Kevinpreston3
Well-known member
- Joined
- Apr 28, 2005
- Messages
- 484
Anyone see this yet?
It's a TV ad that starts out with each family member "not wanting to touch 'it' ". Turns out 'it' is the power bill. It is bulging in size.
Hey, Tide Coldwater to the rescue! By washing all your clothes in cold water with this product, so the ad goes, you can save up to $60 A YEAR on your energy costs! The ad then goes on to show thousands of dollar bills spinning gleefully around the outside of the Tide box.
Wow, that's savings. Maybe this month the family can go split a Happy Meal with the $5 they are saving.
Ridiculous.
Another interesting point from:
on information about the campaign, I really like this little blurb:
According to Hitwise Vice President of Research Bill Tancer, the initial data showed that these types of viral marketing campaigns, “have the ability to very narrowly target and engage women through the trusted ability of free samples.”
Are they sexist, or simply implying that men don't like the free samples?
It's a TV ad that starts out with each family member "not wanting to touch 'it' ". Turns out 'it' is the power bill. It is bulging in size.
Hey, Tide Coldwater to the rescue! By washing all your clothes in cold water with this product, so the ad goes, you can save up to $60 A YEAR on your energy costs! The ad then goes on to show thousands of dollar bills spinning gleefully around the outside of the Tide box.
Wow, that's savings. Maybe this month the family can go split a Happy Meal with the $5 they are saving.
Ridiculous.
Another interesting point from:
on information about the campaign, I really like this little blurb:
According to Hitwise Vice President of Research Bill Tancer, the initial data showed that these types of viral marketing campaigns, “have the ability to very narrowly target and engage women through the trusted ability of free samples.”
Are they sexist, or simply implying that men don't like the free samples?