If an agency can't deliver the kinds of commercials you want, just ask your customers to do the job. That's the approach being taken by Kao Corp., which markets Ban deodorant, in a contest designed
to create ads that appeal to teenage girls. The contest was announced in magazines like
CosmoGirl and
Teen People and has already drawn about 4,000 entries from kids 12 to 20 who were
asked to submit an image and fill in the blank in the company's "Ban It" slogan. Nine winners will be chosen and will run in an ad in March in
US Weekly. The tactic is a smart one, especially
when trying to reach teens and people in their 20s--a desirable demographic for advertisers that is particularly resistant to hard-sell advertising.
"Younger audiences have become incredibly
cynical about advertising,'' says Steve Thibodeau, an executive with Dotglu, a New York ad agency owned by MDC Partners, Toronto, which is creating the Ban campaign. P.J. Katien, Ban's assistant
marketing director, adds that reaching young female consumers is especially challenging. In the past, he said, consumer-product companies followed a simple formula: "you explained the benefit and
explained the product and they would buy it. Now it's about getting her to feel like she is involved. No more one-way messaging."
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