Trung Phan Profile picture
Feb 3, 2023 16 tweets 7 min read Read on X
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 🧵 Image
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). Image
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. Image
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. Image
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) Image
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. Image
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. Image
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. Image
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." Image
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. Image
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)
• Writing (grammar, reword, auto-gen text)
• My dopamine levels everytime I see a new sign up

Try Bearly.AI FREE
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". Image
4 more solid Absolut ads ImageImageImageImage

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More from @TrungTPhan

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