It's time to lead consumers by the nose. So goes the thinking at major
package-goods marketers including Mars, PepsiCo, Kraft and Procter
& Gamble, who hope scents will help them get attention among
fragmented audiences. Mars has recently used scent technology to spread the aroma of
chocolate around its M&M's World retail outlets and put Pedigree
dog-food-scented stickers in front of supermarkets and pet stores.
Pepsi spread the smell of black-cherry vanilla
with People magazine inserts and store displays for Diet Pepsi Jazz.
There's also been a whiff of activity sniffed out at Kraft and P&G,
but neither would comment.
And then there's Smellavision. Carmine Santandrea, CEO of "multisensory
communications" vendor ScentAndrea, is putting 8,000 scent-delivery
systems by that name into in-store flat-panel screens in Kroger stores
and other top retailers, including Wal-Mart. In fact, Mr. Santandrea --
long a proponent of the sales-lifting ability of scent -- has dubbed
2007 "the year of the scent."
Media executives like the smell of that, even though they've in the past had spotty success selling the technology to clients.
Most primal of senses
"Our olfactory sense is the most primal
of all the senses and is extremely powerful, much more invasive than
reading or hearing something," said Jack Sullivan, senior VP and
out-of-home media director for Starcom. "Why it's not used more often
is beyond me." But he did offer some reasons: There's always the
possibility that an olfactory campaign might offend, and "huge concern
over people with allergies."
motion sensors
Cost and implementation hurdles have prevented Connie Garrido,
president of MindShare sibling Wow, from going forward with media plans
that involved attaching scent to transit shelters and bathroom mirrors.
That said, Ms. Garrido said the agency is increasingly investigating
scent for clients as media buying becomes "far less one-dimensional."
David Van Epps, president-CEO of ScentAir, which has just signed on
with music and broadcasting service Muzak to offer scent wherever there
is sound and video, said he's seen "exponential interest" recently from
major package-goods players for his products, which include retail
displays with scented cartridges triggered by motion sensors. But, he
noted, there are hurdles.
Not always cost-effective
Even though the price has come
down, it still isn't necessarily cost-effective to use scent technology
for low-cost products such as bread or jam, where the sales lift would
have to be incredibly high to ensure successful profit margins. "For a
consumer-package-good play to work, it must be for a product where the
aroma is crucial to the positioning," Mr. Van Epps said. And it must be
clear what exact product a scent in the air is linked to; otherwise it
can lift sales for the whole category rather than just the product that
paid for it.
But the costs are improving. Tad Acker, president of display company
Marins USA, said the units it sold to Verizon Wireless stores recently
to waft chocolate scent for LG Chocolate phones were only $20 each,
down from nearly $100 for such display pieces a few years ago.
The phones, according to Joe Fiamingo, manager-print and related
services for Verizon Wireless in the Northeast, have been one of the
most successful launches in Verizon history, and the scent played in
that success. How much? "Enough for me to try it again."
Gail Stein, client communications director for Pepsi Beverages at OMD,
would also be apt to use scent again following the marketer's recent
foray into fragrance. Though the costs limited Pepsi's efforts to
subscriber-only mailings of People in Los Angeles and New York, she
said the tactic worked well at stopping the busy 30-something Jazz
target in its tracks in buzz markets.
(Source: Advertising age)
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