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EarthLink's Captive Audience
Ad campaign tells public restroom users, 'EarthLink
Protects Your Privates.'
March 05, 2001
Jim Welte
The business world's appetite for uncharted advertising
space--which has consumed banana stickers, coffee cup wraps, and
airplane snacks in recent times, has made its way to, um, new depths.
Starting last week, women at various bars and restaurants in Austin,
Texas and Washington, D.C. receive the following message on disposable
toilet-seat covers: "EarthLink (ELNK, info) Protects Your Privates."
Men receive the same tagline at public urinals in
yet another EarthLink marketing effort designed to lure some of
AOL Time Warner's (AOL, info) approximately 30 million users to
its Internet service. The Internet service provider, which trails
market leader AOL by more than 25 million users and has previously
run ad campaigns encouraging AOL customers to "Get Out of AOL" and
"Opt Out of AOL," is focusing its current efforts on AOL's consumer
privacy protections, or lack thereof. EarthLink contends that AOL
bombards its users with advertisements and sells user data to other
marketers.
"We created this ad to further illuminate the growing
importance of Internet privacy and to let people know that not all
ISPs or online services have the same level of commitment to privacy
protection," says Claudia Caplan, vice president of brand marketing
for EarthLink. "Our message--and a key point of differentiation--is
that EarthLink is not in the business of exploiting its subscribers'
personal data."
As long as EarthLink doesn't sell its user data
to marketers, which it contends it doesn't, then the campaign's
message and competitive positioning are sound, say several branding
experts. Its choice of venue, on the other hand, could use some
refinement.
"They run the risk of cheapening the brand by the
environment in which they're putting it," says Daryl Travis, CEO
of Brandtrust Consultants. "There are plenty of other creative avenues
that someone could take without running the risk of soiling the
brand, if you will. This basically says that no matter how bad AOL
is, we're willing to sink lower."
While bathroom humor has inched its way into the
advertising mainstream over the last few years, it simply misses
its mark in this case, says Elizabeth Goodgold, chief of The Nuancing
Group in San Diego. "It made sense for 7Up with its "Up Yours" campaign,
because they were going against Mountain Dew, which is a very edgy
brand and their core audience was young males," says Goodgold. "But
when there are 30 million AOL users, how can they be assured that
that group is so homogenous that they're going to understand this
humor? Out of that 30 million user base, are most of them cool,
hip, edgy consumers? My answer would be no." Steve McKee, president
of McKee Wallwork Henderson, an advertising agency in Albuquerque,
N.M., notes the irony in sending a privacy-protecting message in
one of the last bastions of individual privacy. "They're invading
our privacy in order to let us know that they're protecting our
privacy," he says.
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