followthemedia.com - a knowledge base for media professionals
Spots and Space
AGENDA

All Things Digital
This digital environment

Big Business
Media companies and their world

Brands
Brands and branding, modern and post

The Commonweal
Media associations and institutes

Conflict Zones
Media making a difference

Fit To Print
The Printed Word and the Publishing World

Insight
Bright thoughts, Big ideas

Lingua Franca
Culture and language

Media Rules and Rulers
Media politics

The Numbers
Watching, listening and reading

The Public Service
Public Service Broadcasting

Show Business
Entertainment and entertainers

Sports and Media
Rights, cameras and action

Spots and Space
The Advertising Business

Write On
Journalism with a big J

Send ftm Your News!!
news@followthemedia.com

FCUK Advertising Not Yet Banned In Boston – But Getting Close

For clothes retailer FCUK -- the initials stand for French Connection United Kingdom, the initials easy to remember for a reason that doesn’t take a marketing MBA to figure out – sales recently have been seriously dropping. So it embarked on a new advertising campaign featuring lesbianism and women fighting one another. And now sales are dropping even more!

The company happens to have two outlets in Boston and the mayor, Thomas W. Menino, just doesn’t think that kind of advertising fits in with his city. “Don’t use violence against each other to sell a product,” he said. “That’s unconscionable!”

ftm background

The UK Ad Watchdog Gets Its Knickers In A Twist Over An Ad Offering a Free “Boob Job”, But A Topless Woman Biting the Leg Of A Man Showing His Bare Buttocks – In Vogue No Less – That’s OK!
It was a novel first prize for a men’s magazine contest: “Win a Boob Job For Your Girlfriend.” But it raised the ire of a dozen readers and the UKs Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has now labeled the contest in Zoo Magazine as irresponsible, but it did clear it of being offensive or misleading.

Food Ads Under Attack Again: New Survey Says Kids Think “Fat-Free” and “Diet” Are Synonymous with “Nutritious”
As the food industry globally works on self-regulations in advertising various fatty or salty foods to the under 12s, a new survey has come along suggesting certain buzz words like “fat-free” and “diet” need to be fully explained, or not used, since kids equate those words with healthy foods.

Something Nice to Read in Your Morning Mail: “You are Going to be My Next Murder Victim!” By the Way, Did You Miss It was a Promo for a TV Show?
Picture this: You’re reading your morning mail over the cereal bowl when you open a brown envelope and out falls a dossier of crime scene reports, news clippings and photographs all with the basic message: YOU are the victim of a murderous stalker and you could be next.

Sex, A Businessman Skewered by a Stiletto Heel, and a Pool of Blood. What More Do You Want In a Story About Advertising?
The print ad was plain, stark and simple. A giant stiletto heel skewering a businessman in his stomach as his blood poured on the floor.

Can Self-regulation Hold Off The Ad Police?
EU Consumer Protection Commissioner David Byrne told the World Advertising Federation that self-regulation is a good idea and he expected the industry to rise to the challenge.

FCUK says its ad campaign is a “fight” between fashion and style – “fashion fades, style is eternal” – if that sounds familiar it’s a long-time quote from French designer Yves Saint Laurent.

FCUK’s web site proudly shows the advertising campaign. With just opera as its audio, the video shows two women is a very violent Kung-Fu type battle, tearing off parts of their outfits, throwing each other across the room, hair pulling, slapping, getting soaked with water, one trying to drown the other, but they make up with a long passionate kiss at the end suggesting that neither style or fashion wins.

It’s all too much for Boston. “The ad campaign both connects and promotes negative images of women and violence, certainly not how we want girls and young women to see themselves, and most definitely not a path we want them to follow,” the mayor said.

Not that the campaign has gone down well in the UK where one might think the advertising attitudes are a bit more liberal. 

Advertising posters were plastered on London buses and taxis but sales did not improve – clothes retailers in general had a bad Easter but the thinking in London is that FCUK did worse than others because the advertising turned people off.  The company’s share price has fallen around 50% in the past two years due to poor sales.

With initials like FCUK to work with the company has taken its acronym as far as it could – especially on T-shirts. But what brought smirks in 1990s became a bit tiring this century and the company eventually dropped its FCUK logo from advertisements in 2005. The T-shirts were often too much for the American market where Christian groups pressured department stores to remove some of the more suggestive ones from their shelves,

Even in the UK the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has in the past forced the company to pull ads. The current campaign launched in February has already drawn more than 100 complaints from viewers and has been referred to the ASA.

One FCUK executive, operations director Neil Williams, admits the ads had not been as successful as the company had hoped. “People saw the adverts and some people didn’t like them but most people did. Overall, we thought we got a good reaction to it.” But did it produce the desired results? “Maybe not because the figures weren’t what we wanted them to be.”

Indeed the British media is full of quotes by people saying the ads were a turn-off. A financial analyst is quoted as saying, “I personally had no inclination to go anywhere near a store after I saw that advert.”

Clothes retailers are having a tough time in the UK as competition has hardened. Miss your step, be out of fashion for just one season and you’re doomed. And most of the reviews of FCUK’s fashion have been damning for a couple of years – out of fashion and no longer price competitive, which prompted the company to opt for a campaign that would get everyone’s attention.

What it didn’t count on was that getting everyone’s attention does not necessarily turn into more visitors into the shops. Indeed, as with this campaign, it may have boosted the brand’s name, but it gave people yet another reason to bypass the stores.

It was a lesson another major British clothes retailer, Marks and Spencer, had previously learned. The company, known affectionately by families for generations as Marks and Sparks, fell out of fashion a few years ago. It was a long struggle back, beating back hostile buyouts and the like, and the company tried whatever it could to bring back the masses – including its first television campaign. 

To impress buyers that it had all sizes, and it was not just for the young, the TV ad featured a full-figured naked woman on a hilltop shouting out, “I’m normal!” And the masses stayed away! The company has recovered today, its fashion now in fashion, and its advertising features Twiggy!

Back in Boston, the mayor probably has the best marketing advice for FCUK. “Use some sense!”



ftm Follow Up & Comments

copyright ©2005 ftm publishing, unless otherwise noted Contact UsSponsor ftm