Skip to main content

Good advertising, poor execution.. Part 2


Last week, my wife Lauren and I spent X-mas in my lovely home town, Mexico City. One day we were driving my mother's car, and we noticed an enormous outdoor ad in one of the streets . It belonged to Cinemex, one of the two most important movie theater companies in Mexico. Since 1992, Cinemex has opened more than 40 movie complexes around the country. The purpose of the ad was to promote Cinemex's new gift certificate. The campaign's title is "Esta Navidad regala la magia del cine" (This Christmas give someone the magic of the movies). Five minutes after looking at the ad, we heard another Cinemex spot on the radio about the same promotion. Lauren thought it would be a great idea to give movie gift cards to my brothers as a X-mas present. A couple of hours later we went to our nearest Cinemex to buy the gift certificates.

When we arrived, we realized that the theater was decorated with several promotional materials regarding the gift certificate campaign. We went to the main ticket booth and inquired about the gift cards. The clerk asked us to go to the "special guest" booth, so we went to the abandoned desk. We waited for about 6 minutes until someone finally helped us. We told the clerk we wished to buy a couple of $100 pesos gift certificates. At first, she looked confused, but then she told us to wait and she left the booth. We waited for another 10 minutes. I remember seeing her running around, asking for help to other clerks. Finally, she comes back with two gift cards and told us to wait again. She goes to the main ticket booth and spends another 5 minutes there. She comes back with the activated cards so we can pay. Before we paid I asked the clerk why it was so difficult to buy two gift cards for the theater. She first apologized and told me the whole process that involved activating the cards. I told her that it would be a good idea to make those cards easier to access, and that she should be able to activate them from her booth. Apparently, not all the clerks are trained to execute this promotion. The theater seemed empty with 10 people in the lobby, and still we waited 20 minutes to buy two gift cards. Can you imagine how long it would take if they had to deal with 10 more enthusiastic gift card buyers? It would definitely be a complete frenzy for the clerks. Although we had purchased our gifts, we left Cinemex unhappy and disappointed. Lauren and I agreed it was a shame that Cinemex spent millions of pesos in this advertising campaign to create awareness and generate traffic to the theaters, only to have customers dissatisfied with the customer service in the execution of the promotion.

In Mexico, the gift card culture has not evolved at the same pace as it has here in the U.S. Therefore, companies need to double their efforts in educating consumers about the benefits of a gift card before they can think of creative ideas to sell them. Advertising cannot do it all. Marketers need to make sure everyone in the organization to the point of sale is trained to execute a new promotion. This Cinemex case is just an example of how advertising can create awareness and drive consumers to the point of sale, but if the customer service personnel is not trained to close the sale, the whole campaign will fail. Finally, two months from now, when the marketing department finally analyzes this campaign's performance and finds that the sales were not up to par, someone will start pointing fingers. Management will likely fire the marketing manager, and the whole campaign will die without really knowing what happened. It wasn't a bad idea, just a case of bad customer service and execution.

Comments

  1. As cliche as this sounds... I find true time over time... Proper Planning Prevents Poor Execution.

    I agree with your comments about the analysis that will be made afterwards, and management looking directly at marketing... But, I would like to play a little of a devils advocate here, who is at fault here? Is it the management at the theaters for not training or the marketing manager at the headquarters for not making sure that the theaters were ready to execute? Either way the marketing people are the ones who will be seen as the people at fault.

    Thinking about all this takes me to my past agency when I worked for McDonald’s and we needed to make sure that all of the promotions were executed flawlessly. The Account Director and I were there three hours before the event and made sure our Brand Ambassadors were ready and knew as much as possible about the promotion.

    To my initial quote… Proper Planning Prevents Poor Execution…

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think the marketing manager needs to make sure somehow that the theater managers know everything that is needed to know about the promotion, and thus train their staff.

    ReplyDelete
  3. If you get a chance, there is an article on the Harvard Business Review on the proper executions of strategies. I believe it was published last year... great read.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Its the explanation of the phenomena that gives the insight...

I have always found the following idea among the most interesting in business: numbers = true insight. Strong statement right?! Depending on where you stand, Positivist or Post, you might say that the above statement is true. Now, dont get me wrong, I enjoy numbers (a lot actually), but I feel that businesses nowadays are hanging thei hat on a percentage. Some examples of things I've heard - "Our brand tracking is showing that our awareness has declines 2%... are our TV not working?"  "The advertising strategy is not really moving product (sales)... I really haven't seen a percentage increase..." And I could honestly keep giving examples, but the above two are some I can recall pretty fast. Now, let me say that there is nothing wrong with the above statements, what bothers me is that with numbers we tend to look for one answer and one answer only. The thinking behind this is that there has to be some variable that is affecting the phenomena.But, if the...

Is this not a bit too intrusive?!

I know that good marketing is supposed to catch you a bit off guard and make you think about the message but this is just too much... Why? Because, 1) although it in fact was unexpected, it crossed the privacy line (which by today's standards is pretty low). 2) it's not creative, and 3) lacks authenticity... Which is the last thing you want if you deal with money. Thought?!

Honestly... Who is thinking Arby's??

Having worked at a McDonald's and for the McDonald's brand for a couple of years, seeing advertising like the one below reminds why the golden arches still have the higher share in the fast food market. Please know that I am not saying that McD's has this share solely because of its advertising, but at the very least, their advertising doesn't turn anyone away. While watching TV a couple of weeks ago, I came across the Arby's B-day spot, which you can see below. After watching it I just thought... wow, somebody actually produced this spot? Let me say that there is really nothing wrong with the production, it is more the idea that got produced. The strategy behind this campaign was pretty insightful and good. I'm Thinking Arby's . Ownable , different and niche enough that when you want to eat something hot and tasty only Arby's will suffice, hence you crave and can only think Arby's ... the problem was the execution. Does the guy like the food?...