Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2004/09/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Bob, Not shure about that. What do you mean with "important people"? They might be prominent, but they don't know more about photography than I know about growing bananas in Alaska. With gun-press-prominents as key visual, you don't sell one more Leica camera neither to the particular niche customers like we LUGers are, nor to retired lawyers and dentists, nor to anyone else... Leica's image is different. Leica stands for mechanical and optical perfection, constancy of a standard, life-long quality, and not for something short-dated like show-biz oder sports. Leica is not a status symbol. It's a myth. And a brillant tool for those who know how to appreciate it. Leica ad campaigns should focus on great photographs. Outstanding, full-page-sized, black & white photographs, with a little red dot in the corner. Didier >If I were Leica, I'd design an advertising campaign fashioned along the >line >of Rolex's highly successful ad program -- running photos in upscale >magazines and newspapers of well-known people who wear the Rolex watch. >There are lots of important people who own Leicas and I am sure Leica >knows who they are --movie stars, sports figures, business tycoons, fashion >figures and so on. >All Leica would have to do is ask them and give them a free camera [plus >the usual fee.] >You could show, say, Dolly Parton, [if she owns a Leica] say something >like, " Darlin', I ain't much of a photographer but when I want to >be sure the >picture comes out, this is the camera I use.'' --bob cole