The annual Super Bowl telecast demonstrates that viewers love funny commercials, which should encourage small firms and organizations to spice up their advertising with humor and entertainment.
Humor, however, can be a tricky business, requiring some public relations review before being released.
The Super Bowl telecast proves every year that the nation's best ad producers believe humor is a powerful advertising tool, especially in television commercials. A funny commercial generates excitement. It has a good chance of being remembered. The best ones generate the consumer buzz that advertisers now seek.
As folks attending Super Bowl television parties have observed, some viewers look forward to the commercials more than the game. They keep watching even when the game gets dull.
The demand for entertainment in commercials grows as:
Right after the game, USA Today and the Wall Street Journal now conduct polls to determine which Super Bowl commercials were most popular and which were least liked, placing more pressure on producers to stress entertainment.
A little later, the dozens of Super Bowl commercials are parked on the Internet for less-hurried, year-round viewing, some more than a half million times.
Once spoiled by the entertaining $2.6 million Super Bowl spots, ad viewers are harder to impress the rest of the year, encouraging the production of viewer-driven, rather than sponsor-driven, commercials.
Local advertisers have experimented with humorous commercials for decades, with mixed success. They are apt to try more in the future because:
Some politicians, facing a growing weariness with both syrupy ads and attack ads, are also opting for humor in their campaign commercials, sometimes finding their humor in attacking the opposition. That was evident in the 2007 Louisiana election campaigns.
The 2008 presidential and Congressional campaigns could be a banner year for funny political commercials as the politicians try to separate themselves from the pack, reach out to younger voters and take more advantage of Internet video capability.
Reference: Fortune Magazine, September 2007