How the Internet changed advertising
A colleague at Adviso has shared this cool video with us last week. It briefly goes through the history of [...]
Leaving work yesterday evening, I bumped into a new advertising billboard ad for Mc Donald’s. Or was it? At first sight, before even knowing that it represented a picto of French fries, I had a feeling that it was McDonald’s. If you look at this ad carefully though, you’ll notice there is no brand, no name, no address… not many clues about what it is about.
I would guess it’s a long-run effort of image consistency, with the same codes throughout all communications from the Brand, on all channels, and for a long time. After a while, the colors, the style, the (M) logo at the bottom right (all you can find on this ad) becomes enough to evocate the Brand.
Obviously, we’re not on drive-to-restaurant objectives, nor leading to purchase or call-center. We have to go with less rational objectives. Here are the benefits I can see:
I wanted to talk about this ad as I have the feeling it represents a turn in advertising.
First, it is a good example of how important it is for a Brand to offer a consistent message and image on all communication channels.
Moreover, at a time when people receive so many communications daily, we have become able to sort messages, and ignore the most obviously commercial ones. Messages have to offer a certain quality to even hope being read or seen. Making the move from agressive ads to artistic creation makes McDonald’s stand out and builds a positive image and trust.