Community

Community

  « The outdoor marketer's oversight |  Home  | For advertisers, 2008 Superbowl may be silver lining to writers' strike cloud »

Crazy cross-promotion

Did anyone happen to see the new HP commercial featuring Serena Williams and Jumper star Hayden Christensen, which aired Monday night during the NCAA Bowl Championship Series title game on Fox?

Here's an Adweek article about it.

What do you think? Brilliant marketing ploy or distracting/annoying?

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.marketingpower2.com/mt2/mt-tb.cgi/367

Comments

Brilliant! It's hip, it's catchy, and the fact that it mentioned other companies like Nike and Aneres is just brilliant. It almost overshadowed the trailer. My only concern, had I been one of the advertisers is that it was a ton of images and ideas in only 30 secs...and that's a lot to grab. Of course, if they run this ad as much as Kia runs that "he's a maniac" crappy commercial...then I think it will do well with its target audience.

It was a great idea but on paper, but it just didn't flow well. If the main object of the commercial is to promote the movie, they should have done LESS on Serena and not show what felt like the entire Serena commercial in the middle of the movie trailer. It is too jarring the way the commercial cuts back to the trailer at the end. Overkill.

I think HP did a MUCH better cross-promotion when Jerry Seinfeld subtly and humorously promoted "Bee Movie" during his HP commercial.

I'm inclined to agree, Mona. HP's Seinfeld spot was seamless and silly. Much more effective.

But then again, here we are blogging about the Jumper promo...

I think this is brilliant! It might mention a lot of advertisers in a short amount of time but your brain captures all of that and you remember more then you think you do. Just like Edgar caught Nike and Aneres.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

AMA IconPowered by the American Marketing Association | Copyright © 2008 MarketingPower, Inc. The site content may not be copied, reproduced, or redistributed without prior written permission of MarketingPower, Inc. or its affiliates.