Viagra ads try to inform without embarrassing
Pharmaceutical advertising has to hit a select target. That's why drugmakers
spend carefully aimed big budgets trying to reach the right consumer
with their message and product.
Friends at work wonder what's different about their colleagues who are
taking Viagra.
The advertising might show up alongside more
mass consumer goods on prime-time TV. But selling a Coke is far different
from selling, say, a little blue pill for impotence.
"Our job is to communicate to men so they
don't feel so embarrassed," says Janice Lipsky, U.S. team leader,
Viagra.
"Viagra advertising is very targeted to
men's habits." (Related story: Expect an ad-stravaganza as Viagra
gets competition)
For that reason, perhaps, other consumers who
see the ads might be turned off. Results for the current ads for Viagra
in Ad Track, USA TODAY's weekly consumer poll, show just how much consumers
unaffected by a condition can tune out the ads.
"For medication it's a higher-involvement
marketing message," Lipsky says. "People are passionate about
their condition, and education can help men overcome a barrier for treatment."