The Kids Aren’t Alright

Today’s children will be the first generation in our history to live a shorter life than their parents.

And the biggest culprit of this trend is childhood obesity.

According to a recent study by the Rudd Center children today are exposed to even more advertising for sugary drinks than ever before. Even after all of the child protection laws that were passed to help protect the marketing of these drinks to children under 12. 

As marketers we should be ashamed.

We should have a fiduciary duty to not bend the truth. When juice is sold as “real juice” yet there is less than 5% of “real juice” in the bottle that’s a problem.

That’s not marketing. That’s lying.

The Elephant in the Room - Why don’t agencies advertise?

Seth nails it today.

He says what every client has probably thought:

“throughout the history of advertising, ad agencies have rarely, if ever, bought ads for themselves. Worth noting that firms that would seek to help you generate earned media are much better at taking their own advice.” - Seth Godin.

Strange that agencies would spend your money on expensive campaigns and planning but would never do the same with their own money.

“Natural” Lies

More marketing lies. Spotting these are becoming a bit too easy. What a shame.

A Globe & Mail article suggests that meat packaging companies have been misleading consumers with their “natural” product lines that claim they do not contain artificial preservatives such as nitrates. Read it here or get the crux of it below.

As marketers we have an obligation to tell the truth not mislead consumers. That’s not marketing.

From the article:

“Maple Leaf Foods uses a boy named Dylan Carter in a commercial for its Natural Selections brand. A butcher explains in a voiceover that Dylan’s parents wouldn’t let him eat hot dogs because of added preservatives, so the company made one with “no artificial preservatives and ingredients his parents can actually pronounce.”

The promises tap into the mindset of consumers looking to avoid artificial ingredients with complex names such as sodium erythorbate. For this reason, many are willing to pay higher prices for “natural” processed meats.

But the ads and packages for these new meat products don’t mention that they contain cultured celery extract, which is a source of nitrates and nitrites – preserving agents linked to an increased risk of heart disease, cancer and Type 2 diabetes.”

Yikes. And a great example of the disconnect between marketing and product development. Marketers make a promise. The product doesn’t hold up.

After, all of the controversy around Maple Leaf only a few years ago you would think they would get their act together…

Oh Porter Airlines. I feel for you. I really do. In September they ran a campaign announcing their last promo sale. Radio spots said it would be the last sale ever. Discounts are like a drug. You really can’t just stop because you’ve trained people to only buy on sale. Run a discount, sales go up but only temporarily. It’s never sustained. And that’s the problem here with Porter. Regular consumers don’t buy Porter when its not on sale. So their marketing department runs another sale hoping nobody will notice or care…