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Gracie’s Marketing Wisdom

Truth is, in today’s world pretty much any new car will transport you from point A to point B in reasonable comfort and safety. Most washers wil[more]

Old School

Everybody I know, of my generation, who went to art school learned their photographic ropes using a battered and student-abused Pentax K-1000. The K-1[more]

Launching Totally Amp’d

Here’s something we’re really proud to be involved with – the launch of Totally Amp’d, as created by Shaftesbury Film and Smok[more]

What I really want for Christmas is a download code

Here’s a confession: I’ve always hated music CDs. Not for some imagined sound quality issue, I just don’t like the way they look. Th[more]

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays

To all of our friends and clients, a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from everybody at fisheye. [more]

How to Seed, Feed and Weed your way into your customer’s imagination

At fisheye we often talk to our clients about the need to Seed, Feed and Weed. We find that the most successful client initiatives have a real world e[more]

Gracie’s Marketing Wisdom

The latest instalment of Gracie’s marketing wisdom. This is an important insight, and one that people get often wrong. [more]

Is the death of cable TV imminent?

The BBC has just released the iPlayer app for iPad here in Canada. Just under $9.00 a month buys you unlimited access to a vast and growing library of[more]

Why it’s better to be loved (and hated) than be beige

One of my favourite ads of 2009 was the Method Shiny Suds commercial. Unfortunately it got pulled by Method, after some 100 people complained that it was sexist.

The ad starts with a fake commercial for a cleaning product called Shiny Suds. When our heroine returns to the shower the next day she is greeted by chemical residue in the form of bubbles bearing an uncanny, and probably planned, resemblance to the SC Johnson Scrubbing Bubbles.

As a female that showers, I thought it started with a great insight that spoke to what was remarkable about Method’s products. It made me think about a product category I rarely think of and made me want to use Method. They asked the question, when did clean become so dirty and said you deserved to know what chemicals are in your cleaners by supporting the Household Product Labeling Acts which would require disclosure of ingredients in
household cleaners in the US.

Was the advertising potentially polarizing? You bet! But it was noticed. And to be noticed you have to stick your neck out and that means some people will love you and some people will dislike you. The alternative is to have beige advertising that no one notices. I call it beige because rarely do you find someone that hates beige. It’s a safe colour choice. Of course, I challenge you to find anyone who loves beige.

Sample complaints were in the vein of the following: “Making us fear chemical residue from cleaning products because it’s tied into a rape threat is beyond sickening.”

Method’s reaction to its vocal minority disappoints me. I’m a fan of the company because they’ve approached the seemingly low interest category of cleaning products and reinvented it with beautifully design products that can be displayed on, rather than hidden under, the counter in your home.

The video got 700,000 views and a 5 star rating on YouTube with 2,500 letters written supporting the Household Products Labeling Acts to more than 400 members of Congress, according to Method.

Take 30 seconds and watch the ad and tell me what you think.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-k9K8V2-Itw[/youtube]

  • http://fisheyecorp.com Andreas Duess

    When we launched Lakehead’s Yale Shmale campaign we got love and hatemail in equal measure.

    But more importantly, Lakehead got a 17% upswing in student applications that year.

  • http://www.mendicant.ca Alex

    Wow – a “rape threat” – really? It was a witty, insightful commercial that was a category changer – and like anything that challenges the way people think, it was bound to have some negative response. they should have stuck with it.

    Great posting, btw

  • Janet

    This commercial is hilarious! I can’t believe someone actually felt “sickened” by that ad; I’m actually sending it to my mom to watch because I know she’ll love it!

  • http://fisheyecorp.com Andreas Duess

    I was actually wondering if some of the more outspoken complaint had perhaps been plants from the competition. A relatively easy thing to do.

Life, live at fisheye

There's always a lot of cool and interesting stuff happening here at fisheye. Whenever possible, we try and catch it on video.

The t-shirts have arrived. Check the store to get your own.

Chris Fonseca creates a mural for us

Smokebomb's Jay Bennet introducing Totally Amp'd, an app based show we're helping to launch.

At the launch of the 2011 Princess Margaret Welcome Home Sweepstakes.