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The Ads That Broke the Mould
The hype surrounding Nicole, Papa and that wedding
last week notwithstanding, the best car advert, in fact the best advert,
on television at the moment is, as usual, a Volkswagen ad.
The array of people holding truth-telling signs, from
the be-suited businessman on a bench holding the sign "At weekend.,
my name is Mandy", to the seasick fisherman, maintains a standard
of VW advertising that has for 40 years been both remarkably high and
remarkably consistent.
It is not just the smiling, obsessive German cogincei,
checking out Passat door locks, or the "Polo price tag as hiccup-cure"
of recent months that prove that Volkswagen advertising is at the top
of its field.
In the Eighties the dinner jacketed roué who lost everything at Monte Carlo and Paula Hamilton's fur-coat throwing yuppie were perfectly of their time and remain lodged in the consumers consciousness.
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And for those who are old enough, Bert Kwouk and the
Volkswagen Golf dropping out of the sky is as much an icon of the late
Seventies as Sid Vicious.
But the roots to this remarkable heritage of advertising
lie even further back with a man who, in an industry quick to proclaim
the next hot thing, has remained the mould-breaker, the innovator and
legend of the trade: Bill Bernbach.
"These days advertising agencies, according to
the media image of the Nineties, are exceedingly hip places," says
Tony Cox, creative director of BMP DDB, Volkswagen's advertising agency
for the past 40 years. "But in the Fifties things were very different.
Then Madison Avenue, the centre of American advertising, was known as
'Ulcer Gulch'. It was a shrine of conformity. American ad men were hopeless
yes-men. Dedicated to affirming their clients' every whim."
Madison Avenue was in those days also almost exclusively
the preserve of the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant middle classes - think
Darren and his boss from the TV series Bewitched. Into this, world came
Bernbach, a Jewish ex-post room boy from the Bronx.
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| Classic ad - click to see large version |
Unlike, the technicians of the day who believed that
advertising was a science that had rules - you put people in every ad
and use short sentences - Bernbach founded an agency on the belief that
it was an art with creativity at its heart, This is hardly revolutionary
now, but it led to advertising for the Volkswagen Beetle that created
a cult personality" for the car that helped make it the best-selling
car in history.
"Bernbach got to grips with how the VW Beetle
represented the changing climate of the times," says Tony Cox, 'The
cold war thawed, society had became open to new ideas, young people became
more idealistic, more environmentally conscious - men grew their hair,
women burned their bras and a stream of great commercials began to appear
from DDB New York." The original Bernbach ads used self-depreciating
humour for the first time in the history of car ads. Before the rule had
always been for macho self-congratulation. The car as extension of both
the phallus and the American dream. Instead, the VW Beetle was given a
personality that exuded "friendly straightforwardness" and "disarming
honesty" in the words of Tony Cox.
The really remarkable thing about Volkswagen advertising
is that even today car ads remain the least creatively inspiring of any
industry. It is currently the biggest-spending sector and ad agencies
still largely do what the manufacturer tells them. And having spent millions
on the development and design of a car's body styling the manufacturer
usually says "Give me plenty of shots of the body".
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| End of the world thwarted by VW's reliability |
This explains the advertising cliché of the
car on the curving open road. Usually filmed in Scotland, under a lowering
sky with some chisel-jawed hunk at the wheel, these ads register not a
blip on the consumer memorability scale - but they do allow for lots of
shots of the car's body.
This need for the car to be the star interferes with
an ad agency's attempts at humour - which is the generous interpretation
of why the Renault Megane "car-talking-to-driver" adverts are
so lame. In contrast VW, for its part, recently had the confidence to
run an ad that at no point showed the car at all, In "Gas Station'
two New Mexico-style flicks discuss the strange UFO apparition that passed
by without needing petrol. It was identifiable only by the strange sign
of it that looked "Kinda like a Vee and a Dubyer".
What Bernbach realised before anyone else, and what
has maintained the high standard of VW ads ever since, was that being
ironic about selling to the public was a really successful way to sell
to the public.
'This insight has become the basis of utility subsequent advertising campaigns," says Cox. Indeed you can hear papers about it delivered at every advertising convention you go to - nowadays its usually called post modernism."
From the Independent 1998
all Volkswagen Group communications and photos
reproduced with permission of Volkswagen UK |