Product placement became a hot topic a few years ago with the influx of placement on TV reality shows, taken to its most blatantly obnoxious peak by Donald Trump on NBC's The Apprentice.


Product placement has been around for decades, perhaps getting most noticed by marketers back in 1982 when Steven Spielberg's little alien ET expressed his preference for Reese's Pieces. It could have been M&Ms, Milk Duds or healthy carrot sticks, but for a price -- Reese's Pieces it was.
Product placement on TV is nothing new. Game shows have been doing it forever, with companies paying hefty fees to have their products given away as prizes. Back in the early 1980s when I was doing PR for Jaguar, we had a press fleet in Hollywood that was used primarily for "placement" of the British cat in TV shows and theatrical films.
Originally, placement people had relationships with property masters and they made under-the-table deals so a bottle of Sprite might be in an actor's hand instead of whatever happened to be in the prop closet. But the studios caught on and now fees from product placement are often factored into a film's budget, alongside income from licensing and other marketing deals.
Now there seems to be something new in product placement -- product placement in ads themselves. Say what?
I'm told there's an ad running for a Dodge SUV that includes footage of guys drinking Pepsi. It doesn't appear to be a cross-marketing tie-in. Since the Pepsi logo is shown clearly in the ad, could this be the start of a new wave of product placement?
I can imagine some possible benefits for the advertisers. For the primary advertiser who's buying the time, placement income eases the burden of the buy and frees up money for other media buys or other marketing efforts. For the marketer buying the placement, they get the GRPs at a lower cost than going it alone. And both companies get a break by sharing the cost of production of the spot.
The company buying into someone else's ad might also get the reflected glory or credibility from the primary sponsor.
I mentioned this online the other day, and Matt Dickman responded, suggesting sharing ads could work well for some categories such as the recent Nike Father's Day spot featuring Tiger Woods. He thought an ad like that, where timely delivery is relevant, could easily showcase UPS or FedEx. Ryan Karpeles recalls seeing an auto ad recently where an iPod was clearly shown, but with no specific mention by name. An example of product placement or just coincidence?
I know the networks have rules regarding multiple sponsors in a single ad, so I don't think we'll get to the point of rampant clutter within a 30-second spot. But it does open some interesting possibilities, as well as some challenges. If done well, though, product placement in TV ads could work for all involved, including the viewing audience.
It could be the next frontier in product placement.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

After 30+ years in this business, I still look forward to going to work. Rarely are two days the same, and the challenges are varied and stimulating.

My firm, Reich Communications, Inc., handles an interesting range of clients that take me from b2b to consumer publicity, from the world of high-priced art to advocacy for issues including traffic safety and securing mental health resources for survivors of mass violence globally.

Over the years at mid-size and large New York agencies, I’ve served a client roster that reads like a “who’s who” of business – General Electric, Emery, Ryder, Travelers Insurance, Phillips Petroleum, Georgia-Pacific and Jaguar Cars. I’ve also worked with groups like the Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association (for their giant New York Auto Show), Syndicated Network Television Association, and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

Highlights include leading the publicity team that launched L’eggs hosiery, which later became a Harvard B-School case history. I also managed P.R. and community relations for the Metro New York McDonald's Co-op, with more than 250 stores. We won a Marketing Excellence Award for a McDonald's public service program I developed on fire safety. It also won an Emmy for on-air host Dr. Frank Field, health & science editor at media partner WCBS-TV in New York, and it was directly credited by the NYFD for saving several lives. During those years, I also had more than my share of Big Macs.

I have a degree in Industrial Management and an MBA in Public Relations. I live in southern Westchester, 15 miles north of midtown Manhattan, in the same town where I grew up. “Money-earnin’ Mount Vernon” is how the town is now known as a center of hip-hop culture, but it also claims as native sons Denzel Washington, Dick Clark, author e.b. White, Art Carney, Art Buchwald and Sean “P-Diddy” Combs.

I write about marketing, media and public relations at my blog, "my 2 cents" If I ever retire from this crazy business, I'd love to be an all-night jazz deejay.