UNILEVER (AXE and DOVE)
Unilever-manufacturer of several home care, food, and personal care brands – uses
personal marketing communications strategies to target specific age groups,
demographics, and lifestyles. The company has developed some of the most
successful brands in the world, including Axe, a male grooming brand, and Dove, a
personal care brand aimed at women.
The AXE brand launched in 1983, was introduced in the United States in 2002, and is
the most popular make grooming brand in the world, sold in more than 70 different
countries. It offers your male consumers a wide range of personal care products such
as body sprays, body gel, deodorant, and shampoo in a variety of scents. It effectively
broke through the clutter by finding the right target group and delivering personal
marketing messages that touched home.
The biggest opportunities existed with male who might have felt a need for help in
attracting the opposite sex and could easily be persuaded to buy products to help their
appearance. Most Axe ads use humor and sex, often featuring skinny, average guys
attracting beautiful girls by the dozen, hundreds, or even thousands after dousing
themselves with Axe. The result: the brand is aspirational and approachable, and the
lighthearted tone appeals to young men.
AXE has won numerous advertising awards not only for its creativity but also for its
effective use of unconventional media channels. From edgy online videos to video
games, mating game tool kits, chat room, and mobile apps, the AXE brand engages
young adult males at relevant times, locations, and environments. In Colombia, for
example, a female AXE Patrol scopes out the bar and club scene and sprays men with
AXE body sprays. Unilever Marketing Director Kevin George explained, “This is all
about going beyond the 30-second TV commercial to create a deeper bond with our
guy.”
Axe knows where to reach its consumers. It advertises only on male-dominated
networks such as MTV, ESPN, Spike, and Comedy Central. It partners with the NBA
and NCAA, which draw young male audiences, and runs ads during big sporting
events. After AXE’s Super Bowl commercial ran in February 2014, it was viewed on
YouTube.com more than 100 million times. Print ads appear in Playboy, Rolling Stone,
GQ and Maxim. Axe’s online efforts via Facebook and Twitter help drive consumersback to its Website, TheAxeEffect.com.
Unilever understands that it must keep the brand fresh, relevant, and cool in order to
stay current with its fickle young audience. As a result, the company launches a new
fragrance ever year and refreshes its online and advertising communications
constantly, realizing that new young males enter and exit the target market each year.
Axe’s success in personal marketing has lifted the brand to become the leader in what
many had thought was the mature deodorant category.
On the other side of the personal marketing spectrum, Unilever’s Dove brand speaks
to women with a different tone and message. In 2003, Dove shifted away from its
historical advertising, which touted the brand’s benefit of one-quarter moisturizing
cream, and launched the “Real Beauty” campaign. “Real Beauty” celebrated “real”
women and spoke personally to the target market about the notion that beauty comes
in all shapes, sizes, ages, and colors. The campaign arose from research revealing
that only 4 percent of women worldwide think they are beautiful.
The first phase of the “Real Beauty” campaign featured nontraditional female models
and asked viewers to judge their looks online and decide whether they were “Wrinkled
or Wonderful” or “Oversized or Outstanding”. The personal questions shocked many
but created such a large PR Buzz that Dove continued the campaign. The second
phase featured candid and confident images of curvy, full-bodied women. Again, the
brand smashed stereotypes about what should appear in advertising and touched
many women worldwide. The third phase, “Pro-Age,” featured older, nude women
worldwide. The third phase, “Pro-Age”, featured older, nude women and asked
questions like, “Does beauty have an age limit?” Immediately, the company heard
positive feedback from its older consumers. Dove also started a Self-Esteem Fund,
aimed at helping women feel better about their looks.
In addition, Dove released a series of short Dove Film, one of which, Evolution, won
both a Cyber and a film Grand Prix at the International Advertising Festival in Cannes
in 2007. The film shows a rapid-motion view of an ordinary-looking woman
transformed by makeup artists, hairdressers, lighting, and digital retouching to end up
looking like a billboard supermodel. The end tagline is: “No wonder our perception of
beauty is distorted.” The film became an instant viral hit.
Dove followed up with Onslaught, s short film that showed a fresh-faced young girlbeing bombarded with images of sexy, half-dressed women and promises of products
to make her look “smaller”, “softer”, ‘firmer” and “better.” Dove’s 2013 film called
Sketches featured a police sketch artist who drew two pictures of the same woman.
For one, the woman described herself to the sketch artist from behind a curtain, and
for the other, a total stranger described her. The difference in language and
descriptions revealed how women are often their harshest beauty critics. The ad
ended with the tagline “You are more beautiful than you think.” The Sketches film has
become the most watched video advertisement of all time and had more than 175
million views in its first year alone.
Dove’s latest effort to change the attitudes of women and promote positive self-esteem
was called the Ad Makeover. The campaign appeared only on Facebook and gave
women the power to replace negative ads (such as for plastic surgery or weight-loss
products) on their friends’ Facebook pages with positive messages from Dove like
“Hello Beautiful” and “The perfect Bum is the One You Are Sitting On.” Unilever in
effect bought the ad space from Facebook for the positive ads to appear on the friend’s
site, effectively squeezing out the negative ads. During the first week the Ad Makeover
app was launched, 171 million banners with negative messages were replaced.
Although the Axe and the Dove campaigns have both sparked much controversy and
debate, they could not be more different. Yet both have effectively targeting their
consumer base with personal marketing strategies and spot-on messages. In fact, in
the 10 years that Dove has focused on changing women’s attitudes and promoting
positive self-esteem, sales have jumped from $2.5 billion to $4 billion. Axe is not only
the most popular make grooming brand in the world, but also Unilever’s best - selling
brand.