Jardiance and The Turtles
Media courtesy of Vivvix
Can a drug commercial shock me? I have been watching them, analyzing them, and critiquing them for almost 30 years. Jardiance is well known in the ad world for its musical- and dance-themed diabetes ads. Love them or hate them, they are different and effective.
In announcing a newer indication for Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD), Jardiance has gone about as far away from its use of musical format. It used animated CGI turtles playing soccer. It is very basic in its messaging. The main turtle says Jardiance can slow the progression of CKD and reduce the risk of kidney failure. Obviously, turtles know how to slow things down as the lead turtle tells us.
Was I shocked when I saw the turtle ad? Yes, but shock is not necessarily a bad thing in advertising.
I have no issue with the ad itself. It is different, easily understandable, and likable. The question is can or should a brand so dramatically change its creative approach without risking confusing its audience? The advertised CKD indication is different, but does that merit a 180-degree shift in creative?
Could Jardiance have just added the new indication to its current campaign with a super or voiceover? I assume they wanted a separate campaign because the CKD indication is not only targeted at people with diabetes. It is also hard to create a second song dedicated to CKD. That said, I still wonder if the brand image might be affected by such a drastic shift in creative approach.
As one who has argued that too many DTC ads are formulaic, I applaud the use of new approaches. The fact that the new Jardiance ad is so different from the musical version does make for some interesting discussion. There are many multi-indication brands in the DTC world. I have yet to see a brand that has veered so far away from its current creative approach as Jardiance when adding new indications. That is not a criticism because they obviously have research showing the ad works. Was I shocked when I saw the turtle ad? Yes, but shock is not necessarily a bad thing in advertising. On the Golden Globes, the turtles ad certainly broke through the heavy DTC ad clutter. We shall see if this ad is just a brief announcement campaign. But if getting noticed was the goal, it worked.