Pictures of the winners receiving their awards, and of the guests at the AdReview Awards last week can be downloaded from this website: www.flickr.com/photos/adreviewclub
Pictures of the winners receiving their awards, and of the guests at the AdReview Awards last week can be downloaded from this website: www.flickr.com/photos/adreviewclub
(From AdReview 2009)
A Lovemark is more than a brand. Kevin Roberts, the worldwide CEO of Saatchi & Saatchi says it’s the future beyond brands; a product, service or person inspiring, in a truly brilliant phrase, “Loyalty Beyond Reason”. (Roberts, devised the concept of Lovemarks, and has made it the touchstone of his network.)
Loyalty is a word loosely interpreted in the marketing world. Consumer loyalty, brand loyalty or whatever loyalty you favour is generally nothing more than a choice made on the basis of current satisfaction. You are a regular buyer of your chosen brand of baked beans as long as it delivers the combination you require of price, quality and image. But that’s not real loyalty. If any of these ingredients is missing, if price does not equal value, you’ll switch to a rival brand at the drop of a can opener.
Real brand loyalty is epitomised by the loyalty of a football fan. He’ll support Manchester City or the Springboks through thick or thin, through good times and bad, believing in them even when they fall to 16th in the league, or eighth in the world rankings.
Loyalty beyond reason. A key component in being a Lovemark.
Lovemarks attract consumers, they owe little to traditional marketing techniques, and much to how they make the consumer feel. Lovemarks use Mystery, Sensuality and Intimacy to develop a relationship with the consumer. She is curious, excited, comfortable with her Lovemark.
The Saatchi & Saatchi Lovemarker model divides the brand landscape – let’s call it the brandscape – into four quadrants (see diagram), each offering a mix of love and respect.
Low respect and low love is the zone of Commodities. Brands have high respect but low love; Fads enjoy high love compromised by low respect. Lovemarks have high love and high respect.
South Africa’s first Lovebrands were established by research conducted for Saatchi & Saatchi by TNS Research Surveys among a demographically representative sample of 2000 urban adults.
Eight brand categories were examined, and questions were asked about the respect for the brand, and whether it was loved, liked, or tolerated. For example, a ‘respect’ question was, “This brand has a good reputation”. Do you agree, disagree or have no opinion? A ‘love’ question was, “This brand is in touch with people like you.”
Petrol: BP is the only Lovemark. Engen, Shell and Caltex qualify as brands, but Sasol, Total, Exel and Zenex are mere commodities.
Food and convenience stores: Pick n Pay, followed by Shoprite. Woolworths and Checkers are brands, and the rest commodities.
Cars: BMW, followed by Toyota. Mercedes-Benz, Volkswagen and Audi are brands.
Beer: Castle Lager was the leader, but Amstel, Carling and Hansa were all Lovemarks too.
Facial skin care: Vaseline Intensive Care was the only one. Surprisingly, Dove and Olay are the only commodities.
Cellphones: Nokia is the only Lovemark, Samsung the only brand.
Chocolate: Cadbury’s and Cadbury Dairy Milk are the only Lovemarks.
Clothing retailers: Edgars stands out.
Ogilvy had a strong showing at the 2009 AdReview Awards, claiming the honours in three categories. But DDB’s stellar creative form (which earned it a Cannes Grand Prix), and its pound-for-pound out-punching of the larger agency, bagged it the Agency of the Year accolade. Full details are in Tony Koenderman’s AdReview, which is published with this issue of Finweek.
Ogilvy Johannesburg’s work for KFC won two awards: The Big Idea and Radmark Radio Campaign of the Year. The agency also came out tops of the closely contested Gauteng Agency award.
Jupiter’s business and creative performance earned them Marketing Communications Group award. Commercials director of the year was Keith Rose who directed the Allan Gray TV commercial devised by KingJames Cape Town. Yet it was Draftfcb which walked away with campaign of the year for African dictator who tells Vodacom customers and prospects: “We’ve been having it.”
Among the Cape agencies it was last year’s newcomer and creative extraordinaire FoxP2 that dominated. The 2009 newcomer of the year is sports sponsorship agency Matchworld. Sports sponsorship agencies’ outstanding performance saw Exp awarded Marketing Services Company. Its MD Justin Sampson and Interbrand Sampson executive chairman Jeremy Sampson are the first father and son to win in the same year. Interbrand took the Design Shop of the Year.
Another interesting win is Magna Carta taking the PR Consultancy of the Year for the fourth consecutive year. The judges ended up with the tough choice between having a new winner and settling on the best. Gloo also maintained its winning streak for the third straight year as Digital agency.
With something like 25 media agencies now in business, it was decided tolevel the playing field by acknowledge small (billing below R450m) and large agencies. Media Agency of the Year went to Mindshare and Applied Media Logic was named Small Media Agency. Although there was no Durban agency of the Year, TBWA Durban took The Boabab Award for its success in building relationships with clients.
Mike Schalit was recognised as Advertising Person of the Year. Known for his creative genius, it was his devotion to socially responsible and sustainable advertising that set him apart.
Due to the remarkable number of outstanding small agencies, awards were also made to Six Hot-Shops. Not all are traditional but have all found a sphere in which they excel: Mick & Nick, Mediology, 34, HDI Youth Marketeers, MetropolitanRepublic and Fine Healthcare.