JackRiddler wrote:Nothing in modern advertising is accidental.
Nothing.
Advertisers aren't all powerful. They're often even not all that smart. Some years back I sat behind two adverising executives on a cross country flight. They spent four full hours discussing one client (and this was a *major* IT client, so I have to assume they were major account reps), who was running a contest in an IT magazine. The contest was going to run for six months. The payoff, from the client's perspective, was that they wanted to collect information about people's networks and servers. You had to fill out a survey card to enter the contest. Well and good - that's fairly standard.
Their problem was that the client wanted to get a good-sized sample up front. For four hours, these two doofuses rattled on about how to get people to enter the contest early when it ran for six months. Four hours of intense headscratching discussion yielded the idea that they'd offer an early-bird prize to people who entered in the first month. That was a stroke of unparalleled brilliance for them both - you could just tell by the way they treated the idea. You might have thought they were the first ones ever to think of that.
I don't doubt the presence of the airbrushed figures in the ice cubes, flames, etc, but don't be too impressed by them. They're in there not because of any sober calculation, not because anyone really knows what effect they'll have, but because someone has vague, anecdotal evidence that they may have had an effect in a past advertisement. Modern advertising is as much superstition as it is science, possibly more. I've long been of the belief that most of the money spent on ad campaigns is wasted.