Less Cause, More Marketing for Unilever [1]
Submitted by Diane Farsetta [2] on
In 2004, the Unilever [3] company Dove got lots of attention for using "ordinary-looking -- in some cases heavyset -- women in its ads for shampoos and beauty products. The ad and public-relations effort, called 'Campaign for Real Beauty,' created free publicity for the company." Now, Dove is "trying to create a new online community for women that offers entertainment, blogs, advice and advertising." The website was designed by the WPP [4] firm Ogilvy [5], to "strengthen the link" between the Campaign's empowerment rhetoric "and Dove's line of products." To date, the Campaign's "marketing impact has been somewhat blunted by the fact that the social cause hasn't been linked directly to specific Dove products." Dove's new site [6] will face competition from similar corporate-sponsored, woman-focused websites. Yahoo recently launched "Shine [7]," designed to give "the struggling Internet company additional opportunities to sell advertising targeted to the key decision-maker in many households," reports AP [8]. And Kraft [9] has "uPumpItUp [10]," a so-called "cause initiative for the Crystal Light brand [11]."