It's mere minutes, sometimes just seconds of TV, for which businesses shell out up to $7 million to catch the eyes of the year's biggest TV audience. But have you ever wondered, whatβs the recipe for a successful Super Bowl ad?
It's a question Rama Yelkur first posed to marketing students in Wisconsin nearly 20 years ago.
βIt all started in a marketing class, a promotions class, I was teaching in the dead of winter,β said Yelkur. I thought, oh the Super Bowlβs coming up in the end of January. Let me create an assignment. Letβs assess together what drives the likability or success of Super Bowl commercials.β
Today, as the Dean of the business school at Texas Woman's University, it's an assignment she's not only refined but turned into real-world research.
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Each year, she recruits a panel of students to code each year's commercials, like this yearβs preview of the Amazon Alexa ad featuring Scarlett Johansson and Colin Jost.
βThis platform is to create brand awareness. It is for companies to showcase themselves,β she said.
And over the years, she's determined the best recipe to do so, or at least the best ingredients, including the commercial's length, humor, use of celebrities, kids, animals and its sex appeal.
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βAnd this will all compile to add likeability,β said senior marketing student Michael Gyure.
More importantly for the companies paying for them, itβs the return on investment.
Through her research, Yelkur has become one of the nation's leading experts on the subject, consulting for clients like Kimberly Clark, Hormel Foods, Disney and NBC Universal.
βIt turns out to be a good story that you can laugh together in a group of people that you're watching the game with and you can enjoy it. It's entertainment,β said Yelkur.
Though her favorite place to share what she's learned remains in the classroom.
βIt has helped them grow personally and professionally, and so it is the gratification. This is why Iβm in this business because I get to impact students,β she said.