Over the weekend, Samsung began airing a series of spots about the Galaxy Gear smartwatch, mostly as an introduction to the product. There was a simple spot with a series of futuristic wrist-based gadgets, presented solo, and a âsupercutâ spot which combined shots of those gadgets in use from classic science fiction TV and movies.
The spot is very effective, some are calling it Samsungâs best commercial ever, which I think could very well be true. The clips are well chosen, with a good mix of cartoons and live action offerings. Thereâs Knight Riderâs Michael Knight, speaking to his talking car; Captain Kirk using a rare wrist-mounted version of the traditional âcommunicatorâ; the oft-referenced Dick Tracy and his two-way radio.
In what is in interestingâ¦.coincidence, there is also a reference to Marine Boyâs wrist communicator. Marine Boy is also the avatar used by Apple SVP of worldwide marketing Phil Schiller [1] on Twitter.
When I saw the spot for the first time last night during the âNiners game I immediately saw a resemblance [2] to Appleâs âHelloâ spot introducing the iPhone. That spot was originally aired during the Oscars in 2007 and also featured a supercut of old movies, with a series of people saying âhelloâ into phones of the time.
I was sitting waiting for a takeout pizza and saw the spot. My mind jumped right to the âHelloâ spot because there was too many similarities to ignore. That assessment wasnât based off of careful consideration or analysis. Just a general impression. But thatâs often the way advertising works best, by giving a âgeneral impressionâ of something.
After thinking about it for a bit, it seems clear that the Samsung spot had to have been âinspiredâ at some point by the âHelloâ spot. The marketing firm in charge of this spot was Cheil [3] , which is Samsungâs in-house ad wing. They have no other clients. It seems highly likely that Cheil would have used the âHelloâ spot as a part of their pitch to the Samsung executives in charge of the Gear launch.
But, news flash, this is exactly how ad agencies work. They often use established works to create an impression for their clients, and then the ads are built off of those impressions. And since Cheil is the in-house agency for Samsung, it seems likely that theyâre pretty limited creatively. They execute on their only clientâs ideas, with an enormous budget, but they canât exactly tell them theyâre not the right agency for the job and move on when their sole clientâs ideas are intellectually bankrupt.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with Samsung taking inspiration from the âHelloâ spot. Howeverâ"and this is an important note â" Samsung is a company which has had a billion-dollar judgement against it for copying Appleâs work.
If I was a company which had gained a reputation for copying Appleâs work, the last thing Iâd want is to have my advertising associated with anything theyâd ever done.
Examining the Samsung spot closer, there are a number of differences in execution between it and the âHelloâ spot. Yes, theyâre both supercuts and yes, they both use old movies to make their point. But the Galaxy Gear spot shows objects from the future, not the past, and positions the Gear product as something bringing those future things to the now, not replacing the devices of the past.
In what is a moment of incredible irony, the clips that Samsung chose for its spot actually make the Gear look pretty terrible in comparison. The gadgets in those clips and movies did amazing, wonderful things like communicating across vast areas of space and analyzing the environment. Only a few of them were actually âphonesâ â" which is how Samsung pitches the Gear.
With the âHelloâ spot, Apple showed phones. Simple phones. Used for over 100 years to do roughly the same thingâ¦say âhelloâ.  And then the iPhone at the end, a device that was a phone, but also offered a lot more in an attractive package. Note that Iâm not saying smartphones hadnât been around, Iâm just talking about how the spot presented it. Apple was saying that those were the âold wayâ and this was the ânew wayâ. And it was right. All smartphones now look basically like the image that Apple presented at the end of that spot
The spot is very effective, and I think that it will do very well with the public. It might even be a contender for a Cannes Lions [4] award when that rolls around â" and I doubt that being âinspiredâ by Apple would hurt those chances. Itâs too bad the product that itâs advertising is so very bad, by most accounts [5] , but it wouldnât be the first time that an ad was better than a product.
It seems clear that the âHelloâ spot was an inspiration for Samsungâs Galaxy Gear spot, but that doesnât mean that it wasnât executed well or wonât be effective. It also doesnât mean that it was a âcopyâ, because itâs not. But it does demonstrate a distinct difference in thinking between Samsung and Apple, both of whom exercise enormous control over their advertising.
April 1, 1976
NASDAQ:AAPL
Started by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne, Apple has expanded from computers to consumer electronics over the last 30 years, officially changing their name from Apple Computer, Inc. to Apple, Inc. in January 2007. Among the key offerings from Appleâs product line are: Pro line laptops (MacBook Pro) and desktops (Mac Pro), consumer line laptops (MacBook Air) and desktops (iMac), servers (Xserve), Apple TV, the Mac OS X and Mac OS X Server operating systems, the iPod, the...
Links
- ^ Phil Schiller (twitter.com)
- ^ immediately saw a resemblance (twitter.com)
- ^ Cheil (www.cheil.com)
- ^ Cannes Lions (www.canneslions.com)
- ^ by most accounts (www.theverge.com)
- ^ â' Learn more (www.crunchbase.com)
No comments:
Post a Comment