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      « Will texting be the Hotels.com of nonprofits? | Main | Call for submissions: Online fundraising / community building questions and cover letters for makeovers »

      September 07, 2008

      Laughing at ourselves: Tourism humor that works

      Since writing a few posts on the “Not in Columbus” convention and tourism campaign, I’ve found myself in an ongoing offline debate about what works and what doesn’t in tourism advertising. Since I have little or no experience in the category, I’ve been educating myself the blogger way: search, click and play.

      No question, it’s a tough business. Glamming up the decapitated mountains of West Virginia, differentiating one artsy desert community from another, making even a big-ass mall seem like a destination.

      It’s no wonder we want to laugh at ourselves.

      But doing humor well…. That’s tough. The campaigns that do it well deliver three key things consistently:

      1. Communicate a vibe, a personality of the place
      2. Quickly transition from a self-effacing laugh to the good stuff
      3. Make it easy for you to see yourself in them (either in the story or in the place)

      My two favorite examples of campaigns doing it well couldn’t be more different:

      Minneapolis' Unconvention Campaign.
      Sponsored by the city's groundswell - a group of independent organizations, businesses and people - and centered on the playing host to the Republican convention, this integrated print and Web campaign is laugh-out-loud funny and still delivers on all the criteria above.

      Makeaneffort_lawn_3Makeaneffort_parkinglotMakeaneffort_wally

       

      See the full campaign

      Maine's "It's Got to Be Maine" Campaign

      Sure, it's one thing to do independent well. But, what about official advertising? The kind that has to go through channels and committees and compromises?

      I like Maine's campaign because it survived the gauntlet relatively intact. It pokes a little fun at the state, but in a personal, inside-joke kind of way. And, once its campy humor stops you, the fast-paced montage communicates a wholly unexpected vibe. WKB Spier produced this campaign. You can see more examples in "the work" section of their Web site.

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      Comments

      Those Minneapolis spots are easily the funniest things I've seen in months. What great work and kudos to the city for having the guts.

      I think that Columbus Convention and Tourism could learn a lot from the Maine campaign and take a page from their book. One easy adaptation that comes to mind is showing a bunch of rapid OSU football fans (which is what everyone thinks of when you think of Columbus, including when I was traveling in England! Peopple tend to forget that there are 6 other institutions of higher learning in our fair city.) Then say something like "if you think thats all there is to Columbus, you're kidding yourself" and then show a montage of non-OSU Columbus sites, Short North, COSI, Irish Fest, Greek Fest, etc. Another spot could focus on how Columbus with all of it's different ethnicities is really like a mini-UN right in the middle of the heartland. Not only do we have German & Italian village but we have a thriving Asian community due to OSU & the Honda plant in Marysville, The Latino Festival, a somilan community, and tons of small mom & pop ethnic grocery stores (Greek, Middleeastern, Hispanic, Asian, Somali.)

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