David Vinjamuri    david@brandtrainers.com

David Vinjamuri is adjunct Professor of Marketing at NYU and President of ThirdWay Brand Trainers, a leading brand marketing training company. David has over 18 years of marketing and management experience. David started his career at Johnson & Johnson and Coca-Cola in brand management and marketing. David has also led marketing groups at DoubleClick, Save.com and a major private label manufacturer. He is a graduate of Swarthmore College and the Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy and studied marketing and manufacturing at Harvard Business School.

David writes and speaks frequently on marketing. He is editor and lead reviewer for the ThirdWay Advertising Blog, a Google® top five search pick for “Advertising Blog.” He has been the featured guest lecturer on the Queen Mary 2 and contributes regularly to Advertising Express. David’s 2004 article on branding called “What’s in a Name,” in the Journal for Nonprofit Management has helped to spark renewed interest in branding among nonprofits. David’s book on entrepreneurial branding will be published by John Wiley & Sons in 2008.


COMMENTARY: Why Yellow Beat Red

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Issue: Bono’s Red Campaign Has Not Burst
Commentary by:
David Vinjamuri

AdAge set off a firestorm this week by suggesting that the RED campaign has yielded just $18mm for the Bono charity which benefits the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. RED CEO Bobby Shriver fired back that the total number was now $25 million, that there were a lot of other publicity benefits for the charity and that the promotional partners also saw incremental profit and sales from the campaign.

From a brand standpoint, the much more interesting question is this: Why did a campaign with six huge corporate sponsors, dozens of celebrities and an enormous amount of publicity get beat by a simple yellow band promoted by one athlete?

That’s right, that simple yellow band brought in over $50 million for LiveStrong, the Lance Armstrong foundation which benefits people affected by Cancer. One celebrity, one SKU, twice the results.

This advertising blog doesn’t think that is any accident. Lance Armstrong did four things right:

  1. Simple - The LiveStrong campaign was easy to understand - pay a buck, take a stand, fight cancer
  2. Shareable - The LiveStrong campaign had a shareable message - wear the yellow and join the fight
  3. Self-Reinforcing - When a consumer became aware of the campaign, every yellow wristband reinforced the message.
  4. Sustainable - With simple execution, low manufacturing costs and no need to keep multiple partners on board, this campaign has been easy to maintain.

The RED campaign hasn’t surpassed the Yellow campaign for just one reason - Execution. RED sounds like a brilliant plan and when it hatched in Bono’s mind, it probably was. But it was compromised in several ways in its execution:

  1. What is RED and what is just red? - Because the RED campaign had multiple partners, it was harder to distinguish at a glance which products were RED sponsored and which merely sported a similar color. This created consumer confusion and cost the campaign valuable momentum.
  2. Commercial motives - To entice partners, 60% of profits were retained commercially with the remaining 40% going to RED. This compromised the integrity and authenticity of the movement and made it a promotion instead. A movement (as LiveStrong was) has much stronger brand equity than a promotion.
  3. Too much noise - Multiple partners and multiple products also racheted up the noise. To understand the promotion, consumers had to pay attention and investigate. The extra work required of the consumer made the campaign much less appealing.

We believe that RED is pursuing noble goals. Unfortunately, the meager results have left the ground open to critics from the nonprofit sector who claim that this is the inevitable result of the privatization of charity. The hurt feelings created by the Gates Foundation stealing the limelight from more established players are resurfacing in this debate. But a privatization of charity and more stringent application of business principles to keep charitable giving effective are desperately needed. The lesson of RED is that it has to be smart business, and strong branding.

4 Responses to “COMMENTARY: Why Yellow Beat Red”

  1. Bruno Chenque Says:

    Interesting point of view. In addition, could be mentioned Chris Anderson´s concept about The Long Tail, because as you pointed in the third item, the reinforcement caused worked as viral and a made people feel like: “I wanna do the same”.

  2. Developing Ideas Says:

    I think the reason why yellow campaign worked is because people understand it further. While people are disconnected from the red campaign, since they don’t know exactly where the money is going to or the people who are helped.

  3. Rob @ Cynic Says:

    I have a massive hatred of the way RED has conducted its business - it’s heart might be in the right place, but the way it has done it is terrible. It’s not about empowerment to the masses, it’s about ‘champagne socialism’ … feeling you’ve done something good but want something great in return.

    If RED had adopted a Robin Hood stance [steal from the brand whores to give to the needy] I wouldn’t be so angry about it, but it doesn’t, it pretends to be the Mother Teresa of Charities and it so isn’t.

    I’ve just written ANOTHER piece about all this so feel free to have a look and tell me what you think. I personally feel the Paul Newman thing I talk about is an area that deserves more exposure, especially when you see the results its obtained for little or no media hopplah!

  4. joey Says:

    I worked at a mcdonalds near me a bit ago, and well we had 2 mice, and we kept them there and named them. =D nothing ever happened of them

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