Who Needs a Bahamavention?
Brand: Bahamas (Bahamas Ministry of Tourism)Link: Spot 1, 2, 3, 4
Target: Over-stressed North Americans
Rating: ****
Reviewer: David
Description:
This campaign’s centerpiece is four spots, each of which document ‘Bahamaventions’ - interventions by the family and friends of the overstressed. A vacation to the Bahamas is the therapeutic answer to each of these situations. The four protagonists are Lyle - an overloud executive, Monte - a grim-faced family man, Malcolm - a skinny, pasty white guy and Maureen - a tightly wound wife.
What Works:
The best feature of this new campaign is that it focuses not on the “Where?” of travel or the “How?” but the “Why?” Instead of just seeing pristine beaches (which all look the same in advertising), Fallon carefully lays out the argument for going on vacation in the first place. A pasty complexion, high stress levels, the tendency to snap and a grim demeanor are all good signs of someone who needs a vacation. These spots work by methodically and comically laying out the ‘before’ using living caricatures of these symptoms. Then we get the solution - a Bahamas vacation. The end benefit is the relief of the symptoms we’ve seen at the front end of the spot. There is a social rationale behind this as well as Americans on average fail to use 4 vacation days a year (up from three) and increasingly identify ‘life balance’ as a key missing element in the modern workplace.
The second element in this campaign is the use of humor to engage the audience. This advertising blog is often critical of humorous campaigns because they distract from the brand or overwhelm the value proposition of the advertising. Here, though, the humor is nicely tuned to make the point that vacation is a necessity rather than a luxury.
Finally, the ‘hook’ to this commercial from the branding standpoint is the ‘Bahamavention.’ This is memorable and intuitive. It makes the campaign ownable. The ‘reason why’ points (700+ islands, multiple types of vacations) work better because it is not difficult to tie the advertising back to the brand because of this coined term.We cannot predict whether, as Fallon Creative Director Todd Riddle hopes, ‘Bahamavention’ will make it into the cultural vocabulary the way other Fallon campaigns have (most memorably the “I’m not a doctor but I did stay in a Holiday Inn Express last night” line). But either way we believe this campaign will help the Bahamas and prove to be a landmark for other destinations looking to build brand identities.
What Doesn’t:
This campaign attempts to own a generic end benefit. It is a risky undertaking. We understand that stress and depression are rampant, but is the Bahamas the only cure? Or even the first cure we’ll remember? It all depends on the viral strength of the Bahamavention concept. If the concept doesn’t take - meaning we never hear Jay Leno or David Letterman crack a joke about a politician needing a Bahamavention - then Fallon should seek to narrow the brand positioning. They can instead say that Bahamavention may not be the only cure for stress but it is a unique cure, and then explain why. This campaign also depends upon the carefully managed execution of humorous creative which can sometimes create problems down the line.
Branding Bottom Line:
We think Michael Richards needs a Bahamavention.

October 26th, 2007 at 7:36 pm
It is really a shame Fallon has let so many talent creative leave while retaining the likes of Todd Riddle. He has brought the level of creative down significantly and taken credit as their over-all Creative Director after Feuerman’s demise. He clearly is open to stealing concepts from other sources - see Traveler’s tv - and being excessively arrogant. It’s people like him who have hurt a once fantastic agency slide further into its own demise.
January 29th, 2008 at 8:11 am
The Bahamas, and in particular the Nassau area, has been a favorite vacation destination of mine ever since winning a trip as part of a company sponsored production contest. We’ve been back many times. And we are NOT among the rich and famous.
The perceptions many people have is that this is glitz and expense and all the bells and whistles, and yes.. this certainly is available and part of the island. You can see some of the most expensive yachts in the world in the harbor there at any one time and there’s top of the line hotels. And they are not cheap!
BUT… there’s also many other ways to enjoy Nassau and the Bahamas. Any number of searches will reveal economy ways to do it, and you still have access to the same beaches and historic sites the high rollers do.
Another perception is distance. The flying time from many NE US cities such as New York or Boston is no more than the time to Miami or New Orleans or Chicago, and there are direct flights.
We think most of the comments in this blog are right on target when it comes to destination fun; the blog also keeps you up to date on the things like money exchange, passports, etc. so return often and leave YOUR story.