Aus dem aktuellen adbusters (n. 69 – Jan. – Feb. 06) stammt dieser Artickel zum thema “De-Branding-Branding”. Alles natuerlich ohne URLs zum nachschlagen…
The same companies that had been terrorized by jammed ads in the 1990s have smartened up and are now starting to use jammers’ own momentum against them in a game of marketing jiu-jitsu. Take the example of the Coke Zero ad outside Berlin’s University of the Arts: when fly-by-night jammers cut out the coke bottle from the ad (a la Zeus – Visual Kidnapping of the Lavazza model – 2002), the soft drink giant fought back. Company spokeswoman Claudia Fasse claimed in Der Spiegel that the cut-out bottle proved that Coke Zero was “so popular with students that they’ll even go out and steal it.” And at the end of the day, the joke was on the jammers.
Apple Computers took the joke even further when jammers cut out the models and computers from their ads. They offered the missing models on their website as downloadable images, and launched a contest for people to photograph the models in their original settings. Far from detourning ads, the jammers unwittingly added momentum to the company campaign.
To be effective, adbusting must evolve. Half-hearted shots don’t work anymore. If you can’t subvert the offending and in a meaningful way, it may just better just to obliterate the whole thing under a coat of fresh paint.