HBOS Marketing Campaign

In late 2000, UK bank Halifax began a long-running television advertisement campaign featuring staff singing popular songs with the words changed to reflect its financial services products.

Campaign

The campaign was the brainchild of DLKW Creative Directors Malcolm Green and Gary Betts, who had previously found fame when they launched the Gary Lineker Walkers Crisps campaign.[1] Auditions were held and Halifax employee Howard Brown was selected by Green and Betts to spearhead the new advertising drive for the bank in 2000.

Brown was the first and most frequently featured star of these adverts. His first advert saw him sing "Extra", a song with new lyrics by Malcolm Green, set to the tune of "Sex Bomb" (originally by Mousse T featuring Tom Jones) on Boxing Day 2000.[2] The Adverts topped Adwatch, the first time a bank had managed this feat in the survey's history.[3]

The practice continued following the merger with Bank of Scotland, with Bank of Scotland employees were also allowed to take part, which was fully taken into account In 2002 with the "Somethin' Stupid", which feature Howard and a Bank of Scotland employee.

In 2005, at the height of Brown's popularity he toured the branch network giving Halifax customers the chance to meet him, as part of the "Giving you Extra Tour". That same year, the original advert was ranked the 13th best advertisement of all time by ITV in a top 20 list and in 2009 it was ranked as the 18th best advertisement of the decade in another top 20 ITV list.

In December 2006, Natalie Webster and four other Halifax colleagues Richard Willoughby, Jilly Ellard, Nicola Roberts and Paul Dudley, flew to Johannesburg to film the "Halifax remix" of Aretha Franklin's Think. The advertisement was first shown in February 2007. Another advertisement featured Thomas Yau from Leeds singing a version of Herman's Hermits I'm into Something Good. It was first shown in January 2008, though was axed in August 2008.[4]

In 2008 following a review of its creative marketing campaign, company reappointed the then newly merged DLKW and Lowe agency, to revise its advert strategy to make it more serious,[5] As advert styles were too upbeat for the then gloomy economic climate. With the move away from its upbeat singing ads, in April 2008, Howard Brown no longer starred in any more Halifax adverts, instead taking a role in its public relations department.[6][7] Following the merger the Lloyds Bank, Halfax and Bank of Scotland took different routes for its advertisement.

Animated Version

In addition to the numerous singing and non singing adverts, between 2002 and 2006 an animated version of Brown also appearing in adverts, voiced by London actor Paul Shearer and created in conjunction with Paris-based animation stars Numéro Six, which used the "Who Gives You Extra?" at the end of each advert. The real Howard Brown has continued to appear in the live-action adverts. Further adverts were Written and art directed by Richard Lovell and Martin Cox at DLKW (London). In an interview with news agency Reuters, Brown said:

Being in the advertising campaign has changed my life tremendously. I sometimes feel like a popstar. People recognise me everywhere I go.

Bank of Scotland

In 2004, the Bank Of Scotland dropped Howard from their versions of the adverts. The Bank of Scotland stated that Scottish customers could not stand him because he was "too in-your face, and particularly annoying". HBOS admitted mistakes have been made in promoting the new image north of the border, as it did not take into account the Bank of Scotland brand nor its heritage. The replacement advertising campaign instead feature Scottish members of staff, although the animated version of Howard were used north of the border.[8][9]

Singing Adverts

gollark: You might need another machine for it, I'm unsure because the UI is kind of awful.
gollark: Also, interestingly enough, while it's not well-known because the UI is kind of awful and it's poorly documented, RFTools builders *can* selectively mine.
gollark: Although Utsuho is committing heresy and Environmental Tech is awful since it goes for "balance" by using increasingly giant amounts of resources and boring progression chains instead of requiring any independent thought whatsoever.
gollark: It takes me AT LEAST two hours of manual work before I have enough automation up for some sort of automatic ore generation.
gollark: I mostly just do 11 because something something lava.

References

  1. ADVERTISING HANDBOOK By Helen Powell, Jonathan Hardy, Sarah Hawkin, Iain MacRury ISBN 978-0-415-42311-3
  2. Peck, Tom (21 May 2011). "Howard quits Halifax after bank decides his face no longer fits". The Independent. London.
  3. http://cws.cengage.co.uk/yeshin/students/halifax.pdf
  4. Knapton, Sarah (7 August 2008). "Halifax's Howard dropped as downturn bites". London: The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2010-02-01.
  5. http://www.marketingweek.co.uk/halifax-a-history-of-ads-and-howard/3030200.article
  6. "Howard Brown axed from Halifax adverts". Birmingham Mail. 21 April 2008. Retrieved 17 August 2008.
  7. Green, Chris (7 August 2008). "Howard's end: he's too happy for a recession". London: The Independent. Retrieved 4 August 2012.
  8. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/HOWARD'S+AWAY%3B+Customers+hated+the+singing+banker.-a0123984964 ; Customers hated the singing banker. By Stuart MacDonald Daily Record (Glasgow, Scotland) Date:Nov 3, 2004
  9. http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/2007/05/13/2610681.htm
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