Celebrities In Advertising: A Marketing Mistake?

Guest AuthorFebruary 18, 20115 min

Popular wisdom asserts that getting a celebrity endorsement is a tried-and-true, simple-to-implement way to maximize advertising effectiveness. Sure, it’s expensive, but celebrities always yield stronger ties with viewers and, ultimately, greater sales, right?

Wrong. Over the course of last year, time and time again we observed incredibly low effectiveness scores of TV ads starring celebrities. From Tiger Woods to Donald Trump, we found that with rare exception, celebrity endorsements were largely ineffective and failed to yield the benefits popular wisdom promises.

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We set out to understand whether celebrities today are really worth the significant investment that brands were making. We studied every nationally televised ad for the first 11 months of 2010 and found that celebrity ads performed either below average or merely equaled it. Specifically, our study, 2010 Celebrity Advertisements: Exposing a Myth of Advertising Effectiveness, 2010, showed that fewer than 12% of ads using celebrities exceeded a 10% lift, and one-fifth of celebrity ads had a negative impact on advertising effectiveness.

Why was this?

Were celebrities losing their pizazz in influencing consumers? Had the age of social media and consumer control ushered in a new consumer that is not as easily won over by a famous face?

In fact, yes. Today’s consumer is a totally different animal than the consumer of even five years ago, meaning that what was effective and influential five years ago is not necessarily so today, as today’s consumer is more likely to be influenced by someone in their social network than a weak celebrity connection. Today’s consumer is informed, time-compressed, and difficult to impress, and they are only influenced by ads that are relevant and provide information. They don’t want to have products pushed at them, even from a celebrity. In fact, the data show that relevance and information attributes were key missing ingredients from most celebrity ads.

Not surprisingly, Tiger Woods led the list of the worst celebrity endorsements of 2010, along with other sports figures, including Lance Armstrong and Dale Earnhardt, Jr. Mired in controversy, Tiger’s sponsors chose to address his “mistakes” in their ads rather than the products that he was supposed to be hawking.

As rationale for not being influenced by celebrity endorsements, consumers overwhelmingly cited “confusion” about what product the celebrity was endorsing and dislike of the celebrity, two obvious catalysts to Tiger’s poor performances, which were equally unpopular across every demographic tested.

Lance Armstrong’s “No Emoticons” ad for Radio Shack is another example of this. The ad never actually mentions “Radio Shack” by name, nor are there any prominent storefront, aisle or product shots. A typical open-ended response from a viewer indicated that she “had no clue what they were advertising until the Radio Shack sign comes up [at the end of the ad].”

2010’s Worst Celebrity TV Ads by Negative Lift (Sink)
  Celebrity Brand Ad Title Lift
1 Tiger Woods Nike Did You Learn Anything? -30%
2 Lance Armstrong Radio Shack No Emoticons -28%
3 Kenny Mayne Gillette Good Segment -28%
4 Dale Earnhardt Jr. Nationwide Auto Insurance Coverage at the Right Price -27%
5 Donald Trump Macy’s Making Timmy a Mogul -24%

Likewise, one respondent remarked about Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s ad for Nationwide Auto Insurance: “This ad was too silly and did not really sell me anything. It tried too hard to be funny and missed the mark.”

What all of this proves is that adding a celebrity to an ad with an already poor creative message is like rubbing salt in the wound. Instead of serving as a Band-Aid to bad creative, using a celebrity on top of bad creative usually makes the ad even less effective and confusing to viewers.

The bottom line is that good ads stand on their own, and this study empirically shows that a celebrity has little to no impact on an ad’s effectiveness. In fact, regardless of gender or age, ads without celebrities out-performed ads with them. (See graphs.)

Just because an ad is incredibly popular, funny and/or viral, that doesn’t mean that it is effective with consumers. The same rule goes for celebrities. Just because a celebrity is incredibly popular and achieves fabulous box-office returns and critical accolades does not mean they will provide a similar boon to brands in advertising. In fact, our report empirically demonstrates the very weak and sometimes negative relationship between celebrities and ad effectiveness.

The great news in all of this is that brands should not have to feel compelled to shell out big bucks on a celebrity. Instead, they should be charging their agencies with creating ads that have a strong, watchable creative message (high on attention, relevance, information, desire). Recent ads like Hewlett Packard’s “Happy Baby” (Ace Score over 110 points above the tech category’s norm) and Sony’s “Epic Gaming For All” (Ace Score 124 points above Video Game norm) are great examples of ads that hit the mark in creative messaging, scoring well with consumers without the gimmick of celebrity endorsement.

Contributed to Branding Strategy Insider by: Peter Daboll, CEO of Ace Metrix, which tracks every nationally televised TV ad and provides syndicated data on findings. A complete list of worst celebrity ads can be found in Ace Metrix’ “Celebrity Advertisements: Exposing a Myth of Advertising Effectiveness” White Paper.

The Blake Project can help you discover the right celebrity endorsement for your brand based on emotional connection measurement. Further, we work with all of Hollywood’s A list celebrities and can strategize and facilitate your celebrity endorsement.

Branding Strategy Insider is a service of The Blake Project: A strategic brand consultancy specializing in Brand Research, Brand Strategy, Brand Licensing and Brand Education

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4 comments

  • Michael Smith

    February 19, 2011 at 1:36 pm

    Excellent. I couldn’t agree more. Give me brand values over vanity any day. Marketing via celebrity endorsement is indolent and shows a profound lack of brand involvement by the creatives concerned.

  • Nick Stamoulis

    February 24, 2011 at 11:27 am

    Consumers are more weary these days. They are much more likely to try a product or brand because someone in their social circle recommended it, not because a celebrity endorsed it. With everyone connected on social media it’s easy to get recommendations from friends.

  • Nick Winbanks

    March 17, 2011 at 9:14 pm

    I know I’m coming later to this discussion – I just stumbled across this entry in my RSS feed.

    I think its important to distinguish between ‘celebrity endorsement’ and ‘celebrities in ads’.

    I agree that celebrity endorsement can be an ‘easy way out’ for a brand struggling to build a story of its own.

    The question I have though – thinking of the Nike/Tiger Woods relationship – is, how else would a brand built on running (and other active sports like basketball and football) have successfully stretched into the golfing category, without an endorsement from the likes of Woods to demonstrate expertise in the field and relevance?

    Nike was a brand born of sweat, endurance, strength and skill. I’d argue that taking that brand into the highly skilled world of golf would have taken far more time and investment without Woods involvement. The ads (as measured immediately after an exceptional event in Woods’ life) may have been ineffective – but that is not to say that there was no value in Nike’s sponsorship of Woods.

  • Mohit Saxena

    March 21, 2012 at 6:53 pm

    I feel when a brand has to enter new markets/dimensions then celebrity endorsement can work.

    As discussed in the case of Nike entering golf with Tiger Woods, Pepsi also entered India in 1989 with mass marketing and huge celebrity endorsement. At one point in time the majority of Indian cricket players and Bollywood Stars were endorsing Pepsi. Coke, on the other hand, was not only slow to re-enter India but also was slow in its communication plan.

    Result – Pepsi is still above Coke in India.

    So, I feel there is some positive correlation between brands and celebrities, especially when new arenas have to be conquered.

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