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Write on business with @workweekinc. Building an AI research app (https://t.co/fZ5ObIyBGI) and LLM API management platform (https://t.co/VTMMh1VdHR)

Feb 3, 2023, 16 tweets

In 1981, Absolut Vodka launched the longest-running print ad campaign ever.

The Swedish brand produced 2000 ads in 25yrs, all in the same format. Its success — with help from Andy Warhol — is a testament to the persuasive power of repetition.

Here's the story 🧵

Absolut Vodka was founded in 1879 by Lars Olsson Smith. In 1917, Sweden's state alcohol maker (Vin & Spirit) took over the operation.

By 1979 — a hundred years after its founding — Absolut went global and entered a crowded US vodka market (w/ no brand and a plain-ish product).

While vodka brands competed on taste, ad agency TBWA advised Absolut to market itself on the aesthetics of its bottle (designed as a 19th-century Swedish pharmacy vial).

The first ad — in 1981 — was the bottle matched w/ a pun ("Absolut Perfection"). No models. No celebs.

The idea took off in 1985, with the help of Andy Warhol. While Warhol wasn't a drinker, he was "enthralled by the artfulness" of the bottle.

Absolut turned a Warhol painting into an ad ("Absolut Warhol"). It blew up.

After Warhol's magic touch, other major artists and cultural figures wanted their version of the Absolut Ad:

◻️ Keith Haring (grafitti artist)
◻️ Kurt Vonnegut (writer)
◻️ Manolo Blahnik (fashion designer)

With the wave of artist collaborations, the bottle's shape became iconic and instantly recognizable.

The "bottle + pun" template could tackle any subject and would be rehashed 2000 times over a 25-year span.

Once Absolut found a winning marketing formula, it made sense for Vin & Spirit to keep spending.

The brain has two competing desires: familiarity (which provides comfort) and novelty (which fulfils our curiosity).

Slightly riffing on the bottle's design met both desires.

The related marketing heuristic is "The Rule of 7": a prospect needs to hear a message at least 7x before taking action.

And don't forget the power of *spaced repiition* for awareness and memory recall:

The masterstroke for Absolut was localizing the campaigns. When the bottle silhouette was tied to a city, it was instantly recognizable for the consumer and benefitted from the nostalgia.

The geographic possibilities were endless (check out, Texas!) and gave Absolut another avenue to fulfil Napoleon Hill's famous quote: "Any idea, plan, or purpose may be placed in the mind through repetition of thought."

When the print-only campaign started in 1981, Absolut sold 20k cases of the vodka.

By the time it ended in 2006, Absolut was selling 5m bottles a year (~50% of US imported vodka bottles).

Absolut went from unknown to dominant thanks in part to a simple idea...repeated 2000x.

If you enjoyed that, check out my Saturday email on business and tech. Previous bangers include:

• Why is Linkedin so cringe?
• The psychology of Apple packging
• Amazon's best acquisitions ever

trungphan.substack.com

PS. I'm also building an AI-powered research app called Bearly AI that boosts your:

• Reading (instant summaries)
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One more thing: A sure sign of cultural clout is a good parody. Here's one called Absolut Impotence with a savage Shakespeare line from Macbeth: "[Drink] provokes the desire but takes away the performance".

4 more solid Absolut ads

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