Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Lastminute.com marketing team were 'perplexed' by electrocution ad

In April this year we ran a post featuring a bizarre video ad which had been produced for Lastminute.com.



Understandably the post sparked a few comments.

Yesterday the producer of the ad, Matt Huntley, got in touch to let us know what happened:

I wrote, directed and co-produced this ad. There was no involvement from Lastminute.com whatsoever.

It was funded by me for my showreel, it could have been for any travel company but at the time Lastminute.com weren't doing TV commercials.

We presented it to their marketing deparment in the hope of selling it (more for the exposure than the money) but they didn't seem very interested (more perplexed!)

Shame as it has proven really popular. But what the hell do I know?!
Kevin May, editor, Travolution

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Tuesday, July 10, 2007

TV advertising is the new black?

Looks like other internet-based travel companies - who perhaps in the past would have turned their noses up at something as old media for offline marketing - have taken note of TravelSupermarket and its recent spending spree on TV advertising.

Hotels.com - the accommodation aggregator from the Expedia stable - is launching its first TV ad campaign in the UK this week.

A fairly hefty £3.5 million has been spent on the campaign and it follows its recent rebranding - new logo, look and feel of website, etc.

Although it is difficult to measure the effectiveness of TV and other offline marketing campaigns (Hotels.com will also be evangalising on radio), TravelSupermarket's recent rise up the Hitwise rankings does suggest shoving your brand in front of a nation's eyeballs night after night has an impact.

Whether those visits convert into referrals/bookings is another matter entirely. But clearly Travelsupermarket thought its £9 million so far this has been well spent.

But there does appear to be more offline advertising - but not press - being used by online travel companies, simply for branding. Think HotelClub, Expedia and what seems like every second bus in London from Lastminute.com.

So, why? Some points to consider:

  • 1) In a commoditised market like travel, branding is perhaps more important than ever?
  • 2) TV and billboard ad rates have come down as their market share of overall advertising spend has decreased?
  • 3) Pay-per-click is expensive/unreliable/congested/Long Tail keyword-buying too fiddly?
  • 4) Search engine optimisation is becoming rather pricey?
Food for thought. Answers in the comments section please...

Anyway, some grabs from the Hotels.com TV campaign:

Kevin May, editor, Travolution

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Sunday, April 08, 2007

Lastminute.com ad spiked before hitting the airwaves

Not sure about this TV ad for Lastminute.com, apparently filmed in London in 2005.

It was supposedly only a test commercial, but I imagine someone thought better of it [probably just as Travelocity was about to buy the company!]



Maybe it will be resurrected if viral marketing picks it up again...

Kevin May, editor, Travolution

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Friday, December 15, 2006

Why spend millions on TV advertising?

In some respects you’ve got to hand it to Travelsupermarket as it continues its relentless strategy of brand building via the offline media.

As reported here, Travelsupermarket will be splashing out £11 million in 2007 on a huge marketing campaign, with £8 million going just on TV.

The interesting point to all this is the absolute faith the Cheshire-based company has in the strategy.

In fact the unflappable Chris Nixon, Travelsupermarket’s general manager, more often than not casually brushes aside any remarks about an apparent over-reliance on TV advertising.

Many online-only brands have adopted this approach in the past, and it has often paid off, at least initially – ESure, Egg, Ebay.

But this is the first time that an online travel company has followed through a initial burst of TV advertising with a far bigger (the 2006 TV campaign totaled around £2.5 million) level of spend.

There are clearly many reasons for the ongoing marketing programme: despite the growing popularity of the vertical travel search engine sector, many industry figures suspect Travelsupermarket will feel a hit of some kind when the traction behind new players Sidestep and Kayak really kicks in during early-2007.

In fact it would be fair to say that of the two, Sidestep has generated a fair amount of buzz in industry circles, primarily for its functionality and content.

And if leading industry figures are a decent enough benchmark of what will also perhaps enthuse consumers, then Travelsupermarket’s strategy is spot on.

Raise the traffic volume bar by getting in the minds of consumers, during the Christmas and New Year holiday break, and hope some of the traffic sticks in the long run by also improving its content and functionality.

Travolution is probably not alone in predicting 2007 could be the year that meta search/travel search truly comes to the fore.

Kevin May, editor, Travolution