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View Full Version : Hyundai Reveals New Ad Campaign Challenging Consumers To "Think About It"


Munky
09-19-2007, 09:25 AM
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, Calif., 09/07/2007 Hyundai Motor America (HMA) announces the launch of a two-part advertising campaign aimed at reframing the brand for U.S. consumers under the theme “Think About It.” This new advertising campaign is the first major creative work by Hyundai’s national marketing and advertising agency Goodby, Silverstein & Partners which was hired this past spring.

“Our new ‘Think About It’ advertising campaign is designed to be thought provoking,” said Joel Ewanick, Vice President of Marketing, HMA. “Goodby, Silverstein & Partners has developed an unconventional, integrated campaign that challenges perceptions about our brand and the auto industry, resulting in a creative execution that feels authentically Hyundai.”

By adopting a tone of disarming honesty, Hyundai is breaking down the barriers that consumers have built to shield themselves from marketing claims. The intent was to pull consumers into a new understanding of the automotive world – to challenge consumers’ thoughts about what is, and should be, “standard” in the automotive industry.

“The Hyundai brand has an opportunity to define itself in the eyes of the consumer,” said Jeff Goodby, co-chairman of Goodby, Silverstein & Partners. “We feel that the campaign will close the huge gap between the reality of Hyundai vehicles and the perceptions that consumers have about the brand.”

Phase one features three weeks of unbranded advertising from September 10 - 28, 2007. The intention is to increase the receptivity of a consumer audience that is increasingly skeptical of marketing messages, by offering startling proof points deployed across the media landscape (print, broadcast, outdoor and online). During phase one of the campaign, the advertising challenges conventional thinking about the auto industry.

Examples include:

Shouldn’t a car have more airbags than cupholders?
The logo is there to tell you what the car is, not who you are.
When a car company charges for roadside assistance aren’t they really just helping themselves?

Phase two begins September 29th, identifying the brand as Hyundai and presents ideas and thought bombs that challenge conventional thinking. They actively ask the consumer to “think about” unique truths regarding the Hyundai brand. Thoughts like:

New technologies confirm: the best way to avoid an accident is to avoid an accident
We built over 2000 Sonatas and then crushed them in the name of quality
932 Engineers Agree: Bling Saves Lives

Hyundai Motor America, headquartered in Fountain Valley, Calif., is a subsidiary of Hyundai Motor Co. of Korea. Hyundai vehicles are distributed throughout the United States by Hyundai Motor America and are sold and serviced through more than 750 dealerships nationwide.


Has anyone seen these commercials? They make me feel like I'm on some sort of acid trip or something.. :bad:


Hopefully this will help bridge the gap between luxury cars and Hyundais, bringing us up in the world.

http://www.thinkaboutit.com


It's emblem may not come from Germany or Japan, but that would only prove one thing: the smartest choices today aren't always the most obvious.

Munky
09-19-2007, 09:57 AM
The truth is, more than half the cars we sell in America are made in a state-of-the-art facility in Montgomery, Alabama. That's over 200,000 cars a year, more than made domestically by Buick, Saturn, or Cadillac, all so-called "American" carmakers.

Add an engineering headquarters in Ann Arbor, Michigan and a top-flight design center in Irvine, California-both staffed with some of the keenest minds in the auto industry-and it's no wonder why our cars consistently top lists from Consumer's digest, J.D. Power and associates, and Motor Trend.
:thumb:

hammondfra
09-19-2007, 10:35 AM
I have seen these commercials, it makes me want to go get a hot dog for some reason.

mac11
09-19-2007, 03:08 PM
I know they have been trying to go up market for the past 5+ years and that they are setting their sights, most obviously, on BMW. I commend them on their effort, and I know that Hyundai as a world-wide entity has deep enough pockets to toss around this kind of money, but good luck changing American's minds. I really think they should have made the transition more progressive. Spent another 3-5 years to get to the point where they are trying to compete with the best Germany and Japan have to offer. Spent the time in between really establishing that they do in fact make a better car than the American "domestics" and make that very well known. Then moved on from their. If they succeed, great. I just think they are trying to move too quickly. BUt, i'm not a business or marketing guru either. $0.02

Baube
09-19-2007, 04:48 PM
i think it's a good time for hyundai to be quick. As the american companies are having some difficulties right now and their futur is nor sure, hyundai should try to make his own place before the europeans and jap...

streetcreeper
09-19-2007, 05:52 PM
Ive never seen them

optimoprime
09-20-2007, 11:37 AM
its good that hyundai is trying to upscale, but they shouldnt be going after BMW they need to set sights on companys like toyota and nissan.

Munky
09-20-2007, 11:39 AM
You know what they say...go big or go home.

LLDEVIL
09-25-2007, 05:56 AM
Hmmmmmm I haven't seen any of these commecials yet, but then again we don't always get the same ones up here as you guys do.