NYSA TI Single-Page 1
Atlanta isthe pride of the
Abstract
Here's how the major brands am spending their media dollars as the
Fields
- Named Organization
- Philip Morris & Co. Ltd. (Cigarette manufacturer, incorporated in U.S. in 1902)Philip Morris & Co. Ltd.., was incorporated in New York in April of 1902; half the shares were held by the parent company in London, and the balance by its U.S. distributor and his American associate. Its overall sales in 1903, its first full year of U.S. operation, were a modest seven million cigarettes. Among the brand offered, besides Philip Morris, were Blues, Cambridge, Derby, and a ladies favorite name for the London street where the home companies factory was located - Marlborough.
- Philip Morris U.S.A. (See Philip Morris Incorporated)
See Philip Morris Incorporated- R.J. Reynolds Corporation (second tier subsidiary of RJR Industries)
- Philip Morris U.S.A. (See Philip Morris Incorporated)
- Named Person
- Gardner, Fred
- Horrigan, Ed
- Lights, Golden
- Mau, Tom H. (LOR Sr. VP 1989-92)
Defense- Maxwell, John
- Morgan, Jim (PM)
- Smith, Kelly
- Horrigan, Ed
- Date Loaded
- 16 Mar 2005
- Box
- 0622
Document Images
Atlanta isthe pride of the
South. But compared to
Orange County, California,
Atlanta is a po' cuzzin.
Both Atlanta and Orange
County have about 1.9 million
population. But Orange "
County has about $530 •
million more in retail ~ale,~.
• About $2 billion more .in •
total buying power. And
Here's how the major brands am
spending their media dollars as the
of the year commences.
;an Brands
It's a rather neat balancing act that's
gol, r~g'~.on ovei- at Ame~'iean Brands~:" .. "
This." ir~ditidnall~, mute -c-orp~ration .~ -
found th~ er6sion of its'ifiarket'share "-
position was tem~oraril..y .h.a'}tedt "last,
for the'acco~mplishment.. " -'. ~'. " ..-. "
While its Tareyton, Pall Mall, Silva.
a..strong advance. Conseque.nt!y,
American Bra~ds t~tal share slipped
only one tenth of one percentagd point,
.from 1t.7% to 11.6%:
Most cigarette market observers
don't attribute Carlton's. strong per-
formance to. creative s.trategy, but
rather to remarks mhde over two yea.rs
'a~ by Dr. Gio G~ri, a scientist work-
lag for Hea.Ith Wd'f.are ~a/ad E'di~cation,
whiehwere subject to wide eirenla-
tion. Dr. Gori implied that Carltons
weren't too injurious to h~alth, and
th~at they could be smoked at a rate of
10 to l'over the full flavor brands high
in tar and nicotine. '~
• According tO the Maxwell Report,
Carlton's market share improved by
Atlan~a's." "
When you're buying
Southern. California, '
remember that there's a '.
market bigger than Atlanta
just south of I~os Angeles.
And" reme/nber ~'hat Th'e
Register's Orange County -
Metro Grotip newspapers
dominate the market. Otir
9.40,000 daily subscribers
almost 50%, with sales of 15,1 billion
cigareties last year as compared with
10 billion the year before.
But it must be noted that American
"B'~'ands did invest su6s'tantially more in
media for C~rlton last year. With an
outlay of $25 million in 1978, about
.averfige for its bFfffid'sh~6 position
that year, AB .apparently decided to go
with the momentum, and upped the
b.udget 37%, to $34 million.- :
The biggest change in the media mix
about a $2,000per household represent 64 percent of .~amc in.
newspapers, as Carlton'~
advantage in median effective the new p per-reading
." " " ,'•. , ...~i~
S a budget soared
from $8 3 mflhon m '79
to $18 4 mflhon last year Magazine
, buying income. Last year households. And three out • ' " " " ".. •i
". :!,-~
" ,
expenditures chmbcd $8 mslhon to $10
Orange County s populhtion of every four of them read' . ." " , . , " "
---w a~- twi-- th~ rate of -^ ~~'~- rt~w ..... - "
million. Outdoor incrchscd from $3
.- • . • . . .
:~.. mtmon 1o,~3..~. ,mt.lllOl~.. - " "
" " " • . " • . " ~ ~ . .
Carlton s, magazine expenditures for .j~
~
h
" " • " * " "
thd first quarter suggest a budget in- •~ .
' ~h ~˘~.i~ "
crease of about 25% over 1979 out. / tt
t ~~, ~ ~'~~. Carlton's use
of newspapers has
range County Metrot.iroUp e~phasized a
variety.of ad sizc~, in- I
.... eluding two by
fours in a single color,
Orange County, CA 92711. Represented nationally by Story & Kelly Smith. ......
"
- .
re, a, on sports pages ano me oacK
,~rces: Sgdd~119~gsar~yofBnsfin/.l~wer D~t~ Serdees: F, ct~ C~ns~id~t ,t~l. l.,os ~l~
~ ~ pages of tab.loid dailies. "
TI05280019

"W~ ~xpect.h tu'~maround, for Kent a~6r
the initial impa~t of'Kent.Ill is -
absorbed," Tom Mau, vp, adveflising
• and brand management, Lorillard. .
Creativ~ is simple an~ n~.n pictorial. ""
Thelow tar ~tory is told with short
copy in _big type;and where space
allows,. Dr,_ Gori's asse.ss.ment ihat
Carlton could be smoked at a rate of 10
to ~. over full .flavor brands is cited
without a specific mention of the HEW
~cientist as the source.. ~. ~ .
rown &' Williamson "- .•
Getting a new low. tar 6igarettc "
through a successful brand introduc-
tion has been a major preoccupation
~'or B&W for the past four years.
Clearly, the going has been rough.
After t.wo'efforts with Fact and a cam-
paign based •on the gas content of the
brand's smoke that was too arcane and
obscure for the smoking p{tbli~ to
grasp, B&W tried again last ye~ with
Arctic. -. ".
Last year Arctic and Arctic Lights
picked up two tenths of a share point,"
and while that may not sound-like
much, it's twice the market share
achieved by Fact when it wa~ removed
from" the market.
Brown & Williamson's reasons for
trying to build some share with a low
tar brand are particularly compelling7
The company's share of the tot.al ciga-
rette market dipped from )5.3% in
1978 to 14.4% last year. Of all the
B&W brands, only Kool Milds, Super
Lights Kings, and Super Lights Longs
" expanded market share. Overall, the
l~rand' wa~ ddwn.'5.5%.. "
-.- " Whil~"B&W's effori" with Arctic
isn't a failure, the introduction hasn't
b~n'a howling success eitheK A mar-
k~t ~h~e of two, tenths of ~pe~ ~een ,~.ge
• ' "'point i..s., a.b~ut, the bare minimum
nee,.ded to sustai'n ~/brand'.s existence,
The distn'bution of ultra-low tar
smokers suggests that the introduction
will be confined to. major urban cen-
ters.
A Brown & Williamson corporate ..
spokesman, was appropriately cryptic
when answering,questions about sup;'~ "." "
port forArctic an.d Keel. He said, "At .:
this point, we are eyalua.ting ~iff;e.re.n.t..-:..z
e~e,ativ˘ op~ion~ for th~ brand a~˘ con:- - _.
.tinuin~. to give it effective" regional ~....
. support:~' This would lead ~n oftside.:..'-
0~˘rver to, ~or~d~ ~t ~e b~a~a h~ .~.. 7,
of. any cig~.rette brand in the U.S. mar- B&W's position on Keel is that "it
.ke.t, $11.4 million. The graphi'cs for will continue to aggressively suppoi-t •
this campaign wdreparticularly suited ,~| the brand.'" .
for. largetT-than-life presentation. ~kLorillara . . .
,.
Moreover, the measured media spend- ~ Th~ last year of the decade was a
ing for the new brand was .only very good one for Lorillard as the
$6~00,000 less than that for the seven .company expanded its piece of the
va~.riefies of B&W's flagship brand, market b~ almost I%. It stands a very
'Kodl.'-' ..... .:, " .- good chance of winning and holding •
• :' .Fii'st qu .ayter e?~pendit.ures f~r .1980 . over 10% of domestic cigarette sales "
indiea~t~ r_ha.t B&W is cbnti.nuing tq. "by the e.nd of this year./ts twt~.top'sell-
suppprt Arctic at expected post-. "ing brand.s, Kent and Golden L.{ght~,
intr6ductory levels. The use of outdoor.• each gained .market share thr.ough_ L -
is downfrom 1979levels, accordingt0 brand extension, while Newport•
dat~-from Leading National Advertis- showed some surprising momdhtum..
er~.' ~ " . , , But in the advertising world, the re-
" Th~ campaign for Ko0l did~ f di'ffei: ..- c~ntly introdiaced Triumph• i~ causing
~nuch from Arctic's as thebr~ndran up quite a stir. The commotion was
the secondlargest outdoor exp.enditure 'mostly about copy, as Triumph
after Arctic. Other media were used-on claimed the b~-and is preferred by.
levels consistent with the top spenders - smokers over several othe?s in taste
in'the i~dustry: • " " "' ~e~ts. Lorillard is making the most of
But B&W isn't giving up th~ fight t~ this" with head t6 head advertising,
bring out a new cigarette. In mid- Naturally, the contenders who hav~
September its first ultra-low tar brand," been named in the advertising as being
Barclay, was rolled out wiih an intrd- second choice are up in arms, an.d pro-..
ductory campaign in maga.zines, testing the manner in which the test re-
. newspapers, supplements, and out.- suits were turned into copy claims.
door. The controversy, of course, gets the "-
]3&W says the new cigarette was brand talked about, which may have
~lesigf~ed to circumvent the problems more positive results fdr Lorillard th~n
smokers have with low tar brands, lack the"ad~ertising itself. " " ""
of taste ,and difficulty in puffing. The In. response to criticism, B&W
ad slogan for the new brand is "99% changed the copy from "taste test" to
tar free." No one in the industry seems "smokers test." Some aspects of the
to know exactly what is meant by that campaign .are now in litigation,
claim. . Triumph was rolled out last year
Industry experts estin~ate that the with $25.5 million in measured media
• cost of a'new brand introduction in ad- dollars, in regular and menthol flavors.
vertising is now about $50 milli6h. Its reception wasn't overwhelming but
Extrapolating from that figure, and satisfactory in terms of minimumsales
figuring in some front-loading for the expectations. But then, no one has
roll out, media costs for the remainder been able to duplicate the success
of 1980 for Barclay will be in the $17 achieved for Merit by Philip Morris,
million to $19 million range, not even Philip M~rris.
TI05280020

Last year the Triumph introduction it should have been dispelled by Philip
bridge is said to be off to a slow stm't.
was most heavily backed in news- Morris. Although the PM name brand Creative for the
brand focuses on a
papers a,nd outdoor. But the test results has long since slid into obscurity, the visual
effort to maximize package reg-
dictate a larger share of media dollars company'_s _p.e.q_r_f.or. man ce with
istration. The terse copy merely stress-
go to magazines,~as t~y a~ thi~ year~.:" Marlbm'o~ which, took thfi top. ~a}es es the
low tar content. No doubt, it is
Tom, Mau, vp, ad~grfisifig & brartd~" spot aw.~'~..ff~-. R. "J." Reynol~'.. too early
in the car~paign t~ play with'___..
Li~ghts alLl~_ :to h~,~e st, ah~lh'~ in,. them,na~ay.sueces~ofi~ l@~6~o,~tar
bridge advertisifig, as itstands, verges ..
Zati6~ by Kent IlI, ina'o~ldced in" ~nid-~ most i~pr~ssiv'd-~aikeiing "-success -. .. PM
'~nanagement" is
_.. Merit, ~ieh, eontin~es'~b, w~bran-d ~o~)~ a #~w~art, gmsnmhqg it will
.... '~r~om:~past l~ mon~s-ha~e been
~˘f~-'--ga~fff. SfiTes g~//-bv.er the previous year and a difficult
period for new product in- •
• 'Golden Lights a~e~ cpnfi/mifig .to .t,3ke"
in new users, which helps~ offset the
losses to Kent HI.'" ' " " ""
Golden Lights are advertised na-
tionally, with magazines, newspaper
and outdoor, while Kent continues, as a
• 23.2 billion cigarettes sold..
But in today's turbulent cigar.otto
~n'arke~ much more than aggressive-.
hess is.required... Other ne.cessary in-
~redient~ include a big advertising
budget;, creativity in positioning and
regiofia! brand, .with media rest:tied c~py, and.p~tience. All three of these
to l~oca[ $.u~day ~pps'and outdoor:.. W'[il play a big ~oie in ~M'~ latest
~˘ ~~m~@f Kent i~ ~ :taste m~.s:~g~, product i~oduction, ~mbridge, an
- If t~'er˘. ~as 6ver any doubt 6at an ~udget estimated within ~e indus~ as
aggressive m~kefing ~mnce pays Off, ~ b~ng in ~e .~60 mglion range, Cam,
. There ~s more to Georgia than Atlanta=.lhe.
GEORGIA GROUP...
AUGUST ..A'COLU}~.BUS.',A:~CQ.N~SaVA~ ~AH
'THE I~ATI0N'S
N.EWSPAPER GI~OUP BUY' -.
P~pulation... 980,300 =.
Georgia Gioup Population Would Rank 3st& In The Nation
60% More People Than Charlotte
• Total Retail Sales ~
... $3,602,813,000
,p Retail SalesWould Rank40th In The N&tion
42% More Retail Sales Than Charlotte
THE. " "
CHRONICLE & HERALD
AUGUSTA
THE.
TELEGRAPH & NEWS
MACON
THE
• L'~DG~R & ENOUIREr
COLUMBOS
:IHI~
NEWS & PRESS
SAVAN NAH
troductions, Competition in the ultra
low tar category is particularly fierce,
with Carlton's'strong performance ~,nd
the build~hg'momentum of RJR's Now.
brand. While the categor~ is obviously
expanding, getting a foothold on that
very narrow marketing ledge is a pre-
carious undeaaking.
But difficulties not withstanding,
Cambridge achieved "four tenths of a
share point accord{rig to John Max-
well, since its introduction in May.
/2ambridge "~lJed -out .'~ith. expendi-
tu.res of $2.1 mlilion in magazi.~es and
Sunday supps, with/t total of 42 pages,
in May; as measured by ~.˘ Publishers
Information Bureau.
Jim Morgan,-vp-marketing -for
Philip Morris U.S.A,, says Cambridge
is right "on target" in terms of sales
goals since its, introduction four
months ago. But he also poin~ out that
the ultra-low tar category is a limited
but necessary, area of opportunity for
the company.
• 'If w~-'~'a'n'l~d to continue to grow
in sales, we knew we eould.n_'t d° it
without an ultra-low tar cigarette. We
~ decided in ~977 that When the ultra-
low tar category dccbante~l for 5% of
sales, or Carlton reached a 2.5 share,
that's when W~ .woul.d enter the low tar
chtegory," That p0int.was reached in
the spring of 1.980." ..
i. Morgan iSescribes, th~ d.ecis|0n" to
introduce Cambridge as "'a ~strategie
entry"qnto th.e market.."We decided
to go in and co. ver,.thr~e basic areas of
• that "category; the lowest tar position,
1/10th of I% tar, with'Cambridge box,
the I mg. tar king, in soft pack, which
smokes like a regular cigarette., and'the
100 ram. 4 rag. tar, a cigarette with
more flavor.'"
The market for the box variety is the
Tt05280021

10%
5%
Top 10 Brands Share of Market 1979
brand sha_~ p~'ormancc for a ]~ader.
PM's flagship brand, Marlboro, is.
no exception to industry performance,
20%. losing share in i~ full flavor v~cti~
while gaining them in lower t~ cxtcn-
"" sions. Overall, the brand added to i~ ""
~ sal= leads with a sa]~ inc~e last
15% ~0mpfish~d ~i~ measured m~ia ex-.
.:'~ " " pendi~ of just under $~6 million,.
': ..... and ah ap~axenflyag~ess "creatiVe '.
store, a d;irect order catalogue of
10%.. western outdoor we~ng parapher-
" ' nalia, and invested o~er $2 million ~h
"" advertising in magazine doub]~
.... gatefoids. While PM remains mum on
~e subject, the associative rob-off
must have a most beneficial effect on
-- 5%' brand image aod sal=..
PM's market position appe~s to be
secure reg~dles~ of the performance
of C~b~d~," wi~ "on17 Parliament
... and Alpine showing declining sh~es. :
Media ~xpendim{es ~e substantial but
not dispropo~ionate. L -
TI05280022

Reynolds etnplo~,~ blue ~ollar appeal for th~ reward of good taste i~ a cigaL
rette in its magazine ~and outdoor ads for Winston.
Still the king of the" cigare~t'te busi-
ness, R. J. Reynolds feel.s increas.ing
pressure from Philip. Morris, although
the share gap between them is still
comfortable. Last year the Reynolds
percentage of cigarette sales slipped
three tenths, of'a percentage point.
One of RJR's ver]'few miscalcula-
tions became evident lasf spring when
its Rear brand was remo,~ed
market. Industry post mortems at,~-
bute the demise to inapphapriate initial
positioning, with claims of natural-
ness, which apparently rwere of no
great interest to smokers.
The second creative flight for the
brand affected a macho image with a
burley man in a dune buggy, sort of a
beach boy version of the Marlboro
man. Potential brand" switchers
peared to be equally indifferent to that
theme as well. So in a two year period,
• Real failed to win that minimal two
tenths of a •share •point th~it is the
make-or-break line in the low tar brand
category. • ..
But with its other brands, R JR, is
holding its own. Full flavor Winston~
are losing smokers while Lights and
Lbng Lights ar8 bu.il.ding share. The
s~.mc is true for Salem and Camel,.,
Some of those smokers moving away
from full flavor are buying other
brands rath'er than "switching to the
brand extension. More and Doral arc
gradually building share, and Now is
also "edging up..
Overall, R JR holds, 36% of all low
tar cigarette s~les, whlc~ is the ordy
area of the market that is expanding.
So how will RJR move in the 1980"s
to consolidate and build industry
leadership? Ed Horrigan, new chair-
. m~n, president and CEO at Reynolds
Tol~acco Co~, recently explained
,_strategy for the '80s." '.'Our marketing
." ao.llar, s, .m-~ripb~er 9n.d pkfiduet dev~l-
" opment skills az~ the tools~we will u~e-.
.I. hm.lly.'see a. ~-prdfig~d ~pproach in
the near future, We intend to reinforce
• " ourj~r'esent of leadership in
o~ting- b}an-d~s thi'ough impro~"ed
advertising execu~tio.ns and ~upport. t.
"l think our greatest potential for~
share growth, given the trend of the
industry, is with Vantage, Now, and
ofir lights line extensions. Wington
Lights and Salem Lights lead their re-
spective segments, while Camel Lights
is showing solid growth. Also, be-
cause of its unique position, More is an
exciting brand.
"I think manufacturers will con-
tinue to se~ opportunity, for lihe exten-
sions, but it is the respongibility of
mahufacturers to spin_ off only from-
. stre.ngth. Line extensions shouldn't be
an attempt to build on past failures. I
see a real need ih the 1980's for the in-
du~try to become more aggfessi.ve,
more assertive, and more supportive o,f
the smoking public," he said.
RJR provides substantial media
• support .f9r its brands, and is outspent
only by Lorillard's Kent. Last year,
RJR spent $55.5 million in measured
media on Wins,ton, the number two
brand'in U.S. cigarette sales. But the
$25 million in',/ested in magazines was
a hig,h for the industry.
R JR is drastically restructuring
its media plan this fall, .re.dueing .maga-"
zinc space and expanding the use of
newspapers and outdoor.
Particularly hard "hit by the tighten-
ing of.the magazine list were the worn-
, en's service books and special interest
publications, and t'he newsweek~ies.
Magazines had been the benefici-
aries of a shift in media emphasis in
1978, when funds were diverted from
newspapers. Apparently R JR ha~; de-
cided that frequency is more important
than was previously supposed, and
particularly important at the local
leve.l. By Fred Gardner,
Senior Editor
TIO528G023
