Acknowledging a wart - profiting from honest advertising
Issue 5 - May 2008 (with special thanks Max Sutherland)
Sometimes a politician emerges who resonates with voters because he or she
is disarmingly frank and doesn't couch every answer in political-speak.
In marketing too, ads that are disarmingly honest can make a brand resonate with potential buyers. Now there is new evidence on the effects of ‘acknowledging a wart’.
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When we first landed on the moon,
Volkswagen ran a brilliant ad depicting
the moon-lander with the headline:
“It's ugly, but it gets you there. VW”.
Two things made this such a great ad.
First, it gains huge attention by
slipstreaming a high-profile event – indeed, the most watched event in history.
Second, it also stands out because it is
disarmingly honest.
It earns points for honesty and gains
credibility for VW because it articulates
what many people were actually thinking
at the time; Volkswagens were ugly.
In other words, it ‘acknowledges a wart’.
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That’s also how Avis became so successful
with its classic slogan
“We are No. 2….We try harder”.
By explicitly acknowledging that Avis
was not market leader, it garnered
credibility and trust for its positive claim
that ‘Avis tries harder’. After all,
underdogs usually do try harder.
This strategy of acknowledging a
negative is curiously rare in advertising
these days. |
Yet it is something that continues to be prevalent in public speaking where we often hear things like:
* “I’ve prepared a terrible slide here, but…”,
and
* “This is a gross oversimplification, but…”
In an attempt to manage audience impressions, speakers acknowledge a negative and presumably hope to get more credibility for what they say next. Consciously or unconsciously, the intent of saying something like: “Now this may be a crazy idea, but …” is that the audience will be better disposed than if the speaker simply ignored or glossed over the possible negative.
Does it work?
Yes. The evidence is that it does. It induces people to regard the speaker (and what is being said) in a more favourable light. It moderates people’s subsequent reaction.
Research has long shown that presenting both sides of an argument, rather than just one, is more persuasive (unless the audience is already committed to your position). To acknowledge opposing arguments is to acknowledge a negative. It also connotes fairness and it helps to engender trust and credibility for the speaker.
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In his early work for Volkswagen, Bill Bernbach (founder of ad agency DDB) was a master of this strategy of gaining
psychological advantage by ‘acknowledging a wart’.
Acknowledging the VW brand’s ugliness was something that
DDB deployed very effectively for Volkswagen. They even ran
a ‘celebrity ad’ that starred the unattractive (but at the time,
hugely popular) comedian, Marty Feldman under the headline
“If he can make it so can VW”. |
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At times VW also used this style of
advertising as a linking device.
For example, when Volkswagen
introduced automatic transmission,
it trumpeted the introduction of the automatic VW with the headline:
“You’ve called it ugly.
Now you can call it shiftless”.
The phenomenal success of Volkswagen
in those years was presumptive evidence
that this strategy of ‘acknowledging warts’
is effective. Intuitively it feels as though
it makes us more sympathetic and
prepared to cut a brand a bit more slack. |
Now, new evidence has emerged that this strategy of acknowledging a negative, works more broadly. It appeared in a recent paper “Accentuate the Negative: The Positive Effects of Negative Acknowledgement” in Psychological Science (November 2006).
When a person acknowledged confusion in a paragraph that she had written, people rated the paragraph as ‘clearer’ than when she just glossed over or ignored the negative. Also, when a student explicitly acknowledged in a college application, his awareness that his grades were ‘less than stellar’, it resulted in more positive perception of those grades; his application was seen in a better light.
Across three very different studies, the research consistently showed that the act of explicitly acknowledging a negative induced ‘audiences’ for these communications to discount the negative. In other words, they evaluated the negative attribute less negatively than they otherwise would. So, this strategy seems to be able to temper or offset otherwise unfavourable evaluations.
I would go further and say that in advertising, it can help build more trust and credibility. Al Ries in his book “The Fall of Advertising and the Rise of PR” observed that public relations works better today than advertising because it engenders both attention and trust. Advertising’s crisis of confidence, he says, is not only because it is losing its attention-getting ability but also because it can’t engender trust.
Where are today’s Bernbachs? Why these days, is there so little advertising that acknowledges brand warts? It seems to have vanished. OK, advertising is supposed to be about puffery but in saying all nice things, advertising clearly struggles to win trust and credibility. Maybe it is time to rediscover the art of ‘acknowledging warts’.
Brand warts are usually not hard to find. Any mild negative associated with a brand is a possible candidate. Take a look at those early Volkswagen ads for inspiration. The warts they communicated went beyond just the product’s ugliness.
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VW loudest car on road for example, check out this ad! When the company
launched a new range of VWs in
bright new colours, they displayed
these garish Volkswagens under
the headline:
“There is now some truth in the
rumour that Volkswagens are the
loudest car on the road”.
Personally, I don’t remember the VW
as being particularly loud but the
rear-engine was distinctive and it
made a unique noise. Being different
it penetrated people’s awareness
and for Volkswagen this was a wart
to acknowledge, not ignore. Other early VW ads followed the same style.
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Conclusion:
Nobody is perfect. Nor is any brand. Consumers can handle this. Imperfections are part of life and if managed the right way, blemishes can make a brand seem more real and genuine. Acknowledging warts may not be for everyone but when challenging an established market leader, it can be a savvy way to build trust and credibility in a brand; a way to profit from honest advertising.
Considering some good honest advertising? then call us on (08) 8232 8188
or email Greg Marshall on greg@nrgadvertising.com.au
VW has continued to acknowledge their warts and we’ve included a couple of their newer ads for your entertainment...
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VW Golf GT... 'Superfly'
Click here to play |
VW Polo... 'Terrorist' (banned ad!!)
Click here to play **Warning** |
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