Thanks to Andrea Learned’s posts on Artistic Tile’s ads this week, was one of those weeks where I wish I didn’t restrict myself to only updating this blog on Fridays.
Concerning Artistic Tile’s provocative ads, Carole Fuller (Director of Strategic Marketing for Smith College) decided to contact the tile company’s VP of Marketing. In her email, Carole stated this:
I communicate with about 50,000 smart, educated, well-to-do women who live around major cities, and I lived in northern New Jersey for 22 years. I would be appalled to market to the smart women I know with such sophomoric humor. It’s not funny; it’s just lame.
Sounds like a valid critique from an informed professional. Jan MacLatchie, VP of Marketing at Artistic Tile, included this in her response:
In fact, this campaign, strategically developed to differentiate our brand within the category, was produced by some of the top talents in advertising in the world, and was photographed by one of America’s leading fashion photographers. His work includes the current campaigns of many of the top fashion houses. The theatrical model makers who hand craft our tile costumes are the same people who are creating costumes and set designs for current Broadway plays, feature films and television, including the amazing angel wings you may have seen in HBO’s (Mike Nichols’) adaptation of Tony Kushner’s brilliant and moving “Angels in Americaâ€. The copywriter is the same brilliant talent that made Kenneth Cole a household name. While the copy (as well as the idea that anyone would actually wear tile) is certainly tongue-in-cheek, we feel it underscores our key message points of style, selection and service in a memorable, playful way.
Pretty impressive… if these were ads for an HBO original or a Broadway musical. They’re not. They are ads intended to market a high-end tile to a sophisticated audience. Instead of addressing the possibly misguided strategy of these ads, Ms. MacLatchie focuses on the execution. They are beautiful ads which will probably win a few awards for the ad agency. With a little target market feedback and some sharper copy, they probably could have helped Artistic Tile win lifelong customers as well. Alas, I feel as though Ms. Maclatchie is too emotionally invested in the credentials of her ad producers to adjust the campaign. Instead, she’ll likely continue to defend her decisions.
The Casual Fridays blog is about business in blue jeans. It's about doing the REAL hard work of today. Pausing, thinking and asking the questions others won't ask.
Laura
August 23rd, 2005 at 3:19 pm
She probably will continue to defend her decisions. That’s because she’s a VP of Marketing and not a customer service agent, and as such, she probably rarely has to respond to customers directly. For purposes of this post, I’m just going to assume that Carole Fuller is a potential customer for Jan MacLatchie, because as someone outside the company, she should be treated with the respect that would be given to those who spend their money on her company’s products (in case they do someday).
This is a textbook example of a bad response to customer feedback. At best, she should have actually taken a moment to consider whether the suggestion had some merit and maybe she might need to adjust her campaign. But she should have AT LEAST thanked her for her feedback, even if she didn’t commit to making any changes or taking any steps.
What does she do instead? In trying to defend her campaign (and really, when a customer provides negative feedback, they don’t want to hear excuses), she makes it obvious that she thinks the customer is just missing the point. In essence, she’s pointing out how stupid she thinks Ms. Fuller is for questioning the ad.
Brilliant - deflect the blame by pointing fingers at the customers for not “getting it”? Even if they DON’T get it, that’s a problem with the ad and not the customer.
david Ide
January 22nd, 2008 at 1:47 pm
The TILE ads are very artistic and creative . Erotic, sexy, and elegant… Wonderful…. If anyone has been to Artistic Tile on fifth ave in Manhattan.. it;s a great store with any kind of tile you wish to find… The ads made me go to their website and look at tiles and their ads. created excitement and a look at all the NEW tiles… since I’ll be re-tiling my bathroom…. KEEP UP THE GREAT ADS.