Take the Plunge
Contrary to popular belief, you use "bad news" to create a successful advertisement. Find out how it's done.
Can we talk toilet humor for a minute? Although it doesn't
usually appear in advertising, if you're a marketer for
American Standard (AS), one of the most recognizable names on
bathroom porcelain, you have license for some form of it.
The company took that tack in developing the current advertising
for its "incredible" flushing system. After all, a
serious treatment on the subject might be a little dicey: a
side-by-side "whoosh-off" with a rival brand? How about
testimonials from happy users bounding out of the john? Or a
picture of all the guys down at Reliable Plumbing giving us the
thumbs-up sign? I don't think so.
AS's ad agency, Carmichael Lynch, in Minneapolis, went
negative, so to speak. It picked the least desirable duty
associated with toilet malfunction-plunging-and figured out a
humorous way to say the activity would no longer be yours to
relish.
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The headline declares, "Really bad news for people who
enjoy plunging their toilet." It's not only funny,
unexpected and attention-getting, but also makes the point.
The rest of the copy describes the utility as "designed to
handle whatever life throws your way. Fast. Quiet. Clean. Every
time. No more plunging. No more jiggling the handle. All backed by
a 10-year Worry-Free Decade Warranty." Kudos for the
inoffensive treatment. (However, it's not just a 10-year
warranty, but one that lasts a decade? Hmmm . . .)

So how might a growing business borrow this idea, or a
variation, to tweak for its own purposes? An appliance repair
division, bent on differentiating itself, might run a headline with
the mock lament "Truly bad news for people who like waiting
for repairpersons to show up 'sometime between 9 and
5.'" This would be followed by "Welcome to
specific-time appointments." Or perhaps a new airport shuttle
service might bemoan "Sad news for those who enjoy commuting
to the airport and paying those hefty parking rates." The
subhead might say "Jetway Airport Shuttle now zips you
door-to-door for far less hassle and money." Or how about
promoting your luxury car dealership's rare discount days with
a simple ad that says: "We regret to inform those who prefer
the exquisite pain of paying our normally exclusive pricing that
for three days only we will reduce certain models to the merely
affordable."
The message? Promotions using good "bad news" as an
opener can be different enough to generate extra rubbernecking.
Jerry
Fisher is a freelance advertising opywriter and author of
Creating Successful Small Business Advertising.