Marketing Campaign
Topic : PeopleIn the 1950s, marketing whiz Stanley Arnold was working at Young & Rubicam, where he was asked to come up with a marketing campaign for Remington Rand. The company was among the most conservative in America. Its chairman at the time was retired General Douglas MacArthur. Intimidated at first by a company that was so much a part of America, Arnold also found in that phrase the first inspiration for a campaign. After thinking about it, he went to the New York offices of Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Beane, and placed the ultimate odd-lot order:
I want to purchase, he told the broker, one share of every single stock listed on the New York Stock Exchange. After a vice president tried to talk him out of it, the order was finally placed. It came to more than $42,000 for one share in each of the 1098 companies listed on the Big Board at the time. Arnold now took his diversified portfolio into a meeting of Remington Rands board of directors, where he argued passionately for a sweepstakes campaign with the top prize called A Share in America. The conservative old gentlemen shifted around in their seats and discussed the idea for a while.
But Mr. Arnold, said one, we are not in the securities business. Said another, We are in the shaver business. I agree that you are not in the securities business, said Arnold, but I think you also ought to realize that you are not in the shaver business either. You are in the people business.
The company bought the idea.