Is it time to put purpose on pause?

This article originally appeared on Strategy Online

For several years now, a marketing mantra has dictated that brands seeking a meaningful perch in our minds, hearts and wallets must have a purpose. Pundits like P&G’s Marc Pritchard and Unilever’s Alan Jope opine that it’s not enough to clean our clothes, products like laundry detergent must have a more noble raison d’être; it must help right social wrongs. So coffee is now conserving rainforests, and cereal is saving the honeybees.

Brands are tasked with fixing society. But what happens when we find ourselves in a time warp where we are all living in a state of relentless purpose? We are eclipsed by it daily; everything matters, all the time.

Is it possible we are sick of purpose? For me that explains the wild popularity of the new “Fresh start” Extra Gum commercial. I haven’t seen a reaction like this to an ad in a very long time.

This spot has taken the world by storm, everyone is talking about it – and I don’t mean just the ad world, even friends and family who claim to hate advertising (typing those words was like a stake in my heart) have sent the spot to me, exalting it. Even the ad snobs snarking about executional misses (guilty) have to admit, its timely zaniness found its mark. Wrigley nailed the global zeitgeist with uncanny precision.

The last 14 months have hardly been a laugh a minute. Our lives idled in the long shadow of COVID. We spout the latest stats on global infection rates, ICU beds filled, vaccinations not yet delivered into arms. We seesaw between fretting about health of society versus the economy while riding the rollercoaster of business openings and closings.

With our masks on, we hoard TP and hand sanitizer. WFH long ago lost its TikTok sheen, the day drinking memes are now tired. Numbed by interminable lockdowns, kids and parents are holding it together by a fraying thread.

So what is a brand to do?

The first year of the plague ushered in a period of poignant advertising. Touching ads rallied on behalf of healthcare workers, then frontline workers. We saluted courage, flagged bravery, and fundraised for blood drives. We applauded people for staying home.

We were riddled with purpose, and it was the right thing to do at the right time. But are we sick of it now? I say enough already with the purpose. We just want out of this mess. Extra took the pulse of the globe and responded in kind.

The brand tapped into our desperation to break free of our homes and our sticky little hands. We long to be silly, to hug and kiss again. We want to hang out together and embrace office small talk.

Yes, smart brands have gently put down the mantle of purpose. Some have, instead, leaned into the epic weirdness of it all, like Burger King. Their Impossible Whopper ad orbits the utter confusion we feel these days, how we struggle daily with what to do – but mostly, what not to do. We just want to put this hellscape in the rearview mirror.

Purpose has a purpose. But it shouldn’t be a default rabbit hole for brands, especially now.

We are weary of worrying, tired of being on high alert and wringing our hands. And a few smart brands have cracked the code.

Angst and earnestness will reclaim their place. But maybe it’s time to put purpose on pause.

It was slim pickings at Super Bowl 2021

I wondered what kind of Super Bowl we’d be looking at this year as we huddled in lockdown, tiring of sourdough. Still mid-plague, with political chaos reigning most of the year, and BLM igniting across the world I wondered where brands would land. Many spent this year in a mad dance while others found their footing fast. 

But what about Super Bowl?

Super Bowl is like Christmas morning for we ad maniacs. I love and anticipate it. It is typically a pre-season run-up to the Cannes Lions podium. The best brands in the world come out to strut their stuff. 

This year when a cascade of big-name advertisers started pulling out, things felt wobbly. But instead, it seemed to create space for newcomers, like Robinhood and Logitech. 

So let’s hit the highlights.  

Budweiser’s clever Light Seltzer Lemonade spot acknowledged the year that was 2020 with raining lemons. They get extra points for their reference to film Magnolia’s raining frogs.

Will Ferrell’s goofy “No Way, Norway” allowed GM to stake unforgettable ground for their commitment to electric vehicles.

Robinhood's timely and anthemic "We are all investors" was strategically masterful at addressing novice investor intimidation with an interesting parallels.

Logitech's call to defy logic to create the future with Lil Nas X's unforgettable new track "Montero" cut through.

Jeep married politics with promise urging us to “meet in the middle” and be the "REunited States of America. Note that this ad has now been pulled because of Bruce Springsteen’s recent DWI dust-up.

"Alexa's Body" from Amazon with Michael B. Jordon made me laugh out loud, with fantastic performances all around. You will never look at watering the lawn the same again. 

We had the usual coterie of celebs including Jason Alexander on a hoodie, Cardi B and Garth on Wayne’s World, Maya Rudolph in quadruple, Amy Schumer (as the Hellmann's Fairy God Mayo), John Travolta, Martha Stewart, Don Cheadle shilled for Michelob and an oddly random Paul Rudd and Drake appeared for State Farm.  

The utterly bizarre included Oatley's CEO singing "Wow, no cow." in a field, a 2D Matthew McConaughey flapping around for 3D Doritos and Edward Scissorhands showing up for Cadillac.

Which will make it to Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity this year? I think it was slimmer pickings than other years. 

But still, brand resilience is what it took to survive this year and a tip of the hat to those who made it through.