Showing posts with label Advertisement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advertisement. Show all posts

January 17, 2010

Ten minutes past ten

Why are all watches, used in advertisements and commercials, set to 10 minutes past 10? Some people say: it frames the brand and logo nicely. Others say when you are photographing a watch on this way, it smiles, instead of a sad face. I mean everybody wants to see a smile on the face of a watch, right? We searched for some pronunciations from experts.

Klaus Peter Mager, a spokesman for Swatch, said his 25-year-old company, based in Biel, Switzerland, has always photographed watches primarily at 10:10, because “they’re smiling instead of a sad man’s face.” Andrew Block, executive vice president at Tourneau (large watch retailer, which has 51 stores worldwide) said: Because brand names generally are centered on the upper half of a watch, hands positioned at 10 and 2 “frame the brand and logo”. He also said “It’s almost like an unwritten rule that understands to photograph a watch at 10:10” (NY Times, 2008).

Personally I think these are some statements that aren’t true or false, I like watches who are showing 10:10 because its symmetric, and usually that is experienced nicer by customers. The following marketing advertisement is a nice fact: Ulyssee Nardin had a wristwatch campaign where the watch was set on 8:19. Susanne Hurni, head of Ulyssee Nardin’s advertising and marketing, said they did this, because when watches have secondary dials and windows – for the day of the week, calendar day and year – that would be obscured by the hands at 10 and 2.

Linda Kaplan Thaler, CEO of the Kaplan Thaler Group, a New York advertising agency, learned about the 10:10 rule when her firm worked on a campaign for Rolex several years ago, and was drawn to the notion that it was like a smile. “In advertising we would never expect someone to look at a watch and say, ‘The watch is smiling,’ but it’s just a feeling you get,” said Ms. Kaplan.

I think we never get to know if it is a rule or just a “guideline”, but I’m sure a watch that is smiling, is always good!

Written by: Tobias. S