Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it did what it was supposed to do. not too many people are still talking about the dodge ad or the go daddy one.
I thought it was totally fine.
It encouraged people to buy Nationwide insurance? ok.
Why would you have life insurance on a kid? Didn't see the connection.
Nationwide specifically said it wasn't about selling insurance. Just like the Like a Girl wasn't really about selling Always pads, or the Dove campaign wasn't about selling soap. Its cause based marketing. and brand awareness.
That really wasn't clear -- I assumed they were trying to sell the idea of buying life insurance for your kid, which is pretty creepy if it's for anything beyond funeral expenses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I work in advertising and people kind of overgeneralize ad strategies. Really very few advertising tactics as direct as "I want you to like our company so watch this about our company and now you will love our company." Most in fact are just about company awareness and name recognition which this campaign is giving them plenty of. Even the PR from Nationwide defending/explaining the ad isn't really about defending or explaining the ad its about keeping the name out there via another angle/adding more avenues. I mean we are all sitting here talking about who?? Yup Nationwide.
And most people are saying the ad was sensationalistic and in poor taste. So what does that say about their brand recognition?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nationwide was a leader in home foreclosures and as far as their insurance division, they dropped everyone that suffered through a hurricane.
They can go suck a d...
so people were not insured well enough? that is their fault?
Anonymous wrote:It's a very effective commercial. Think about how many people are talking about Nationwide today.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So I work in advertising and people kind of overgeneralize ad strategies. Really very few advertising tactics as direct as "I want you to like our company so watch this about our company and now you will love our company." Most in fact are just about company awareness and name recognition which this campaign is giving them plenty of. Even the PR from Nationwide defending/explaining the ad isn't really about defending or explaining the ad its about keeping the name out there via another angle/adding more avenues. I mean we are all sitting here talking about who?? Yup Nationwide.
And most people are saying the ad was sensationalistic and in poor taste. So what does that say about their brand recognition?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it did what it was supposed to do. not too many people are still talking about the dodge ad or the go daddy one.
I thought it was totally fine.
It encouraged people to buy Nationwide insurance? ok.
no and clearly it didn't and they do not expect it to. did you read their press release? I wouldn't expect people to line up for insurance after it either but I bet you thought more about accidental deaths in the past 12 hours than you have in the past.
Anonymous wrote:So I work in advertising and people kind of overgeneralize ad strategies. Really very few advertising tactics as direct as "I want you to like our company so watch this about our company and now you will love our company." Most in fact are just about company awareness and name recognition which this campaign is giving them plenty of. Even the PR from Nationwide defending/explaining the ad isn't really about defending or explaining the ad its about keeping the name out there via another angle/adding more avenues. I mean we are all sitting here talking about who?? Yup Nationwide.
Anonymous wrote:Nationwide was a leader in home foreclosures and as far as their insurance division, they dropped everyone that suffered through a hurricane.
They can go suck a d...