As in last year's campaign, which
focused on the car's IntelliLink telematics platform, this ad will use
football as a metaphor, although for auto safety. And
while last year's effort had Manning calling plays to IntelliLink, the
new one has him comparing the virtues of the car’s blindside safety
technology to how one needs teammates to help avoid a
blindsided tackle.
In the ad, Manning goes to make a
lane change, when suddenly the blindside indicator lights up. Another
shot shows him backing out of a driveway when a
truck suddenly appears behind him. "It's like I've got the whole team
protecting me," he says.
"He's approachable and that's really synonymous with what Buick is all about,"
says Tony DiSalle, Buick VP marketing, in a video about the spot.
At
the New York Auto Show, the marketer told Marketing Daily that Buick
also keeps its distance from GM's
other luxury brand, Cadillac, by maintaining some of its brand equity as
a less exclusive, more neighborly luxury brand, although that
neighborhood would ideally be upper middle class.
While
Cadillac hasn't yet gotten the even more exclusive cachet it is going
for, the brand is definitely hoping to grab some of that equity with
the new CTS. That car, unveiled at the
show, is clearly intended to some blindsiding of its own against
Mercedes' E Class and BMW's 5-Series cars.
Early
last month, Buick extended a Verano campaign, "Unexpected,"
around the time the car started appearing in dealerships in good volume.
The lead spot focused on the car's sound-blocking qualities, which have
long been a hallmark of the brand. Another ad played
with the infotainment side of IntelliLink by showing a fleet of buses
full of bands rolling behind the car, intended to embody what you get
when you use the platform The raft of "Unexpected" ads have
also been in "Celebrity Apprentice" and NCAA Mens Basketball.
The sports alignment includes the "Human Achievement" platform, comprising a documentary series about former NCAA
stars who have gone on to do good for their communities.
Courtesy of MediaPost News.
No comments:
Post a Comment