The Super Bowl XLIII Ads are selling even in today’s tough economic times. The benefits for the 3 Million dollar price tag for a 30 second spot is too good to pass up for the big advertisers. Enjoy the brief preview of who and what they plan to do for this years great Super Bowl Ads of 2009.
•Cola wars. Coke and Pepsi again will go head to head. PepsiCo, the game’s second-biggest advertiser, with seven slots for its beverages and snacks, plans either two 30-second ads for Pepsi Max or a 60-second ad for flagship Pepsi-Cola. It would feature singer Will.i.am and the brand’s new “Refresh Everything” tag line.
Coke also unveiled an ad theme this month for its flagship cola, “Open Happiness,” and will feature it. But you won’t see Coke’s cola ads until the second half — rival Pepsi bought enough spots to have the first half to itself.
•Doritos ad. The brand from PepsiCo’s Frito-Lay brand recruited amateur video makers online for ads two years ago, and last year solicited amateur songs. This year’s contest, again for videos, got more than 1,900 entries. Doritos picked five finalists that are posted on CrashTheSuperBowl.com for online voting to pick the one to air in the game. (It also is offering a $1 million prize to the maker if the ad wins USA TODAY’s annual Ad Meter consumer rating of Super Bowl ads during the game.)
•Buy a car. Struggling U.S. automakers are sidelined, but Audi, Hyundai and Toyota will suit up. South Korea’s Hyundai has two slots and is testing four ads for its coming Genesis luxury coupe, says Joel Ewanick, vice president of marketing. Among them: one with race driver Rhys Millen and one with music by cellist Yo-Yo Ma.
•Or fix the old one. Bridgestone tires and Castrol Motor Oil will court folks keeping their old car in good shape. Bridgestone is the sponsor of the Bruce Springsteen halftime show and will have in-game ads featuring Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head and spacemen.
“If car sales are down, our sales to car manufacturers are down,” says John Baratta, president of consumer replacement tire sales. “This is our opportunity to … drive traffic into our stores” for retail sales.
•Timely play. With the game so close to Valentine’s Day, flower service Teleflora will air an ad mocking flower companies that send bouquets in boxes. Teleflora uses a network of 23,000 local florists to deliver bouquets in vases. “There is no point in advertising if you don’t have a point of difference,” says owner Lynda Resnick.
•A-B defends its turf. Anheuser-Busch, now owned by Belgium’s InBev, is again the game’s biggest advertiser. For its nine 30-second ad slots, A-B has created a batch of potential ads that includes slapstick jokes, a Bud Light ad with talk show host Conan O’Brien and three ads with its trademark Clydesdale horses.
“The Clydesdale message is so important this year because it reinforces our traits of tradition, heritage and quality,” chief creative officer Bob Lachky says.
•Tough job. The advertiser with the toughest job may be online brokerage E-Trade, given the dramatic stock losses investors have taken. The company is testing two ads, both with the theme of “liberation” from big financial institutions by using the online service. One features the talking baby seen in its 2008 Super Bowl ads.
“We’ve tested lots of options,” chief marketing officer Nick Utton says. “What might have worked last year is not necessarily appropriate in this environment.”
•Get a job. Online job-listing company Monster.com will try to outdo rival CareerBuilder by touting its National Football League partnership. It will promote a contest for the job of “Director of Fandemonium,” which has a $100,000 “signing bonus” for the winner, and perks such as being on the field for the 2010 Super Bowl’s coin toss.
•Standing out in 3-D. While movie studios Universal Pictures and Sony also will advertise, the advance buzz has been for a 3-D ad for DreamWorks Animation’s 3-D movie Monsters vs. Aliens and a companion 3-D ad for Pepsi’s SoBe Lifewater that will feature dancing lizards, Monsters characters and NFL players. Pepsi is helping distribute 3-D glasses that let viewers get the effect.
VIA: USA TODAY By Laura Petrecca and Theresa Howard
January 20th, 2009 at 7:34 pm
Great post. I’m excited to see what the Super Bowl has to offer this year, as it always finds a way to deliver attention-grabbing ads year in and year out. The most telling point that Super Bowl ads must work is that people are willing to spend big bucks for 3-second spots, even in our unstable economic times, as you stated. I enjoyed reading this and I’m sure others will too.
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