURSELVES, why do we
expect anyone else to buy. all the slick name recognition in the world
won't help if we don't have the right product at the right cost.
but maybe we aren't selling PCs. what are we selling?
If we are going to debate the adv, we need information at the beinging.
If this note was only to praise the adv, pardon my replies.
-whinning off
ed
|
3528.103 | An Historical Note | LJSRV2::FEHSKENS | len - reformed architect | Wed Nov 30 1994 12:10 | 10 |
|
Somewhere back there someone mentioned the Energizer Bunny ads. I sat
beside a Duracell battery engineer one time on a flight and we got
talking about the Bunny campaign, and he said Duracell got a free ride
from the early part of that campaign because a lot of people mistakenly
associated the ads with Duracell rather than Energizer. I.e., they
remembered the Bunny but not whose Bunny it was.
len.
|
3528.104 | Wishful thinking | SULACO::JUDICE | May fortune favor the foolish... | Wed Nov 30 1994 12:15 | 6 |
|
re: .103
Hmmm... I get it! Maybe people will see those ads for IBM, KPMG,
Apple and HP and think they're for Digital!
|
3528.105 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Nov 30 1994 12:27 | 7 |
| Digital does have good PC products at good prices. But Digital makes it
very difficult to buy one, as I have recently discovered.
I think the current ad campaign is fine - I'm looking forward to its
expansion and tie-ins to more product-specific advertising.
Steve
|
3528.106 | | BEIRUT::SUNNAA | | Wed Nov 30 1994 12:56 | 25 |
|
Why don't I buy a Digital PC..
Let's see..
I made today my third phonecall to get a PC catalog..yes..the third
phonecall in 6 months..the last was about 6 weeks ago..still waiting..
Today, I was lucky to talk to the same guy I talked to last time, and I
asked him whatever happened to the catalog he was supposed to send
me..? and oh yes..the fax for the new packages that wasn't in the
catalog at the time (they are now I guess)..
I told him that Digital doesn't seem to be too eager to sell PC's, and
if I don't get the information I will be buying a PC from someone else,
as I plan to buy it by christmas.
He told me after I mentioned that I was an employee, that sometimes
they don't send the catalog to the employee..oh well..given that I
didn't call in as an employee and gave my home address and phone
number, I didn't appreciate the preferencial treatment..
So who was wondering why??
Nisreen
|
3528.107 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Nov 30 1994 13:17 | 6 |
| Yes, they do send catalogs to employees. I got one and they keep sending
me new editions. However, once you get into the order process you'll find
that they treat you no different from any other customer - that is to say,
abysmally.
Steve
|
3528.108 | | NPSS::NPSS::BADGER | Can DO! | Wed Nov 30 1994 13:24 | 13 |
| re .106, YES!
there aren't no fancy advs gonna fix that. and in the unlikely even
that those advs do bring people in to buy more watches, we're not
ready.
when I was buying my PC, I looked at DEC first. Tried expressing my
concerns to EPP. bought outside.
we got name recognition inside [I hope, but was it DEC or digital?]
we got desire, yet employees buy outside.
If we can't sell to our employees, if our VPs buy the competition,
why or how can an adv cause a stranger to buy dec?
|
3528.109 | | BEIRUT::SUNNAA | | Wed Nov 30 1994 13:32 | 7 |
|
oh yes..I forgot..the salesperson (from 1-800-dontbother) told me to go
to BJ's..! (at this point I don't know if he wanted me to go there for
the catalog or the PC) who cares..I'll probably end up buying Gateway
anyway..
|
3528.110 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Wed Nov 30 1994 17:16 | 5 |
| We don't sell PCs at BJ's. We sell them at CompUSA and Sam's Club.
Either the salesperson is clueless or you misunderstood him/her.
Mark.
|
3528.111 | | CSEXP2::ANDREWS | I'm the NRA | Fri Dec 02 1994 10:01 | 13 |
| In regard to the logo changing colors.
Last night was the first time I noticed a new blipvert for digitgal
sponsering the nightly business report.
Instead of the static burgandy logo, the new one was a black one, that
did a little dance around the screen, before standing still. There
also was a new voice over, but I didn't pay enough attention to it to
remember what the man said.
If the black is the new color, I like it. I always thought
burgendy/purple stunk.
|
3528.112 | white on burgundy, black on white, white on black all okay | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Fri Dec 02 1994 12:22 | 28 |
| re: .111
� Instead of the static burgandy logo, the new one was a black one, that
� did a little dance around the screen, before standing still.
This sounds like a description of the way the logo's used at the end of each of
the new TV ads.
If the black is the new color, I like it. I always thought
burgendy/purple stunk.
from VTX IR
Date Document
Posted Title/Description ID
14-Jul-94 USING OUR LOGO...BUILDING BRAND EQUITY CS0011
... The updated logo has white
letters on burgundy blocks, not a stencil. The consistent use
of burgundy blocks with white letters will help us to achieve
much more impact and visibility across a wide range of
applications: print, video, slides, product and packaging.
In one- or two-color printing, where burgundy is not
possible, black blocks with white letters can be used.
In black and white treatments only, white blocks on a black
background can be used.
|
3528.113 | From across the pond | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Fri Dec 02 1994 13:42 | 8 |
| Is there a plan for getting the ads onto the various European TV
stations (Eurosport, NBC Super Channel) or into the individual
European countries?
The German version of the "We're making a comeback" print ad looked
very good, I thought.
Steve
|
3528.114 | What color haven't we had yet? | KOALA::HAMNQVIST | Reorg city | Fri Dec 02 1994 14:01 | 4 |
| New logo colors? We haven't run out of envelopes with the blue one yet .. I
guess we'll get a batch of burgundy when we do :-)
>Per
|
3528.115 | Enquiring DECies want to know... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Fri Dec 02 1994 15:04 | 6 |
|
I, too, saw the NBR "new" logo, but the voiceover escaped me.
Anybody have the text, or did the announcer just make it up as he went
along?
the Greyhawk
|
3528.116 | I like speed | AZTECH::LASTOVICA | Is 'tired old clich�' one? | Sun Dec 04 1994 23:37 | 12 |
| this afternoon there was some sort of football game on the TV that I
was staring at. They were tossing the pigskin around when they
interrupted the game. then, this cool ad came on. bunch of people
doing fast stuff (I spend a little time racing motorcycles so I
generally get excited about things like this). 'must be a beer add' I
thought. nope. 'perhaps it is an add for some new red car'. nada.
'hummm, maybe a new honda motorcycle add'. sorry. then the words
start flashing over the screen. for a split second I figured it was
jaia (just another intel add). wrong-o. I'm really impressed! I just
wished the digital logo was on the screen for a little longer.
- norm (new oracle 'hire')
|
3528.117 | YESSSSS! | ESBLAB::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Mon Dec 05 1994 00:27 | 32 |
| OK - I'm converted!
After a dubious start with the whacked-out prancers in the "generation"
ad (a loser, imho), this series has developed content that doesn't leave
the viewer wondering "who the heck is Digital?" I'm truly enthusiastic!
"speed", "internet", and most of all the "hell has our number" ads defy
the viewer to leave the tube and head to the 'fridge...excellent! Heck,
with that signature music, these ads should wake the near-dead to watch!
And the voice-over on the "hell" ad provides real, honest-to-goodness
content that even a layperson can understand. Major progress here!
I only wish we could afford to run them more often.
Am I right that there are at least two versions of the "hell" ad? I
could swear the scenes of destruction and the way our logo comes into
view are different...
One nit I did note: somewhere around halftime in the 1PM (EST) ABC
game (Patriots/Browns) one of those "brought to you by's" came up. We had
our logo on the screen for a few seconds, but all it got from the
announcer was "Digital"; while all of the other sponsors - both before
and after - got at least a full sentence with their corporate "message".
Do we have one of those snappy one-liners that we could pay a few more
$$ to have read by the announcer? I mean, it would have been *great* to
hear a play-by-play guy say something like: "Digital. Hell Has Our Number!"
Anyway...Good stuff. Keep it up. And don't *ever* change that music! ;^)
/dave
|
3528.118 | Me Too! | JRFVAX::HODGES | | Mon Dec 05 1994 09:14 | 18 |
| I too noticed the missing one-liner! I'm a TV sports fanatic so I
heard and saw this "brought to you by digital" at least 3 times over
the week-end and each time the announcer reading the copy didn't seem
to know how to read ours because it wasn't the same as the others! One
guy even made it sound like a question: brought to you by digital?
(you could just hear the - am I missing part of my script? in his
voice!)
I also agree about the music; we were getting dressed to go out and
heard the music - we knew it was a digital ad; I can also recognize the
graphics when I see it in a soundless window (I told you I was a
fanactic! I do watch 2 events at once sometimes! B-) )
I think it is a good campaign and it's being seen by the people who
used to ask why we never advertise 'cause they watch these TV events
also!
Maryann
|
3528.119 | | SOLVIT::TTHOMPSON | | Mon Dec 05 1994 09:31 | 30 |
| Re: .111 & .117
The new voiceover of the sponsorship "ad" for the NBR on
PBS is:
"Digital.
"Doing whatever it takes, to make information work for people...
..and not the other way around."
Good message.
Too bad the signature music isn't running too, to reinforce the visual
of the logo twisting and bending into shape. Ah, but that would probably
be too much for the button-down folks at NBR...
Hummm... another thought just came to mind: How about packaging the
guitar/feedback snarl with the SFX logo into the start-up program
software that would play/display everytime you boot a multi-media PC
or workstation? (Apple Macs play a cute little piece of music
everytime you start one.)
That Kravitz-like (..actually sounds more like Hendrix to me, but I'm
old..) music, and flying logo, would sure wake me up every morning!
What'dya think Bill?
TT.
|
3528.120 | "Voiceover" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Dec 05 1994 09:40 | 16 |
| re: Voiceover
We are limited in what messages and tone we can use with the NBR - this
includes that all the sponsors must use the same person at NBR.
The "Hell Has Our Phone Number" voice actually took a good deal of
tryouts to get it right. He is NOT a well known personality - but we
thought he read very well as a newscaster style voice.
It bears repeating that some of the ads will have voiceovers, some not,
we are not using a spokesperson model for advertising.
We are looking at a line for the 5 second intro piece. Due to how the
media is bought - it varies around the country whether there is a
promotional - "Brought to you by DIGITAL" opportunity.
Bill
|
3528.121 | The medium is the message | LANDO::BAGHDOYAN | | Mon Dec 05 1994 12:13 | 31 |
| re: .117
I too am a convert to the AD PROGRAM. As the basenote writer to the topic "Whatever
it takes," while I still maintain my reservations about the print ads, especially the texts,
I find the TV commercials strategic and refreshing.
I have seen only two TV commercials. The very first one, and another one on Dec. 4. The
first commercial by design, the other by accident (Sorry, but I only watch the Superbowl).
As I was preparing to turn the TV off and leave my house, I was struck as fast as
lightning by that now familiar music (hope this is not wishful thinking) resounding in my ear.
My finger froze on the remote.
HEYYYY.......THAT'S THE DIGITAL COMMERCIAL!!!
I was really exhilarated. What a difference the medium makes!
My most important comments?
1. "Don't touch that music," (as previous noter)
2. Keep them messages flashing....
3. Keep the logo on for one more second, even at the expense of the rest, (a previous noter)
4. The mix of recognizable music and unexpected message is a bombshell. Add some humor, maybe?
Keep it going. It's great!!!
armen
|
3528.122 | At lonnnnnnnggggg last! | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Mon Dec 05 1994 12:16 | 4 |
| Not to be a bore, but these new ads are REAL good. Not just compared to
former Digital ads -- they stand up well to *anything* on the tube.
John
|
3528.125 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Mon Dec 05 1994 17:39 | 10 |
| RE: .123
Hey Bill,
How about providing something other than a "\\nodename\service"
format to connect too? Gateways and Pathworks being what they are, it's
easier to FTP, DECnet copy, or connect via the Web to get the
files.
mike
|
3528.126 | "Take the videos off the network" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Dec 06 1994 08:07 | 17 |
|
Frankly, I am not aware of the service with these 4 ads - I really hope
these are the right 4 ads. Does anyone know who put these on the
network to verify? Also, I am working with the Internet Business Group
to put these ads up on the WWW.
We have worked very hard to get these ads right - bootleg
implementations should not be going on without clear authorization, and
that should be happening through the Advertising department.
Strategically, the ads themselves change and we need to ensure that our
message integration is tight.
Your help is needed to keep the campaign vibrant, clear, and timely.
|
3528.127 | TV Ads. | SWAM2::WANTJE_RA | | Tue Dec 06 1994 13:34 | 7 |
| One comment:
Great, keep it up!
One suggest:
More!
|
3528.128 | | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Tue Dec 06 1994 15:55 | 9 |
| Is there any analysis (typically done) or available as to the effects
on, opinions about or perceptions of the public about the ads?
What did Adweek ad other industry publications have to say?
I'm sure we'd all like to hear what John Q. and Mary Public think about
the ads.
Bruce
|
3528.129 | "Research in progress" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Dec 06 1994 16:12 | 6 |
|
Baseline research on attitudes has been conducted - followup will take
place early in Q3.
BT
|
3528.130 | Radio station mentioned Digital | NOTAPC::RIOPELLE | | Tue Dec 06 1994 16:32 | 9 |
|
While coming in on rte 128 yesterday I was listening to KISS 108,
not my regular station. Anyway one of the announcers asked the other
if they had seen the new digital ads. Being a music person, the music
caught his attention. His next comment was that he was impressed, and
said he felt sure digital was coming back in a big way.
Hey, any chance to get the ads on the radio in some form ?
|
3528.131 | "Radio is in the arsenal" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Dec 06 1994 17:14 | 12 |
|
Radio was explored and certainly is a weapon in the arsenal. It tends
to be used for tactical marketing - for example - getting prospects to
a local seminar, offering a local deal/special price, etc., although
there are examples of image advertising, like the Cigna Healthcare
campaign.
We keep it top of mind - more so than in the past. But right now we are
concentrating in the other media.
BT
|
3528.132 | Good Work | DECWET::BERKUN | | Tue Dec 06 1994 18:36 | 12 |
| I am ecstatic that:
1. We are advertising
2. The ads are HOT (I love 'em)
3. Someone from the Advertising group is reading this note
4. It's an on going campaign, with proper attention being paid to
tuning it.
Congratulations and keep up the good work!
Ken B.
|
3528.133 | Other countries too ? | XSTACY::JDUGGAN | | Wed Dec 07 1994 05:30 | 8 |
| Hi,
Does anyone know if the new ads are to be shown in other
countries besides the USA ? In Ireland, for example,
Microsoft and IBM (Warp) have new ads on the TV, but as
of yet there's no sign of Digital's new campaign,
Jim.
|
3528.134 | Opinions from loyal Digital customers | 46672::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Wed Dec 07 1994 08:03 | 5 |
| We had a brief discussion of the TV ads at the DFW LUG meeting last night.
Most people liked the ads, some didn't, but EVERYONE thought it was great we
were advertising on TV and to keep it up, or do more if possible.
Bob
|
3528.135 | Its now or never! | NEWVAX::MURRAY | HELL! its hot right now. | Thu Dec 08 1994 08:00 | 11 |
|
I like the ads also, did from the beginning!
But, I feel our time is running out with the competition catching up,
like PowerPC. It seems 95 is the year we have to make an impact.
We also need to get our performance numbers way up on NT.
Trend watch. It seems that service is coming back in vogue?
More attention in PC rags, TV program focusing on it (48 hours).
Mike M.
|
3528.136 | "Service Content coming" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Thu Dec 08 1994 09:34 | 5 |
|
Not to worry - a battery of service ads and messages are being
developed.
|
3528.137 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Dec 08 1994 10:24 | 5 |
| I was looking in on the "VAX Forum" on CompuServe last night and one
customer called out the "Hell Has Our Phone Number" ad as his favorite.
The reaction there has been very positive.
Steve
|
3528.138 | From Singapore ... | ZPOVC::GEOFFREY | | Fri Dec 09 1994 00:40 | 13 |
| I've seen a couple of new Digital ads on the Asian Business Review
program and generally on CNN International. The only one that really
stuck in my mind focussed on our PC line, with big letters across the
screen "LPv+" which I thought was totally meaningless. How is someone
supposed to know whether it means a PC model or a food additive? I
like the new model "branding" like Celebris, but I don't see it used
much in our advertising.
Notwithstanding, it was still good to see a Digital ad in the first
place ...
Geoff
|
3528.139 | | 2082::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Dec 09 1994 08:17 | 3 |
| LPv+? We've dropped that line.
Steve
|
3528.140 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Fri Dec 09 1994 13:10 | 5 |
| Not in Singapore (and several other Asia/Pacific countries).
Localization sometimes delays the introduction of new products
overseas.
Mark.
|
3528.141 | AVI clips for non US DECies ??? | GVPROD::WENGER | Max Wenger @GEO | Sat Dec 10 1994 16:26 | 11 |
| Reading so much about the ads and even having US based customers telling us
how good they are, I would love to see one for real. I.e. in AVI format, so
that I can play it back on my PC.
Surely there must DECies with video cards "out there". Anyone willing capture
one and put it on the net ?
million thanks !
Max_who's_frustrated_in_Geneva
|
3528.142 | Let me discuss this with VIIS Marketing/sales | MPGS::CWHITE | Parrot_Trooper | Sat Dec 10 1994 17:55 | 11 |
| re: .141
Actually, that's not such a bad idea at all! And since I work in the
Video Interactive Information Services group, I'll poke around and
see what can be made available on our servers. There may be something
already being planned, but if not, I'll plant the seed. It will be
in MPEG format. So, through Mosaic it should be possible! The tough
part will be to get the videos onto MPEG format. We have a means, but
it takes time. Stay tuned.
chet
|
3528.143 | | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | Cyberian-American | Sun Dec 11 1994 10:16 | 5 |
| If I had to guess, I'd surmise that those who put Richard Seltzer's and
Berthold Langer's award-winning "Glimpse of the Future" video into .AVI
and .MPG format are ALREADY working on this... and planning to make
'em available on our Corporate Web server outside the firewall... :-)
|
3528.144 | .141-.143 see .126 | LNDRFR::ADOERFER | Hi-yo Server, away! | Sun Dec 11 1994 23:39 | 1 |
|
|
3528.145 | What's the exposure/benefit relationship ? | GVPROD::WENGER | Max Wenger @GEO | Mon Dec 12 1994 04:20 | 13 |
| re: .144, understand, but this is a totally US centric view, yet I believe that
we are a global company generating 50% of our revenue outside the US.
There is also a fair chance that some ads now running in the US will never be
seen outside anglo-saxon countries, simply because they can't be x-lated or
because of cultural differences, i.e. the "Grim Reaper". Real shame for those
of us who understand cultural differences but live outside the US.
What's the real exposure of putting up the ads on the net, compared with the
benefits which could be reaped *OUTSIDE THE US* ? In any case, anyone with a
video board (and a seat in the US !) can capture these ads - DECies, customers
and competitors alike.
|
3528.146 | Hell commercial was great! | SWAM1::MERCADO_EL | | Mon Dec 12 1994 16:13 | 17 |
| re: "hell has our number" TV commercial
My husband and I (who are both with Digital) caught this commercial
last night and loved it. The funny thing is that when I had
read about the commercial I didn't think I would like it!
I usually completely ignore commercials-(this time I got up to
do some work in the kitchen) but the music definitely caught my
attention, and the fast images kept my attention, until I realized
that it was "our" commercial. After so many years it is great to
see our name put across in such a "catchy" way. Sorry the folks
outside the U.S. can't see it because it was a morale booster for
us!
-Elizabeth
|
3528.147 | Customer says "Hell" wasn't very hot... | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Mon Dec 12 1994 19:33 | 14 |
| My customer saw "Hell" this weekend (I'm still waiting to see my first
commercial; I guess that's the drawback of not being a diehard football
fan).
His reaction: very negative.
"What does this mean? You're the company from hell?"
"Digital must have a death wish!"
"Non-customers will have no idea what Digital is or what they sell!"
"I want to call your 800 number and ask 'May I speak to the devil?'"
FWIW
-- Russ
|
3528.148 | | STRATA::JOERILEY | Legalize Freedom | Tue Dec 13 1994 01:27 | 12 |
| RE: -1
I've been with DEC for over twenty years and after watching that
hell commercial I had the same reaction as your customer. It's good
that they finally are doing commercials I just wish they had done
something that looked a little more professional rather than something
that looks like a high school kid put it together in his kitchen.
Although it appears that some folks like the TV ads I think the
majority of the people are wondering where DEC's head is. Well if
nothing else at least people will see our name on the airways.
Joe
|
3528.149 | where the sun don't shine... | PLAYER::BROWNL | The InfoHighway has too many side-roads. | Tue Dec 13 1994 05:10 | 7 |
| RE: <<< Note 3528.148 by STRATA::JOERILEY "Legalize Freedom" >>>
� majority of the people are wondering where DEC's head is. Well if
Sometimes, I'm certain that I know where it is... ;^)
Cheers, Laurie.
|
3528.150 | UK Advertising ??? | BHAJI::GMCKEE | | Tue Dec 13 1994 06:27 | 12 |
|
Sorry if this has already been mentioned but...
Why is there NO mention of Digital in any of the UK Lottery
advertising which is on billboards,posters in every town and
most importantly television at least twice an hour every day ???
Surely there is no better example of number crunching anywhere else
in Europe. The only place I have seen anything about Digitals
involvment in the lottery is in Digital Today.
Gordon...
|
3528.151 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | The InfoHighway has too many side-roads. | Tue Dec 13 1994 06:53 | 12 |
| Everyone I know thinks (thought! ;^)) that the kit crunching these
enormous numbers/volumes of data was ICL because ICL provide the POS
kit. WHY AREN'T WE DOING SOMETHING ABOUT THIS?
To explain to our colonial cousins, last week's UK lottery had 61.5
million participants. Within 30 minutes of closing the tills, the total
take and prize money were known. Within 2 hours of the draw, the total
number of winners was known, and the fact that there was one winner of
18 million pounds (about $27m). That takes some serious kit, and the
world should know it's ours, not ICL's.
Laurie.
|
3528.152 | | WELSWS::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Tue Dec 13 1994 08:45 | 2 |
| Why should Camelot give us a boost. We're only a kit supplier -
whereas I think you'll find that ICL is one of the partners in Camelot.
|
3528.153 | Must use the Turbo-sort option! :-) | DPDMAI::HARDMAN | Sucker for what the cowgirls do... | Tue Dec 13 1994 08:49 | 9 |
| re .151 That's pretty interesting. I don't know whose system they use,
but I was amazed while watching the Texas State Lottery drawing the
other night. They had about 15 million participants, yet they were able
to announce, within 5 seconds or so of the last number drawn, that
there had been no winner. Must be one hell of a database engine,
running on one hell of a fast system!
Harry
|
3528.154 | | KLAP::porter | keep reading and no-one gets hurt! | Tue Dec 13 1994 08:55 | 6 |
| > there had been no winner. Must be one hell of a database engine,
> running on one hell of a fast system!
>
Or else they knew the result ahead of time :-)
|
3528.155 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Tue Dec 13 1994 08:58 | 4 |
| It wouldn't be hard to quickly know how many winnding tickets are sold
even with modest computing resources.
ed
|
3528.156 | Look-alike ads... | SULACO::JUDICE | May fortune favor the foolish... | Tue Dec 13 1994 09:40 | 15 |
|
While channel flipping the other night, an ad came on that with
rapidly changing, solarized images of race cars. Emblazened on the
screen were black bands with text at odd angles - looking a lot like
dymo tape - and talking about fast cars... And in the background
was wild guitar music (Lenny Kravitz-like...). Neat Digital Ad I
thought.
Except at the end there was a GM logo, and a dymo-label saying
something about Mr. Goodwrench.
Perhaps AKOCOA::TROY may want to check with DDB Needham about this!
/ljj
|
3528.157 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | The InfoHighway has too many side-roads. | Tue Dec 13 1994 10:58 | 9 |
| RE: <<< Note 3528.152 by WELSWS::HILLN "It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall" >>>
� Why should Camelot give us a boost. We're only a kit supplier -
� whereas I think you'll find that ICL is one of the partners in Camelot.
A fair question, and the answer, of course, is that they shouldn't.
WE SHOULD!
Laurie.
|
3528.158 | Maybe "reknown" but NEVER "reknowned" | LANDO::BAGHDOYAN | | Tue Dec 13 1994 11:54 | 14 |
| Just read the "Hell Has Our Phone Number" add in Digital Today. Next to the last paragraph
reads:
We'll demonstrate in detail a capability for which Digital is justifiably reknowned.
There is no "reknowned" in the English language. At least not yet. If the add wanted
to say the obvious, then the word should have spelled "renowned."
If the idea was to emphasize a new image for Digital which is being propagated, and Digital
is being known again after having been forgotten, then one could have used "reknown."
But "reknowned?"....And in an add? Quick, somebady to the rescue. %7^;-)
armen
|
3528.159 | a diversion | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (DTN 297-5780, MRO3-3/L16) | Tue Dec 13 1994 11:56 | 11 |
| re Note 3528.158 by LANDO::BAGHDOYAN:
> There is no "reknowned" in the English language. At least not yet. If the add wanted
> to say the obvious, then the word should have spelled "renowned."
Well, the DECspell product is being retired, with no
replacement.
Bob
(who may just stop writing notes and sending Email if I have
no spelling checker!)
|
3528.160 | "ad" just got re-nouned | KLAP::porter | keep reading and no-one gets hurt! | Tue Dec 13 1994 12:06 | 25 |
| The word "reknowned" can only be found in ignoramus centric
dictionaries.
--
But seriously - I presume we employ professionals to
write our adverts. I'd say that since words and images
are the tools-in-trade of the advertising professional, then
they damn well ought to know how to use them properly.
A spelling error in an advert is a glaring bug.
--
Btw (tee hee) ..
>
> There is no "reknowned" in the English language. At least not yet. If the add wanted
> to say the obvious, then the word should have spelled "renowned."
>
There is no noun "add" in the English language. At least not yet.
If you wanted to abbreviate "advertisement", then the word should
have been spelled "ad".
But that's ok as long as you're not getting paid a fat fee for these notes.
|
3528.161 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Tue Dec 13 1994 12:37 | 10 |
| The semiconductor group recently ran a full page ad in PC Week and
other places that compared, in huge letters, their new Tulip to 3COM's
Etherlink II, an obsolete networking card from 3COM. In the small
print was a reference to Etherlink III (3COM's current card) as being
a trademark of 3COM. I inquired... sure enuf, the huge letters
should have said "III" instead of "II".
On the other hand, probably only 1% of the intended readers would have
noticed the bug, while maybe 20% noticed the ad. I'd rather have
bugs in ads than no ads at all. kb
|
3528.162 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Dec 13 1994 12:48 | 6 |
| I've been seeing spelling and grammatical errors with increasing frequency
in printed ads. "Get your's today!" shouts a Computer City ad. Another
store advertises "calandars". I agree that a professionally produced ad
printed in a major newspaper should not have invented spelling.
Steve
|
3528.163 | "Draft ad run by mistake" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Dec 13 1994 13:48 | 11 |
| Frankly - the "hell" ad that was in the DIGITAL Today was NOT the
advertisement running in the newspapers and magazines - an older
version was run that had the last two sentences completely changed -
including the infamous 'reknowned'. I am checking into why this happend
but it did not go out externally. We are redoubling our efforts to
ensure that only the final copy is printed in DIGITAL Today.
While we are getting these ads out quickly, we do check these for
spelling and grammar.
|
3528.164 | "Dymo type" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Dec 13 1994 13:50 | 6 |
|
We will check with DDBN. There are a few companies using dymo tape here
and there - we hardly have the exclusive rights to it. And the more
one is looking for it - the more you see it.
|
3528.165 | unfortunately, 3Com makes the error more obvious.. | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Tue Dec 13 1994 13:57 | 14 |
| re .161 (Etherlink II)
Actually, I noticed the comparison to the II immediately; I said to
myself "Well, if you can't beat an Etherlink II with ANYTHING
reasonably modern, you better hang it up.." (I have an etherlink III in
the PC I'm typing this on, so I have some reference point) Actually,
with SMC and 3Com continuously in each other's faces in all the LAN
trade rags, I suspect a *LOT* of people got a pretty bad impression
from that ad.. people have been seeing Etherlink III in (large) print a
lot...
I did not notice the fine print on the bottom..
...tom
|
3528.166 | Keep Writing, Troy | SWAM2::WANTJE_RA | | Tue Dec 13 1994 15:06 | 17 |
| re: .163 TROY
Thank you for your participation, quick responses, and factual
insights. It is real goodness.
OBTW, As I understand it, there are 7 'market areas' in the US. Each
with its own style/approach that works best. With TV addressing all
the markets, you can expect to see ads that you like/dislike. Trying
to generate a nation wide TV ad that appeals to the entire audience
must be very diificult.
So far, I have liked all the ads. Enjoyed anything being on TV even
more.
IMHO
rww
|
3528.167 | | SULACO::JUDICE | May fortune favor the foolish... | Tue Dec 13 1994 15:10 | 10 |
| re: .163
thanks for your response. be advised the goodwrench advertisement
not only uses "dymo typeface", but has exactly the same pacing, music,
er... "look and feel" as our ads.
/ljj
|
3528.168 | It's done all the time | ESBLAB::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Wed Dec 14 1994 00:06 | 10 |
| re: "look alike" ads
There's nothing new to this - I think it falls into the "guerilla
advertising" category. Nissan coyly exploited Lexus ads (like the "ball
bearing" test, "stacked champagne glass" test, etc) for nearly a full
year, much to Toyata's dismay.
If GM's agency actually copied our look & feel, I s'pose we could feel
flattered...
|
3528.169 | | VANGA::KERRELL | DECUS UK - IT User Group of the Year '94 | Wed Dec 14 1994 03:38 | 20 |
| re.150:
> Why is there NO mention of Digital in any of the UK Lottery
> advertising which is on billboards,posters in every town and
> most importantly television at least twice an hour every day ???
Because Digital is a supplier to Camelot, the consortium who run the
lottery, and not a member. We therefore have no influence whatsoever over
their advertising. In fact, Camelot have played down Digital's role,
because one of the members is ICL.
> Surely there is no better example of number crunching anywhere else
> in Europe. The only place I have seen anything about Digitals
> involvment in the lottery is in Digital Today.
I think you'll have to look harder in future Gordon, we've had coverage in
the national press and computer press. If you contact the UK press office,
I'm sure they could tell you exactly what coverage we've achieved todate.
Dave.
|
3528.170 | Camelot is all VAXs and OpenVMS!!! | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Wed Dec 14 1994 05:09 | 14 |
|
Dave, you might have mentioned DIGITAL's wonderfull stealth
marketing plans about many of our products, not just the Camelot part.
In fact, as you are undoubtedly aware, it wouldn't have mattered at
all which consortium had won the contract for the lottery, it would have
had DIGITAL hardware, for the simple reason that the only software to
do the job ONLY runs on VAXs
I still don't understand why "the man in the street," like me,
doesn't know (apart from being a DIGITAL employee at the moment!) that the
the main number crunching etc. is ALL done on DIGITAL VAXs and VMS.
Malcolm.
|
3528.171 | | VANGA::KERRELL | DECUS UK - IT User Group of the Year '94 | Wed Dec 14 1994 06:13 | 7 |
| re.170:
Generally speaking, "the man in the street" does not care which computer does
it. I expect that's why the tabloids have not bothered covering this aspect of
the lottery.
Dave.
|
3528.172 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | The InfoHighway has too many side-roads. | Wed Dec 14 1994 06:46 | 10 |
| So Dave, you're saying that along with all the other newspaper ads
directed at whom, the man in the street?, one trumpeting our part in
the highly-visible, widely-talked-about UK lottery is inappropriate?
In my opinion, it's a wasted opportunity by our talented
stealth-marketeers. Or is it like the Intel farce, a case of the
possibility of upsetting a "partner" being more important than
customers?
Laurie.
|
3528.173 | | VANGA::KERRELL | DECUS UK - IT User Group of the Year '94 | Wed Dec 14 1994 12:52 | 9 |
| re.172:
What I am saying is that most people don't care what computers run the lottery.
Those that do, read the broadsheets, which have published articles featuring the
Digital VAX computers used.
Dave.
|
3528.174 | | MKOTS1::PAPPALARDO | PCBU Mfg/Logistics | Wed Dec 14 1994 17:10 | 11 |
|
This might not be related to the note however, I must say that I've
seen a few of the ads, when they were on I asked different people
when the ad was over, if they got anything out of them...all didn't
have a clue what we were trying to say.
The ads I've seen all were silent, just music...and words...anyone
know if we are going to show the product with a person taking about
it?
|
3528.175 | Maybe May West was right :-) | SUFRNG::REESE_K | tore down, I'm almost level with the ground | Wed Dec 14 1994 20:13 | 15 |
| I was surprised to find myself liking the ads. The music also got
me out of the kitchen and I suffered thru a second football game
(SF killing our Atlanta Falcons) just to see how many times the ads
would run.
The hell ad ran 4 times (I think); there was another ad that ran
once, i.e. race cars, trains etc. things showing speed and there was
mention of the world's fastest microprocessor. I liked the ad showing
the references to speed, but why didn't we mention Alpha when talking
about fastest microprocessor? Or better yet, why didn't we have Alpha
painted on the side of the train and race car?
I must admit the first time I saw the hell ad I held my breath until
I made sure 1-800-DEC-SALE didn't flash across the screen at the end :-)
|
3528.176 | I beg your pardon???? | SUBURB::POWELLM | Nostalgia isn't what it used to be! | Thu Dec 15 1994 04:17 | 11 |
| <<< Note 3528.174 by MKOTS1::PAPPALARDO "PCBU Mfg/Logistics" >>>
>>>The ads I've seen all were silent, just music...and words...anyone
^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>>know if we are going to show the product with a person taking about
>>>it?
Malcolm.
|
3528.177 | | MKOTS1::PAPPALARDO | PCBU Mfg/Logistics | Thu Dec 15 1994 10:16 | 11 |
|
re:76
The ads were not descriptive at all....people who do not work in the
industry really didn't understand who or what Digital is and what
we were trying to show. The ads have no "WOWs" no "Electric"
So, to make it simple...the ads "Stink".....
|
3528.178 | | MKOTS1::PAPPALARDO | PCBU Mfg/Logistics | Thu Dec 15 1994 10:22 | 7 |
|
BTW: I would love to be part of the design team that creates the ads..
As a nobody..Joe-shmooo...bet we can capture the publics
interest..
|
3528.179 | Still think it's a missed opportunity | MASALA::GMCKEE | | Thu Dec 15 1994 12:24 | 13 |
|
re .172:
Dave, this string is talking about TV advertising, the reason I
asked the question was that it seemed (and still seems) a wasted
opportunity for getting DIGITAL mentioned on TV on a VERY regular
basis. What you seem to be saying is that the average man on the
street (like myself) isn't interested so why should the company spend
the money on the advertising. That seems very defeatist to me and
also seems very arrogant.
|
3528.180 | | VANGA::KERRELL | DECUS UK - IT User Group of the Year '94 | Fri Dec 16 1994 03:28 | 19 |
| re.179:
Television advertising is very expensive and primarily used for getting messages
to the masses rather than a more targeted audience. Firstly, we do not have that
kind of money in the UK, and even if we did, we would have to question the
benefits versus our more focused campaigns.
Regarding the "average man in the street" comments. You are not that average
person. You are in the computer industry, which is not the largest industry.
Most people do not work for computer companies, do not have IT jobs in other
industries, and are not responsible for influencing, specifying, or purchasing
our products. Thus they are not interested in either our IT focused messages or
our business focused messages. The only exception to this is the home market
but that's not applicable in the UK yet (no Starion 'til late '95).
So we are not defeatist or arrogant, we have very little money to spend, so we
use it focused and measured ways to gain new business.
Dave.
|
3528.181 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | The InfoHighway has too many side-roads. | Fri Dec 16 1994 05:08 | 23 |
| Dave,
You still seem to be missing the point. Digital UK advertised
extensively in the quality UK press. The ads were pretty good, and most
welcome. Many of those ads will have been read (or ignored) by the man
in the street, but that didn't stop Digital UK running them. The logic
being, I suppose, that enough people in the bizz will read them to make
it worthwhile. Why, therefore, is it not a good idea to run an ad
telling these people that the kit running the lottery isn't ICL, but
Digital?
As far as TV is concerned, I agree that such specific targets are
perhaps best addressed by more cost-effective means, but people in the
bizz watch TV too you know... Ask Intel.
Additionally, there have been several TV programmes about the lottery,
and the technology behind it. Where is Digital? Not mentioned as far as
I can see. Our marketing people should be banging on the door of the TV
companies ensuring we get proper credit. Why, for instance, aren't we
featured on "How do they do that?", in a feature on how quickly the
lottery results are compiled? The BBC is hardly going to come to us.
Laurie.
|
3528.182 | Actually... | WELSWS::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Fri Dec 16 1994 05:21 | 8 |
| "How do they do that?" did feature the lottery.
But they looked at the time it took to read your ticket,
encrypt, transmit, store on shadowed disks on two separate
systems, calculate the checksums etc., transmit and print
the receipt -- all in 5 seconds.
No mention of any manufacturers names though.
|
3528.183 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | The InfoHighway has too many side-roads. | Fri Dec 16 1994 05:28 | 13 |
| RE: <<< Note 3528.182 by WELSWS::HILLN "It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall" >>>
-< Actually... >-
� "How do they do that?" did feature the lottery.
I must've missed that one.
� No mention of any manufacturers names though.
Exactly. Why not? And it's not because it's banned on the Beeb, it
ain't.
Cheers, Laurie.
|
3528.184 | | VANGA::KERRELL | DECUS UK - IT User Group of the Year '94 | Fri Dec 16 1994 07:51 | 16 |
| re.181:
> Why, therefore, is it not a good idea to run an ad telling these people that
> the kit running the lottery isn't ICL, but Digital?
It is a good idea to tell people and UK PR have got us quite a bit of exposure.
I doubt you will see any advertising though because this all controlled by
Corporate and Europe and nolonger the UK.
> Additionally, there have been several TV programmes about the lottery,
> and the technology behind it. Where is Digital?
We can tell the tv companies all about our involvement in the lottery but we
can't make them pass on the information.
Dave.
|
3528.185 | Radio adverts in Italy | MLNAD0::ANTONANGELI | The Customer is always left! | Mon Dec 19 1994 12:56 | 8 |
| Here in Italy Digital started doing radio advert in the state-owned
radio station.
Those adverts are not marvellous, but we started doing something for the
large audience.
Waiting for the TV ads...
�AA
|
3528.186 | It's growing on me! | SPESHR::KEARNS | Invention, the Mother of Necessity | Tue Dec 20 1994 18:40 | 8 |
|
Just wanted to say I like the TV ads. I was critical of past ads where
there was no voiceover or music. I think these will work as long as you
let the jingle sink in over a long period of time.
Regards,
Jim K
|
3528.187 | Still hoping to see the ads, some day | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Fri Dec 30 1994 11:22 | 8 |
| If the marketeers are considering running the ads in Europe (or for
that matter worldwide), they might consider CNN International. It
is available in a decent number of homes via cable, but more usefully,
a healthy percentage of the hotels most frequented by businessmen
offer it on their in-house TV systems. I suspect the ads could reach
a decent number of decision-makers for relatively little money.
Steve
|
3528.188 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Fri Dec 30 1994 12:27 | 3 |
| 11 Digital PC ads will run during this weekend's NCAA Bowl Games.
Mark.
|
3528.189 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sat Dec 31 1994 03:48 | 15 |
| re: .187
Cable TV has been tried in this area, but in general makes a loss
and the companies go bankrupt. However, I would guess that around 1 in
3 of the more well-to-do houses has a satellite dish. We have two fixed
dishes, but others have a steerable dish. CNN is available on what is
probably the second most popular satellite to point a dish at. The most
popular carries only French and Spanish language programmes. The
satellite that carries CNN also carries a fair number of German
channels, so possibly a fair number of German speakers *could* watch
CNN, though whether they do I am not sure.
CNN would be a reasonable choice, and would reach a fair number of
English speaking ex-pats. TF1 would probably be best if you wanted to
reach French speaking decision makers, but the ads would almost
certainly have to be completely redesigned for the French culture.
|
3528.190 | New commercials | CSEXP2::MORICK | | Mon Jan 02 1995 03:26 | 8 |
| I just saw some DIGITAL commercials *actully* showing some of our
hardware - "the PC that fits in a manilla envelope" and a Desktop.
Maybe now people will realize that we make computers and definitely
a step in the right commercial direction. I was impressed!
Bruce
|
3528.191 | | ICS::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Mon Jan 02 1995 15:48 | 5 |
| Caught the last three quarters of the Orange Bowl... Really like the
two Digital ads I saw there! Good stuff!!!
tony
|
3528.192 | | HAAG::HAAG | | Mon Jan 02 1995 16:44 | 1 |
| i would agree. the latest adds are really pretty good. we're learning.
|
3528.193 | | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Sales Support;South FL | Tue Jan 03 1995 08:37 | 7 |
| My wife saw the ads and was very impressed. Her comment was that the
ads were very nicely done, showed off a nice product, and surprised her
because she didn't expect such quality advertising from Digital.
Another very nice job by the PCBU. Innovative work in an excellent setting...
-- Ken Moreau
|
3528.194 | | CSC32::R_JACOBS | Exit stage left, In a hurry even! | Tue Jan 03 1995 10:32 | 5 |
| I liked the new laptop ad's. Finally showing the product instead of an
image. I'm a call screener in Colorado Springs and in the past hour I
have taken 4 calls calls from potential customer asking about the laptop
that can fit into an envalope(sp)
|
3528.195 | | MSDOA::ROSS | Reboot | Tue Jan 03 1995 10:49 | 2 |
| Just to save a phone call, what are we telling customers the lead time
is for shipping the Hi-note laptop?
|
3528.196 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Tue Jan 03 1995 11:09 | 5 |
| re .194 >first ad to show the product
I was real glad to finally see what we sell in on of our ads too.
For a manufacturer, that's the first rule in advertising. Infinity
car ads were interesting and potentially mold-breaking, but didn't
translate into sales. KB
|
3528.197 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Tue Jan 03 1995 12:54 | 4 |
| .195
You mean someone actually wants DELIVERY on a Hi-Note?
:-)
|
3528.198 | USA Today | USPMLO::DESROCHERS | Mine's made outta unobtainium! | Tue Jan 03 1995 14:46 | 10 |
|
From Today's USA Today Sports Section reviewing the weekend
sports on tv...
"AD Notes: A Digital ad, hyping computer services that work
in trying times, has the most creative tagline we've seen
in awhile - "Hell has our number"
Tom
|
3528.199 | attention getting! | FREBRD::POEGEL | Garry Poegel | Tue Jan 03 1995 15:22 | 8 |
|
Everytime the Digital ads come on TV, I crank up the volume
and my son comes running into the room to hear it. He wants
more!
He's 2.
Garry
|
3528.200 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Tue Jan 03 1995 15:26 | 3 |
| Great, but how many 2 year olds have the money to buy an Alpha?
-John
|
3528.201 | Its all in the marketing... | DECLNE::PETERSON | It's a Cluster, but not as we know it | Tue Jan 03 1995 17:05 | 5 |
|
I like it; play lots of ads with hot music and graphics (attention
grabbers) then start showing real ads with what we really sell.
Now we can take those orders and put them in our envelopes.
|
3528.202 | fwiw | KLUSTR::SOUTHY::Gardner | Southie Mudshark | Tue Jan 03 1995 20:36 | 6 |
| re: .195
mid-December, lead times for the HiNote & HiNote Ultra were
25 to 35 days.........
_kelley
|
3528.203 | From the Chief Financial Officer of a 6 month old... | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Wed Jan 04 1995 03:50 | 5 |
|
> Great, but how many 2 year olds have the money to buy an Alpha?
None, but if you were to ask how many seem to have direct on-line access
to Daddy's wallet, well...
|
3528.204 | | WRKSYS::BCLARK | Where can I rent a cone-of-silence? | Wed Jan 04 1995 08:19 | 8 |
| At first, I thought the ads were no good. After seeing them on TV,
coupled with the full page ads in the Boston Globe, I have to admit
that the whole campaign has merit. The campaign strategy seems to
working quite well!
bc
|
3528.205 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Wed Jan 04 1995 09:37 | 5 |
| Our partners are seeing the ads. Here's a postcript to a request for
product information...
"P.S. To the DECies, I'm glad Hell has your phone numbers; maybe they won't call
me so much..."
|
3528.206 | Will we compete with Bud Bowl? | POWDML::KGREENE | | Wed Jan 11 1995 11:55 | 9 |
| I heard on the radio today that this year's Superbowl ads will run $1M
per 30 second spot.
Haven't seen/heard whether Digital has bought advertising time or not.
This year's Superbowl is scheduled for Sunday, January 29th for those
outside of the U.S., and typically has a very large TV audience.
kjg
|
3528.207 | So when is it really? | KAOFS::R_DAVEY | Robin Davey CSC/CTH dtn 772-7220 | Wed Jan 11 1995 12:55 | 8 |
| Re: -1
>This year's Superbowl is scheduled for Sunday, January 29th for those
>outside of the U.S., and typically has a very large TV audience.
And on just what day is held in the U.S.?
Robin
|
3528.208 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 11 1995 14:49 | 3 |
| Superbowl advertising is too expensive for us right now.
Steve
|
3528.209 | What message will our absence send? | PMROAD::KGREENE | | Wed Jan 11 1995 15:12 | 7 |
| RE: .208
That's too bad. The Superbowl usually has a very high viewer rating.
I bet IBM, Compaq, etc have ads.
Kevin
|
3528.210 | choices, not lack of dollars | CPDW::CIUFFINI | God must be a Gemini... | Wed Jan 11 1995 15:16 | 10 |
|
re: -1
Sorry to disagree Steve. It's probably more a choice of where we ( well
not 'we', but 'THEY' ) choose to spend the dollars.
We choose to spend millions reorganizing, moving people from site to
site, more VP's, etc.
jc
|
3528.211 | Expensive, but a bargain | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Wed Jan 11 1995 15:23 | 6 |
| re: last couple
True the Superbowl is very expensive, but from what I understand,
advertising during the Superbowl is one of the cheapest as far as
cost per viewer.
|
3528.212 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Jan 11 1995 16:31 | 6 |
| Maybe we should branch away from sports - I know we do the Sunday talk
shows (I don't watch those either, but I suppose I'm not a typical viewer).
I know, let's advertise during the OJ trial! :-)
Steve
|
3528.213 | You're calling from *where*, Mr. Simpson? | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG2-A/R05 pole AA2 | Wed Jan 11 1995 17:15 | 5 |
| re: .212
So, like, "hell has our phone number" and if OJ fries ...
Steve
|
3528.214 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Wed Jan 11 1995 17:19 | 1 |
| I'd like to know what brand of laptop Judge Ito is using? :-)
|
3528.215 | | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Wed Jan 11 1995 17:21 | 1 |
| IBM
|
3528.216 | Maybe he's got more than one | ANGST::BECK | Paul Beck | Wed Jan 11 1995 17:31 | 3 |
| re .215
I thought I read that it was a Toshiba Satellite.
|
3528.217 | Computer Ads AWOL | SOLVIT::TTHOMPSON | | Wed Jan 11 1995 17:54 | 40 |
| Re: Last few entries about advertising during the `Superbowel'
(..sorry, couldn't resist..)
Bill Troy may wish to share the decision not to participate, but here's
a few interesting tidbits from this week's "Advertising Age."
-- The article did not have a definitive list of every advertiser, but
IBM, Compaq, Microsoft, H-P, et. al. were NOT mentioned..and it was a
good-sized article.
-- 30-second spots are $1M each - a 5.2% increase over 1994
-- 60 "units" are being sold by ABC
-- 2 remained unfilled as of late last week
-- Last year's SB scored a 45.5 audience rating
-- Cars will have a big share of the units allotted:
American Honda - introducing new "Odyssey" minivan
Ford - unveiling redesidned Lincoln Continental
Chrysler - launching Dodge "Stratus" midsize sedan
American Isuzu - kickoff of new upscale "Trooper Limited"
-- Other advertisers mentioned:
McDonalds - already running spots that will run through and
beyond the SB featuring a host of comedians
Anheuser-Busch - Bud Bowl # whatever
Miller - with Jimmy Johnson
Comedy Central - also with Jimmy Johnson (..sheezz..)
Coke (natch)
Club Med
Sony Music Entertainment
Blockbuster Entertainment
Frito-Lay Doritos - with a "Raiders of the Lost
Ark"-inspired halftime show being produced by
Walt Disney Co., and featuring................
..............................................
........Tony Bennett
...must be they wanted to be sure everyone could take a l-o-n-g
potty-break without guilt.. 8^)
Will keep looking for a "final" list of advertisers.
|
3528.218 | | NYAAPS::CORBISHLEY | David Corbishley 323-4376 | Wed Jan 11 1995 17:55 | 3 |
| RE: .216 and .216
The IBM logo is kind of hard to miss, even if it is upside down.
|
3528.219 | One other... | PCBUOA::MORGAN | | Thu Jan 12 1995 08:43 | 5 |
| If I'm not mistaken, the Super Bowl is 7up's only television
advertisement of the year. This has nothing to do with Digital, of
course, but I just thought I'd throw that in here. :-)
Steve
|
3528.220 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Thu Jan 12 1995 08:49 | 17 |
| > <<< Note 3528.219 by PCBUOA::MORGAN >>>
> -< One other... >-
>
> If I'm not mistaken, the Super Bowl is 7up's only television
> advertisement of the year. This has nothing to do with Digital, of
> course, but I just thought I'd throw that in here. :-)
7-Up? The UnCola? Geoffrey Holder "Never had it, never will?"
The little red dot guys cavorting on and off the label?
They're all over the dial, all year long!
SuperBowl advertising is a waste unless you just want to reinforce
a VERY well known name (Coke) or break SIGNIFICANT new ground
(the original Macintosh ad). Everything in between is just
to say you did it. You may get a 45 rating, but who's really watching?
- tom]
|
3528.221 | | PNTAGN::WARRENFELTZR | | Thu Jan 12 1995 10:44 | 7 |
| I would have to agree with those about why we're NOT advertising in the
SB. It seems a likely follow-on to those advertisement during the
regular season and the playoffs.
A new commercial would be extremely timely. What about airing the one
commercial that didn't get to the finals with the PCBU? Mostly male
audience, it should go over pretty well.
|
3528.222 | Are we still running any? | DECC::VOGEL | | Thu Jan 12 1995 12:19 | 6 |
|
Just wondering....did we run any commercials last weekend?
I've been normally seeing 3-4 a weekend, but nothing last weekend.
Ed
|
3528.223 | | WONDER::REILLY | Sean / Alpha Servers DTN:223-4375 | Thu Jan 12 1995 12:57 | 10 |
|
> > If I'm not mistaken, the Super Bowl is 7up's only television
> > advertisement of the year.
>
> They're all over the dial, all year long!
Yup, but there is a company that does or used to do this - Master (the
padlock company).
- Sean
|
3528.224 | | TEKVAX::KOPEC | we're gonna need another Timmy! | Thu Jan 12 1995 14:17 | 4 |
| I haven't watch the OJ stuff much, but I recall seeing a Toshiba
Satellite on Judge Ito's bench via TV last month..
...tom
|
3528.225 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Fri Jan 13 1995 05:40 | 5 |
| it was being entered into evidence, there was blood stain on it.
:-)
ed
|
3528.226 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jan 13 1995 11:24 | 3 |
| > it was being entered into evidence, there was blood stain on it.
If it was a Digital computer, Shapiro would claim it was a burgundy stain.
|
3528.227 | "Tv and Super Bowl" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Fri Jan 13 1995 15:21 | 27 |
|
re: TV placement - we are on hiatus in US for a while on tv - still doing
print ads. This was part of the plan going back 7 months to DDBN's
initial recommendation to DIGITAL and we are executing against the
plan. TV is being beamed to the Far East in January and February
(Star TV, CNN International are 2 networks) to reach the PACRIM, so the
U.S. side is quiet now as it rolls out elsewhere.
Regarding sports - while it may seem we are only doing sports - there
has been significant news programming, and some placement on scifi tv
shows (like Earth 2), and movies. The plan is based on what the target
audiences and when they watch, which did lead us to Sunday tv all day.
Super Bowl is one of those topics where everyone has an opinion on
being there or not. You do end up betting that your 1 or 2 spots are
not key bathroom time, or in the second half of a lousy game. This
does differ from many lower rated games where you can buy 4 or 6 spots
and get the message out a couple of times to the target audience with
more certitude. The agency certainly is not prejudiced against the
Super Bowl - as they are now the Anheuser Busch lead agency and are the
agency behind the Bud Bowl this year. But they did not recommend the
Super Bowl as part of the initial flight of TV and we went with that plan.
No reason Super Bowl would not be in our future media buy plans.
Bill
|
3528.228 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Missed Woodstock -- *twice*! | Fri Jan 13 1995 15:34 | 5 |
|
Re .227:
So when will TV ads show up again?
|
3528.229 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Fri Jan 13 1995 15:42 | 6 |
| *If* we have a bad Q2 earnings report next week, perhaps it's best
not to be doing much advertising anyhow... kind of like how airlines
pull their ads after a crash. (or change them: US Air dropped the
latter part of "On time. On the nose" after Pittsburgh's nose dive)
On the other hand, ads are even more visible after a good earnings
report. kb
|
3528.230 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Fri Jan 13 1995 16:16 | 3 |
| >If we have a bad Q2 earnings report
we just change the ad to "the INVESTORS have our number"
|
3528.231 | Thanks Bill | DECC::VOGEL | | Sat Jan 14 1995 11:59 | 10 |
|
RE 227:
Bill, thank you very much for the update. Others have said this, but
I'd like to too - It sure is nice having someone from upper management
telling is little folks not only what's going on, but why it's going
on!!
Thanks again,
Ed
|
3528.232 | | PCBUOA::ROGICH | AA2T | Sun Jan 15 1995 21:03 | 8 |
| re: .142
Any luck getting MPEG CD roms done off our our ads ?
We need for PC Adv MM offering demo to mgmt. I can take white or.mpg
but not green book at this time.
JRogich
|
3528.233 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Mon Jan 16 1995 03:35 | 3 |
| I'm still seeing the ads on CNN Headline news
ed
|
3528.234 | Sometimes, repetition of an ad is not required. | KRYSTL::MASSEY | A Horse & a Flea and 3 Blind Mice | Mon Jan 16 1995 07:13 | 15 |
| RE: Last few discussing efficacy of advertising during Super Bowl
given the significant cost factor.
There is a certain company who in previous years has had a single
ad on television ALL year. That ad was done during the Super Bowl
and only done ONCE. One ad, once per year. And yet I venture a
guess that a significant number of your REMEMBER the ad and buy the
product:
The ad: a bullet blasting through a lock and the lock still
remains locked.
The company: MasterLock.
.../ken
|
3528.235 | And I'd like to say Thanks, too | MUNDIS::SSHERMAN | Steve Sherman @MFR | Mon Jan 16 1995 08:17 | 21 |
| re .227:
> plan. TV is being beamed to the Far East in January and February
> (Star TV, CNN International are 2 networks) to reach the PACRIM, so the
Does this means the CNN ads will be visible only in the PacRim? If we
ever "do" Europe, I'd be grateful for a schedule.
And Bill, I'd like to echo .231 (I think it was) and many others who have
expressed thanks to you for taking the time to participate in this
notesfile. Not only is it good to hear the reasoning behind a set
of decisions, but it is wonderful for morale to have the feeling of
being listened to by decision-makers (whether we in fact are or not).
Maybe I'm naive, but it seems to me if I were in a position of worldwide
management responsibility, I would want to know what employees are
thinking (at the very least), and I probably would take advantage of
the opportunity to influence that thinking by addressing their concerns.
But maybe I'm naive.
Steve
|
3528.236 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 16 1995 09:30 | 11 |
| Re: .234
Never saw the MasterLock ad, but then, I don't watch football at all.
Re: ads
Today's Boston Globe has the latest of John Carroll's "Ad Hoc" columns in
which he puts down the Digital ads as too annoying. (Several other ad
campaigns also get shots taken at - he likes IBM's latest with "nuns".)
Steve
|
3528.237 | "No problem" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Jan 16 1995 14:19 | 2 |
|
I am glad that my periodic 'drop ins' are useful. Thanks.
|
3528.238 | Saw them in Malaysia | JUMP4::JOY | Perception is reality | Mon Jan 23 1995 12:38 | 9 |
| re: .227 I was just in the PacRim last week and sure enough saw the ads
twice while watching CNN International. I believe I was in Malaysia at
the time. It was funny because I had just been talking to a colleague
earlier that days telling him about the ads and saying how they really
should be shown on CNN International or Star TV...guess I must have
been psychic or something ;*)
Debbie
|
3528.239 | More to come | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Mon Jan 23 1995 12:59 | 18 |
| The whole suite of current TV ads was shown to a packed amphitheatre of
Digital employees and partners in Brussels on Friday as part of the
Work Group Systems and Electronic Commerce symposium.
Very impressive! Can't wait for world-wide rollout.
The speaker made a throw-away comment "this is the new face of Digital, -
this is what you can achieve driven by the harwdare business"
"Damn - we're in the software business........"
He then proceeded to show the preview of the next-in-series with
same music and rapid image collage - this time some in-ya-face
SOFTWARE marketing. Great stuff!
/Chris.
P.S. Guess the software product ?
|
3528.240 | "More on TV" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Jan 23 1995 13:34 | 12 |
| re: TV ads
Glad to hear the Asia broadcasts were seen - they are running into
March.
European TV is being explored as part of a larger rollout of the Brand
campaign in Europe, which will include local language implementations
of the print ads - the full plan is being developed right now.
U.S. TV - we are sharing a NCAA buy with the PC group - the Brand
campaign ads will be on NCAA BBall this weekend Sat and Sun. More
details on Livewire in next day or so.
|
3528.241 | Don't keep us in suspense re "Guess the S/W product", pls!?:-) | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | TeleCommuter on the InfoBahn | Mon Jan 23 1995 13:54 | 4 |
| Give mit ze eenformation!!
:-)
|
3528.242 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jan 23 1995 14:14 | 3 |
| I'd guess LinkWorks.
Steve
|
3528.243 | Digital TV ads... H E L P...!!!!! | ODIXIE::MURDOCK | eltico... | Mon Jan 23 1995 16:16 | 30 |
|
I saw a GREAT...?? Digital Commercial on TV the other night, it goes
like this...
Blank screen
Some big band music... followed by (so fast that I could bearly
read it):
Digital HiNote... best notebook in the industry....
Screen goes blank again... followed by:
And some people though that we made VCR's (??)
Question:
Who in the WORLD designs our TV commercials...!?!?
How about taking 20 seconds to SHOW THE PUBLIC a PICTURE of what me
make....
There is NO WONDER why no one knows what me make....!!!!!
Sigh....
|
3528.244 | How little you understand... | BIGUN::BAKER | where the rubber hits the toad | Mon Jan 23 1995 16:25 | 7 |
| You dont understand,
TV Stations have started charging based on the information content
contained in ads. If we put any information in them they would be far
too expensive for this company to put on.
|
3528.245 | | PCBUOA::LEFEBVRE | PCBU Asia/Pacific Marketing | Tue Jan 24 1995 03:20 | 5 |
| Re: .238:
Yup, I saw ads while in Hong Kong on Star's coverage of the Aussie Open.
Mark.
|
3528.246 | Re .240 | SUBURB::MCDONALDA | Shockwave Rider comfortably numb | Tue Jan 24 1995 04:20 | 14 |
| > European TV is being explored as part of a larger rollout of the Brand
> campaign in Europe, which will include local language implementations
> of the print ads - the full plan is being developed right now.
This should be interesting, seeing as the former MD of Territory A (UK
and Ireland) and now ABU manager for Europe is dead against TV
adverts. The messages we have been receiving is that both he and UK
marketing seem to feel TV ads are expensive, unfocused, "need a
sustained campaign" and are a bad investment. The all time classic
excuse for not advertising on TV is that 'by advertising we may create
an demand for our products which (oh my gosh) we might have trouble
satisfying'.
Angus
|
3528.247 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | An Internaut in CyberSpace | Tue Jan 24 1995 08:03 | 3 |
| I guess LinkWorks. ;^)
Cheers, Laurie_in_Brussels.
|
3528.248 | Speaking of VISIBILITY, Kudos to DIGITAL's Bill Troy! | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | TeleCommuter on the InfoBahn | Tue Jan 24 1995 08:19 | 8 |
| I just finished driving to work, during which drive I was listening to
US National Public Radio. I tuned into a piece about the future of
advertising media, including CD-ROM, multimedia in general, and via the
Internet/Web. And who should be interviewed on the latter topic, and
sounding properly pundit-ish and analytical, but our own Director of
Advertising, Bill Troy. Not only does he make himself available for
interactions in THIS medium, he takes questions from the press! BRAVO.
|
3528.249 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Jan 24 1995 08:26 | 19 |
| > <<< Note 3528.248 by LJSRV2::KALIKOW "TeleCommuter on the InfoBahn" >>>
> -< Speaking of VISIBILITY, Kudos to DIGITAL's Bill Troy! >-
>
> I just finished driving to work, during which drive I was listening to
> US National Public Radio. I tuned into a piece about the future of
> advertising media, including CD-ROM, multimedia in general, and via the
> Internet/Web. And who should be interviewed on the latter topic, and
> sounding properly pundit-ish and analytical, but our own Director of
> Advertising, Bill Troy. Not only does he make himself available for
> interactions in THIS medium, he takes questions from the press! BRAVO.
What you heard was a locally produced (Boston's WBUR) segment.
Such segments sometimes do make it to "US National Public Radio,"
of which WBUR is an apparently important contributing member,
but you ain't heard it there yet.
But Dan, if anybody had asked, I would have sent them to you!
- tom]
|
3528.250 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Tue Jan 24 1995 09:54 | 6 |
| RE: .243 I liked the "VCR" ad and so did my wife.
This just goes to show you that no single advertisement is liked
by every single viewer.
-John
|
3528.251 | Sports? | FUNYET::ANDERSON | A sad, snowless winter | Tue Jan 24 1995 16:09 | 9 |
| re .240
� U.S. TV - we are sharing a NCAA buy with the PC group - the Brand campaign ads
� will be on NCAA BBall this weekend Sat and Sun. More details on Livewire in
� next day or so.
Don't we want to sell things to people who don't watch sports?
Paul
|
3528.252 | It's a different plot | PERFOM::WIBECAN | Acquire a choir | Tue Jan 24 1995 17:32 | 14 |
| >> � U.S. TV - we are sharing a NCAA buy with the PC group - the Brand campaign ads
>> � will be on NCAA BBall this weekend Sat and Sun. More details on Livewire in
>> � next day or so.
>>
>> Don't we want to sell things to people who don't watch sports?
Actually, this is a campaign by the professional sports organizations to force
people to watch sports on TV if they want to see Digital advertisements.
:-)
(I haven't seen any Digital TV ads yet; theoretically they've been on Star Trek
Deep Space Nine, but I haven't noticed the Digital logo whizzing by when I fast
forwarded the tape. :-)
|
3528.253 | " Why sports" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Wed Jan 25 1995 09:56 | 4 |
|
re; Sports buy. Actually our primary sports buy is College sports for
Q3. We buy sports, news, sci fi and movies because the business and IT
decisionmakers watch those programs.
|
3528.254 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Wed Jan 25 1995 11:07 | 11 |
|
There were folks in this and the Marketing notesfile that have
been saying for years that business and IT decisionmakers watch
sci-fi. I'm glad we finally believe it.
Not all people who watch Star Trek are 16 year old boys who still
live in their Mom's basement and have never kissed a girl. (to
paraphrase a particular SNL skit)
mike
|
3528.255 | A serendipitous proof; too bad it wasn't ours | MUNCH::FRANCINI | I'd like to teach the world to ping... | Fri Feb 17 1995 01:17 | 23 |
| This was brought home by an ad run during the premiere episode of Star
Trek:Voyager in the Boston market by D.E. Shaw, Inc -- a financial
services company from NYC. They are expanding into the Boston area and
need a pile of IT people. The ST:V premiere was serendipitous. They
ran a text-only ad, no actors, and (I think) no music. And the only
contact information at the end was an E-mail address. As
their VP in charge of the expansion pointed out in a note to me when I
inquired, "What better way to put our message in front of every
technically savvy person in greater Boston than by buying time in the
premiere episode of a Star Trek series?" They got a huge pile of
responses. Too bad we weren't there as well. Or were we? (See
postscript for why I'm unsure.)
John
p.s. I say "I think" because I watched the episode on a friend's
wall-sized projection TV system direct from the United Paramount
Network satellite feed, and the local ads inserted by the local
affiliate station (WSBK-TV38, Boston) were obviously not present. The
screen was dark during the intervals allowed for local ad insertion.
The national ads took up only about 50% of the available ad time; the
rest were inane promos for equally inane UPN programming.
|
3528.256 | They could of least said what prison he was in.... | PATE::SCHIAVONE | I put the fun in Dysfunctional | Mon Mar 06 1995 12:16 | 6 |
|
Anyone else catch the "new" tv advert on security systems. Bordering
on bad taste IMHO, but whatever works I guess. That one should draw
some attention...
|
3528.257 | But I recorded it anyway... | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Mon Mar 06 1995 12:22 | 9 |
| re .-1
If Inmate xx-yyyyy-zz was really in prison due to our security features
I could buy it, otherwise it seemed to be rather a dumb thing to say.
A bit of nice timing tho, showing it during "Carriers" on the Discovery
Channel.
.mike.
|
3528.258 | | HANNAH::KOVNER | Everything you know is wrong! | Mon Mar 06 1995 12:32 | 7 |
| Re .256 " They could of least said what prison he was in...."
They did - the "mug shot" gave the prison as Leavenworth, Kansas (which I
thought was a military prison)
I noticed the ad because of the music - and then I recognized the style,
and kept watching, because I knew it was one of our ads.
|
3528.259 | he looked familiar | SWAMPD::ZIMMERMANN | NOT your father's VAXcluster | Mon Mar 06 1995 12:46 | 3 |
| I assumed we were refering to Kevin Mitnik (sp?)
Mark
|
3528.260 | Seems to have a wide audiance... | NEWVAX::MZARUDZKI | I AXPed it, and it is thinking... | Mon Mar 06 1995 12:53 | 8 |
|
Also aired on "60 minutes" this past Sunday.
So where are the rest of the ads @?
-Mike Z.
Vacation time for sale... interested?
|
3528.261 | | MAIL2::CRANE | | Mon Mar 06 1995 12:55 | 1 |
| I think Leavenworth is a federal pen but used to be a military pen.
|
3528.262 | "A few details" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Mar 06 1995 13:07 | 20 |
| We are developing several new spots - "security" is the first.
The person is an actor hired for the photograph - the reference to
Leavenworth was done as it is the most known of the Federal prisons.
It is the TV companion to a DIGITAL print ad entitled" "Riding Shotgun
on the Information Highway" that first appeared in the Wall Street
Journal last Thursday, which discusses DIGITAL Firewall Services.
As Information Security is a very hot topic, DIGITAL has very strong
offerings, and no one else is talking about it - it is an excellent
opportunity for DIGITAL to claim some ground. IMHO - we need to do more
of this type of marketing.
We continue to advertise in the U.S., but not at the same intrusive
levels of Q2, in order to build our image overseas.
Bill
|
3528.263 | | NPSS::NPSS::BADGER | Can DO! | Mon Mar 06 1995 13:08 | 4 |
| The adv drew a collective "that's stupid!" from everyone sitting by the
TV where I was. It was during CNN headline news. Followed closely by
a very nice IBM adv. sigh. I know who should be in prison.
|
3528.264 | Music is getting memorable.. | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Mon Mar 06 1995 13:30 | 11 |
|
Saw it also during both 60 Minutes and Carriers. Thought it was
OK, but then I'm very jaded by advertising and figured it was not
a real somebody. Like Pepsi ads.
The music is the big attention getter. Even my three-year-old
now associates the music with Daddy, work, and TV. She dropped her
toys and ran into the living room to watch. Now if we could just
get her a job as head of MIS at a Fortune 500 company....
the Greyhawk
|
3528.265 | | ALLENB::BISSELL | | Mon Mar 06 1995 13:48 | 5 |
| The military prison is on Ft. Leavenworth Kansas. U.S. Army
There is also a very large Federal prison in Leavenworth Kansas.
They are within a few miles of each other.
|
3528.266 | Hey, whatever it takes! | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Mon Mar 06 1995 14:43 | 8 |
| Actually, I heard a rumor that the real intent of this advertising
campaign was to get attention and annoy people. Once we have their
attention, the tone and style of the messages will change to better
explain our company, products, and services. Maybe this was wishful
thinking on someone's part, but I like the idea and it seems to be
working! I know the ads annoy the hell out of me when I see them!
When your 8 and 10 year old kids are laughing at the ads (at them - not
with them), then you know something is wrong.
|
3528.267 | Timing on the one I saw was great. | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Mon Mar 06 1995 15:15 | 4 |
| I also saw the "security" add on CNN, right after they did a story
about "bandits" on the information highway/
Ad was annoying. But it couldn't have followed a better new item though.
|
3528.269 | Is Europe forgotten ? | BIS1::WAUTERS | | Tue Mar 07 1995 07:55 | 8 |
| Side question : still no news about TV Advert in Europe ?
Living in Belgium ( center of Europe ), I've still seen none so far.
Although I can see a lot of excellent IBM adverts.
Are we simply forgotten ...
Philippe
|
3528.270 | "Security ad" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Mar 07 1995 08:44 | 16 |
| re: Security advertisement: a couple of points.
1. We are getting responses to the ad saying "I had no idea you
provided this type of service" from large customers and prospects.
2. We occasionally have our inside jokes, but the number was
especially created to NOT be a legitimate prison number - resemblance
to a part number is wholely coincidental.
3. We carefully targetted security ad placements to key audiences -
for example the Government area with the Discovery Channel's "Carriers
- Fortress at Sea" show.
Re: Europe. COuntry level plans are being finalised right now. TV is
part of that plan. SHould start seeing ads in last few days of March,
first few days of April.
BT
|
3528.271 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member in good standing | Tue Mar 07 1995 08:51 | 20 |
|
RE: .270
BT,
I must say that it's great having you participate in this discussion
and addressing some of the questions that your coworkers have.
I thought the commercials were pretty catchy. My only question was, do
we have the name recognition so as people know what business we're in.
If we do, great (I have doubts about this). If we don't, perhaps we
need to throw a few ads in that show we are a full service computer
vendor.
Mike
|
3528.272 | Prisons Abound ! | ANGLIN::WOOLLUMS | Russ Woollums | Tue Mar 07 1995 23:15 | 10 |
| Just a little clarification. I happen to service equipment at Ft
Leavenworth. Among other things, Ft Leavenworth is home to the US
Detention Barricks (USDB) a.k.a. The Stockade. The USDB houses military
offenders only. The Federal Penitentary a.k.a "The Big House" is
located on an adjoining federal property. It is no coincidence that the
penitentary is bordered on three sides by Ft Leavenworth. Just to
complicate matters further, the Kansas State Correctional Facility is
located a few miles away in Lansing. Lansing and Leavenworth have grown
into each other and are indistinguishable save the city limit signs. I
guess you could say the whole area is based on a "captive economy".
|
3528.273 | Ze Votes von Deutschland... | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Sat Mar 11 1995 04:42 | 7 |
| The whole set of advertisments were shown to about 200 German
Digitals at a Cebit kick off meeting. Were definitely well
recieved. My guess is that these advertisments would go down
well at least in Norther Europe where English is reasonably
well understood.
re roelof
|
3528.274 | Carrier - Good choice | DECCXL::VOGEL | | Sat Mar 11 1995 11:27 | 22 |
|
RE .270
FWIW - I liked the secutiy add.
> 3. We carefully targetted security ad placements to key audiences -
> for example the Government area with the Discovery Channel's "Carriers
> - Fortress at Sea" show.
From Today's Globe:
"The ratings ship can in for the Disovery Channel last Sunday.
The cable channel drew its best ratings ever with its two-hour
special on aircraft carriers "Carrier: Fortress at Sea." The
show earned a 4.0 rating, which translates to about 2.6 million
households nationally."
Looks like someone made an excellent decision!!
Ed
|
3528.275 | The Billion Dollar Question | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Sat Mar 11 1995 15:02 | 16 |
| I happened to be half-listening to a very late showing of the
"Carriers" program while catching up on my email, when "that music"
came on. Behold: new Digital ad!
Trying to place myself in the mindset of a non-Digit is not easy, but
in that context I found this particular ad as typically cryptic of the
entire series (with the exception of the "Speed" ad)...
On the one hand, the series must have some positive effect: it's quite
obvious to me that I've been successfully programmed (as in Pavlov) to
immediately recognize the music and associate it with Digital - and I
suspect this to be a nearly universal response by now...
On the other hand, I still wonder if MIS personnel with big-ticket
signature authority actually "get it" and respond by considering
Digital in their future...
|
3528.276 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Mon Mar 13 1995 00:35 | 12 |
|
I found it quite amusing that right after a segment on Science and
Technology Week on CNN Sunday that dealt with Kevin Mitnick
and the security of the Internet and how Shimumora (sp?) tracked
him down, there was an ad by Digital for Network Security.
I still think the actor in the ad looks alot like KM.
Good job.
mike
|
3528.277 | "A comment on Discovery Channel" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Mar 13 1995 11:10 | 29 |
|
I think that I responded to some of the above comments last week, but
here is a quick reprise.
in Security, we are dealing with a hot topic, which exactly lends
itself to the news buy we are doing on CNN. We have the opportunity
each week to adjust which ad runs on which show - we therefore have
ensured that "Security" is the primary ad we are running on news
programs.
The Discovery Channel has excellent viewership demographics, coupled
with the fact that the shows on that channel add audiences who do not
watch other shows, for example A&E or News, so we are reaching new
audiences.
We thought the quality of the Carriers show would be high - the good news
for the company is that we bought the show based on a viewer rating
projected to be about 1% or so of the audience - it actually did a 4.0%
of the audience - which of course is a bargain for DIGITAL. Discovery
Channel also did promotion work on radio, etc. to help build audience.
Based on the Government and Technical influencer audience we expected,
we ran "Speed" and "Security".
As for the TV ad content - it's important to remember that there is a
text rich complementary print campaign ongoing - our latest print ad is
called "Riding SHotgun on the Information Highway" - which brings
forward more details than a 30 second spot can do.
BT
|
3528.278 | The speed ad should expand! | AMCUCS::SWIERKOWSKIS | | Mon Mar 13 1995 15:29 | 20 |
| re .275
> I happened to be half-listening to a very late showing of the
> "Carriers" program while catching up on my email, when "that music"
> came on. Behold: new Digital ad!
>
> Trying to place myself in the mindset of a non-Digit is not easy, but
> in that context I found this particular ad as typically cryptic of the
> entire series (with the exception of the "Speed" ad)...
I agree. The speed ad is the best. And as I mentioned in another
thread, I'd like to see a tie-in with motor racing. It would be
great to see the Digital logo on a race car: Formula One, Indy Car,
NASCAR or Top Fuel Dragster.
I also wish we'd advertise during prime-time on the top rated
network shows (Roseanne, Home Improvement, etc in the US) with the
speed ad (and the race car tie-in). Why do we continue to be obtuse?
SQ
|
3528.279 | We did F1 a few years ago.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Mon Mar 13 1995 16:37 | 14 |
| | It would be great to see the Digital logo on a race car: Formula One,
| Indy Car, NASCAR or Top Fuel Dragster.
Granted, paid for long ago. But in one of the world's most visited
museums, MOMA in NYC, at the top of the escallator is a Ferrari F1
car from just a few seasons ago. The Digital logo (old style) is rather
prominent. (And the Goodyear tyres have "for competition only
not for street use" embossed into the sidewalls.)
A few years ago, we even had some of our hardware in the Industrial
Design collection. I'm sure it's still there, but in the warehouse
instead of out for current display.
-mr. bill
|
3528.280 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Mon Mar 13 1995 19:17 | 6 |
|
NASCAR would probably get the most bang for the buck in racing in
the USA.
mike
|
3528.281 | We're in the right place | DECC::VOGEL | | Mon Mar 13 1995 21:27 | 21 |
|
RE .278
> I also wish we'd advertise during prime-time on the top rated
> network shows (Roseanne, Home Improvement, etc in the US) with the
> speed ad (and the race car tie-in). Why do we continue to be obtuse?
Gee...I'm certainly no expert but it seems to me that we're
advertising on exactly the right kind of shows. Why spend big
bugs for Roseanne and Home Improvement? Sure the shows are popular,
but are they popular with the people who will be buying our
equipment? Now if we were selling beer...
I think we're much better off with 10 adds on This Week With
David Brinkley than one on Roseanne.
Keep up the good work.
Ed
|
3528.282 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Tue Mar 14 1995 09:38 | 20 |
| Just a few data points:
o IBM reached our family last week with a direct-mail piece
promoting their Aptiva line.
o H/P reached me last week with a TV advert promoting their
low-end inkjet printers
o Digital did not reach us in any way.
( o Neither ad was babe-oriented, although the H/P ad did
involve a youngster abusing the printer. )
I stand by my contention that IBM, H/P, and Apple (from previous
exposure) want me as a customer; Digital does not. My business
goes where its wanted.
Atlant
|
3528.283 | Speaking parenthetically... | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Tue Mar 14 1995 09:42 | 12 |
| (The last Digital ad I saw was the one where the Digital exec-
utive gets hauled off to jail for misappropriating company in-
formation. He *MUST* have been a Digital executive 'cause he
was wearing a Digital part number! :-)
Seriously: Speaking just for me, that ad would motivate me to
cross Digital off "the approved vendor list". Between having
an unclear message, no product pointers, and no way indicated
to call Digital and follow up on the message even if it *DID*
interest me, which it didn't, that ad was a zero in my book.
Atlant )
|
3528.284 | MPEG on WWW yet? | MUGGER::LIVINGSTONE | Survive! get a little crazy... | Tue Mar 14 1995 11:09 | 8 |
| re:- 3528.126 (dated 6-DEC-1994:-)
For the benefit of Europe! What happened to the proposed WWW MPEG
files of these adverts. I thought they were on their way? Or have I
missed something?
Thanks; Phil.L�
|
3528.285 | "WWW and TV" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Mar 14 1995 12:03 | 7 |
|
There was no plan to place the ads on WWW - we have them digitized for
conference and trade show use.
Bill
|
3528.286 | "A little more.." | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Mar 14 1995 12:13 | 10 |
| A clarification on my note on WWW, having just read my December note.
There was an exploration of tv ads on the Web. For business and
technical reasons, we are not doing it. Business - we need to keep
close control on the ads due to the claims we make and maintain an
ability to recall them.
Technical - speed of the WWW and its dependence on any combination of network,
server and client slowness. We are keeping an eye open to improved
demand creation approachs for the Internet.
|
3528.287 | Hey -- what's wrong with beer? | AMCUCS::SWIERKOWSKIS | | Tue Mar 14 1995 14:58 | 31 |
| re .281
> Gee...I'm certainly no expert but it seems to me that we're
> advertising on exactly the right kind of shows. Why spend big
> bugs for Roseanne and Home Improvement? Sure the shows are popular,
> but are they popular with the people who will be buying our
> equipment? Now if we were selling beer...
>
> I think we're much better off with 10 adds on This Week With
> David Brinkley than one on Roseanne.
This reminds me of an English professor I once had. He published
a revised edition of Huck Finn but used the author's real name
instead of paying royalties for the use of Mark Twain. He couldn't
see spending the big bucks for the name. He sold about 6 copies.
As someone in the class pointed out, keeping 100% of $0.00 is still
$0.00.
Why do you assume that the decision-makers aren't watching the
popular shows? Isn't it possible that they are? And isn't it
possible that the people who influence them are watching? They
might even be beer-drinkers (at least on the left coast).
Wall St Journal/David Brinkely/SciFi shows are all good. I just
don't think we should limit ourselves. I love it when I see print
ads in Newsweek, TV Guide, local newspaper.... Now if we could
just spice up the ads a lot!
SQ
|
3528.288 | | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Tue Mar 14 1995 15:28 | 5 |
| Hey SuzieQ, you related to Tony? Beer and Coke don't mix too well with
our equipment, especially when you spill 'em into the keyboards. I
don't know much about advertising, though. :-)
Mark
|
3528.289 | They like coffee better!! | AMCUCS::SWIERKOWSKIS | | Tue Mar 14 1995 15:56 | 10 |
| Mark,
Yes, Tony is my better half (was it the last name? :-) ) I haven't
had any recent experience with liquids in a keyboard, but I do
remember an old LA120 that took a cup of coffee and is still going
for all I know, well, except for the "r" key. Hmmmm - takes a
licking and keeps on ticking -- awww -- guess someone else already
thought of that one!!!
SQ
|
3528.290 | Focus is key | AKOCOA::TROY | | Tue Mar 14 1995 15:59 | 10 |
| Folks - without getting to specifics, we are outspent in advertising by
our major competitors. We therefore must be focused and disciplined to
reach key targets in the most efficient manner possible. This
unfortunately means we must pass on many advertising opportunities,
especially many prime time shows. It is all a matter of reaching our
target audiences as many times as we can afford, at the most important
times of the week our audiences watch.
Am I sick of seeing the somewhat ubitiquous IBM nuns on prime tine
shows, - you betcha.
|
3528.291 | | DPDMAI::EYSTER | She ain't pretty (she just looks that way) | Tue Mar 14 1995 16:57 | 12 |
| I did see a full pager in "Gas and Turbine Power Monthly". Seriously,
folks, I'm not making this up. It's an airline industry mag, geared
towards who's building what plane, some historical articles, some
scientific articles...and a big Digital ad that said something like
"When you need to be x times faster than your competition...you need
Digital!".
Pretty damn neat ad, well-suited (just like Pamela Anderson :^]) for
the target market.
Tex
|
3528.292 | Brinkley vs Roseanne | DECC::VOGEL | | Tue Mar 14 1995 17:22 | 31 |
|
Re .287
.290 pretty well says it all. But...
> Why do you assume that the decision-makers aren't watching the
> popular shows? Isn't it possible that they are?
Of course it is. I'm sure decision-makers are watching these shows.
However the important thing is what percentage of the people are
watching these shows. Here's how it might work:
Suppose Brinkley has 1/10 the viewers of Roseanne. This would mean
it might cost 10 times more to advertise on Roseanne than Brinkley.
So...in cost per person reached it would not matter whether we
advertise once on Roseanne or 10 times on Brinkley. However, I
would bet that if you look at what percentage of the viewers of
each show are decision makers, things change quite a bit. Perhaps
1/2 of the people watching Brinkley are decision makers, and only
1/10 of the people watching Roseanne are. This means that
in dollars per decision maker (who are the people we are trying
to reach) advertising on Roseanne just isn't worth as much as
advertising on Brinkley.
I also wish we did not have to limit ourselves, but as we do,
I think the people making the choices are doing an excellent job.
Hope this clarifies what I was trying to say.
Ed
|
3528.293 | How about putting the print ads on the WWW? | GUESS::DOUCETTE | More Chuck for the buck! | Tue Mar 14 1995 17:35 | 4 |
| Although you are against putting the TV ads on WWW, how about a scanned
copy of the print ads?
Chuck
|
3528.294 | | RTFM1::OSTMAN | Time - is what keeps everything from happening at once. | Wed Mar 15 1995 05:09 | 24 |
|
RE: .290
The figures below from Adscope was in a Swedish computer magazine.
They must be totally wrong then?
/Kjell
Global advertising, 1994
MUSD Change
IBM 81.7 -0.12%
Digital 45.4 42.50%
Microsoft 45.0 3.75%
Compaq 41.6 10.55%
Dell 28.2 -1.72%
Gateway2000 26.5 13.45%
AT&T 25.0 -18.66%
Lotus 22.6 -5.32%
Apple 22.5 5.32%
H-P 21.7 66.63%
Intel 17.5 68.90%
NEC 16.4 26.54%
Source: Adscope
|
3528.295 | Koud Water Vrees? | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Wed Mar 15 1995 05:25 | 32 |
|
> There was an exploration of tv ads on the Web. For business and
> technical reasons, we are not doing it. Business - we need to keep
> close control on the ads due to the claims we make and maintain an
> ability to recall them.
Hmmm, do you intend to recall all video tapes from anyone who might
have taped the advertisments? And come to think of it what about all those
print advertisments that are no longer politically correct...I hope
that you have a BIG garage :-)
> Technical - speed of the WWW and its dependence on any combination of network,
> server and client slowness. We are keeping an eye open to improved
> demand creation approachs for the Internet.
This argument comes up quite often with people who don't use MPEG
via WWW. Extending this argument and we would not put any JPEG or GIF
images on the WWW because some people (like me) only have 16 colour
video and can't display the images in their true glory.
There are just too many MPEG sites successfully operating on the Web
to take this argument seriously. Standard practice is to indicate
the minimum specifications you need as a client machine to display
properly.
With respect to having a slow network server...well, that is an issue.
On the other hand it is self-regulating..fully loaded is fully loaded.
Hopefully this isn't a case of what we call in Dutch "koud water vrees"
(cold water fear).
re roelof
|
3528.296 | INTERNAL ONLY MPEGS? | MUGGER::LIVINGSTONE | Survive! get a little crazy... | Wed Mar 15 1995 08:34 | 5 |
| I can *maybe* understand the stated reasons for NOT putting MPEG
adverts on the commercial Web.
BUT,
How about providing the adverts from one of our INTERNAL Web Pages?
Phil.L�
|
3528.297 | "Advertising Spending" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Thu Mar 16 1995 09:10 | 7 |
|
While we do not have all the 1994 advertising numbers from overseas
yet, the U.S. data and first indications in most major countries
outside the U.S. is that we are being way outspent. In any individual
country, your mileage may differ (e.g., Sweden).
Bill
|
3528.298 | free airtime | WRKSYS::SCHUMANN | Never tested on animals | Fri Mar 17 1995 20:16 | 7 |
| Two arguments in favor of putting the ads on the net:
1) It's cheap
2) The people who access them are likely to actually look at them.
--RS
|
3528.299 | Digital and Real Hardware Come Together on Radio and TV! | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Sun Mar 19 1995 21:35 | 19 |
| Heard a Digital ad touting our inkjet printer line on the radio (during
the NCAA b'ball coverage). Digital and an ACTUAL PRODUCT mentioned in
the same breath - repatedly! Nearly drove off the highway!
Got home, flipped on the tube, and lo and behold, a Digital TV ad for the
HiNote Ultra! A superb ad, easy for any viewer to understand what makes
the HiNote a neat product (sliding the Ultra out of an interoffice
mailer was a great touch). Good voice over, too.
I was stunned! Yeah, it's the PCBU, and they sell to a different market
than the SBU, but the ad had *Digital* and a *real piece of hardware*
together!
Great stuff! It's very nice to see an ad that people (other than Digits)
can understand...
[Too bad we probably won't see any revenue gains though - from everything
I've read the entire Ultra build capacity through the end of the FY95 was
sold out a month ago!]
|
3528.300 | | SNOFS1::POOLE | Over the Rainbow | Sun Mar 19 1995 22:15 | 13 |
| Re: -.1
Now that there are product specific ads, people will remember that the
product was made by Digital. The company name is no longer a mystery,
thanks to the name recognision campaign that has been going on.
On another note, I personally think this whole advertising thread is a
plot. Oz I haven't seen anything since the 'Desk 'n Tree' ad. And I
think that was only published internally.
Later,
Bill
|
3528.301 | Why not promote our PC's (desktop) instead ? | CSCMA::BALICH | | Mon Mar 20 1995 08:40 | 12 |
|
re .-2
If the Notebook is sold out till end of fiscal year.
THEN why are we advertising a product that we cannot sell to people
whom seen the ad ... Iwould think hearing we are sold out is not good
business practive.
Comments ? Am I missing something here ???
|
3528.302 | KISS | NEWVAX::MURRAY | Its now, or never | Mon Mar 20 1995 09:42 | 5 |
|
Hay, I'd like to just see us get the message out that Digital does
WORKSTATIONS! A lot of people still associate us with the glass house.
|
3528.303 | Basketball player causes stock increase... | DPDMAI::WISNIEWSKI | ADEPT of the Virtual Space. | Tue Mar 21 1995 17:00 | 9 |
| I just heard that with Jorden back playing basketball McDonalds,
Nike, and all his sponsors Jumped over 2 Billion (yes billion with
a B) Dollars in the combined value of their stocks last week because
of rumors of his return...
Just think if we had a controvertial figure as a spokesman for
Digital Equipment... And on TV no less;-)
Nah, We don't need any increase in stock value...
|
3528.304 | Mr. Simpson does it for me... | POBOX::CORSON | Higher, and a bit more to the right | Tue Mar 21 1995 17:14 | 6 |
|
Maybe you'ld suggest OJ? He's in the news alot, on TV almost everyday,
everyone has heard of him, he is definitely controversial, a former
TV pitchman, and he's killing 'em in LA...
the Greyhawk
|
3528.305 | | IMTDEV::BRUNO | | Tue Mar 21 1995 17:18 | 4 |
|
Why controversial? Jordan doesn't fit that description.
Greg
|
3528.306 | | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Tue Mar 21 1995 17:31 | 6 |
| OJ is sponsored already by SONY and IBM - just watch a few minutes of
that garbage and you see those names all the time. On second thought,
don't watch - it's a joke.
Chuck (a.k.a. silver hairline)
|
3528.307 | | BIRMVX::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Wed Mar 22 1995 05:12 | 4 |
| OJ who???
Wouldn't it be better if we had someone well known on a global basis,
rather than a US-parochial celebrity?
|
3528.308 | don't know any global celebs | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, AXP-developer support | Wed Mar 22 1995 09:11 | 1 |
| you suggesting the Pope?
|
3528.309 | Re. .308 | BIRMVX::HILLN | It's OK, it'll be dark by nightfall | Wed Mar 22 1995 11:25 | 2 |
| Wasn't there a press release saying Microsoft had bought the RC church,
with its management?
|
3528.310 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Wed Mar 22 1995 11:56 | 5 |
| then when OJ shows his swollen knees or finger or whatever he could
pull up his sleeve a little and make sure that his digital watch
gets into the picture and everyone would think of DEC? :-)
ed
|
3528.311 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Mar 22 1995 12:28 | 1 |
| Well, he is a hacker.
|
3528.312 | name change | SMURF::WALTERS | | Wed Mar 22 1995 13:06 | 7 |
| re 309
> Wasn't there a press release saying Microsoft had bought the RC church,
> with its management?
Pearly Gates?
|
3528.313 | Thumbs up! | SWAM2::GOLDMAN_MA | Walking Incubator, Use Caution | Wed Mar 22 1995 14:25 | 21 |
| As a (semi) positive comment that will have absolutely no impact on
anyone, anywhere --
My husband is a heavy equipment mechanic, and therefore, not a likely
target for our advertising. However, he was watching the Sunday night
movie this week (3/19) on NBC, and caught the "Speed" commercial. I,
of course, was out of the room at the time, and missed it (again!!!).
As a mech, his one complaint with most computer company commercials
(including the latest series of foreign language commercials from IBM,
which seem quite popular and effective), is that they are so filled
with industry buzzwords and technological terms that they don't seem to
be *selling* anything he can communicate with.
Anyway, hubby was *very* impressed with the "Speed" commercial. He said,
and I quote, "I just saw the most terrific commercial for Digital! Now
that's a commercial even a gearhead like me can understand!!" So, two
points to Troy & his co-workers for a commercial that speaks to the
masses, not just those into techno-speak!
M.
|
3528.314 | Hey Mickie, It's Just plain faster!!" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Wed Mar 22 1995 16:59 | 4 |
|
re: Non techno speak
Thanks to your husband for his kind words.
|
3528.315 | Only Free Lunches Are Cheaper... | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Thu Mar 23 1995 04:04 | 28 |
| Bill,
I'ld like to take another crack at breaking a lance for getting
these ads out onto the Internet.
As I see it:
* the ads are such that there is no spoken text, do not rely on
detail or subtlety and have outrageously great music making them
ideal MPEG candidates. Almost as if they were specially designed
for this medium.
* By being the first company to do this (and up to today nobody
else has) we would generate a newsworthy item and as a result
get free advertising about the ads themselves. This has _got_
to be an adman's dream, surely?
* This can only strenghten Digital's renewal image _and_ Digital's
savvy in the Internet space.
* Your target audience is just around 2 million well educated computer
literate males aged 25-35 who work (or will work) for many companies
which are (or could be) prime Digital customers.
* Your costs are practically zilch. Convert the files, put 'em on
the external web and ftp servers. Throw out a couple of news
bulletins...and let the Internet do some of your work for you :-)
re roelof
|
3528.316 | | NETCAD::SHERMAN | Steve NETCAD::Sherman DTN 226-6992, LKG2-A/R05 pole AA2 | Thu Mar 23 1995 11:07 | 9 |
| re: .315
I absolutely agree. Also, I think that internet hackers are basically
the same audience that did PC hacking during the last decade. They are
young, savvy and enthusiastic about the technology. I think they will
affect our current and future markets in a fashion similar to how they
affected the PC market.
Steve
|
3528.317 | | ATLANA::SHERMAN | Debt Free! Thank You, Jesus! | Thu Mar 23 1995 15:30 | 6 |
| RE: .310
Hey Ed, maybe we can get OJ to drive a tractor-trailer rig with the
|d|i|g|i|t|a|l| logo on the side (again) ... 8^)
Ron
|
3528.318 | IBM TV adds are on the Web! | GRUMBL::keane | hello | Fri Mar 24 1995 03:51 | 21 |
|
Hi,
Re the thread about putting TV adds on the Web
I have just found a Web page with all the IBM TV adds!
Check it out on:-
http://www.europe.ibm.com/getdoc/psmemea/technical/movies.html
(I hope I typed that correctly 8>)) )
If IBM can do it why cant Digital ?????
regards
Patrick
|
3528.319 | "Thanks" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Fri Mar 24 1995 10:09 | 10 |
|
Thanks for the path for the IBM ads. Doing it technically, which any
media company, computer company, experienced MAC user, etc. can do is
different than it making sense to do business wise. It is being
evaluated in a context of new media. This is being worked as part of a
new media discussion and its role in advertising.
BT
|
3528.320 | Have at it! :^) | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Apr 19 1995 11:13 | 37 |
| Just scanning through this topic and I made my way up to the
superbowl discussion and big bucks. Thought I'd do my duty to
comment (again/still) on an effective advertising medium.
Winston Cup stock car racing. ~$2 million for 1 year.
Races 31 times, on (mainly) National TV for up to 4.5 hours
per race. Includes show car(s) which show up wherever we want
(comdex/decus/ALF :^)) however many times we want per year.
Transported all over the country in a huge Digital billboard.
Winston Cup racing is the most popular tv viewership of motorsport.
TBS set a new viewership record (for ANYTHING) with their Richmond
race. These events continuously set the attendance records for ANY
sporting event in several states (New Hampshire, Tennessee, Deleware,
and others). Race fans have a proven brand loyalty to sponsors
of Winston Cup racing. 55% of viewers are female (contrary to the
red neck beer swillin bozos some folks think). The series visits
almost every major metropolitain area in the country.
Combine this effort with a coordinated campaign which passes out
hat's, pins, shirts, and other doo-dads and we get major exposure
all year.
I live in a small town (Dawsonville Georgia). The home town and
shop location of Bill Elliott. He drives a Red ford (yeck) with
a Big yellow "M" on it. Recently a new commercial has started
running where Bills "blowing through town" and he knocks down the
"Welcome to Dawsonville" sign. If you live in Seattle, Washington
or Augusta Maine, you might have seen it. The exposure to our
town is massive. Heck, we get traffic problems when motorhome driving
tourists roll into town and get lost (or stuck). Oh ya, lots of
fans who follow this sport have big bucks. I wish I could afford
$80,000 for a custom coach to follow this series all over the country,
but I have to settle on my Suburban.
Regards,
MadMike
|
3528.321 | | 7269::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Wed Apr 19 1995 11:33 | 7 |
| What, and compete with Apple's nifty "PowerMac" car?
Atlant
Disclaimer: I have no idea what class that car races in. All I
know is that I've seen it in lots of Apple Adverts so far.
|
3528.322 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:02 | 33 |
| Therein is the key:
> All I know is that I've seen it in lots of Apple Adverts so far.
It's on CBS, ABC, ESPN, TBS, TNN, international satellite, in the
trade papers, in the mainstream newspapers (except boston, at the
moment), on the radio, all over the place. It's essentially one
big digital commercial for a year, and it's seen all over the place,
by billions of people.
I don't have the viewership numbers handy of the Daytona 500, but
it's VERY big. And that's just ONE race. A little quick math:
car leads 10 laps (who cares where it finishes at the moment). A
lap at speed at daytona takes about 46 seconds. That's what,
7.6 minutes @ $400,000 tv time per minute (we'll be cheap and give
the airtime away). Of the time while leading, the camera is focused
on our car for 4 minutes. That's a $1.6M "commercial". And we
paid $2M for the whole season.
Think of the positive moral (sure, some folks think this deal stinks)
but "hey... there's our car... kicking butt... go man go..." Digital
could get active at New Hampshire International Speedway. Send some
folks to the race to hang out with "our" team because they sold
lots of stuff this year.
They're building new tracks specifically for this class of racing
in Los Angeles and Dallas/Ft. Worth. New Hampshire was added a
couple years ago.
You want to talk branding? Try and get my wife to buy something
other than Tide to wash our cloths.
MadMike
|
3528.323 | it's the 21164 car, in the lead! | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:04 | 14 |
| I have to second (again) MadMike's [.-1] entry, (you really live in
Dawsonville?) If we want the entire U.S. to know that "DEC" and
"Digital" are the one and same, a couple million to sponsor an WC and a
Busch team would do it.
Going along with the "female" aspect of WC fans, I am now driving a
Ford Thunderbird, mainly because my wife (a violently anti-Ford fan in
the past) likes the #6 car. A spot on one of the 'news' shows asked a
woman (at the races) if she'd switch from "Tide" to a product proven to
be better and cheaper, to which she replied "Hell No!" She follows
D.Waltrip and supports "his" sponsor. May not be the best, but if it's
good enough for her driver, it's good enough for her.
.mike.
|
3528.324 | Lunchtime Notes Collision? | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:10 | 3 |
| Notes Collision? Gee Mike, maybe that was your wife they interviewed?
.mike.
|
3528.325 | | CSEXP2::ANDREWS | I'm the NRA | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:31 | 17 |
| NASCAR fan nit:
A spot on one of the 'news' shows asked a
woman (at the races) if she'd switch from "Tide" to a product proven to
be better and cheaper, to which she replied "Hell No!" She follows
D.Waltrip and supports "his" sponsor. May not be the best, but if it's
good enough for her driver, it's good enough for her.
---
Don't know how to break it to your wife, but Ricky Rudd drives the Tide
car. DW is in the Western Auto car. (Must be a female trend for Mark
Martin, my wife also likes the #6 Valvoline car too. Now, if they can
just WIN SOME RACES!)
Rob
|
3528.326 | Care to start small?? | JUMP4::JOY | Perception is reality | Wed Apr 19 1995 13:35 | 11 |
| Although I'm not a big WC fan, my brother is and I have to agree with
the last few. He regularly spouts statistics refering to WC racing as
being the most highly watched sport in the world, etc. He also happens
to race the same type of stock cars as they do in WC, albeit on a dirt
track (and no where NEAR the price tag). So, if we want to start small
I'm sure he'd love to have Digital sponsor him! Besides, he's been a
faithful Digital PC owner for over 10 years (still has his Rainbow to
run his business and keep his race results on!)
Debbie
|
3528.327 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Wed Apr 19 1995 14:23 | 7 |
| Note that Digital doesn't have to fully sponsor a Winston Cup car.
I'd settle for a nice Digital or Alpha logo on the quarter panel.
Or even one fo the small signs on the dashboard that you can see
from the in-car cameras.
-John (a big WC fan)
|
3528.328 | | OLD1S::SYSTEM | shakes and shimmies all over the road | Wed Apr 19 1995 15:10 | 4 |
|
RE .325
Martin might win one if he quit driving a Ford!!!
|
3528.329 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Wed Apr 19 1995 16:52 | 17 |
| RE: .328
Don't tell that to my WC-lovin roommate! :)
I also have to agree with the previous noters. I think $2million
for a team could reap some serious airtime that DEC..er..digital
doesn't have the resources to spend on today. $2million is
tossed around this company like it's nothing in many places to
this day. Tossing it in the direction of a WC team and/or a
Bush team would be great. And get lots of "digital" logo's
where the in-car and other cameras can see them! (Suspension-Cam
being my favourite)
I'll bet Bob Palmer would like to park his Porsche for a ride
in a WC car. :)
mike
|
3528.330 | Must be a well thought out, NATIONAL exposure deal. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Apr 19 1995 17:12 | 38 |
| See what I mean? Ya, me and ~7000 other folks live in Dawsonville
in the North Georgia mountains.
I think the market we're trying to reach needs to be addressed
at the Busch level (one step under Winston Cup) at least. It needs to
be a National effort, busch is still too regional, and the average
follower may not keep up with what's going on.
So the "ideal" series is Winston Cup.
Next, we need to control the whole car, or be what's known as the
primary sponsor (get the hood & quarter panel). An associate
sponsorship would be the equivalent of sticking the little "dec"
decal on the front of Bobby Rahals indy car. We spend the
bucks, it's "our" car and does what we want when we want it to be
done.
To control a car, and make it COMPETITVE, which the digital car
MUST be, would take a minimum of $2M and CAREFULL team selection.
Some teams (not mentioning any names) spend upwards of $6M. A bare
bones effort is $1M. We need carefull selection because it is getting
increasingly difficult to make the field of a race. We MUST make the
field at each event too. Slapping on a decal and spending big bucks
is the wrong approach too. It must be researched properly (hell, that's
assuming SOMEONE is listening).
To round out the package a parallel marketing effort needs to be
done in conjunction with the car. I've heard many sponsors spend
3 times what the cost of car sponsorship costs to promote their
product, but I'm not a marketing guy. I know what sells when I see
it though. Unfortunantly, my neighbor is currently selling A WHOLE
BUNCH OF HAMBURGERS at the moment, so he can't help us, but I am
hooked into the scene if someone wishes to follow up on any of the
stuff discussed here.
Regards,
MadMike
Who now shops at Lowes, as opposed to the "other" place...
|
3528.331 | KP7 to check it out. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Apr 19 1995 17:16 | 11 |
| re: Note 3528.326 by JUMP4::JOY
You mean he drives an ARCA car? They run primarily in the midwest,
but hit some of the major NASCAR tracks too. (Daytona, Talladega,
Atlanta).
Various information on NASCAR (and stock car racing in general)
is available via the NASCAR notes file. I happen to moderate the
conference. (imagine that?!) :^)
|
3528.332 | WWF :) | NEWVAX::MURRAY | Its now, or never | Thu Apr 20 1995 08:32 | 2 |
|
gee, if you want attention...try WRESTLING, now thats the ticket!
|
3528.333 | | PHDVAX::LUSK | Ron Lusk--[org-name of the week here] | Thu Apr 20 1995 21:35 | 8 |
| re .330
>> To round out the package a parallel marketing effort needs to be
>> done in conjunction with the car. I've heard many sponsors spend
I must be getting tired earlier these days; my first pass over
these lines had me wondering why we need to work on parallel
parking a race car. ;^)
|
3528.334 | | DPDMAI::EYSTER | It ain't a car without fins... | Thu Apr 20 1995 21:42 | 3 |
| -.330
THAT was good!
|
3528.335 | Go Dale, Go FAR FAR away! | CSEXP2::ANDREWS | I'm the NRA | Thu Apr 20 1995 21:55 | 8 |
| Besides, I like the sound of "The Digital car ran real good today."
Sounds better than, say, "The Spam car ran real good." (Yes, Spam
does sponsor a car, I don't remember who drives it though...)
Just don't sponsor someone like Dale Earnhardt, I don't think I could
come up with the mental gymnastics to get my mind around accepting him
as 'my' driver. My head would explode.
|
3528.336 | Go Dale #8 is coming | GLDOA::POMEROY | | Fri Apr 21 1995 02:18 | 3 |
| At least with dale driving the Digital car would get seen near the
front of the pack alot. He's always there like a bad penny, just ask
any Ford driver.
|
3528.337 | I believe we've done this a bit with IndyCar (in Vancouver?) | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Fri Apr 21 1995 09:37 | 22 |
| re .330
Good call MadMike...
Imagine the possibilities... Digital at NASCAR events... a tent full of
Digital PC's running Papyrus's NASCAR RACING PC game. Our driver in
the tent racing against dozens of fans over a network (something
Papyrus is working on for this program). The press and fans would eat
it up.
We've already used the "speed" theme in some of our ads... lets take it
a step further.
It is well known in the advertising and racing industries that
dollar-for-dollar return on investment for advertising in NASCAR is
higher than in any other sport. NASCAR fans are fanaticly loyal to car
sponsors.
Later...
Steve
|
3528.338 | Another alternative | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri Apr 21 1995 12:03 | 18 |
| Another option which may work is for Digital to sponsor the series
as opposed to a specific car.
We have the fastest stuff in the business, so... we reward the
fastest lap in competition at each event.
The "Digital Fastest Lap of the Race Award" or something like that.
Each race would pay $5000 for quickest lap. The person who wins
this contest at the end of the season gets an extra $25000.
In order to participate in the program (get the money), it would
require each car to carry a digital decal (yup, add another to the
fenders of each car). If we did this, we'd be catered to by NASCAR
itself as opposed to only one specific team. We could also be
the "Official Computer of NASCAR". We could look into this as
opposed to sponsoring one car. Of course, we'd have to run some
of our awesome tv adds during each event. I really like the
security commercial. How tough? Ask inmate #9214086412410-4
in Levinworth. :^)
|
3528.339 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Fri Apr 21 1995 13:42 | 16 |
|
So, maybe I'm lost. I've never heard of Bill Elliott,
Dawsonville or most of this other stuff.
As far as I can tell, this string says:
"I like auto racing, so digital should advertise there."
Do you have any objective demographic information on the
audience for these races?
Just what are Bo and Luke Duke going to do with a PC?
I could understand this, if we were selling chewing tobacco,
beer, or maybe even auto accessories.
|
3528.340 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Fri Apr 21 1995 14:14 | 7 |
|
Digital will no longer be in the front-row seat at the PBS
broadcasts of the Boston Symphony televised concerts. The
concerts were in jeopardy after 12 years of our sponsorship
until two other companies stepped in to fill the gap we
left in the land of culture.
|
3528.341 | sometimes enlightenment comes with gas and a match | DPDMAI::EYSTER | It ain't a car without fins... | Fri Apr 21 1995 15:45 | 31 |
| > So, maybe I'm lost.
Yep, more ways than one.
> Just what are Bo and Luke Duke going to do with a PC?
> I could understand this, if we were selling chewing tobacco,
> beer, or maybe even auto accessories.
Wahl, most uv us who watch auto rasing ain't 2 smrt, but weed lahk 2 bi
th' produkts uv th' sponsirs. S'cuse me, I thank I spilt my Bud...
Now, if'n we wuz sellin' jock-itch powder, I culd see th' footyball
adverts doin' sum gud... S'cuse me, I thank I swallered my plug...
Tex
Companero, I've got some bad news for y'all. Reconstruction's over,
the carpetbaggers have either assimilated or left, and the economic
powerhouses are cities like Dallas and Atlanta. (And to show how
wonderfully up the average Yankee is on this, I had to explain on my
last trip that "No, we don't pick cotton by hand anymore". The reply
was, "Oh, since they invented the cotton gin?" :^])
Now, if'n y'all wouldn't say "I don't see no sense in sponsorin'
women's tennis unless we're sellin' feminine deoderant" in this
notesfile, then drop the "Duke and Luke with a brew and a chew"
crapola, please. Argue your point without stereotypes or, if
necessary, contract someone else to do it for you.
Tex
|
3528.342 | Maybe Im just a freak of nature | MSDOA::MCCLOUD | plug & pray | Fri Apr 21 1995 16:41 | 7 |
| rep .339
> I could understand this, if we were selling chewing tobacco,
> beer, or maybe even auto accessories.
I love NASCAR and I do not drink beer chew tabacco and I buy more
computer accessories the auto accessories.
|
3528.343 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Fri Apr 21 1995 17:03 | 21 |
| �� <<< Note 3528.341 by DPDMAI::EYSTER "It ain't a car without fins..." >>>
�� -< sometimes enlightenment comes with gas and a match >-
�� women's tennis unless we're sellin' feminine deoderant" in this
�� notesfile, then drop the "Duke and Luke with a brew and a chew"
�� crapola, please. Argue your point without stereotypes or, if
�� necessary, contract someone else to do it for you.
Well, I checked my "Valuing Diversity Guide and Party Phrasebook"
and as good ol' boys are white males, I'm free to bash them.
But, don' ya go worryin' I ain't got no mind to load up
the yu-haul and move to texaz, cuz I no they're ain't nothin'
a texan hates more'n a yankee with a yu-haul.
But, do stop back when you have some objective demographics
on NASCAR viewers.
"You know you're a redneck when your lawn furniture
used to be your living room furniture."
- Jeff Foxworthy
|
3528.344 | One racing sponsor's perspecitve | SPEZKO::LEPAGE | | Fri Apr 21 1995 17:19 | 138 |
| Maybe this article will help clarify the makeup of Nascar audiences,
and business reasons for getting involved.
-Mark (another racing fan)
Path: mrnews.mro.dec.com!funlwb.stl.dec.com!jac.zko.dec.com!crl.dec.com!crl.dec.com!caen!newsxfer.itd.umich.edu!gatech!psuvax1!news.cc.swarthmore.edu!netn
From: [email protected] (Russ Gould)
Newsgroups: rec.autos.sport.nascar
Subject: BGNN: The Business of Racing
Date: 18 Apr 1995 11:44:40 GMT
Organization: University of Pennsylvania
Lines: 122
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
NNTP-Posting-Host: oehs5.oehs.upenn.edu
With all the postings regarding sponsorship I found this article in my
local Sunday paper interesting and thought I would pass it along.
Sunday News, Lancaster, PA
April 16, 1995
The Business of Racing
Lancaster-based Burnham wins the checkered flag with its car, driver and
motorsports marketing strategy.
By Gil Smart Sunday News Staff Writer
Four-speed transmission. More than 500 horses revving at a red line
R.P.M. of 8,200. A snazzy paint job. And a top NASCAR driver.
What does it all add up to?
Burnham Corporation hopes the right answer is "profits."
The boiler and heating equipment manufacturer, based in Lancaster, PA, is
the primary sponsor of Avery Motorsports' Busch Grand National North #09
race car, driven by two-time NASCAR Winston Modified Tour Champion Mike
Stefanick of Coventry, RI. The car and driver will compete in 20 races on
the Busch Grand National North Series this season, racing throughout the
northeastern US.
The team has already raced once - at the NASCAR Busch Grand National North
125 at Loudon, NH., on April 11, 1995 - and they won it. And that excites
Burnham vice president of marketing Bob Coons, who helped coordinate the
company's racing program, for two reasons.
First, as a big NASCAR fan, he was thrilled to see his team win. Second,
Burnham's car and logo was splashed across sports pages and evening
newscast across the country. And you can't beat that kind of exposure.
"We've already had a ton of interest," says Coons. "This is a really
exciting way to get our name out there." Burnham's not interested in
getting its name out to the average guy on the street. The company sells
nearly all of its products to wholesalers, plumbers and heating
contractors. Among that group there are quite a few NASCAR fans, Coons
says.
But there are more and more NASCAR fans everywhere you look these days.
And those fans have money and want to spend it on NASCAR sponsors.
According to a recent study, 70 percent of NASCAR fans always or
frequently buy products from NASCAR sponsors. Nearly half of those fans
work in "white collar" jobs, more than 40 percent earn more than $40,000 a
year. Small wonder, then, that the companies are racing to market their
goods on NASCAR cars.
Burnham's not the only sponsor for the car; there are four associate
sponsors. Amtrol, a Rhode Island indirect water heater and accessory
maker; Wirsbo, a Minnesota based radiant heater manufacturer; Taco, a
Rhode Island maker of hydronic components; and Honeywell, with plants and
offices worldwide, all have their company logos on the car. But none as
prominently as Burnham.
Burnham got into motorsports last year, when it sponsored a two race pilot
program in the North series. The response the company received was
tremendous, Coons says, and Burnham decided to go all the way this year.
There are a variety of marketing opportunities and racing series for
potential sponsors. Burnham, assisted by Godfrey Advertising, selected
the Busch North Series because it's based in the area where the company
sells most, if not all, of its products - the Northeast.
"The target market for the North series was perfect - Virginia to Maine,"
says Coons. "It was where we wanted to be, and the investment was
relatively small." How small was that investment? Coons won't say, but
the figure is in the tens of thousands.
In addition to the car, emblazoned with the Burnham logo and painted the
company's red, white, and blue, there is racing gear for Stefanick and his
team; additional promotions and advertising based on the racing theme; and
hospitality events.
At five of this year's 21 races, Burnham will set up a "hospitality tent"
where food, beverages and racing paraphernalia will be given away to
invited guest, mostly wholesalers and other customers. Burnham pays half
the cost for the event, as well as the race ticket; wholesalers pay the
other half. The hospitality tent in Loudon drew about 400 people, Coons
says. At some events this year, they expect up to 1,000.
And if that doesn't sound expensive enough, a few weeks ago Burnham
decided to sponsor an entire race - the Burnham 150, which will run at
Watkins Glen International in New York on August 12, as part of the Bud at
the Glen NASCAR Winston Cup Weekend. The 62 lap event will be televised
live on ESPN.
Coon says all of this is "surprisingly affordable" - Burnham isn't
spending any more than it usually does on advertising and promotions, it's
just redirected its advertising dollars. And the exposure the company has
received would have cost much more had the company tried to buy
advertising space and air time instead of getting it free when Stefanick
does well in a race.
There has been a downside to Burnham's sponsorship - it takes time.
Godfrey Advertising's John Vastyan, who works with Burnham on the
projects, estimates there are up to 50 people working on some aspect off
the program at Burnham and Godfrey. And Coons, referring to the
hospitality events, adds that "Normally in the course of running a boiler
company you don't have to plan a party for 1,000 people."
But Burnham considers the time and money will spent. Coons expects
Stefanick to keep on winning, or at least remain competitive. If Burnham
didn't think Stefanick could win, the company wouldn't have signed him to
a contract. "We want to run with the best of them," Coons says. "If we
weren't competitive, it would taint our image. But Mike's a great
driver."
And his achievements, as well as the success of the company's motorsports
program, are more than have been anticipated. "Has this translated into
additional boiler sales? I don't have the figures to prove that yet. But
the response to this has been way beyond our expectations.
--
-Russ Gould-
[email protected]
|
3528.345 | Plugged, fer sure | MIMS::PICKETT_K | | Fri Apr 21 1995 17:33 | 14 |
| re:last
>>But, do stop back when you have some objective demographics
>> on NASCAR viewers.
You'll get your objective demographics if I know Mike(he's the one that
started this NASCAR string). Because A) He is not going to tolerate
stereotyping of the South, like a lot of us here; and B) Well, he is
the moderator of the NASCAR notesfile, after all.
kp
|
3528.346 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Fri Apr 21 1995 18:20 | 20 |
| �� <<< Note 3528.345 by MIMS::PICKETT_K >>>
�� -< Plugged, fer sure >-
�� You'll get your objective demographics if I know Mike(he's the one that
�� started this NASCAR string). Because A) He is not going to tolerate
�� stereotyping of the South, like a lot of us here; and B) Well, he is
It's good he has you to speak for him.
I was poking fun at NASCAR viewers. It's you defenders who
equated NASCAR viewers with the South. Hardly helps your
claim of broad viewership.
Before you get your southern panties in too tight a wad,
I think hockey probably has pretty poor demographics
as well. I didn't mention it because I haven't seen
dozens of "I like hockey, so digital should advertise there"
notes.
I liked .344 I don't think we're quite in the HVAC business,
but it was pretty convincing.
|
3528.347 | | AIMTEC::ZANIEWSKI_D | Why would CSC specialists need training? | Sat Apr 22 1995 05:24 | 8 |
| NASCAR racing is becoming very high-tech. Most racing teams use
2-4 pc's, in their travel hauler. Maybe as many as 6 more in the
shop. Computers are used for position updates and scoring. I
don't ever expect to see computers in cars, but I do expect
someone to break into the single vendor, computer supply monopoly
some day. Let it be Digital.
Dave Zaniewski
|
3528.348 | Who said the 'H' word? | SNOFS1::POOLE | Over the Rainbow | Mon Apr 24 1995 00:57 | 7 |
| I like hockey, but Digital shouldn't sponsor it.
'Cause we don't get much hockey down in the REAL south.
Bill
Sydney, Australia
|
3528.349 | Michigan like NASCAR too! | GLDOA::POMEROY | | Mon Apr 24 1995 01:58 | 7 |
| I like hockey, but the two events that draw the most paying customers
up here in Michigan are the NASCAR races in Brooklyn.
To bill in Sydney you need soom hard water to play hockey, I thought
your weather would be too mild.
Dennis
|
3528.350 | You wanted demographics, you got demographics... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Mon Apr 24 1995 12:03 | 115 |
| Here's some notes from the NASCAR notesfile...
-Steve
<<< VMSNET::DSA120:[NOTESFILES]NASCAR.NOTE;1 >>>
-< NASCAR RACING >-
================================================================================
Note 32.143 ESPN/ TV COVERAGE OF RACES 143 of 152
CONSLT::OWEN "Stop Global Whining" 57 lines 9-MAR-1995 12:20
-< Stats on Winston Cup Races >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Newsgroups: rec.autos.sport.nascar
From: [email protected] (Mark A. Breland)
Subject: Some interesting statistics...
Reply-To: [email protected]
Organization: MCC
Date: Wed, 8 Mar 1995 21:56:02 GMT
...as culled from the Speedway Motorsports, Inc. stock prospectus.
Attendance at WC events:
------------------------
1990 1991 1992 1993 1994
3,337,000 3,377,000 3,700,000 4,020,000 4,896,000
"typical" WC spectator demographics:
------------------------------------
38% are women
53% work in professional, managerial, or skilled labor positions
58% are married
65% own their own homes
78% use credit cards (explains those MBNA credit ambushes at every race)
$39,280 is the median annual family income
Costs:
------
Primary cost to sponsor a team starts at $1M, associate sponsorship
starts at $250,000. The average WC team spends $50,000 per race event,
or about $1.5M over an entire season. (my guess is this does not include
costs to operate the garage shop and to build cars)
Combined CMS/AMS financial data:
--------------------------------
$65M total 1994 revenues (18% growth from 1993)
$44M total 1994 operating expenses (19% growth from 1993)
$10M total 1994 net income (11% growth from 1993)
Interesting, huh?
--
Mark A. Breland -- Microelectronics and Computer Technology Corporation (MCC)
Research Division
3500 West Balcones Center Drive | voice: (512) 338-3509
Austin, Texas 78759-6509 USA NB#51 | FAX: (512) 338-3900
--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dark Night, Cool Breeze, Wet Dreams...
<<< VMSNET::DSA120:[NOTESFILES]NASCAR.NOTE;1 >>>
-< NASCAR RACING >-
================================================================================
Note 228.15 channel 5?? 15 of 17
CONSLT::OWEN "Stop Global Whining" 39 lines 20-MAR-1995 08:43
-< More fuel for the fire - Pt. I >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Article: 20009
From: [email protected] (Bill Stoffel)
Subject: TV: Ratings for The Rock
Date: 15 Mar 1995 09:36:54 -0500
Organization: Annapolis Detachment, CARDEROCKDIV, NSWC
I thought some of you might find this interesting. - Bill
[Posted with the premission of The Nashville Network]
Nashville, Tenn. -- March 7, 1995-- Over 4.5 million people
tuned in to TNN: The Nashville Network's live coverage of the
NASCAR Winston Cup's Goodwrench 500 on Sunday, February 26,
according to Nielsen Media Research.* The event drew the highest
average household audience any TNN program has ever attracted in
the network's 12-year history. The live, four-and-a-half hour
special earned a 5.0 rating, making it the highest-rated
motorsports program on cable during TNN's five-year involvement
in telecasting live motorsports.
"Clearly the NASCAR Winston Cup Goodwrench 500 drew the
largest number of households to date on TNN with over three
million cable homes tuning in, representing over 4.5 million
viewers," said David Hail, Sr. Vice President, Cable Networks,
Gaylord Entertainment Company. "This is a major milestone for
TNN and demonstrates the power of our motorsports programming
and the loyalty of our viewers." Mr. Hall added that TNN will
televise over 48 live NASCAR races in 1995-- more than any other
network.
The Goodwrench 500 was held at North Carolina Motor Speedway
in Rockingham, N.C. NASCAR Winston Cup driver Jeff Gordon
captured his third Winston Cup victory edging out Bobby Labonte
and seven-time Winston Cup champion Dale Earnhardt. In addition,
Gordon, the 1994 Brickyard 400 inaugural winner, received an
extra $91,200 from Unocal 76 for winning a Winston Cup race from
the pole position.
*Source: Nielsen Media Research Fastrak
|
3528.351 | We call that "Bull Stuff"...and it smells | DPDMAI::EYSTER | It ain't a car without fins... | Mon Apr 24 1995 12:52 | 48 |
| > I was poking fun at NASCAR viewers. It's you defenders who
> equated NASCAR viewers with the South. Hardly helps your
> claim of broad viewership.
Look, don't disguise your prejuidices here. Bo and Luke were TV
characters from backwater Hazzard County in the deep south, with a
Confederate flag as a license plate. If you had made the same
reference to putting an ad in "Ebony" magazine only being valuable if
we were "selling watermelons" to "Amos and Andy", I sincerely hope
someone would have jumped down your throat...with cleats.
If you're from Massachusetts and will be traveling in the South, it
might behoove you to remember a few things:
1. Don't refer to your African-American colleagues as "boy". I
couldn't believe it when I actually saw a Bostonian do this at
a Digital site. He, conversely, couldn't believe the swift and
immediate response this invoked. The rest of us locals could.
2. Don't refer to your Native-American colleagues as "chief". Equally
insulting, and apt to illicit same response as #1.
3. Please keep your fried chicken and watermelon jokes to yourself,
even though you might think they're hilarious. The majority of
Southern whites and blacks find them equally offensive, at best,
and you'll *not* have been the first person uttering them.
4. If you thought Hee-Haw was hilarious and Gomer Pyle typified the
Southern male, keep that to yourself also. This would apply to
Bo & Luke stereotypes, too.
5. Cultures are different. You can't learn the wonderful parts of one
or its people if you begin by maligning it and them. Stereotypes
will prevent you from learning...anything. And justifying them
with "Ah was jus' kiddin'" doesn't work. Real humor doesn't tend
to rile your audience.
An easy way to check and see if you're getting ready to utter a totally
insensitive and prejuidiced remark is to swap out the
ethnic/geographic/demographic population you're referring to with a
random group like "Jews" or "Women" and see if it'll still be funny and
well-received...as well as covered by P&P. Chances are, you'll find
you're an obnoxious bore instead of a comedian.
Tex
Now, back to the topics at hand....
|
3528.352 | "Auto races and beyond..." | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Apr 24 1995 13:07 | 22 |
|
Re: Sponsorships - my office alone gets about 10-12 solicitations a week
for these events, probably 2-3 are auto racing. We have done some
**minor** auto racing sponsorships in the past, just like we have for
yachts, football etc. ; in a events marketing/sponsorship market that
is several billion dollars a year in size, there are always some out
there. Our past sponsorships have not had enough focus and commitment
(tv media buying, integration with other activities for DIGITAL
throughout the year, etc.) for them to really work for DIGITAL.
For example, our Canadian subsidiary sponsored several auto races along
with Molson last summer, as I recall. While Canada was able to host
quality customer events at these races, they did not have the
electronic media budget to leverage the race visibility to broader
audience, and signage alone does not work. But the venue was
justifiable based on the customer hosting aspects.
We are looking at these type of activities for DIGITAL in consultation
with DDB Needham - our lead advertising agency. They have built a VERY
active program for clients such as Anheuser Busch/Budweiser and
American Airlines aming others.
venues as part of overall communications spending.
|
3528.353 | | LEEL::LINDQUIST | Pluggin' prey | Mon Apr 24 1995 14:25 | 28 |
| �� <<< Note 3528.351 by DPDMAI::EYSTER "It ain't a car without fins..." >>>
�� Look, don't disguise your prejuidices here. Bo and Luke were TV
�� characters from backwater Hazzard County in the deep south, with a
�� Confederate flag as a license plate. If you had made the same
The Dukes drove around in a 'sports' car with the doors
welded shut, and a number painted on the side. To me,
that presented an autoracing image. More so, than say
an appreciation of poetry. I particularly appreciated
the dukes, as they made fun of cops.
So, Sr. Tex, back in .341, when you wrote:
�� Companero, I've got some bad news for y'all. Reconstruction's over,
�� the carpetbaggers have either assimilated or left, and the economic
�� powerhouses are cities like Dallas and Atlanta. (And to show how
�� wonderfully up the average Yankee is on this, I had to explain on my
�� last trip that "No, we don't pick cotton by hand anymore". The reply
�� was, "Oh, since they invented the cotton gin?" :^])
...it seems to me you're imply that most Yankees are pretty
stupid. They don't even know what a cotton gin does. So, as
you would say:
"don't disguise your prejuidices here"
And, since you're so sure reconstruction is over, why don't
you let us know just how many non-white NASCAR drivers there
are.
|
3528.354 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Trouble with a capital 'T' | Mon Apr 24 1995 14:48 | 15 |
|
>And, since you're so sure reconstruction is over, why don't
>you let us know just how many non-white NASCAR drivers there
>are.
Who knows and who cares? Maybe NASCAR isn't bounded by
"quota requirements".
[And that is NOT a flame, just the way it is. I have a
friend who is a federal employee who told me within the
last couple weeks that his group is required to employ a
certain number of minorities, which today means white
males [8^)].]
|
3528.355 | | BSS::C_BOUTCHER | | Mon Apr 24 1995 15:37 | 2 |
| Please, let's stop already with the off color and back handed insults
and stick to the topic ... this is getting (has gotten) old.
|
3528.356 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Mon Apr 24 1995 17:55 | 10 |
| RE: 352
Lets hope that DDB Needham likes to race then! :) Maybe if
we got a DECcar on the circuit, DDB Needham would put their
own name up on it too. :)
RE: Bo/Luke/TheSouthWillRiseAgain/DamnedYankees
Enoughs enough. Take it to Soapbox.
mike
|
3528.357 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Apr 25 1995 02:14 | 29 |
| re: LEEL::LINDQUIST
Sorry, while I was out RACING (imagine that) others have put in some
good data about demographics. As mentioned, this circuit physically
visits almost every major market in the country, and it's seen in
other countries via satellite (and I know someone in France is
going to say "what?" (or ques-que-c'est NASCAR?) but those numbers
are increasing too) Remember, this particular market is geared towards
the United States. Formula 1 is world-wide, and can you say
"$50Million budget?" Digital can't I'm sure. So this seris is where
we'd want to be. And to the Gentleman from Oz, I'm sure he's heard of
the Thunderdome. NASCAR races there too. Except they drive
"backwards" down under.
I may sound like I have an axe to grind, because "I like this stuff".
But #1: I do this anyways, so I don't GAS if Digital wants to benefit
from it... #2: I work for digital and I'd like for people (especially
people who have lot's of $$$ and need computers and services) to know
digital can provide it... no... we don't make watches. #3. the
advertising possibilities and exposure are obvious to ANYONE who's
not in a coma.
As for your tee-vee preferences, Stick to watching Roseanne, or America's
funniest home videos or something. Hell, you'd prolly have a coronary
if you stumbled across hee-haw.
MadMike
(who didn't always live in Jawga... I actually used to be a
a... ah... ya.. ya- yan....er, yan...kee....)
|
3528.358 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Wed Apr 26 1995 15:54 | 6 |
| <---- Mike has some excellent points especially with the relative speed
of Alpha chips. We spend the bucks to have a Cobra and a vintage
Corvette at PC Expo etc. Why not get out on the track for some real,
long term exposure, continuous exposure?
Brian
|
3528.359 | Would the point be "speed?" | AMCUCS::SWIERKOWSKIS | If it ain't broke, we'll break it. | Wed Apr 26 1995 22:09 | 24 |
| > digital can provide it... no... we don't make watches. #3. the
> advertising possibilities and exposure are obvious to ANYONE who's
> not in a coma.
MadMike,
I've been too busy with a customer project to check Notes for a couple of
weeks. After reading the last 30 or so entries, I'm not sure everyone DOES
get the point (fastest processor/fastest cars - duh). I'm also at a total
loss to explain the hostile reactions to advertising through motor racing.
It makes great sense to me. I watch the Sequent car when NHRA broadcasts
the top fuel dragsters and wish it said Digital instead.
To the rest of you who have made some wild assumptions about who follows
motor racing, I think you'd be amazed at the wide variety of people in the
stands. I want to see Digital become a household word like HP and Intel and
Apple. To do that, we need to take advantage of all forms of advertising.
The Digital logo on the hood of a major race car would be dynamite, especially
if the on-board camera caught it. Around and around for 500 miles at Daytona?
Yeah!
Troy, what say you?
SQ
|
3528.360 | "We're a first name company" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Thu Apr 27 1995 09:25 | 3 |
|
Auto Racing will reviewed as part of any sponsorship mix. BTW, we
prefer Bill to Troy.
|
3528.361 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member in good standing | Thu Apr 27 1995 15:01 | 8 |
|
Good deal, Bill. Keep us posted. Hey there are a few of us DECCIES
who are into auto racing, I'm sure there are others in other mjor
corporations as well.
Mike
|
3528.362 | And some of us watch all 3 types of racing :-) | SUFRNG::REESE_K | tore down, I'm almost level with the ground | Thu Apr 27 1995 19:29 | 6 |
| MadMike's been pushing Winston Cup, but don't forget about Indy
cars :-) The F1 conference has a large following out of the U.S.;
IMO F1 would be a good place to advertise out of the states.
Karen
|
3528.363 | I sometimes get sooo confused! | AMCUCS::SWIERKOWSKIS | If it ain't broke, we'll break it. | Thu Apr 27 1995 22:46 | 12 |
| > <<< Note 3528.360 by AKOCOA::TROY >>>
> -< "We're a first name company" >-
>
>
> Auto Racing will reviewed as part of any sponsorship mix. BTW, we
> prefer Bill to Troy.
Cool, and I'll be sure to call you Bill in the future. This happens to
people with two first names. Before I married Tony, my last name was
Carroll and some people got confused.
SQ
|
3528.364 | We'll prolly sponser a rally car or something. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri Apr 28 1995 00:09 | 41 |
| re: Note 3528.362 by SUFRNG::REESE_K
> MadMike's been pushing Winston Cup, but don't forget about Indy
> cars :-) The F1 conference has a large following out of the U.S.;
> IMO F1 would be a good place to advertise out of the states.
Karen,
Winston Cup provides the most bang for the buck.
Indy cars is considered upper crust, their season is short, the
cars are too expensive and the drivers are prima-donnas. I think the
average CART budget is $13M. And there is not a whole lot of
advertising space. Plus, the "action" is somewhat lacking.
Finally, their TV audience is "not much".
F-1 is PROHIBITIVELY EXPENSIVE. IMO. I never checked it out, but I
hear budgets are upwards of $50M. Scratch this.
Which brings us back to Winston Cup.
Someone else mentioned Sequent, and NHRA. Hey... that's where I was
(Southern Nationals at Atlanta Dragway). I am a drag racer, but I
know that the tv exposure in NHRA is less than Winston Cup. There
can only be 16 cars in each of the 3 professional fields, and races
(when the cars are moving/competing) last anywhere from 4.7 - 7.2
seconds. It's difficult to package this for TV which again....
brings us back to Winston Cup.
31 times a year
for up to 4.5 hours
plus show cars
All over America
large, loyal fan following, massive TV audience
affordable, economical, fits with image (speed)
I can see it now... someone will contract with IMSA and pay a bundle
to sponsor a car on that series and it'll be a big waste of
time/money... then my boss'll hear about this and kick my buns out
of here for suggesting digital go racing.... Oh well.
MadMike
|
3528.365 | F1 | EEMELI::AMANNISTO | En�� 6183 p�iv�� el�kkeeseen... | Fri Apr 28 1995 03:08 | 4 |
|
I can understand that F1 is expencive, but anyhow it's *INTERNATIONAL*.
Asko
|
3528.366 | | RTFM1::OSTMAN | Time - is what keeps everything from happening at once. | Fri Apr 28 1995 05:04 | 19 |
|
To me it seems as the choise should be based on if the mony comes out
of a corporate or "local" (US,Europe or AP) budget. I assume that
it would not make sense to do this on a country by country level.
If it's a corporate budget it should be effective world wide too...
I don't know of any 4 wheel motor sport that has the world wide
coverage needed other than F1 or possibly Indy Car. I'm not sure but
2 wheel racing (Road Racing) seems to have a much more international
coverage than any of the 4 wheel race forms.
If it is a "local" budget you should use it to get the best "local"
coverage. But you split your resources and will have even less money
to spend.
IMVeryHO
/Kjell
|
3528.367 | Folks outside of Dawsonville watch other types of racing | SUFRNG::REESE_K | tore down, I'm almost level with the ground | Fri Apr 28 1995 13:54 | 18 |
| MadMike,
I wasn't suggesting we sponsor a team! :-) I would love to have
seen a Digital logo on the side of Nigel Mansell's helmet that
would have been picked up every time that camera mounted on the
rear right of his car was flipped on :-) (While he was driving
Indycars).
I mentioned F1 because of its international appeal; I wouldn't
mind seeing our logo somewhere on the car/helmets of Michael
Schumacher, Damon Hill or Jean Alessi. Hopefully, those would
catch the eyes of our German, British and Italian customers and
co-workers.
No matter what venue we might choose, sponsoring a team is out of
the question (IMHO).
|
3528.368 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri Apr 28 1995 17:52 | 30 |
| The "bank" decal on Sennas helmet cost $800,000.
I'm looking at this from a cost v. benefits issue.
Take a look at the CART attendance and tv exposure and take
a look a WC attendance and tv. The outcome is obvious, not because
I say so, but because the numbers say so.
Now, put yourself in the la-z-boy of an average tv viewer.
You watch the race and say, "this is cool". TIDE, BUD, etc...
you go take a leak and they switch to "wheel cam" and the little
digital decal is on tv of a couple seconds. You come back and
see "tide won".
It needs to be a whole car, or a contingency program. Otherwise,
I wouldn't waste the money. The only people who'll be looking for
the decal on TV would be US. It would be more of a novelty.
Seeing DIGITAL/AXP on the side of a car is unmistakable. "Do they
make watches?" Hmmm, the press release says digital is in maynard
and makes real fast computer stuff... and I'm in the market for
a computer (or I'm the director at a company and we need computers)."
Finally, while comparing CART to NASCAR Winston cup. This weekend
at Talladega 42-44 cars will start the race. What is the average
field for Indy cars? 28? The INDY 500 only accepts 33 cars.
You've got to make it into the race to begin with, to ever get on
TV.
Cost v. Benefit. WC = economical. CART = too expensive. Not because
I said so, the numbers do.
|
3528.369 | WC, not go-carts. | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Sat Apr 29 1995 01:08 | 25 |
| and... as I said once before, my wife and I went to the Coca-Cola 600
(real long races - lots of tv time) and sitting next to us were a
couple from a "large AeroSpace Corporation". (The only one now?)
Between them (both management) they controlled budgets of double
digits, in MILLIONS. And here we sit sipping' Bud, with them in their
Bill Elliot clothes, that they paid big bucks for, watching a Winston
Cup race. And all four of us could be called "yankees". Do you really
think that a DECmobile would have gone un-noticed? Do you think that
the 700+ Sun workstations/servers would be installed at said
large-aerospace-corporation? Maybe yes, maybe no, but damnit lets do
something more than some bizarre off the wall here now and then gone
wierd tv commercials.
We probably don't get the non-crank "Can'ya fix my watch" calls now
because they laid off the recptionist and nobody likes the answering
machine, but watching Winston Cup is growing a lot more than we are,
and if we don't do some real serious long term effective advertising
soon, then we may not have to. This whole bit seems typically digital
to me, study it do death and hope it goes away so I/we/us/them won;t
have to actually make a real decision.
Sorry if I sound bitter, but I am.
.mike.
|
3528.370 | :') | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member in good standing | Mon May 01 1995 09:09 | 8 |
|
And Mad Mike and I will gladly take upon ourselves the positions of
being the corporate liasons to the racing team. Right Mike?
Mike
|
3528.371 | Re: WC vs. F1/CART, etc ... | TMAWKO::BELLAMY | Ain't this boogie a mess? | Mon May 01 1995 09:38 | 5 |
| And besides .... there are many more square meters of painted
surface on a Winston Cup car. They make a much better Billboard!
;-)
|
3528.372 | Hard to advertize at 205.... | GRANPA::MZARUDZKI | I AXPed it, and it is thinking... | Mon May 01 1995 13:54 | 8 |
|
Re: WC vs. F1/CART, etc ..
But it is hard to read a bill board at 200+mph. And sometimes when they
come to an unexpected stop, pieces of the bill board are missing or
impaled on someone else's billboard.
-Mike Z.
|
3528.373 | Easy to advertise, hard to win! | TMAWKO::BELLAMY | Ain't this boogie a mess? | Mon May 01 1995 15:40 | 11 |
| Mike .... come on .... those TV camera guys are good!
I watched the race in Alabama on TV Sunday and reading the
Logos was easy at 195 mph.
You are correct ... they do come to abrupt halts sometimes. But
unlike F1/CART cars, they often patch 'em up and get back out
there. Not so with the fragile open wheel cars. Stock car racing
is a contact sport! :-)
(Yes, I said sport - but that's another rathole!)
|
3528.374 | How many of YOU watched the Winston Select 500? | BVILLE::FOLEY | Instant Gratification takes too long... | Tue May 02 1995 13:28 | 11 |
|
And just to continue further down this particular rathole, might I
inquire just how many Digital Employees/Contractors/Customers-you've
spoken-to, watched Mark Martin win at Talladega?
I feel that sponsoring a race and an every race fast-lap-kinda-like-the
Busch-Pole-award would be an awesome start to awakening America to our
existance. We are everywhere, and most people don't even know it.
.mike.
(Valvoline user, Folgers coffee drinker.)
|
3528.375 | | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Tue May 02 1995 13:37 | 3 |
| I did -- classic NASCAR finish, with a battle for the lead in the last lap.
andrew
|
3528.376 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Tue May 02 1995 14:04 | 4 |
| I watched also. I sure scared the cats when I yelled when Earnhart
spun at the end of the race!
-John
|
3528.377 | Sponsor testimonial | CSC32::M_JILSON | Door handle to door handle | Tue May 02 1995 14:09 | 131 |
| Here is a testimonial from a sponsor in one of NASCARs minor leagues but
the same goes for NASCAR Winston Cup (if not more so).
Jilly
Article 23125 of rec.autos.sport.nascar:
From: [email protected] (Russ Gould)
Newsgroups: rec.autos.sport.nascar
Subject: BGNN: The Business of Racing
With all the postings regarding sponsorship I found this article in my
local Sunday paper interesting and thought I would pass it along.
Sunday News, Lancaster, PA
April 16, 1995
The Business of Racing
Lancaster-based Burnham wins the checkered flag with its car, driver and
motorsports marketing strategy.
By Gil Smart Sunday News Staff Writer
Four-speed transmission. More than 500 horses revving at a red line
R.P.M. of 8,200. A snazzy paint job. And a top NASCAR driver.
What does it all add up to?
Burnham Corporation hopes the right answer is "profits."
The boiler and heating equipment manufacturer, based in Lancaster, PA, is
the primary sponsor of Avery Motorsports' Busch Grand National North #09
race car, driven by two-time NASCAR Winston Modified Tour Champion Mike
Stefanick of Coventry, RI. The car and driver will compete in 20 races on
the Busch Grand National North Series this season, racing throughout the
northeastern US.
The team has already raced once - at the NASCAR Busch Grand National North
125 at Loudon, NH., on April 11, 1995 - and they won it. And that excites
Burnham vice president of marketing Bob Coons, who helped coordinate the
company's racing program, for two reasons.
First, as a big NASCAR fan, he was thrilled to see his team win. Second,
Burnham's car and logo was splashed across sports pages and evening
newscast across the country. And you can't beat that kind of exposure.
"We've already had a ton of interest," says Coons. "This is a really
exciting way to get our name out there." Burnham's not interested in
getting its name out to the average guy on the street. The company sells
nearly all of its products to wholesalers, plumbers and heating
contractors. Among that group there are quite a few NASCAR fans, Coons
says.
But there are more and more NASCAR fans everywhere you look these days.
And those fans have money and want to spend it on NASCAR sponsors.
According to a recent study, 70 percent of NASCAR fans always or
frequently buy products from NASCAR sponsors. Nearly half of those fans
work in "white collar" jobs, more than 40 percent earn more than $40,000 a
year. Small wonder, then, that the companies are racing to market their
goods on NASCAR cars.
Burnham's not the only sponsor for the car; there are four associate
sponsors. Amtrol, a Rhode Island indirect water heater and accessory
maker; Wirsbo, a Minnesota based radiant heater manufacturer; Taco, a
Rhode Island maker of hydronic components; and Honeywell, with plants and
offices worldwide, all have their company logos on the car. But none as
prominently as Burnham.
Burnham got into motorsports last year, when it sponsored a two race pilot
program in the North series. The response the company received was
tremendous, Coons says, and Burnham decided to go all the way this year.
There are a variety of marketing opportunities and racing series for
potential sponsors. Burnham, assisted by Godfrey Advertising, selected
the Busch North Series because it's based in the area where the company
sells most, if not all, of its products - the Northeast.
"The target market for the North series was perfect - Virginia to Maine,"
says Coons. "It was where we wanted to be, and the investment was
relatively small." How small was that investment? Coons won't say, but
the figure is in the tens of thousands.
In addition to the car, emblazoned with the Burnham logo and painted the
company's red, white, and blue, there is racing gear for Stefanick and his
team; additional promotions and advertising based on the racing theme; and
hospitality events.
At five of this year's 21 races, Burnham will set up a "hospitality tent"
where food, beverages and racing paraphernalia will be given away to
invited guest, mostly wholesalers and other customers. Burnham pays half
the cost for the event, as well as the race ticket; wholesalers pay the
other half. The hospitality tent in Loudon drew about 400 people, Coons
says. At some events this year, they expect up to 1,000.
And if that doesn't sound expensive enough, a few weeks ago Burnham
decided to sponsor an entire race - the Burnham 150, which will run at
Watkins Glen International in New York on August 12, as part of the Bud at
the Glen NASCAR Winston Cup Weekend. The 62 lap event will be televised
live on ESPN.
Coon says all of this is "surprisingly affordable" - Burnham isn't
spending any more than it usually does on advertising and promotions, it's
just redirected its advertising dollars. And the exposure the company has
received would have cost much more had the company tried to buy
advertising space and air time instead of getting it free when Stefanick
does well in a race.
There has been a downside to Burnham's sponsorship - it takes time.
Godfrey Advertising's John Vastyan, who works with Burnham on the
projects, estimates there are up to 50 people working on some aspect off
the program at Burnham and Godfrey. And Coons, referring to the
hospitality events, adds that "Normally in the course of running a boiler
company you don't have to plan a party for 1,000 people."
But Burnham considers the time and money will spent. Coons expects
Stefanick to keep on winning, or at least remain competitive. If Burnham
didn't think Stefanick could win, the company wouldn't have signed him to
a contract. "We want to run with the best of them," Coons says. "If we
weren't competitive, it would taint our image. But Mike's a great
driver."
And his achievements, as well as the success of the company's motorsports
program, are more than have been anticipated. "Has this translated into
additional boiler sales? I don't have the figures to prove that yet. But
the response to this has been way beyond our expectations.
--
-Russ Gould-
[email protected]
|
3528.378 | Announcers say "The Kodak Chevrolet", or "The Valvoline Ford" | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Tue May 02 1995 14:37 | 18 |
| Just to drive the point home about advertising, Sunday's winners were:
Valvoline,
Dupont, &
Citgo.
Other advertisers that were shown quite a bit:
Health Source, Spam (yes, SPAM!), Kodak, The Family Channel,
Ford Quality Care, GM Goodwrench, etc... these from memory... there
were many more.
Advertisers are having a field day with Winston Cup... it's cheap
(relatively speaking) and the exposure is massive.
Later...
Steve
|
3528.379 | Don't think we can kiss-off rest of the planet | SUFRNG::REESE_K | tore down, I'm almost level with the ground | Tue May 02 1995 14:41 | 13 |
| How many people *outside* the U.S. watched the Winston Cup race
from Talledega? There is no question this race series is extremely
popular in the States, but what about the rest of the world?
If (mighty big if) Digital is going to go all out to advertise with
racing it must pick a venue that has universal appeal.
Yes, I did watch the race Sunday (Dale wuz robbed) :-) I also
watched the Imola F1 earlier in the day. (I've been known to tape
an Indy race that conflicted with either of the previous 2 races
mentioned).
|
3528.380 | | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | NRA member in good standing | Tue May 02 1995 14:53 | 9 |
|
Karen,
They'll (the rest of the planet) catch on pretty soon. ;')
Mike
|
3528.381 | Elsewhere someone mentioned branding and things looking up.... | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue May 02 1995 15:20 | 20 |
| Just got back from Western Auto where I bought a DieHard battery for
my Chevrolet....
Karen, I don't propose we leave out the rest of the world, but what
part of our market is in the United States? 40-45%? So, we drop
$6M, say, for a big huge branding blitz in the states and it does
happen to spill out to the rest of the world (mainly England & Oz).
Now, I don't follow events in europe enough to know how well something
like this (auto racing) would sell, so I can't say. I THINK it
would be difficult to justify spending $25Million to hop on board
an F-1 car. I don't really know. I do know that NASCAR would
be a huge benefit for the US bizness. Nothings guaranteed, but the
potential benefit is painfully obvious.
Oh, and I watched the race too. My neighbor came in 6th. They'll
be ringing the siren in town in the near future I'm sure.
MadMike
|
3528.382 | | ALFAXP::MITCHAM | The Watkins Man | Tue May 02 1995 17:04 | 22 |
| > How many people *outside* the U.S. watched the Winston Cup race
> from Talledega? There is no question this race series is extremely
> popular in the States, but what about the rest of the world?
I haven't a clue how many people outside the U.S. "watched" the Winston
Cup race but I do believe NASCAR racing has a following outside the
United States.
I understand that several of the condominiums at Atlanta Int'l Raceway (or
whatever it's called now) were purchased by some large Japanese businesses
for exclusive use in settling business transactions. What better way to
close the deal than to fly to Atlanta (or Charlotte) for a weekend of NASCAR
racing?
FWIW, while I was at COMDEX this past week, I noticed that Apple had one
of it's "Power Macintosh Racing" IMSA race cars (with their Apple logo
slapped all over it) on display. I picked up a free poster to help remind
me of this topic :-(
Hey Mike -- do 'ya think Digital could somehow out-bid McDonalds sponsorship?
-Andy
|
3528.383 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Tue May 02 1995 18:24 | 7 |
| I don't think there is a single sport that has world-wide appeal.
Certain events as the Superbowl, World Series, etc. have some
international following, but I was in London last week and baseball
wasn't even mention. The only racing I saw was Formula 1 and a nice
article about Nigel Mansell.
-John
|
3528.384 | Another humble suggestion.... | AMCUCS::SWIERKOWSKIS | If it ain't broke, we'll break it. | Tue May 02 1995 18:48 | 15 |
| re .383
Did that article about Nigel Mansell have anything to say about what happened
with his car at the beginning of the season? Why he didn't "fit" the car? We
thought it very strange that he didn't start the season this year.
Switch gears to another suggestion. Does anyone know what it would cost to
sponsor Villeneuve in Indy car? I'm sure Little Al, Emmo and Rahal are way
too pricey, but Jacques is one of the hottest young drivers around. The
announcers love talking about him, the cameramen love shooting him and every-
one seems to enjoy talking with him. A Digital logo on his car and helmet
could go a long way. He always mentions the sponsors in interviews like
Little Al. It's worth checking out, if Bill Troy is still listening.
SQ
|
3528.385 | Sponsorship occurring in Canada... | CGOOA::OWONG | SKIWI in Canada (VAO) | Wed May 03 1995 02:35 | 5 |
| Don't know the details but Digital Canada is involved again this year
with sponsorship for two Indy races (Toronto & Vancouver) and also the
Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal.
Owen.
|
3528.386 | But What About Ditch Jumping and Egg Hunting? | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Wed May 03 1995 04:49 | 20 |
| Up north in Friesland ditch jumping and - in the spring - egg hunting
are top of the bill. Ditch jumping is pole vaulting over a ditch.
Winners stay dry, losers don't. Egg hunting for the first (too early)
egg of a particular bird (i've forgotten which) is fraught with
tension, excitement, disappointment and skill. The first found egg
is presented to a representative of the Queen and therefor
the finder, the sponser (and the egg) have high exposure.
Those knowledgeable in the sport will undoubtedly realize that these
sports easily surpass cars knockety-knocking around tarmac in terms
of sheer blood curdling knuckle whitening excitement.
I must admit that I am trifle worried that under the onslaught of
nascarism and indynightedness, ditch jumping and egg hunting may not
be getting its fair share of sponsorship attention. Say it ain't so,
Bill?
re roelof
PS We could have the poles done up in tasteful burgundy for starters.
|
3528.387 | Ours is Digit in the middle. | ANNECY::DAVEY_M | Only an engineer. | Wed May 03 1995 08:10 | 19 |
|
From my sojourn in NL, I remember another interesting Dutch sport. It
consisted of the participants sitting on top of 12 metre poles in the
middle of a lake. I don't know what it was called but it seemed to
happen when the weather was determined to be cold and windy. I think
the winner was the last one to fall off, after a week or so.
This seems to be an ideal situation for advertising our wares. It
received attention on TV every night for the course of the game, it
didn't move at 195mph, and it emphasises our good engineering / goes
on-and-on / real users don't want excitement marketing message.
Yes, Roelof, I think we're onto something.
Mike.
PS The one I saw had contestants called A, B, C, D ... Now if we can
get them to change it to Alpha, D, E, C ...
|
3528.388 | Ferrari does it too... | ADOV01::MANUEL | | Wed May 03 1995 08:21 | 13 |
| FWIW re the last 20 or so, I have a photo on my office wall of a
Ferrari team F1 car from a few years back sporting the Digital logo on
the nose cone and rear wing, looks great and caught a lot of TV
exposure for us.
I follow Indy (and the two wheelers) as well but feel if we are going
to venture into this type of advertising that something with
international coverage would probably give us the widest exposure,
don't forget that a lot of key decision makers are guests in corporate
boxes for these events too.
Steve Manuel, my nick name is "automatic".
Adelaide, F1 capital of Australia for the last 10 years.
|
3528.389 | I miss watching it | COMICS::MCSKEANE | och, away an' play wi' the buses!! | Wed May 03 1995 08:31 | 12 |
|
We do get coverage of Winston Cup races over here in the UK, though its
only covered by satellite channels. I don't know what the coverage is
like these days, as its a couple of years since I lived in a house with
a satellite dish. When I did have it, the coverage was pretty good. A
lot of the events were covered live and they were always repeated at
various times through the week. (Pretty difficult to miss actually).
Cable seems to be the next big thing to hit these shores (can we say
behind the times!!!!) so the coverage of such channels can only expand.
POL.
|
3528.390 | | SUFRNG::REESE_K | tore down, I'm almost level with the ground | Wed May 03 1995 16:48 | 8 |
| .389
Thanks, I thought I remembered someone mentioning that they used to
get limited coverage but I couldn't remember if I saw it in the F1,
CARS_UK or RACERS conference :-)
You do get Indycar coverage, correct?
|
3528.391 | | SNOFS1::NICHOLLSM | Problem? ring 1-800-382-5968 | Wed May 03 1995 20:58 | 12 |
| The other way to get brand name awareness is not to sponsor a car, but
to provide the scoring.
A few years ago, DEC in Australia had an emplopyee who was interested
in motor sport and he managed to get DEC to provide the scoring system for
the televison coverage for our best known race, the Bathurst 1000
(touring cars doing 1000 km over a road circuit).
Whenever the results came up on screen, there was the DEC logo. We also
had those pull across type ads during the coverage that mentioned DEC.
|
3528.392 | Getting the Alpha to the Pole Position :-) | HLDE01::VUURBOOM_R | Roelof Vuurboom @ APD, DTN 829 4066 | Thu May 04 1995 04:10 | 19 |
| > From my sojourn in NL, I remember another interesting Dutch sport. It
> consisted of the participants sitting on top of 12 metre poles in the
> middle of a lake. I don't know what it was called but it seemed to
Hmmm, we could have these poles done up in tasteful burgundy too :-)
> PS The one I saw had contestants called A, B, C, D ... Now if we can
> get them to change it to Alpha, D, E, C ...
We could even put an Alpha _on_ the pole. Bet it would stay up there
a damn site longer than any of the contestants :-). Use the alpha
as the scoring timer with a microsecond granularity and we can
even make a case that we need 64 bit computing :-) :-)
Haven't heard from Bill yet but I bet he's already whizzed down
to Needham and is ferverishly working on these plans as we speak...
..ehhh...note.
re roelof
|
3528.393 | | COMICS::MCSKEANE | och, away an' play wi' the buses!! | Thu May 04 1995 06:43 | 13 |
| >Note 3528.390 by SUFRNG::REESE_K
>You do get Indycar coverage, correct?
The coverage was a lot better over here when Mansell was racing in the
series (even made it onto one of the national terrestrial channels for
a weekly report show). Mansells attempts at the Indy 500 were prime time
news over here. When I had the satellite dish a few years back, every
Indy race was shown live over here (not sure about this seasons
coverage though)
POL (who'll watch just about any kind of motor racing 'cept truck
racing 'coz there is even less overtaking than in F1!!!)
|
3528.394 | | SUFRNG::REESE_K | tore down, I'm almost level with the ground | Thu May 04 1995 11:54 | 14 |
| I've noticed the commentators for Winston Cup are mentioning more
and more teams using lap-tops or PCs in the pits during races to
calculate gas mileage etc. Rusty Wallace apparently used some sort
of on-board computer during qualifying (don't think he's allowed
to use it during actual race).
Unfortunately for Rusty, his computer failed during the race; his pit
crew scrambled to calculate gas mileage the way they used to, alas
he ran out of gas with 3/4 laps to go :-)
Louden, N.H. is right in HQ's back yard; it might make sense to
sponsor an event there or at least get our logo on display (if we
don't do that already).
|
3528.395 | | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Thu May 04 1995 12:03 | 5 |
| Karen, Rusty's car ran out of fuel with over four laps to go --
he wasn't nearly as close as he hoped to be. A noble gamble,
but it failed sooner than they expected.
andrew
|
3528.396 | Even made the news over here | COMICS::MCSKEANE | Cough red nose | Thu May 04 1995 12:12 | 6 |
|
Wasn't there a story a few years back, where Bobby Rahal won the Indy
title after his pit team worked out using a Digital system, that he
didn't need to make a final 'splash and dash' pitstop.
POl
|
3528.397 | way to go! | DPDMAI::EYSTER | It ain't a car without fins... | Thu May 04 1995 12:36 | 7 |
| I'd just like to comment that I've seen some of the most ingenious
comments and suggestions in this string regarding "bang for the buck"
advertising via racing. From helmets to scoreboards to laptops. I
hope someone will compile these ideas and forward them to the
appropriate area. They're too good to be lost.
Tex
|
3528.398 | | MASS10::GERRY | Is that NEARLINE enough for you | Thu May 04 1995 12:58 | 10 |
| re .390
> You do get Indycar coverage, correct?
Winston Cup and Indycar racing are only availble on Satelite or cable
but only less than about 30% of the UK have either of these things (but the
numbers for cable are rising rapidly!)
Gerald
|
3528.399 | Judge Ito uses an IBM too... 8^) | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Thu May 04 1995 14:48 | 16 |
| re .397
I seem to recall a couple of years ago, many teams were using IBM
laptops. When being interviewed about their new techno-toys, they all
went out of their way to mention that it was an _IBM_ laptop (Thinkpad,
I believe). That's the way race teams work. They KNOW which side
their bread is buttered on. They ALWAYS go out of their way to get
their plugs in.
And what did IBM do for all that publicity? Probably just gave all the
teams a laptop (or at least the big ones). We NEED to do more of this
sort of "hands on" marketing.
Later...
Steve
|
3528.400 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu May 04 1995 16:32 | 1 |
| Psstt... hey Bob... over here.... start back around .320 %^)
|
3528.401 | "Still here" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Thu May 04 1995 19:27 | 10 |
|
Hi - I am tuned into this but thought we were done for the moment on
the topic of NASCAR, etc. - silly me. BTW - the name Needham is a
'who' not a 'where', and they prefer DDB Needham, not DDB of Needham.
Anyway, We are currrently evaluating FY96 advertising plans, budgets
and the whole big picture of relationships marketing - including sports
marketing, sponsorships and the like.
BT
|
3528.402 | Speed is the key, and where better to show off speed? | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Fri May 19 1995 08:38 | 40 |
| Just to open this back up again...
Here's a note on how Apple is using racing to market its Power
Macintosh.
-Steve
Article: 2364
From: [email protected] (David Reininger)
Subject: IMSA: Power Macintosh Racing notes
Organization: MNI - Motorsport News International
Date: Fri, 12 May 1995 02:53:12 GMT
The Power Macintosh sponsored Wheel Works Racing Team will
be bringing the Power Macintosh on Wheels Tour to Lime Rock
for the WSC/Trans Am doubleheader on May 26-29. The Power Macintosh
on Wheels Tour brings Apple technology and the Apple World Sports Car
and transporter to corporate sites, college campuses and large
computer stores in conjunction with races around the country.
While at Lime Rock, fans will be able to enter the team's
transporter and test drive the latest Apple technology.
Using side-by-side demonstrations, race fans will get
a chance to see for themselves the speed advantage
the Power Mac has over Pentium machines.
Power Mac Racing is contesting the WSC with two Spice
chassis powered by Oldsmobile engines. In addition to
team owner, Rick Sutherland drivers have included
Stanley Dickens, John Graham, Jeff Gray and Dan Marvin.
The Lime Rock race will be broadcast live by ESPN on
May 29 at 1:30 p.m.
Power Mac Racing Team merchandise is available
exclusively from Maryland Motorsports. Contact
Dave Treffer of Maryland Motorsports at 410-741-5530
|
3528.403 | SUN... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Tue May 23 1995 09:20 | 7 |
| Check out:
http://www.racecar.com/detgp.html
SUN Microsystems is helping sponsor the Detroit Grand Prix.
-Steve
|
3528.404 | Looks like someone made the connection... | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Livin' on refried dreams... | Wed May 24 1995 19:12 | 37 |
|
from Digital Today, Issue #19, May 15, 1995...
Statistically, the average person's chances of standing next to a 1953
Corvette are even more remote than winning the lottery.
People passing through the AKO1 lobby in Acton, Mass. are actually
beating the odds. Parked next to the lobby staircase is a '53 Corvette
- one of only 300 made.
This 'Vette, shining with Digital burgundy and sporting a HiNote Ultra
notebook computer, sits waiting to go to New York City, where it will
join up with a 1955 Porsche and a 1964 Ford Cobra for use at the
Digital booth at PC Expo in mid-June.
The three vintage cars are part of the 1995 Digital PC event strategy
that compares Digital's 'Vehicles for the Information Highway' with
legendary vehicles for the paved highway. The theme drives home a
message about the high performance of Digital's personal computers.
In consumer markets, purchase are often made largely on the basis of
image and perception, jsaid Bob Carty, PC marketing manager.
"We have to achieve very high memorability," Carty said. "At PC Expo,
for example, we have an IBM booth on one sid eof us and a Compaq booth
on the other. They're 10 feet away.
"We have to do what we can to have visitors remember what they've
experienced at our booth. We want them to experience the booth, not
just attend it."
In addition to PC Expo, Digital's classic sports cars are scheduled to
appear at several other major trade shows, including COMDEX and the
Consumer Electronics show.
|
3528.405 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Thu May 25 1995 08:20 | 3 |
| gee, and I just took the DEC Rdb plate off my Stealth.
ed
|
3528.406 | slight rathole... | WOTVAX::STONEG | Temperature Drop in Downtime Winterland.... | Thu May 25 1995 09:48 | 11 |
|
>>> The three vintage cars are part of the 1995 Digital PC event strategy
.... cars built in 1953, 1955 and 1964 however desirable they may be
(and these three are!) are NOT vintage, they're just old.
I do like the idea tho', it'll certainly make sure people remember the
event.
Graham
|
3528.407 | | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Thu May 25 1995 10:50 | 5 |
| In the USA, a car more than thirty years old can be officially
designated an antique -- this would qualify it for "vintage" status
in the eyes of most journalists.
andrew
|
3528.408 | Get Real! | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Livin' on refried dreams... | Thu May 25 1995 11:08 | 7 |
| > .... cars built in 1953, 1955 and 1964 however desirable they may be
> (and these three are!) are NOT vintage, they're just old.
Cool! This means they're fully depreciated and should be available in
Idle Assets after the shows! :^]
Tex
|
3528.409 | | MU::porter | | Thu May 25 1995 11:21 | 4 |
| Hmm, my immediate thought on seeing that was: just what
DEC needs, to be equated with once-leading-edge technology
which is now obsolete, expensive, and plain irrelevant.
|
3528.410 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | E&RT -- Embedded and RealTime Engineering | Thu May 25 1995 11:24 | 8 |
| Dave:
I had the same thought. But I thought we could have alleviated
it a bit by putting a PDP-1 next to them with signage that called
it "We've been building Personal Computers almost since these were
the newest models!" or thoughts to that effect.
Atlant
|
3528.411 | | INDYX::ram | Ram Rao, SPARCosaurus hunter | Thu May 25 1995 12:16 | 12 |
|
> Hmm, my immediate thought on seeing that was: just what
> DEC needs, to be equated with once-leading-edge technology
> which is now obsolete, expensive, and plain irrelevant.
Reminds me of the Sun Ad from a few months ago depicting some
huge dinosaurs from Jurassic Park. The point of the Ad was
that Sun machines were used to develop the special effects
for that movie. But I couldn't help identifying Sun computers
with the huge beasts in the Ad (SPARCosaurus?), that were powerful
in their time, but are now extinct. I wonder ifmany others seeing
the ad felt the same way.
|
3528.412 | SPARCosaurus? | HDLITE::SCHAFER | Mark Schafer, Alpha Developer's support | Thu May 25 1995 12:46 | 1 |
| gosh, they're copying us again!
|
3528.413 | we're not the only ones who get it wrong | MAZE::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Thu May 25 1995 18:28 | 6 |
| re: .411
They took a lot of heat from this. Seems people were saying "Jurassic
SPARC".
Ray
|
3528.414 | apologies... | WOTVAX::STONEG | Temperature Drop in Downtime Winterland.... | Fri May 26 1995 05:51 | 10 |
|
>> In the USA, a car more than thirty years old can be officially
>> designated an antique -- this would qualify it for "vintage" status
sorry, I didn't realise the rules were different in the USA - I assumed
that as the motor car had only been around for 100 years or so, that
they'd be treated the same everywhere.
Graham
|
3528.415 | Sun always impresses me with their revisionism.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Fri May 26 1995 09:00 | 28 |
| re: .409
|Hmm, my immediate thought on seeing that was: just what
|DEC needs, to be equated with once-leading-edge technology
|which is now obsolete, expensive, and plain irrelevant.
I suspect that your reaction would be the exception, not the rule.
The vast majority of potential customers of the HiNote family
probably have very positive associations with those cars.
(Same thing with the Mustang ads from Ford a while back. "Then"
"Now" "Then" "Now". Everytime I saw that ad, I said "Then, then,
then, not now!" But, I never was likely to buy a new Mustang,
so I wasn't part of the audience they were trying to reach.)
re: .411
| The point of the Ad was that Sun machines were used to develop the
| special effects for that movie.
Uh huh. But unfortunatlely for Sun, the flying pigs sequence they were
involved with ended up on the cutting room floor.
(I think still have a copy of the periodic table from SGI with the
"Jurassic Classic" listed.)
-mr. bill
|
3528.416 | no sense of absolute age involved | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri May 26 1995 09:20 | 4 |
| vintage: adj. 2. characterized by excellence, maturity,
and enduring appeal; classic
American Heritage Dictionary, on line edition
|
3528.417 | linguistic chauvinism | MU::porter | | Fri May 26 1995 10:13 | 2 |
| American Heritage Dictionary: see 'joke'.
|
3528.418 | knickers a tad tight? | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Livin' on refried dreams... | Fri May 26 1995 10:45 | 12 |
|
Three Step program for getting along:
1 - Sprinkle Prozac liberally on Corn Flakes.
2 - Eat several bowls of same.
3 - Begin noting.
Apparently, Porter's got the order mixed up.
Tex
|
3528.419 | I'll take one please! | AXPBIZ::SWIERKOWSKIS | If it ain't broke, we'll break it. | Mon Jun 12 1995 18:06 | 15 |
| re .409
>Hmm, my immediate thought on seeing that was: just what
>DEC needs, to be equated with once-leading-edge technology
>which is now obsolete, expensive, and plain irrelevant.
I'd give my eye teeth for one of those obsolete vehicles, especially the Cobra.
That display would be awesome, but then, only the guys who can plunk down a
quarter mil would be interested in this "irrelevant" stuff (and we wouldn't
want their attention would we? :-))
SQ
Back from 3 weeks vacation -- loaded and ready for bear. Saw a Shelby Cobra
at the gas station last week _ WOW!!
|
3528.420 | little anti-racing sentiment here, or what? | DPDMAI::EYSTER | Livin' on refried dreams... | Mon Jun 12 1995 18:55 | 24 |
| Personally, I equate a Cobra with power, speed, and quality. Hyundais,
although current, cheap, and relevant to transportation needs, I don't
equate with the above. Nor, I surmise, will the power, speed, and
quality enthusiasts either today or 25 years from now.
You want butt-kickin', neck-snappin', wheel-diggin' power and speed,
buy a Cobra...or an Alpha at a lot lower price.
You want a slow, stodgey machine to meet your minimum needs? Buy a
Vega...or an IBM!
Hey, *that's* an ad! A Cobra with a Digital logo and a Vega with an
IBM logo on a quarter mile strip. The Christmas tree turns green, the
Cobra thunders down the track, driver hits the pits, gets the trophy.
The Vega finally crosses the line. Fade to black...
"If these two cars cost the same, which would you buy?"
"Digital. All the power without all the price"
Close-up of Vega fades back in, showing chagrined driver as a tire
blows and the Cobra driver meets the press.
Tex
|
3528.421 | PC Advertising must be working | KERNEL::BROWNM | DRAC | Mon Jun 26 1995 12:33 | 8 |
| I was glad to hear our PC advertising was working.
I was speaking to Netscape Communications about a problem with NEtscape
and was asked what PC I said Digital Venturis, I was asked if this was
intel based, yes I said, wow, I didn't know you made intel PCs, are they
your entry level systems?
Mark
|
3528.422 | | BSS::S_CONLON | A Season of Carnelians... | Mon Jun 26 1995 12:53 | 17 |
| This isn't about an actual advertisement, but...
On CNN's Computer Connection this weekend, they showed a HiNote
with a multi-media box (cd rom, speakers, etc.) which can be
attached to the bottom of the HiNote.
This was mentioned in the 'computer news' (or whatever) section of
the show. Unfortunately, they didn't show the Digital logo (except
for the very slightly visible logo on the HiNote), but they did call
us 'Digital Equipment' (as the company name).
I had it on tape and had to run through it a second time to see it
clearly.
It's nice to see this make 'computer news', but I'd love to see it
advertised as well. The multi-media option for the HiNote is very
exciting news!
|
3528.423 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Jun 26 1995 13:31 | 4 |
| Yes - it is a nice option (for the Ultra only). Too bad it's double the
price it should be.
Steve
|
3528.424 | Customer notices Digital ads at IndyCar race in Canada | SSDEVO::PARRIS | Keith, SCSI Clusters pioneer | Fri Jul 21 1995 12:25 | 14 |
| Came across this on DECUServe:
<<< EISNER::$2$DIA7:[NOTES$HIVOL]SHOP_TALK.NOTE;1 >>>
-< SHOP_TALK >-
================================================================================
Note 13.10 DEC TV Ads 10 of 10
EISNER::STEFFEN "Wayne Steffen" 5 lines 19-JUL-1995 13:22
-< Digital Signage >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Not TV ads, but at the recent Molson IndyCar race in Toronto, there were
numerous and some large Digital signs on fences and by the grandstands.
Thought it was interesting, and a positive sign that Digital needs to
become a household word like I**.
|
3528.425 | | ODIXIE::CERASO | | Mon Jul 24 1995 21:58 | 7 |
| re. last
Digital of Canada was also the co-sponsor of the Grand Prix du Canada
along with the traditional sponsor, Molson. Digital had numerous large
banners on the grandstands and some sort of tent set up(which I never
found;still trying to get one the cool Digital/Grand Prix jackets).
CERASO
|
3528.426 | And in Vancouver, BC as well. | CGOOA::OWONG | SKIWI in Canada (VAO) | Tue Jul 25 1995 21:36 | 13 |
| And Digital Canada is one of the sponsors of the Molson Indy here in
Vancouver 1-3 September, 1995.
Exposure is two part
- VIP booth for selected Digital customers with real-time race
monitoring on Digital systems in every VIP booth.
- Showcase of DEC PC's incorporating live Internet access in a
general public exhibition area.
Presumably there will be many banners laid out around the race site as
well.
Owen.
|
3528.427 | Digital PC ads on TV | TOLKIN::JBROWN | The just shall live by faith. | Wed Jul 26 1995 10:44 | 11 |
| While tuned in to CNN News last night at around 8:45 I happened to
catch two new Digital PC commercials - and they were great! The music
was very upbeat and fit the message perfectly, and the written messages
were worded very nicely.
This is the first time I was left with a very good feeling after seeing
Digital PC advertisements.
FWIW,
Janet Brown
:-)
|
3528.428 | | NYAAPS::CORBISHLEY | David Corbishley 323-4376 | Wed Jul 26 1995 16:03 | 4 |
| re: .426
I'll be in Vancouver for the race, let me know if I can help in any
way.
|
3528.429 | i like the new hi-note ad !! | ANGST::DWORSACK | | Mon Jul 31 1995 14:37 | 2 |
| saw the new hi-note ad yesterday (sunday). much better than the
last ad's we did. must have changed agents...
|
3528.430 | Any news | DECC::VOGEL | | Mon Oct 16 1995 20:47 | 11 |
|
Well it's been a number of months since a reply to this topic,
and about that long since I've seen any Digital TV advertising.
Does anyone have any information about when we'll see our next
ad?
Ed
|
3528.431 | And on a related (print) topic... | GEMGRP::GLOSSOP | Low volume == Endangered species | Mon Oct 16 1995 22:24 | 44 |
| It's also been a LONG time since I've seen a print ad in PC World (the one
I happen to get.) Looking back it appears the last ad was a whopping
2 pages in April - 7 issues ago. (I don't see my Sep. issue, so it's
possible there was some advertising in that one WIndows-95 issue.)
For comparison, this month's edition (and from what I've seen, this seems
to be fairly typical for these vendors) has:
Compaq: 4 pages, Compaq Direct Plus: 4 pages In 4 different places
Gateway 2000: 8 pages In 3 different places
Dell: 11 pages In 5 different places
HP: PC 2 pages, + 2 pages for products In 3 different places
AT&T: 6 pages In 2 different places
IBM: 9 pages In 7 different places
Micron: 4 pages In 3 different places
NEC: several (laptop + monitors) In 2 different places
TI: 8 pages In 1 place
Zeos: 5 pages In 1 place
Toshiba: 3 pages In 2 different places
ALR: 1 page In 1 place
Apple: 1 page (remember, this is a PC pub...) In 1 place
Microsoft: 10 pages In 3 different places
Digital: Not listed, 0 pages In 0 places for at least
5 of the last 6 months
(to be contrasted with
the prev. that seem to be
very consistently present...)
Digital did get 1/4 of 1 page of a 3 page spread for PC Compleat (along with
Compaq, HP, AST, NEC, TI, Packard Bell, AST and Toshiba...)
If you try to find Digital in the advertisers/products list, the only pointer
is to a table that includes the Celebris XL 590, reviewed in may, with
the comment "Fine Pentium-90 perfomrance, large monitor, high price
on corporate PC from big vendor".
----------
It was good to see the Starions at Lechmere (which is the first one that
I would consider buying, since it does appear to be price competitive.)
However, at least if you're a reader of PC World, you wouldn't even know
Digital was in the PC business unless you looked *really* hard...
|
3528.432 | It's Assignment America time | BVILLE::FOLEY | Digital = DEC, Reclaim TheName! | Tue Oct 17 1995 14:40 | 13 |
| Ok, maybe if we say it long enough and loud enough someone will listen?
What is our Advertising budget? What is HP's? IBM's? Intel's? Compaq's?
Do we *HAVE* an advertising dept? If we do, I have another question.
- Compare our ad budget to the top 10 competitors in the PC, Server,
Large System, Storage and whatever other category fits and report the
results here.
Waiting...
.mike.
|
3528.433 | have Computer Reseller News handy? | MBALDY::LANGSTON | our middle name is 'Equipment' | Tue Oct 17 1995 15:27 | 49 |
| re: .432
�"...What is our Advertising budget? What is HP's? IBM's? Intel's? Compaq's?..."
The note below is very old. But it will provide some history. Does anybody
have Computer Reseller News handy? Mr. Corson, I believe you've sworn by it in
this space.
Do they still print vendors' ad budgets?
Bruce
<<< QUARK::USER_DISK:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MARKETING.NOTE;1 >>>
-< MARKETING >-
================================================================================
Note 199.5 FAQ: `how much do we spend on advertising?' 5 of 5
LEDER1::PETTENGILL "mulp" 31 lines 6-JUN-1994 17:56:53.08
-< March 1994 Print ad >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Computer Vendors
Compaq $2,732K
Gateway 2000 1,983
Apple 1,937
Digital Equip 1,843
Dell 1,636
IBM 1,616
Ambra 888
Zeos 785
NCR (AT&T) 746
NECT 669
Vtech 595
AST 591
Acer 535
HP 469
Application Software
Lotus $841K
Wordperfect 796
Borland 634
Microsoft 551
Micrografx 525
CA 514
Corel 464
Oracle 370
Intergraph 306
Lotus WP div 288
DCA 250
Informix 232
|
3528.434 | "yes, we are here" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:34 | 26 |
|
Hello from advertising land -
There are several advertising depts - and two ad agencies (DDB Needham
for Coporate and most of the BU's, and Young and Rubicam for PC's). Major
DIGITAL ad depts are Corporate advertising (where I work), SBU and
PCBU. Each other BU has a person half or full time assigned to
advertising.
We are busy finalising the new Corporate Television and print ads -
they will run starting in November in U.S., start in January
overseas. We will1 be changing to a much higher production value
advertising look. A great deal is currently being written
on our overall Company advertising plans to be communicated in a
couple of weeks. The campaign is designed to support the new strategy
of the company that started being communicated in September to the
Industry analysts.
On ad spending - we spend what the company has decided it can afford -
it is not ideal but workable.
I will not share advertising dollars in a public forum - we are about
on par with HP and Compaq - quite a bit below IBM. If you factor in
coop or market development funds for resellers, we are outspent by all
of the above, IMHO. Advertising Age publishes spending periodically.
Bill
|
3528.435 | I'll take it... | DECWET::WHITE | Surfin' with the Alien | Thu Oct 19 1995 14:55 | 5 |
| So it ain't perfect, but will take it...
Let's get going!!
-Stephen
|
3528.436 | | DECC::VOGEL | | Thu Oct 26 1995 12:36 | 9 |
|
re .434
Thanks for the reply Bill. Glad you're still with us. Looking
forward to seeing the new stuff.
Ed
|
3528.437 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DEC: ReClaim The Name! | Thu Oct 26 1995 13:09 | 12 |
|
Ditto .436, Bill, but I have to ask a question. I hope it won't be
taken as an attack, personal or otherwise.
>> I will not share advertising dollars in a public forum - we are about
>> on par with HP and Compaq...
I'll hazard a guess that the concensus in this forum would be that our
visibility is certainly not on a par with HP and Compaq, so where are
those advertising dollars going? Are we getting our money's worth? Is
there something else we should be doing?
|
3528.438 | Printed in invisible ink? | HSOSS1::HARDMAN | Digital. WE can make it happen! | Thu Oct 26 1995 17:01 | 7 |
| If we're spending as much on advertising as Compaq is, we're getting
seriously ripped off somewhere. I see Compaq advertising everywhere. I
hardly see Digital advertising anywhere, yet I'm actually _looking_ for
the Digital ads! Where's the money going?
Harry
|
3528.439 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Thu Oct 26 1995 18:12 | 7 |
| > Where's the money going?
Well, I have seen the (eminently forgetable) "Put your software
in our beautiful storage boxes" ad in Newsweek. Its presence
there actually surprised me; I just wish it was a better ad.
Atlant
|
3528.440 | Ads are one element - profit helps too!" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Thu Oct 26 1995 19:39 | 31 |
|
YEp - I'm here, actually in new York on my faithful 486 laptop
whilst finalising the spots.
Getting ripped off - hey,` some ads work, some don't . I think that
our direct ad spending is close to the HP and COmpaq examples, but they
are 1. Juggernauts on a roll (as we were in '85-89), 2. Very Large Coop
and market development spenders, so that they have an extensive
reseller and retail presence 3. Had consistent high revenue and profit
growth over a few years - while we have had some hopeful quarters, and
the 11% revenue growth in apples to apples comparisons is nice, we are
still recovering in image from 3 absolutely horrible years, that eroded
the company's reputation and customer confdence. I remember a study a
couple of years ago saying essentialy that DIGITAL had one of the
lagrest cumulative losses in Corporate history that did not lead to
Chapter 11. Contrast our toes on the precipice posiiton to the
enhanced image that HP and Compaq were buidling with that huge
profitable growth in the same time frame. And that really affects a
company's image.
We are seeing hopeful signs that our image is slowly improving, but it
took a while to take down, it will take a while to rebuild. IMHO, we
are on the upward track and building momentum, and much prefer the
place we are today versus last year. The recent Senior management
decisions on company strategy help further focus the company and
therefore what we speak about in Communications.
Bill
|
3528.441 | They're out there. | CONSLT::GRIFFITH | Shaker Jockey Extraordinaire | Fri Oct 27 1995 00:29 | 15 |
|
Well I just watched a nice commercial, or possibly two (1) minute
commercials consecutivley, on Comedy Central at approx. 11:50 pm.
Not exactly prime time, but they were both to the point, and touted the speed
and affordability of our Celebris PCs. It was without doubt exclusively
a PC advert., and the burgundy logo was prominently displayed at the end
of each spot.
Frankly, I was caught offguard. I've occasionally seen sponsorship
acknowledgements for ~digital~ on PBS before, but this looked like a true
commercial.
-- BMG
|
3528.442 | Name recognition means so much. | CONSLT::GRIFFITH | Shaker Jockey Extraordinaire | Fri Oct 27 1995 00:41 | 9 |
|
Oh, and lest I forget to mention it... just before the spot faded to
black, the "Intel Inside" logo morphed onto the screen just below and to
the left of the ~digital~ logo.
-- BMG
|
3528.443 | on Sportcenter | CHIPS::FEELEY | Growing older but not up... | Fri Oct 27 1995 14:25 | 14 |
|
Earlier this week I caught the tailend of a Digital PC commercial on
SportCenter on ESPN. I had it on in the morning while I was getting
dressed and missed most of it, but I was pleased to see it nonetheless.
Also, there is an ad currently running from Circuit City, about getting
a free color printer whenever you buy an IBM-compatible PC. It's just
a quick mention, along with Compaq and NEC (but a higher placing), while
they give more time to Packard-Bell and IBM. Unfortunately, when they
mention Digital, they flash the black Digital logo rather than the
Burgundy one. But they spelled our name right...
--Jay
|
3528.444 | TV Placement | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Oct 30 1995 08:57 | 13 |
|
re .441
PCBU is primarily buying Cable TV programming in the states, while the
Corporate Advertising dept is on a mixture of Network TV and Cable.
PCBU also runs ads over the course of the week, while Corporate focuses
on Sundays (i.e., NFL).
Use of the Intel Inside banner and sound means that PCBU can get coop
reimbursement and can stretch their Ad dollars further. Corporate
Brand advertising does not use other people's logos, since we are
promoting overall DIGITAL capabilities.
|
3528.445 | Still looking down the Rathole... | BVILLE::FOLEY | Digital = DEC, Reclaim TheName! | Mon Oct 30 1995 12:25 | 13 |
|
Not to revisit previous ratholes Bill, but has anyone priced to cost
and benefits of putting that pretty maroon logo on the (quarter
panel/hood/trunk/suspension-cam/dashboard {pick one or more}) of a
Winston Cup Stock car?
I hesitate to actually put a number on it, but I'd have to say that
$100K would go a lot further there, than on TV.
I'll bet someone who lives near (insert popular McD's driver name here)
could find out some numbers too... :-)
.mike.
|
3528.446 | Micron also sponsors sometimes... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Mon Oct 30 1995 12:30 | 9 |
| re -.1
FWIW...
At yesterday's race (Phoenix), Dave Marcis' car was sponsored by
Prodigy and Packard Bell.
-Steve
|
3528.447 | | BVILLE::FOLEY | Digital = DEC, Reclaim TheName! | Mon Oct 30 1995 12:57 | 5 |
| RE: DAVE MARCIS and PRODIGY
I know, that's what prompted my rathole revisit.
.mike.
|
3528.448 | "First things First" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Mon Oct 30 1995 14:19 | 27 |
| Mike -
As we look more broadly into spreading our message - we certainly will
be looking at sports marketing opportunities like Indy Car, Stock Cars,
etc. We will be reviewing sports and leisure interests of our target
audiences as a starting point shortly.
That said - we need the opportunity to restate/rebuild interest in the
company first - on tv, radio, and print. Our mistake in the past has
been to buy into auto racing properties 'on the cheap' like with Bobby
Rahal a few years ago - and have no money to leverage the association
with racing to the broader audience, build our messages, etc. Pure
logo bill boarding from signage, etc. only helps if you have either a.
Instant recognition so you build more impressions and build on your
current mind share and image (like Coke, Pepsi, etc.)
or b. Have additional vehicles to build up the image (Like Visa does
in building up to the '96 Olympics).
Short term the focus is getting the new ads out to help reposition the
company.
Bill
Bill
|
3528.449 | :') | GRANPA::MWANNEMACHER | RIP Amos, you will be missed | Tue Oct 31 1995 07:20 | 11 |
|
Bill,
When you go to NASCAR, you will ne a liason to the team sponsored. I
humbly offer my services for this position. Put me down first on the
list.
Mike
|
3528.450 | New Ads | BGSDEV::RJONES | I don't get even I get odd | Wed Nov 01 1995 09:06 | 171 |
| From: STAR::GRANIT::GRANIT::MRGATE::"NEMTS::SALES::A1::ADVERTISING" 1-NOV-1995 08:48:35.92
To: @Distribution_List
CC:
Subj: Digital's Worldwide Brand Advertising Campaign 1
From: NAME: Corporate Advertising <ADVERTISING@A1@SALES@AKO>
To: See Below
From: Jeffrey Brooks @AKO, DTN 244-6234
On Sunday, Nov. 5, Digital begins its second year of brand
advertising with a new ad campaign created by DDB Needham Worldwide.
It's the most widespread communication yet of the company's direction
for the future -- "connectivity."
That week, a special issue of "Digital Today" describing and
illustrating our worldwide brand- and product-focused ad campaign
will be distributed to all Digital facilities worldwide and to our
partners in the Americas.
Connectivity means connecting people to people, people to
information, and companies to companies. Digital is in the best
position to provide that connectivity. The advertisements you'll see
over the next few weeks and months will deliver this message in
forceful and compelling terms.
In the United States, Digital's brand advertising will appear
primarily on Sundays in selected broadcast and cable TV programs --
sports, news and entertainment; on radio nationwide; and in
newspapers and business magazines. Product- and service-specific ads
will appear in business and information technology publications.
This high-impact television and business print activity provides a
broad umbrella under which all Digital products and services will
fit.
The brand ads complement Digital's ongoing product and service
advertising, which many of you have seen, and reinforce the company's
contemporary market-direct approach and "voice," which separates
Digital from its competitors. These ads have much in common with and
compliment the advertising for Digital's Personal Computer Business
Unit, which is created by Young & Rubicam. As you'll see, both
efforts "speak" in a confident, assertive voice.
The advertising also acknowledges the complexity of today's IT
environment. It recognizes that no one knows exactly what the future
will bring -- not us, not our customers, not our competitors. But
Digital positions itself by defining how it supplies infrastructure
tools so flexible, they can make the future work, whichever and
whatever that future turns out to be.
The TV commercials and print ads will feature the tag line,
"Digital...Whatever It Takes." This statement communicates the
position and differentiation of our company on several levels. It's
a declaration of:
o our ability to provide connectivity, to anticipate change, to
respond to customer needs and protect customer investments;
o our willingness to incorporate, integrate, and maintain
whatever operating system or hardware clients require;
o our intent to compete vigorously and ethically; and
o our willingness to work hard on behalf of our clients.
In a very real sense, "Whatever it takes" reflects our
willingness -- your willingness -- to go above and beyond standard
expectations.
The new campaign is worldwide. For the first time, Digital will
air brand advertising on TV in top overseas markets, such as London
and Tokyo. These commercials will commence in Q3.
We've also worked with our agency's extensive global network of
offices to translate and adapt the campaign for local markets. Each
image and line of copy will be honed country by country. While the
voice is constant, the European and Asian influences for the ads that
run in those markets will be unmistakable.
In particular, specific local adaptation of the "Whatever It
Takes" tag line is under way. Some countries may choose to retain
the original tag line because of its distinctively American flavor.
Other countries may translate or modify it, as appropriate, to meet
their cultural needs.
I am convinced this new campaign accurately reflects Digital's
image as a truly global company. The ads communicate our message --
connectivity, power, strategic alliances, services, and globality --
strongly and clearly.
The TV ads that begin on Sunday in the U.S. will be followed by
network radio starting Monday, Nov. 6. A three-page ad will appear
in the "Wall Street Journal" on Tuesday, Nov. 7. In Canada, the
campaign kicks off the week of Nov. 5 with ads in broadcast and print
media.
The schedule of the TV ads in the U.S. and Canada is listed
below. More information about the new brand advertising campaign --
including the four-week schedule of TV, radio and print ads in the
U.S. and Canada -- will appear in LIVE WIRE and the Information
Repository. I encourage you to watch and listen for these
advertisements in your local media. We look forward to your feedback
and comments.
Regards,
U.S. Media Schedule for Sunday, Nov. 5 (subject to change)
Network Program
ABC "Good Morning America/Sunday"
ABC Sunday Movie
Fox National Football Conference Game
NBC "Sunday Today"
NBC American Football Conference Game 1
NBC American Football Conference Game 2
TLC "Scientific American World"
"Wonders of the Universe"
"Science Frontiers"
TDC "Time Traveler"
A&E "Screening Room"
Canada Media Schedule for Week of Nov. 5
(Ads begin airing on Monday, Nov. 6 and are subject to change.)
CBC "Fifth Estate"
CBC Prime Time News
Discovery Channel "Beyond 2000"
(Canada only) "Hi-Tech Culture"
"On the Internet"
"Wings"
Global TV Network "Early News"
"NYPD Blue"
"Late News"
NewsWorld "Business World"
"On the Arts"
"Pacific Rim Report"
"The Lead"
"Pam Wallin Live"
Showcase "Phoenix"
"Crocodile Shoes"
"Festival Films"
TSN "Grand Slam Golf"
"SportsDesk"
Distribution:
This message was delivered to you utilizing the Readers Choice delivery
services. You received this message because you are a Digital employee.
If you have questions regarding this message, please contact the author.
To Distribution List:
[deleted]
|
3528.451 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | DEC: ReClaim The Name! | Wed Nov 01 1995 10:43 | 7 |
|
.450> It's the most widespread communication yet of the company's direction
.450> for the future -- "connectivity."
(Let's all pray that some corporate wordsmith doesn't change this to
"conDUCtivity" befor we hit the air. :-)
|
3528.452 | heard on the radio | WHOS01::ELKIND | Steve Elkind, Digital Consulting @WHO | Wed Nov 08 1995 00:29 | 7 |
| Heard the same Digital radio ad at least 3 times during my 1.5 hr trip
back from a customer site today, on WCBS in NYC (all-news AM station).
I was impressed that I was hearing the ad. I was not impressed by the
ad itself. Frankly, the first time I heard it, it almost didn't come
across that the ad was for a company called "Digital" - it came out
more like the word "digital". Too bad you can't use the logo to
reinforce the text on radio.
|
3528.453 | | ACISS1::ROGERSR | hard on the wind again | Wed Nov 08 1995 09:29 | 2 |
| I heard it on Rush Limbaugh. Now there is 10m listeners in one whack!
|
3528.454 | | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Nov 08 1995 12:47 | 6 |
| > I heard it on Rush Limbaugh. Now there is 10m listeners in one whack!
And 250 million boycotters.
Yeah, great choice. :-(
Atlant
|
3528.455 | not me.... | FIREBL::LEEDS | From VAXinated to Alphaholic | Wed Nov 08 1995 13:01 | 3 |
| > I heard it on Rush Limbaugh. Now there is 10m listeners in one whack!
There's one place I'll never hear it........
|
3528.456 | | SUBPAC::MAGGARD | Mail Ordered Husband | Wed Nov 08 1995 13:41 | 7 |
|
...so put it on Howard Stern for non-Rushies...
Just kidding!!! :-)
|
3528.457 | Advertise our address !!!! | STAR::MONTAGUE | | Wed Nov 08 1995 22:50 | 23 |
| ... Back alot
the mention was made that there was no WWW address in our ads.
That should be in the ads.
Also, We could paint the address on the sides of our trucks that are
running around the country. The address doesn't changes like a slogan might.
You got a box that's up to 8 foot tall by 40 foot long. You got an 8 by 7
rear end that good use something more interesting than "Caution - Truck makes
wide right turns". The new boxes already have the burgundy logo.
You have a mobile bill board that is already paid for.
Some do nots on this concept:
no pictures - the hw goes obsolete way to fast today. I used to wince every
time I saw the trailers with the rainbow, decmate and pro on them
no slogans - Slogans get retired almost as fast as hw.
no cutesy graphics - I believe you want people to look at the address, and
not wade through a lot of other clutter. After all they are in their
car doing 75 mph.
Send retainer check to address above.
Regards,
/jon
|
3528.458 | Send the man his check! | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC; Reclaim the Name&Glory! | Thu Nov 09 1995 04:09 | 16 |
| I think that's a super idea. Many will not understand what
http://www.digital.com/ means; many others will be struck that DIGITAL
is the first to emblazon realspace-highway-cruisers with signposts for
cyberspace-highway-cruisers. Such "Wow, whatta company!" impressions
are imho hard to make.
As it says on my own rear license-plate holder:
+------------------------------------------+
| INTERNET |
| |
| 191-YXL |
| |
| http://www.digital.com/info/kalikow.html |
+------------------------------------------+
:-)
|
3528.459 | Is this a first? | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Thu Nov 09 1995 07:38 | 12 |
| Dan,
Whoa!! Looks like you're inviting the proverbial Pandora's box
to be opened here. Are you saying that IBG officially condone
personal employee web pages on the external server and that they
can be advertised in/on popular media?. Or is this perquisite
reserved for true web evangelists?
Not begrudging you the spoils of your labour, but inquiring minds and
all that ........
/Chris.
|
3528.460 | | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC; Reclaim the Name&Glory! | Thu Nov 09 1995 08:41 | 12 |
| Fair question.
The personal part of "my" web pages which are hosted on the webforum
demo machine are going to be moved to a private ISP (in my copious free
time... coming soon!) but there are in fact a chosen EARLY-ADOPTER,
knew-how-to-bug-Russ-Jones, wide-eyed fanatic, few, proud,
Webevangelists who do, in fact, have personal pages on
www.digital.com...
Hey, I'm OLD enuf to be a grandfather, why shouldn't I get the benefit
of at least one "Grandfather Clause?" :-)
|
3528.461 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Thu Nov 09 1995 10:26 | 9 |
| I already seen tons of TV adverts with http addresses in them. I
found Canon's new page the other day from their TV ad.
Does our new TV ads include our page address, if not, it should.
As for painting the trucks, that would be good idea. I haven't seen
a truck with a URL on it, but I have seen billboards with URLs.
-John
|
3528.462 | | TP011::KENAH | Do we have any peanut butter? | Thu Nov 09 1995 10:41 | 12 |
| There is a new Disney animated film being advertised --
its Web address is:
www.toystory.com
This address is displayed both on TV and in movie theaters.
Web addresses are becoming more common than phone numbers
in every advertising medium. If we don't have ours listed,
we're out of step.
Of course, if we display our address, then we'd best have
a really neat site to visit.
|
3528.463 | It works for them, it'll work for us! | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Thu Nov 09 1995 11:20 | 19 |
| Gee, the s/w house up the block from me has a good sized sign out
front. On it, they have their logo (a cowboy's head) and under it is
written:
internet mail: [email protected]
I forget whether it has their web page address posted (but it's easy
enough to guess, anyway).
They didn't even bother writing their company NAME on the sign! When I
exchanged email with the owner, he said how surprised he was to get so
many email responses because of the sign. And this is in a rural town
in Maryland (there's a farmette across the street, for instance), not
some high-tech urban center!
IMO, no visual advertisement should omit our web page address. Neither
should we be producing business cards without our web page address.
-- Russ
|
3528.464 | sort of my internet personal license plate | TINCUP::KOLBE | Wicked Wench of the Web | Thu Nov 09 1995 12:29 | 11 |
| And to make the political personal, add this to your sigs when
you are out in the newsgroups. (of course I'm hyping OUR product :*))
resolv> cat .signature
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digital = Internet = Servers, Security and Service
DSNlink V2.0 for Digital UNIX and ULTRIX http://www.service.digital.com/
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
liesl
|
3528.465 | expected now-a-days | FIREBL::LEEDS | From VAXinated to Alphaholic | Fri Nov 10 1995 13:11 | 10 |
| www addresses are showing up everywhere. During the Suns/Celtics game the
other night, the "rolling ads" at courtside in front of the scorers table
were often displaying a simple "http://www.nba.com" - no other info
given. I'll bet a great deal of the TV audience knew what to do with that
info.
I can't believe we don't put our ww address in the ads, almost every other
technical company I see ads for includes their www address ...
Arlan
|
3528.466 | available on tape ?? | FIREBL::LEEDS | From VAXinated to Alphaholic | Mon Nov 13 1995 19:23 | 4 |
| Are the ads avaialable to us on VHS tapes (other than setting our VCR to
tape them off broadcast) ?? I'd like to use them at some customer events.
Arlan
|
3528.467 | Trucks still not painted right! | STAR::MONTAGUE | | Thu Feb 01 1996 16:05 | 28 |
|
I saw one of our trucks again on RT.495 heading south in Chelmsford, MA, USA
the other day. Still the same boring box with no URL painted on the side.
>Also, We could paint the address on the sides of our trucks that are
>running around the country. The address doesn't changes like a slogan might.
>You got a box that's up to 8 foot tall by 40 foot long. You got an 8 by 7
>rear end that good use something more interesting than "Caution - Truck makes
>wide right turns". The new boxes already have the burgundy logo.
>You have a mobile bill board that is already paid for.
WEB WEEK magazine had an article on just this concept in their Dec 95* issue.
Point your browser at
http://www.iworld.com/ww-online/
go to the WEB week magazine
go to help
search for the author Anne Bilodeau ( she has written two articles for
web week )
Picking the correct document is left as an exercise for the reader.
Still waiting for first retainer check.
/jon
* And yes I know it's February. I'm behind on my hardcopy reading also.
|
3528.469 | Even Electronic Shopping is doing it... | SWAM1::GOLDMAN_MA | Oy To the World! | Mon Feb 19 1996 12:34 | 14 |
| re: NASCAR
I'll second the motion for NASCAR.
If QVC (the infamous shop-at-home channel) can sponsor a car for
Bodine, why shouldn't we get a driver ad go for it??
In fact, when Bodine was interviewed after his accident yesterday,
he even "plugged" his sponsor, telling the QVC fans not to
give up on him, and to buy lots of stuff from the Q, since he'd be
needing a new car now -:)!
M.
|
3528.470 | Can't do it, make too much sense. | SYOMV::FOLEY | Instant Gratification Takes Too Long. | Mon Feb 19 1996 12:41 | 7 |
|
re; .-1 MadMike, You couldn't be more correct, but I seriously doubt
that digital will even consider it. It makes too much sense, and would
probably sell way too much hardware for us to a) deliver, b) install c)
service.
.mike.
|
3528.471 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | | Mon Feb 19 1996 14:32 | 6 |
| RE: MadMIke
If you're serious, you should take your suggestion up with either Bill Troy
or David Simler of Digital's Corporate Advertising department.
hth
|
3528.472 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Mon Feb 19 1996 14:51 | 9 |
| RE: .471
I recall seeing a note in here from Bill Troy on the topic of
NASCAR/racing promotion. I think he mentioned it was being
looked at but no decision was made at the time.
I'd love to see a burgandy DEC car..
mike
|
3528.473 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Mon Feb 19 1996 14:58 | 28 |
| I *am* serious. I got "sucess" (considerable) from posting something
in here recently, so I know most of this stuff gets passed to the
proper people (eventually). I was kinda hoping someone "in the know"
would want to contact me about opportunities or suggestions if
*THEY* were serious. If they are not, I am not going to waste my
time with something that anyone not in a coma can see is benefitcial
(IF DONE PROPERLY). If my phone rings, that's nice. If it doesn't,
life goes on.. another day, another headache.
hth (har tee har?)
That's why I'm not actively following up on this. Every year I
state my mind and then shut up (for the most part). If digital
is seriously interested I'm sure I'd find out through the (non
digital) rumor mill.
The only "concern" I have is with digital missing out on the game,
i.e. being a johnny come lately or an also ran. Which looks like
that may be happening. I've seen IBM toying in this sport.
The other thing I'm concerned about is digital blowing a huge wad
on "motor racing" and then getting upset they got jipped because they
bought into Formula one or off road rally racing or something.
It's gotta be Busch Grand National at a minumum, Winston Cup series
would be the best bet. Anywhere else and I'd keep my money in the
bank.
MadMike
|
3528.474 | (brief rathole) | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Tue Feb 20 1996 07:49 | 3 |
| Mike, who placed 6th at Daytona? (side note: Bill Elliott placed 8th)
-Andy
|
3528.468 | Hello... Marketing? | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Feb 20 1996 09:48 | 52 |
| Well, it's that time of year again...
I just got back from Daytona, where I and 250,000 other folks, (along
with an estimated 30 million people on TV) saw the Daytona 500.
This year people like us only brought an estimated $190,000,000 to
the local Daytona economy. Which sounds about right, since the 2
Atlanta races generate $300,000,000 for our economy.
But this year I noticed something different....
The #8 car was sponsored by Circuit City
The #71 car was sponsored by Prodigy
The #15 car, which had a one race deal, had Hayes on the side of it.
Hayes figured out real quick like what was happening and during speedweeks,
extended their sponsorship for the whole year.
And there was the pretty, unlettered #27 car out there all day long.
Oh well. For the tiny sum of $3 million these folks would "take care of us"
like kings for a whole year. Get us on national TV 31, well, make that
30 more times for about 3 hours each time. Probably have 2 independant
show cars at our disposal all year long, appearing wherever we tell them.
Sponsorship used to be (probably still is) around $1M a year. "big dogs"
can generally get $6M. Knowing the 27 folks, they'd probably thought
they'd died and gone to heaven if someone mentioned they have $2-3M
to invest for a year long venture.
The sport is exploding. We'd fit right in. With the proper marketing
angle it's obvious how we can leverage our involvement with just the 3
above mentioned cars. NASCAR is now on the web (finally), the hype appears
to be toward internet, not computers in general, however if digital
muscled in I don't see why we couldn't be the "official computer of
NASCAR", as well as have a car out there. I'm not a marketing guy
or a finance guy, but I know this amount of money is chump change
compared to what goes on in the industry. This isn't a bunch of yahoo's
(no pun) out running fast every weekend all over the country, this sport is
becoming (already) BIG BUSINESS. The networks are fighting over who will
cover the events. The "minor leagues" if you will, are getting picked up
by national tv now too (sponsorship is around .5 to 1.5M/year for them).
These events continuously set viewer and attendance records every year.
The series is expanding and people are building tracks in the hopes
of landing one of these events, but the current schedule is considered
"full". They race in practically every major market in the USA, they
have "goodwill" events in Australia, and soon Japan (rumor).
Now is the time to get in, I would have said on the bottom floor, but the
elevator is moving up rapidly. This whole deal is an excellent advertising
tool.
Regards,
MadMike
(Oh ya, my neighbor came in 8th and led the race for a bunch of laps.)
:^)
|
3528.475 | fixed rathole | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Feb 20 1996 09:50 | 4 |
| Ya, I screwed up, but fixed it. I was in a hurry to get out
of their so when I glanced over at the position board I noticed
the "94" down a ways. It looked like it was 6th but it was
8th.
|
3528.476 | | POWDML::BUCKLEY | | Tue Feb 20 1996 09:59 | 9 |
| RE: .473
If you're going to wait for a phone call from the DEC execs to
discuss your vision of Digital's brand marketing and strategy,
then my recommendation is "don't hold your breath".
I applaud your efforts to *drive* suggestions internally within
the company, but to take the attitutde of "sit back and wait for
their call" is unrealistic in *today's* Digital, imvho.
|
3528.477 | Mr. Pessimist | PENUTS::CGILLIS | Gee, now that you mention it... | Tue Feb 20 1996 10:01 | 39 |
| Hi...
Not a great NASCAR fan, but I did watch this weekends race. Remebering the
previous discussions in this conference I tried to pay special attention
to the sponsors and their "place" in the race. Here are my impressions as a
non-NASCAR fan (not a detractor just not a fan).
1) Beyond the front 5 or so cars there's very little air time for the sponsor.
You gotta' be up there in the big races.
2) I did notice (with some amusement) the plug for QVC.
3) By far, the standout sponsor for me was a furniture store I've never heard
of. I remember this because the sponsors name was prominately featured on the
wrecked car as it was being hauled away. I thought "Boy, I bet that sponsors
happy.". Then I began to imagine the fun competitiors would have with a wrecked
Digital sponsored car and a mention of Digitals place on the Information
SuperHighway.
So...I still like the idea of Digital sponsoring a car if we can be guaranteed
the following:
- It will be the fastest car out there, bar none (this is our claim isn't
it).
- The car will never be involved in a wreck, at least not shown on camera.
- The car always finishes in the top 5
Since this obviously can't be guaranteed, it's a dicey proposition at best
for Digital to sponsor a car. Honestly though, I really do like the image of
an Alpha-Generation logo'd car blazing past the rest of the back to the
checkered flag.
Chuck
BTW Just out of curiosity, how long did it take to leave the speedway? There
were an awful lot of people there.
|
3528.478 | Reminds me of the VAXs being smuggled into Russia... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Tue Feb 20 1996 10:41 | 28 |
| Hayes (the modem company) sponsored a car... and so did Prodigy. HP,
Sun, IBM, and other high-tech companies sponsor cars in other racing
leagues (associate sponsorships).
We seem to be the only ones not bright enough to cash in on this.
re .477. The top 5 got LOTS of exposure in the race, but so did the
others... and especially those that had tied in their race sponsorship
to TV advertising during the race. Although the Daytona 500 is the
"super bowl" of NASCAR, there are 30 other Winston Cup races throughout
the year, and the ratings are very good and getting better every year.
Every driver out there with a full time sponsor will get LOTS of
on-camera air-time throughout the year. And it's not just during the
races. There are at least a half dozen weekly shows about racing, not
to mention that there is a daily half-hour program on ESPN every night
dedicated to the days racing news, not to mention all the people who
walk around with t-shirts and hats displaying the cars/logos of their
favorite drivers.
Race fans are intesely loyal to their favorite drivers and their
sponsors. They buy and recommend the products of sponsors so that
their favorites can go race every weekend.
We're blowing it... again.
-Steve
|
3528.479 |
Just don't sponsor Daryl Waltrip... | HOZHED::FENNELL | A cowboy's life is the life for me | Tue Feb 20 1996 10:57 | 7 |
| It could be as simple as a d|i|g|i|t|a|l logo on the dash of a car that carries
an in-car camera. CBS had 9 in car cams for the Daytona 500.
They usually pan to those every 10-15 minutes or so. A simple burgundy emblem
on the dash would be seen by all tv viewers, but not by the spectators.
Tim
|
3528.480 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Feb 20 1996 12:20 | 5 |
| Speaking as someone who is disinterested in racing and most other similar
activities, I find it difficult to believe that people really base their
major buying decisions on whose logo is on a race car.
Steve
|
3528.481 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Tue Feb 20 1996 12:55 | 10 |
| RE: Note 3528.480 by QUARK::LIONEL
>Speaking as someone who is disinterested in racing and most other similar
>activities, I find it difficult to believe that people really base their
>major buying decisions on whose logo is on a race car.
I agree with you Steve, the people in the past few replies seem to
think spending $3M on this would have some great return. I wonder
what other types of advertising or customer awareness could be purchased
for $3M.
|
3528.482 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Don't like my p_n? 1-800-328-7448 | Tue Feb 20 1996 12:57 | 4 |
|
For the same reason someone would buy a gallon of Tide after see-
ing some bimbo on TV using it?
|
3528.483 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:10 | 14 |
| re: Note 3528.482 by BUSY::SLABOUNTY
> For the same reason someone would buy a gallon of Tide after see-
> ing some bimbo on TV using it?
I can see it now.
The Boss: "Dilbert, why did you decided to buy our files server from
Digital?"
Dilbert: "Wally and I really liked the Digital car in this weekends
NASCAR race."
|
3528.484 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:13 | 6 |
| There have been studies that show great fan loyalty with the products
on their favorite driver's car. Lets put it this way, if it didn't
sell the product, why would anybody spend the money. Winston certainly
doesn't sponsor the entire race series as a hobby...
-John
|
3528.485 | | ICS::CROUCH | Subterranean Dharma Bum | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:14 | 9 |
| It's just another form of name awareness. That's it, nothing more,
nothing less.
Car racing in general doesn't float my boat so it makes no diff to
me but obviously many millions of people do.
Jim C.
|
3528.486 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:37 | 11 |
| Winston cigarettes are purchased on an individual level, and Winston (or
whichever of the coffin-nail manufacturers makes Winston) uses race cars
and all of the associated paraphenalia promotion to provide an "image". "Cool
race car drivers support Winston (even if they don't smoke), so maybe I
should too." I can't see the same sort of basis used to decide to buy
a Turbolaser.
Now if you have to buy a sponsorship to run ads during the race, that may be
supportable. But the sponsorship by and of itself is fairly worthless.
Steve
|
3528.487 | | HOZHED::FENNELL | A cowboy's life is the life for me | Tue Feb 20 1996 13:39 | 26 |
| NASCAR spectators cover the whole spectrum. You used to see sponsors like STP,
Goodyear, Sunoco which were very much tied in to autos/auto racing
Now you see everything:
Hayes
3COM ?
Kellogs Corn Flakes - Including a picture of the driver on the box
Tide
Maxwell House
Quality Life
McDonalds
Hooters Restaurants
Kodak
Miller - Miller features the car in their ads
Budweiser - Bud sponsors NASCAR, BGN, CART and jet boats just to name a few.
Lots of household products with little tie in to racing spend big bucks
sponsoring cars. These races attract several hundred thousand spectators and
millions of tv viewers. Every race is televised (Between CBS, TBS, ESPN and
TNN) on Sunday afternoon and lasts 4+ hours. The season starts in February and
goes until Oct/Nov.
Tim
|
3528.488 | here comes the hate mail now... 8-) | NOTAPC::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Tue Feb 20 1996 14:09 | 23 |
| >Hayes
>3COM ?
>Kellogs Corn Flakes - Including a picture of the driver on the box
>Tide
>Maxwell House
>Quality Life
>McDonalds
>Hooters Restaurants
>Kodak
>Miller - Miller features the car in their ads
>Budweiser - Bud sponsors NASCAR, BGN, CART and jet boats just to name a few.
I've got this image of a bunch of guys hanging around the ol' TV drinking beers
(miller and budweiser). One of them is probably having a coffee (Maxwell
House) and most of them are chowing down on some Big MACs, but at least one of
them is eating a bowl of corn flakes. One of them is doing his laundry (Tide)
because he walking to hooters that nite and is taking his camera along (Kodak)
in case he sees something along the way he wants to take a picture of.
One person is dialed into a web server (3COM) over his Hayes PCMCIA card and is
looking at Quality Life's home page.
-mark
|
3528.489 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Feb 20 1996 14:48 | 79 |
| re: Mr. Buckley
After 4 years, I don't (and never did) expect a phone call. I'm just
tossing this idea out into the open. I COULD howerver be helpful, since
I have a vested interest in seeing that digital is represented properly.
If marketing calls abc company and steers us to sponsor joe-no-name,
we're screwed. They got our money, but we got hosed. We obviously
will not be picking up Earnhardt, Elliott, or any of the other big
names, at least not this year. The 27 is Elton Sawyer, a good guy,
good team, but not worth 6 million, probably 2 or so. The determining
factor would be what the sponsor (digital) wants. The more we want the
more expensive it gets.
re: Chuck
} 1) Beyond the front 5 or so cars there's very little air time for the sponsor.
}You gotta' be up there in the big races.
True, but there is a lot of opportunity during 3 - 5 hours to get on TV.
However, there can be 2 other cars appearing at whatever event we want.
Parked in front of MSO, at comdex, wherever. The things travel down the
road all year long in a nice big truck with friendly folks happy to
answer questions about the car, driver and sponsor. It gets written up
in papers, magazines, on special shows (this week in NASCAR, Inside NASCAR,
etc...). So the exposure is not just limited to the time the car is on
the track.
} 3) By far, the standout sponsor for me was a furniture store I've never heard
}of. I remember this because the sponsors name was prominately featured on the
}wrecked car as it was being hauled away. I thought "Boy, I bet that sponsors
}happy.". Then I began to imagine the fun competitiors would have with a wrecked
}Digital sponsored car and a mention of Digitals place on the Information
}SuperHighway.
Heilig-Meyers. There probably aren't any of there stores up in your
neck of the woods, but you know who they are now, don't you? The thing to
know here and it is very important is SPONSOR LOYALTY. Fans are (proven
via that marketing stuff) known to be very sponsor loyal. So, even though
the fact the 90 car was all smashed up, they'll still sell a big pile
of extra furniture because of the mere fact that they support NASCAR and
therefore the masses will support them. This is the key. If a fan has
a choice to make, they'll usually choose a sponsors brand over "the other
guy".
} So...I still like the idea of Digital sponsoring a car if we can be guaranteed
}the following.
} - It will be the fastest car out there, bar none (this is our claim isn't
} it).
} - The car will never be involved in a wreck, at least not shown on camera.
} - The car always finishes in the top 5
}Since this obviously can't be guaranteed, it's a dicey proposition at best
}for Digital to sponsor a car. Honestly though, I really do like the image of
}an Alpha-Generation logo'd car blazing past the rest of the back to the
}checkered flag.
It ain't gonna happen, of course. The best bet is to make sure you're
not sponsoring junk. Now, you are competing against 50 other people
who want to get into a race. The important thing is how the sponsor
blends it's marketing with the team, leveraging the involvment with
the team to its own marketing efforts (i.e. TV commercials, printed
commercials, appearances). Whatever. This whole deal goes WAY BEYOND
just what you saw on Sunday. Those cars were in Daytona for months.
They'll be running next sunday, and all the way until mid november.
Physically travelling all over the country, being seen in all sorts
of media. The exposure is enormous.
}BTW Just out of curiosity, how long did it take to leave the speedway? There
}were an awful lot of people there.
Less than an hour. After doing this for 10 years you get the hang of it.
The trick is parking. I walk a little futher than some folks, but when I
get to my car I'm right off the main road out of there. I blend in with
traffic and hit the freeway. Lots of folks are gridlocked in parking lots,
or purposly hang around after a race to let the traffic die down. I park
in a mall down the street from the track when I go to Daytona.
Regards,
MadMike
|
3528.490 | there is a lot of money to be had in this realm | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Feb 20 1996 16:05 | 9 |
| re: Note 3528.488 by NOTAPC::SEGER
Simply put, your image is wrong. 1/2 the fans are female (actually,
I think it's over 50%). At one time you were right. Apparently
over the past several years this deal is becoming "mainstream".
That's why timing is important. We're probably gonna miss the boat,
but I said my piece.
MadMike
|
3528.491 | Another view | MKOTS3::WTHOMAS | | Tue Feb 20 1996 16:05 | 14 |
| Sponsorships provide more than race day visibility. We used to sponsor
Rayhal's Indy car until times got tough.
I personally closed a few hundred K because of bringing in a bunch of
my (then) Toyota customers to hear Bobby speak at a Digital Autofact
session in Detroit. Driver endorsements, speaking events, pit passes,
camera shots and autographs with customers and their kids...
All in addition to the obvious race day(s) visibility. Whether you're a
gearhead or not, we have a customer community (existing or potential)
out there that we could recoup a SMARTLY CHOSEN sponsorship investment
from.
BT
|
3528.492 | If it's a whole effort, it will work... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Tue Feb 20 1996 16:30 | 38 |
| The key is to be creative incorporating our message with their sport.
A few possibilities/examples:
- IBM gave a bunch of ThinkPads to race teams. They sent an engineer
(maybe more) to help them develp useful programs to calculate fuel
status, tire wear, and other things they could use during practice and
race day. During interviews, the teams mentioned "IBM" by name when
talking about the technology. We could do something similar.
- We have the fastest systems on the planet. Donate one (or more)
to the team so that they can run advanced airflow and mechanical models
as part of their engineering effort. They're doing this now, but with
our systems, I'm sure they could be doing it better.
- Up in Canada for one of the Indycar races, I remember we did some
sort of 1 race deal where we set up a bunch of our PC's running the
game "Indycar Racing" for the race fans to try out. Something similar
could be done for every race. It certainly would get TV coverage if we
did.
- A web page with the team car, stats, and examples of how Digital
products went into the effort (the above examples). How about a live
video feed (Cu-See-Me? or similar) from in the car during the race?
We'd need to exploit the high-tech aspects of this sport.
If we do this, I think it could be a great marketing tool for Digital.
If we don't, I see it as just another in a long list of marking
opportunities that we were too sluggish and/or foolish to capitalize
on.
-Steve
|
3528.493 | What does the NA in NASCAR tell you? | BIGUN::KEOGH | I choose to enter this note now. | Tue Feb 20 1996 17:41 | 7 |
| Advertising at Daytona or other NASCAR events may be a good
idea. I don't know. But don't forget that it is advertising
pitched at only one third of Digital's marketplace (North
America). Most of the sponsors you listed, like Bud, Hooters
etc. are first and foremost American. So it wouldn't be
"corporate" advertising, just North America's.
|
3528.494 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Tue Feb 20 1996 20:09 | 5 |
| RE: .493
NASCAR is catching on worldwide.
mike
|
3528.495 | | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Wed Feb 21 1996 07:06 | 15 |
| >Advertising at Daytona or other NASCAR events may be a good
>idea. I don't know. But don't forget that it is advertising
>pitched at only one third of Digital's marketplace (North
>America). Most of the sponsors you listed, like Bud, Hooters
>etc. are first and foremost American. So it wouldn't be
>"corporate" advertising, just North America's.
I disagree with the opinion that NASCAR is strictly North American.
At Atlanta Speedway (and this may hold true at Charlotte as well),
several of the Condominiums built at the track (yes, *at* the speedway)
are fully owned by foreign companies and used by company marketing
types to swoon clients. Imagine the impact of flying to Atlanta from
Japan for a weekend of NASCAR racing (not unknown to them, you know).
-Andy
|
3528.496 | Timing is everything.... | CONSLT::CORRIGAN | Hag at the churn | Wed Feb 21 1996 08:45 | 16 |
|
Saw the advert for Starion PCs last night on the tv. Great ad.
But even my 11 year old gave me grief about the timing of the
ad. A few weeks ago I had to explain why DEC was getting out
of the "home PC" market segment. "We don't make enough money on them"
I said.
Now he wants to know why we're spending more money on a product
we're not going to sell anymore.
This conversation took place while I was banging away on our Starion
930, trying to get DOS to recognize the cd rom so he could run a new
game he bought. He's not impressed.
If we decide to get into NASCAR events I hope we know enough to show
up on the DAY of the race.
bob
|
3528.497 | "We don't bite in Brand Advertising" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Wed Feb 21 1996 09:23 | 41 |
|
Hello,
A formal market research study is being conducted with customers and
prospects on the role sponsorships/event marketing could play in our
mix. THis will be a major factor in guiding our selections, along with
the criteria we use for selection (target audience appeal -
extensability to key messages for DIGITAL, etc.)
NASCAR, Indy Car, etc. are certainly viable opportunities for such
sponsorships, but the world is full of them - this is a multi-billion
business annually, and whatever we do we need to commit FULLY and
DEEPLY to the venue - this has not been a DIGITAL strength, and why for
example we passed on a Bowl Game opportunity last year. And unless you
have the commitment - it doesn't help - it is just a money sink.
One quick market example - for last time's Olympics, DDB needham in
Chicago tracked major brands sponsoring the Olympics, and the awareness
of these firms major competitors. The customer question was: "Do they
sponsor the Olympics?". WHile firms like VISA have a 4 year commitment
to them, and it was clear they were the Olympic sponsor, not AMEX, many
customers for other categories had no idea who was the sponsor for
example - KMART,Sears, Walmart, etc. (The answer was JC Penney).
Without the ongoing commitment little happens.
Bottom line - we all have our Favs - I would say DIGITAL should be the
Worldwide Sponsor of UMASS BBALL, not to start another rat hole.
But the company is taking a more organized and strategic approach to these
endeavors, and believe me 180 mph machines would certainly be in the
consideration set.
Bill
|
3528.498 | | MASS10::GERRY | Is that NEARLINE enough for you | Wed Feb 21 1996 10:06 | 18 |
| In Europe, NASCAR is only available via satellite channels and is therfore
restricted to the minority who actually have the dishes and decoders! coupled
with the fact that it is a typically North American sport using vehicle outlines
peculiar to North America! and its sponsored by companies, and products not
known in Europe, Hooters for instance!
Yes, there is some interest but mainly by the anorak wearing motor racing
fraternity, who will watch anything with a motor in that races! Formula 1 still
holds the hearts and minds of most European enthusiast, and for a while Indycars
when Nigel Mansell was doing so well but that interest seems to have waned!
If we want to sponsor motor racing and reach a world-wide audience Formula 1
would be a better bet as i understand i commands the biggest worldwide TV
audiences! In the past we did sponsor Ferrari in F1 but not in very prominent
places (Across the top of the nose and on the front wing endplates), even though
the cars got good airtime!
Gerald
|
3528.499 | | HOZHED::FENNELL | A cowboy's life is the life for me | Wed Feb 21 1996 10:28 | 13 |
| I got my autoweek racing series summary yesterday and there was a summary of
NASCAR, F1 and CART of each car, driver crew and other information.
Major sponsors with tech background include
RCA
Motorola
Panasonic
Konica
So sponsors are not limited to products you buy at the grocery/auto stores.
Tim
|
3528.500 | Was that *YOU* on that TV ad??? | ATLANT::SCHMIDT | See http://atlant2.zko.dec.com/ | Wed Feb 21 1996 11:43 | 8 |
| > This conversation took place while I was banging away on our Starion
> 930, trying to get DOS to recognize the cd rom so he could run a new
> game he bought. He's not impressed.
Did he then go over to the other kid's house, where their
Macintosh was already running that CD-ROM?
Atlant
|
3528.501 | Wife say's I spend to much time on it,..can't win | CONSLT::CORRIGAN | Hag at the churn | Wed Feb 21 1996 12:28 | 11 |
| >> Did he then go over to the other kid's house, where their
No, but he did go to his room and plug the SAME game title into
his handheld Sega thingy and played away.
I know the ad you're talking about. They got that one dead right.
The scenario has played out many times over at my house since the
arrival of the peecee. Three pc game titles for christmas presents.
One runs, the other two are useless at the moment.
bob
|
3528.502 | Disaster is a relative thing | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Wed Feb 21 1996 13:10 | 11 |
| Yep. That scenario plays out in my house too. My kids can fly a
Jumbo-Jet with 2 engines on fire through a hurricane into Kennedy
airport and land it safely but they regard "EMM386 failed to
load the memory thingajiggy" as the equivalent of a major disaster.
Getting Flight Simulator to run from CD-ROM on DOS was a poignant
reminder of how accurate that Apple TV advert is.
Windows 95 has made things quite a lot simpler.
/Chris.
|
3528.503 | | MIMS::MITCHAM_A | -Andy in Alpharetta (near Atlanta) | Wed Feb 21 1996 13:41 | 16 |
| In the Feb. 26 issue of Time Magazine, page 56, is an article on NASCAR and
how it isn't your daddy's NASCAR anymore.
Some stats (from what I recall):
- $2 billion industry last year (and growing)
- 1995 live attendance was over 5-million
- Roughly 1/3 NASCAR fans make over $50k/year
- Approx. 38% are women
(Perhaps someone else {someone with the article?} can provide more)
Point is, IMO, the exposure resulting from becoming a corporate sponsor
(North American or not) would assuredly offset the relative expense.
-Andy
|
3528.504 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Feb 21 1996 14:50 | 40 |
| Very good Andy, That shows the point I was trying to make which
is cost vs. benefits.
If you want exposure, this'll do it _very_ economically,
very quickly, and to a lot of people.
The "what if the car wrecks or the guy gets killed and people will
make fun of us", argument is no good because we get tons of exposure
even while the car is sitting still. Of course we want our guy to
WIN all the time, but it won't happen. The better the guy does, the
more hype we get.
Granted this will mainly target the USA. for 3 million bucks that's nice.
That's 3 minutes of commercials during the superbowl. Thanks.
I've said before, spending $50Million to play (via Formula one) to
a world wide audience would be a waste of money. Some of this
marketing effort will spill over into other parts of the world
automatically.
Finally, I know we sponsored an Indy Car, with a tiny little decal.
It brought in some revenue, and was sort of neat-o. But the car
still said "MILLER GENUINE DRAFT" all over it. It was the miller
car. If you LOOKED REAL HARD you could see the digital decal on it.
IMHO: I hope we didn't spend very much to have that decal there.
For 3 Million I want 3 cars in action, 1 in competition, and 2 at
my disposal for whatever I want all year long. Heck, park one in
the lobby of hq all year long. Park one in front of a customers
hq for a couple days. It'll look exactly like we want, and it'll
do what we want. We won't be playing 2nd fiddle to anyone.
Heck, for $3Million in F-1 you might get a guy to put a little
digital decal on the back of his helmet.
I am not slamming F-1. I'm not slamming cart/indy. I'm just pointing
out the reality that NASCAR Winston Cup is where we should look IF
we look anywhere.
Regards,
MadMike
|
3528.505 | all depends on what you're into! | ASDG::TREMBLAY | http://www.ultranet.com/~tremblay/ | Wed Feb 21 1996 15:27 | 7 |
| We used to sponsor a golf tournament and what sport's more global than
golf? I personally don't care in the least about NASCAR just like lots
of people wouldn't spend a minute watching golf. Remember, just because
you're a big fan of something doesn't mean the world revolves around it.
For $X million you could get some pretty good golfers to put
|d|i|g|i|t|a|l| on their caps and have it seen by millions every
saturday and sunday and several thursday and friday's as well....JT
|
3528.506 | Has little to do with what we're into... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Wed Feb 21 1996 15:58 | 14 |
| re .505
We're not going on and on about NASCAR sponsorship because we like the
sport (although we do).
We're doing it because we believe it represents "the most bang for the
buck". Companies that live and die by marketing have figured it out.
Technology companies are starting to figure it out. I think it
represents a solid opportunity not only to get our name out there, but
as part of a whole marketing package (fast systems/fast cars, etc).
It's an opportunity to be creative with marketing rather than just
sticking your logo on someone's golf cap.
-Steve
|
3528.507 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Wed Feb 21 1996 16:05 | 17 |
| RE: .497
You're right Bill, unless we COMMIT to doing something like this,
it would be crazy to pump money into it. I'd rather Digital
didn't get into NASCAR than to go in half-heartedly. What's needed
is a commitment. That's going to be hard to do. And commitment is
more than just $$, it's time to wait for something to pay off.
Digital is always looking for the quick turnaround. ("If I pay
$3million, it should return 12 times that the first week or I'm
out")
RE: Formula 1
Yup, great sport, I like it, but to get the most bang for the
racing buck, NASCAR can't be beat. Formula 1 is VERY expensive.
mike
|
3528.508 | colleges do it | STOWOA::KULA | | Wed Feb 21 1996 16:06 | 7 |
| New Hampshiree College in Manchester, NH has figured this out. A
student ( I believe from Maine) came to the adminsitration with a
proposal for the college to provide a sponsorship for his car that
he drives on the New England cuircuit. He did such a good job of
selling the proposal, using business classes that he took to lay out
the plan, that the school bought the idea and now sports a decal and his car
( at least for last year)
|
3528.509 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Wed Feb 21 1996 16:08 | 9 |
| On the other hand, NASCAR might be good way to advertise "enduser"
products. Oil, detergent, etc. With our withdrawl from the home
PC space, what are we trying to sell?
There are non-enduser sponsors. DuPont for instance is getting
great name recognization, but I wonder if they are really making
any money off it...
-John
|
3528.510 | Dupont auto refinishes. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Wed Feb 21 1996 16:15 | 20 |
| re: DuPont for instance is getting great name recognization, but I
wonder if they are really making any money off it...
(hypotetical)
I own madmike's autobody shop. I need to buy 20,000 gallons of
paint.... hmmm... who do I call?
this part:
} what are we trying to sell?
is very important. If we don't commit to marketing this properly, we
shouldn't do it.
IMO: A successful package would reach not only joe computer buyer,
but the fellow who makes purchasing decisions for big companys.
I think this would be a good way to set us aside from our competitors.
Not only is our stuff quicker than their stuff, but we got a racecar
too!!!!
MadMike
|
3528.512 | Square D Corp.'s opinion | SPEZKO::LEPAGE | | Wed Feb 21 1996 16:26 | 99 |
|
Square D Employees Revving Up For Goodwrench 400
Company Feels At Home On NASCAR Circuit
ROCKINGHAM, N.C., Feb. 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Thousands of Square D Company
employees from five North and South Carolina manufacturing sites will be
more than casual observers of the Goodwrench 400 at the North Carolina
Motor Speedway in Rockingham this weekend.
That's because Square D has become a primary sponsor of the FILMAR Racing
Ford Thunderbird and driver Kenny Wallace. The sponsorship between the
Palatine, Ill.-based maker of electrical distribution and industrial
control and automation products and FILMAR/Wallace covers the entire 1996
NASCAR Winston Cup Series.
Square D has power equipment plants in Monroe and Seneca, N.C., and
control equipment plants in Asheville and Raleigh, N.C. and Columbia, S.C.
Square D ventured into auto racing last year as an associate sponsor of
the Kenny Wallace Dog/Square D Ford Thunderbird, which raced in 14 NASCAR
Busch Grand National races.
The Square D racing sponsorship fits into its energetic approach to
growing its business.
"Our goal is to increase our sales to $3 billion by the year 2000, and to
do that, we are willing to break new ground in the way we communicate and
connect with our customers," said Charles W. Denny, president of Square D
and president and CEO of Groupe Schneider-North America.
Square D Company is the flagship brand of Groupe Schneider-North America,
with posted sales of $2.3 billion last year. Groupe Schneider, a
Paris-based global leader in the electrical industry, acquired Square D in
1991.
"The sponsorship last year was more successful and popular than we ever
imagined with our distributors, customers and our own people," Denny said.
"It got us close to key customers and to prospects. With the full
sponsorship, we will do more to leverage our involvement, gain a
competitive advantage over competition and enhance brand loyalty."
"The construction industry is a big part of our business, and many of our
distributors and contractors who use our products, or could use our
products, are loyal NASCAR fans," said Denny. "In addition, this
sponsorship helps us market to major industrial customers, many of whom are
also NASCAR fans or sponsors."
"Our association with NASCAR and driver Kenny Wallace has resulted in
terrific opportunities for Square D and its distributor partners to build
customer relationships," says Bob Trice, director of Square D Marketing
Operations. "We've been able to measurably boost customers conversions at
scheduled races, and our 16,000 employees at Square D are rooting for
Kenny. It's a fun morale boost."
As part of its sponsorship, Square D will host hospitality events at
numerous NASCAR races. "These events help us connect with our customers in
an environment that's exciting and memorable and one that is conducive to
building good customer relationships," says Trice. "We also help them
connect with their customers by providing access to race tickets and the
hospitality tent."
To help build a fan following for the Square D racing team, the
sponsorship program also will include a merchandise catalog of shirts,
hats, jackets, souvenir cards and several other items boasting the Square D
racing logo. These items will be available to Square D distributors and
customers.
NASCAR racing is one of America's most popular sports, and provides an
ideal geographic and demographic fit with Square D's marketing efforts.
Trice stressed the following facts:
-- NASCAR leads all U.S. auto racing series in total attendance,
which is growing at 10 percent a year;
-- NASCAR is cable TV's fastest-growing sport, second only to
NFL in audience ratings;
-- NASCAR has the largest average attendance of any sport --
more than 134,000 people per race.
"Square D is at an advantage on the NASCAR circuit because our products
are not aimed specifically at the auto market," says Trice. "We stand apart
from our competitors by talking directly to the people who use and sell our
products, and who also love auto racing."
Square D Company is a market-leading manufacturer of electrical
distribution, industrial control and automation products, systems and
services for the distribution, application and control of electricity.
Square D's products and systems are found in all types of residential,
commercial and industrial construction, in a wide range of manufacturing
and processing facilities, and in the products of other manufacturers.
2687 02/21/96 12:35 EST
:SUBJECT: NC SC SPRT
Copyright (c) 1996 PR Newswire
Received by NewsEDGE/LAN: 2/21/96 12:56 PM
|
3528.513 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Wed Feb 21 1996 16:53 | 14 |
| RE: Note 3528.506 by CONSLT::OWEN
> We're not going on and on about NASCAR sponsorship because we like
> the sport (although we do).
>
> We're doing it because we believe it represents "the most bang for the
> buck". Companies that live and die by marketing have figured it out.
> Technology companies are starting to figure it out.
What analysis have you done to say you get anymore bang for the buck with
NASCAR vs anything else?
-Bruce
|
3528.514 | | HOZHED::FENNELL | A cowboy's life is the life for me | Thu Feb 22 1996 11:19 | 17 |
| 5M spectators a year is hard to compete with. Plus a little digital logo on a
cap for a golfer is not visible to every spectator during the entire event.
Most sports don't allow corporate logos on a uniform.
Look at the sheetmetal on a NASCAR vehicle. You could put the digital logo
across the back of the car and that would be the same as putting the logo the
length of a F1 or Indycar. F1 teams spend 100M+ year. I agree with MadMike F1
is too expensive.
Tieing in our advertising with the car would be a great opportunity. Using
telemetry measurements for chassis tuning calculations, simulations etc. We
would have a great subject for commercials and you would simply be documenting
the use of the digital hardware software used by the team.
I mean, Miller features Rusty Wallace in their ads and you can bet he's not
using their product during the race...
|
3528.515 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Feb 22 1996 11:46 | 4 |
| >I mean, Miller features Rusty Wallace in their ads and you can bet he's not
>using their product during the race...
But the viewers are.
|
3528.516 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Feb 22 1996 12:38 | 7 |
|
I would think that sponsorship of a marathoner would be more in
tune with our prez's image. It would be cheaper too...
justme....jacqui
|
3528.517 | It would beat our current commercials | SYOMV::FOLEY | Instant Gratification Takes Too Long. | Thu Feb 22 1996 12:40 | 19 |
| You have to start -somewhere- reaching the masses, and NASCAR is a
major vehicle to that end. NASCAR fans are everywhere, in every level
of business, top to bottom. Sure, you may have the opinion that it's
all drunken redneck losers for fans, but then you'd be wrong. The
impact that this sport has had on people is amazing. I remember sitting
next to a couple at the Coca-Cola 600, who were dressed in their Bill
Elliot uniforms and not looking at all like two people who controlled
over $10,000,000 budgets between them. (Lockheed Martin) Guess how many
new DEC machines are going in there? Compared to *how many*
HP/SUN/DELL machines? If there had been a DECmobile out there, I would
have meant a lot.
So it isn't world-wide, so what? Try it, DO IT RIGHT, and then look
elsewhere for similar ideas. Is there an equivilent flavor of racing in
<insert country name here>? Get into that too. "The World Wide Digital
Racing Team" has a nice ring to it.
Enough
.mike.
|
3528.518 | | TLE::REAGAN | All of this chaos makes perfect sense | Thu Feb 22 1996 13:31 | 15 |
| I heard on a news report that for NASCAR, its an average of $40K/year
to get your logo on a quarter-panel (not sure of how big...) While
it takes about $1M/year to get your name on the hood/reardeck. This
was an average and certain can be less expensive on the younger
racers and more expensive on the established teams.
Also for those of you who want to be "1st or nothing else", let me
say that I doubt Digital has the money to get Dale Earnhart to
dump GM Goodwrench and repaint in Digital burgandy... You might
get on Dale's quarterpanel, but we're not going to displace sponsors
with long term contracts (and deeper pockets). You'll have to start
at the bottom. Perhaps we can be big shots in the Busch series or
the SuperTruck series?
-John
|
3528.519 | | SNAX::ERICKSON | Can the Coach... | Thu Feb 22 1996 13:41 | 5 |
| re .514,
Rusty does drink Miller when the race is over. :^).
Ron
|
3528.520 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Feb 22 1996 16:53 | 40 |
| re: Note 3528.518 by TLE::REAGAN
It cost's ~$1-2 million dollars to run the Winston Cup circuit.
There are 3 main types of sponsorships:
Primary: "your name on hood/deck/quarter panel"
Associate "your small name somewhere other than hood/quarter panel"
Sanctioning sponsor: Sponsor a race, or a program within the
race or series.
Primary sponsorship generally starts at $1M. More if you're
good. More if you don't want an associate sponsor. Even more
if you dont want your car having all those tiny decals all over it
(like Miller & Pennzoil do).
Those people that are on the tiny decals are the $40K/race folks.
Take "True Value" for example. They sponsor the "True Value Hard
Charger" award. The person who leads the most laps of a race
AND DISPLAYS THAT DECAL will win $x from true value. So, you can
lead the whole race and blow up on the last lap and still get money.
An associate sponsor is tagging along for the ride. You don't have
as prominent a display, but you can boast about being on the car, and
use the program in marketting, but the car will still say "MILLER"
on it, in the Rahal Indy car example. I hear these are about
$250,000/year. The problem with this is control. 2nd fiddle.
I don't think this is a good option.
In the case where the primary sponsor wants a "clean" car, with
no decals (actually, there will still be 5 - 7 decals), the sponsor
will pay what the driver would have won if he had ran the decal.
For example, if the hard charger deal pays $5000 and we would have
won it, the sponsor would pay the $5000.
Everything is negotiable. Everything has a price.
That is why selecting a good TEAM is important. We could hook up
with a good Grand National team, write them a check for $1.5M and
tell them we want them racing in Winston Cup within a month.
MadMike
|
3528.521 | | BIGUN::KEOGH | I choose to enter this note now. | Thu Feb 22 1996 17:11 | 21 |
| A couple of replies back, someone asked, quite sensibly,
what analysis had been done to indicate that NASCAR would
represent the best bang per buck. The answer appears to be
nobody has done it. I won't attempt it either, but ...
Five million spectators would make NASCAR "small/mid sized" in international
sport. The biggest events in terms of live+TV coverage are all from
truely international sports, where the audience is spread over Asia, Europe,
Africa and the Americas. NASCAR would be an order of magnitude behind the big
ones, such as
- the British Open or US Open (golf)
- tour de France (cycling)
- world cup soccer (or any of 10 other big matches)
- the summer Olympics
- Wimbeldon (tennis)
Don't forget that two thirds of Digital's marketplace is outside North
America. I know it is hard for some people to internalise this, but that's
the way it is. Our real growth marketplaces are Eastern Europe and South
East Asia. Go spend time im Malaysia or Thailand. Sport there looks a
little different to your place!
|
3528.522 | one size fits all - NOT! | MKOTS3::WTHOMAS | | Thu Feb 22 1996 17:43 | 15 |
| The current string is a nice discussion on the wisdom of
whether *sponsorship* expenses are a good value to Digital. Several of
us are hard core believers that they are.
Whether NASCAR, Indy/CART, F/1, Golf, or whatever is or isn't a good
choice for the entire planet is missing the mark. Sponsorship can be
effective. Multiple sponsorships can be more effective. Targeted
sponsorships that reflect local customs and interests are optimally
effective. There is no single *best* choice.
Sponsorship of scholastic, sporting, or any of a host of other types of
causes can be great values toward promoting Digital business & image.
Let's avoid "one size fits all" thinking.
JMVHO, of course!
|
3528.523 | | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Thu Feb 22 1996 18:27 | 19 |
|
re: where's the beef.
I mentioned before, I'll put the ball in play. It's not my job to
market something to marketing. I offered several sources to some
folks and they can do what they want with it. I'm not going to
go out of my way selling or proving this; #1: It's obvious. #2:
not my job mon!, #3: IF someone (anyone) were to research this
for themselves, they would find out relatively quick like that
this is a viable place to advertise.
I also mentioned that I'm close enough to this deal that I could
care less if digital gets in or not. I just don't want anyone
thinking I'm not putting my money where my mouth is. I can't justify
goofing off for a week gathering this info just to make a noter or
two happy. Besides, it sounds like the proper people have picked up
on this. It doesn't hurt to discuss it though.
Regards,
MadMike
|
3528.524 | What happens when there are 1000 channels? | NOTAPC::SEGER | This space intentionally left blank | Fri Feb 23 1996 08:11 | 14 |
| just to take a slightly different twist, how much longer will it make sense to
advertise on TV? I'm being a little facetious here but consider that as the
world moves more toward 100's or 1000's of television channels (I admit it
could take a few more years) the size of the viewing audience for any
particular channel is going to drop like a stone. How many people will continue
to watch Seinfeld on Thursday nites when you can catch a good Leave it to
Beaver rerun on channel 8377? 8-)
Maybe what we should instead do is think about what the primary communications
media will be 3-5 years from now (Interent, CD-ROM, ???) and think about what
we can start doing NOW to position ourselves for that future. OR at the very
least think about how to redefine TV advertising in a 1000 channel world...
-mark
|
3528.525 | "Consistency in Old Media is Important" | AKOCOA::TROY | | Fri Feb 23 1996 10:35 | 24 |
| We just LOVE our sponsorships discussions.
On new media and being on TV. Sure there are 67 channels and there's
nothing on.
The issue really is what the viewing habits of our target audiences
are. The market analyses still have Business and IT managers watch a
good deal of Network Tv - although the shows differ from other
audiences. Some Cable shows deliver our target audiences also. Our
issue is really maintaining a consistent electronic presence (TV and
Radio) - not short flights with long delay periods - rather
than "hopping and bopping" toward the new media du jour.
There are lots of new media - they are on the radar screen - but most
are niche. Frankly, I like the brand building attention of Alta Vista
to DIGITAL - which gives you the demonstration potential at the end
user level of excellent DIGITAL engineering and computing power, than just
buying some web banners.
That said, as bandwidth and power improve on the Net, we ad types will
figure out more ways to bother you (i'm sorry, intrude) without your
seeking out advertising. It's the Marketing Way.
BT
|
3528.526 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Fri Feb 23 1996 14:08 | 10 |
| > re: where's the beef.
> I mentioned before, I'll put the ball in play. It's not my job to
> market something to marketing. I offered several sources to some
> folks and they can do what they want with it. I'm not going to
> go out of my way selling or proving this; #1: It's obvious. #2:
What is obvious?
-Bruce
|
3528.527 | EXPOSURE | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Fri Feb 23 1996 15:38 | 21 |
| } What is obvious?
exposure. From January to Mid november you get coverage in TV, print
and elsewhere, in front of a lot of people.
At first this was on ABC wide world of sports. Then CBS did a race,
(daytona 500) flag to flag in '79. ESPN was built on auto racing. Today
ABC, CBS, TNN, ESPN and TBS fight over broadcast rights to these
events. So, even if there are 1000 channels of stuff, apparently
WHEREVER this stuff is being broadcasted people are tuning in.
The "proof" for this is on nielson (sp?) ratings for events. This
is proven, but I don't have that info handy. "The Family Channel"
even sponsors a car. Why? Maybe because their ratings skyrocketed
after doing so I guess. They also have a weekly race program now.
This exposure is year long, ie there isn't a spike where we show
up on tv for a week or two and disappear. We're on every weekend,
somewhere.
MadMike
|
3528.528 | | YIELD::HARRIS | | Sat Feb 24 1996 15:17 | 19 |
| RE: Note 3528.527 by VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK
> } What is obvious?
>
> exposure. From January to Mid november you get coverage in TV, print
> and elsewhere, in front of a lot of people.
.
.
> The "proof" for this is on nielson (sp?) ratings for events.
Digital does not have a deep pockets when it comes to advertising. Yes,
"d|i|g|i|t|a|l" would be seen by a large amount of people if you if Digital
sponsored a NASCAR entry. You can also get exposure from other forms of
advertising. We need to spend our advertising dollars where they will help
generate the most business. What proof do you have that makes you say
NASCAR vs other options is obvious.
-Bruce
|
3528.529 | Mad About HiNote? | POWDML::DUNN | | Mon Feb 26 1996 09:12 | 4 |
| Was that a Digital HiNote that Jaime was using on Mad About You last night?
Sure looked like our burgundy logo from where I was sitting.
|
3528.530 | | PCBUOA::KRATZ | | Mon Feb 26 1996 09:37 | 5 |
| re .529 Mad About You Hinote
We've always wondered about that ourselves... if it is, it's not
a unit that touched the normal PR channels (like were used in
that short-lived Mary Tyler Moore series or the Sundance thing).
Kratz
|
3528.531 | Compaq? | USCTR1::GHIGGINS | Oh Whoa Is Moe | Mon Feb 26 1996 10:18 | 2 |
|
Looked like it said Compaq to me.
|
3528.532 | "It's not just a PC. It's an HP." | UNXA::ZASLAW | | Tue Jun 11 1996 14:26 | 17 |
| Anyone catch the new HP PC TV commercial? (How's that for consecutive
acronyms?) Very hip, like the Kodak commercial with the "Gremster" (?), and
featuring a color scanner built into the system box. It appears to be aimed at
the youth market, and is being shown on the Discovery channel in the 8 to 9 PM
(EDT) slot, maybe elsewhere.
I think it's a winner for them, but as an old fuddy-duddy, I (lightly) object
to the story line featuring a deliberate falsification:
Someone snaps a photo of the guy who owns the PC at the finish line of a
marathon. The photo also shows the race clock which displays an elapsed time
something like "9:08:02". Back home, the runner scans in the picture, brings up
a bitmap editor, cuts a rectangle containing the numeral "2" and pastes it over
the "9" so that he ends up with a photo showing him finishing the marathon in
"2:08:02".
-- Steve
|
3528.533 | | STOWOA::TDOLAN | Tim,MCS PSMG PCs,508-496-8222 (276)OGO-1/F13 | Tue Jun 11 1996 16:41 | 17 |
| <<< Note 3528.532 by UNXA::ZASLAW >>> -
>>Someone snaps a photo of the guy who owns the PC at the finish line of a
>>marathon. The photo also shows the race clock which displays an elapsed time
>>something like "9:08:02". Back home, the runner scans in the picture, brings up
>>a bitmap editor, cuts a rectangle containing the numeral "2" and pastes it over
>>the "9" so that he ends up with a photo showing him finishing the marathon in
>>"2:08:02".
I agree - no longer is "a picture is worth a thousand words". With my
limited talent, I can do fun things with my $100 scanner and Paint Shop Pro.
Also being a fuddy-duddy - I did not enjoy Forest Gump for this same
reason. Not to be an alarmist but you know in 20 years from now people
will be remembering that the guy who mooned JFK(orLBJ), later "invented"
jogging and other things. They will remember the black and white film
clip in the documentationary style film. tim.,.
|
3528.534 | will the real... | TINCUP::KOLBE | Wicked Wench of the Web | Tue Jun 11 1996 17:46 | 9 |
| But just think of the benefits! Now when the National Enquirer
needs a photo of the love child of Elvis and Mrs Bigfoot they
can whip it up so no one can prove it's a fake.
Actually, I think the commercial does a good job in that it's
making the public aware of how bogus images/videos may be as
proof of anything. Now if I could just work my way past the clerks
who still say "if it's in the computer it must be correct".
liesl
|
3528.535 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Wed Jun 12 1996 07:01 | 7 |
| .533 They'll remember that as history only if they're
idiots. If this is the case, they've got bigger problems
than what they believe to be story v. history.
You couldn't even remember which president FG mooned.
|
3528.536 | This isn't BECAUSE HP is beating us... it's WHY! | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Wed Jun 19 1996 11:37 | 15 |
| Before every racing season begins, a bunch of us show up in this note
to voice our opinion that Digital is missing the boat by not using auto
racing as a vehicle (no pun intended) for delivering our message. We
weren't just talking about sponsoring, but getting involved by
supplying computer equipment that could could be used in the design and
testing of a race car.
Well... nevermind. Hewlett Packard has beat us to the punch. Again.
There's a big link on the main page which leads you to:
http://hpcc998.external.hp.com/abouthp/features/rahal/
-Steve
|
3528.537 | we used to sponsor Bobby Rahal | MSBCS::SCHNEIDER | too dangerous to mention | Wed Jun 19 1996 13:47 | 5 |
| I'm sympathetic to the cause of Digital using motorsport for marketing,
but I have a nit: HP didn't beat us to the punch in the case of Rahal;
they took over after we got out.
Chuck
|
3528.538 | PC Watch | GLADYS::ORME | MadVax | Wed Jun 19 1996 19:03 | 7 |
|
DEC (I'm an old timer) is getting big coverage during the UEFA cup in England.
The Americas may or may not be getting the coverage but the rest of the world
certainly is. The signs proudly say "Digital PC". Is this a politically correct
watch? Just kidding.
rgds ted
|
3528.539 | The opportunity is just sitting there waiting... | VANGA::KERRELL | salva res est | Thu Jun 20 1996 04:22 | 7 |
| Digital already supplies the N�1 motor racing team in the world. They use
Alpha for design and manufacture and Prioris in the pits. The cars are seen
by a massive world-wide audience. Their drivers are currently 1 & 2 in the
championship. Companies pay millions to be associated with them.
Dave.
P.S. I'm talking about the ultimate - Formula 1 and Williams.
|
3528.540 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | Cyclops no more! | Thu Jun 20 1996 06:22 | 4 |
| Yabbut, how many people outside (or indeed, inside) know that? Surely,
that's the whole point...
Laurie.
|
3528.541 | It's the whole package that counts... | CONSLT::OWEN | Stop Global Whining | Thu Jun 20 1996 08:29 | 19 |
| re .540
Yes, my point exactly. Throwing money and equipment at them is not
enough. It's the public relationship between the team and the company
that is the big plus.
When we were sponsoring Rahal, did we leverage our relationship with
them to extend to different advertising mediums? Or did we just give
them money and got a sticker on the side of his car?
Just look at what HP is doing. That's HOW it should be done.
With the F1 thing... is this something we advertise? "Hey, look at us.
Our amazing computers are the brains behind the two best race teams in
the world!" If not, then it's a wasted relationship. I follow all
sorts of racing, and that was the first I've heard that we have any
sort of relationship with those teams.
-Steve
|
3528.542 | Sponsoring Thrust SSC LSR Attempt | LHOTSE::DAHL | | Thu Jun 20 1996 10:41 | 6 |
| Sort of on the subject of motor racing, Digital is sponsoring the Thrust SSC
attempt to break the absolute land speed record (and to go supersonic in the
process). The Thrust SSC folks have a nice web site with Digital logos all over
it. I don't recall the URL but it only took me a few moments with Alta Vista to
find it the last time I checked it.
-- Tom
|
3528.543 | Who handles this stuff? | XANADU::ACRO::rackemann | xanadu::rackemann | Thu Jun 20 1996 11:41 | 6 |
|
Anybody know who in Digital handles these types of corporate
sponsorships? Or who does sports marketing? Is there one single
group/VP who handles this?
- Ford
|
3528.544 | WILLIAMS-RENAULT - The End... ! | LEMAN::MONMEGE | | Fri Jun 21 1996 03:10 | 7 |
| .39
F1 Williams-Renault will stop "racing" at the end of 1997.
Just announced on the radio yesterday in France.
B
|
3528.545 | | BBRDGE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Fri Jun 21 1996 04:04 | 16 |
| You'd have to wheel Frank Williams dead body from the pits before he
stopped Formula 1 motor racing. (He's already in a wheelchair)
The announcement was from Renault - the engine manufacturer. I'd bet
big money on the Williams team being around as long as Frank is alive.
The telemetry systems that Digital provide to the Williams team will
probably stay.
By the way, when we had a motor-racing (Italian) European VP at the
helm, we *DID* get a lot of publicity from our tie-up with Ferrari.
Those beautiful ruby-red nose cones with the contrasting blue & white
|d|i|g|i|t|a|l| logo smack in the middle - really made you feel proud
to see the photos and posters all over the place.
/Chris.
|
3528.546 | Not quite right | CHEFS::PATEMAN | Alfa Corse | Fri Jun 21 1996 04:04 | 9 |
| Not sure why its here but its not quite accurate. Renault are to
withdraw from providing f1 engines to Williams & Benetton at the end on
the 1997 season. Both teams will look for alternatives with Honda and
BMW being rumoured.
As a side issue - I do not think we have made nearly enough of a noise
about the Alpha involvement in Williams design and engineering.
Paul
|
3528.547 | Kerrangg | CHEFS::PATEMAN | Alfa Corse | Fri Jun 21 1996 04:06 | 5 |
| By hells teeth Chris Lovell lives & breathes!!
Ooops - notes clash!
Paul
|
3528.548 | Triple notes clash! | VANGA::KERRELL | salva res est | Fri Jun 21 1996 04:10 | 20 |
| re.540/541:
Did you think I was arguing against you? I was agreeing. My point is quite
simply that the Williams F1 team _bought_ Digital products and use Digital
products. We are not paying them. Do we take advantage of this? We do take
guests to special track days but that is all. I can only assume that our lack of
promotion at corporate level is due to the fact it is taking place outside the
U.S. (Like Thrust SSC and EURO96).
re.544:
> F1 Williams-Renault will stop "racing" at the end of 1997.
> Just announced on the radio yesterday in France.
Yesterday's announcement was by Renault not Williams. Renault have decided to
pull out of F1 because they believe they have nothing more to achieve. I expect
Williams to carry on winning with another supplier in 1998, just as they have
done in the past.
Dave.
|
3528.549 | Everyone OK? | DRDAN::KALIKOW | MindSurf the World w/ AltaVista! | Fri Jun 21 1996 05:50 | 3 |
| Good. Hope you're all back to WORK by now, then!!
:-)
|
3528.550 | | WOTVAX::HILTON | http://blyth.lzo.dec.com | Fri Jun 21 1996 08:11 | 4 |
| I notice HP and Benneton running some stuff recently in the UK press
about how the two are working closely together, how Benneton needs HP's
high performing kit, etc etc. Sure would be nice if we and Williams
could do something similiar.
|
3528.551 | My Turn to Play Madison Avenue | WOODYS::SLOUGH | | Mon Dec 16 1996 17:50 | 43 |
3528.552 | | BBQ::WOODWARDC | ...but words can break my heart | Mon Dec 16 1996 19:36 | 1 |
3528.553 | | STAR::KLEINSORGE | Fred, OpenVMS System Technical Leader | Mon Dec 16 1996 20:05 | 10 |
3528.554 | Well, there may be a mirror or smoke in the story, but... | NQOS02::nqsrv235.nqo.dec.com::SLOUGH | Dennis Slough; Novi, MI dtn 471-5154 | Tue Dec 17 1996 08:08 | 7
|