Nissan’s latest ads keep its ‘Heisman House’ alive amid college football uncertainty
Despite coronavirus, TBWA work was created using strict social distancing
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Nissan—which for years has relied on college football—is shifting a significant portion of its media to the National Football League in the latest sign of how the coronavirus is upending brand marketing calendars.
The automaker will continue putting money into college football, where it will air its “Heisman House” campaign for the 10th straight season. But with the Big 10 and Pac-12 suspending their seasons, at least for now, there is less inventory available. So for the first time, Nissan will air the campaign during NFL games.
The move shows how the NFL—already a ratings behemoth and the most expensive ad buying marketplace—will grow even more powerful this year, assuming the league can complete its season without coronavirus shutdowns. For Nissan, the challenge was to find NFL inventory that was not already littered with auto ads; it’s hard to watch games without seeing a pickup truck spot in nearly every commercial pod. The automotive category accounted for $706 million of the $3.9 billion spent during NFL regular season games last year, more than any other category, according to Kantar figures.
Nissan struck a season-long deal with ESPN’s “Monday Night Football” and expects to also run ads in select Sunday afternoon games, which will benefit Fox and CBS. The brand was able to find inventory “with the least amount of automotive clutter so we can try to break through and stand out in a very cluttered space, which NFL tends to be,” Allyson Witherspoon, VP of marketing communications and media at Nissan North America, said in an interview.
The Heisman campaign, which features previous winners of the prestigious college trophy, is a good fit to run in college and NFL games, she says, noting that many of the players in the ads are current NFL stars, including Kyler Murray and Lamar Jackson. “It was just a natural place for us to expand our media and be able to … offset some of the communication objectives that we weren’t able to get because of the reduction of the schedule in college football,” Witherspoon says.
The campaign, as usual, is lighthearted, sticking to its theme of imaging a world in which the previous Heisman winners share a house. But this year’s spots make a nod to coronavirus lockdowns. One ad opens with Jackson greeted at the fictional house by Tim Tebow, who sports what can only be described as an unruly quarantine beard, expressing amazement that the season is on and that it is “Heisman time.”
Creative was handled by Omnicom’s TBWA\Chiat\Day New York and the campaign was directed by Aaron Stoller at Biscuit. Nissan’s sports media investments are handled by Omnicom’s Optimum Sports.
Optimum president Tom McGovern says the agency has directed other clients to move money to the NFL. As of now, spending in the NFL is flat compared to last year, he says, but with the TV marketplace struggling during COVID, flat is as good as up, he suggests. “Once you see the ratings in entertainment in fourth quarter, I think you are going to see more money flow into NFL,” he says. “There’s going to be no new programing. It’s been a downward spiral for a while but now you have a fall season launch with no original programming.”
Nissan’s campaign features its all-new 2021 Rogue, as well as the Nissan Sentra, Titan and Kick models. Other former Heisman winners included in the ads are Marcus Mariota, Baker Mayfield, Derrick Henry, Mark Ingram and Charles Woodson.
The ads were shot outside of Austin, Texas, in July, with the brand and agency team taking COVID precautions, including using a reduced crew and ensuring that everyone stayed six feet apart. The final ads show players riding together in vehicles—but they were actually shot with one player in a car at a time, using green screen technology to bring them together.
This behind-the-scenes video gives a glimpse of how the brand pulled it off, including one shot in which Tebow while driving talks to a tennis ball on a stick, which was used to approximate the location of another player riding shotgun.
Credits
- Date
- Sep 11, 2020
- Client :
- Nissan
- Agency :
- TBWA/Chiat/Day-New York
- Vice President Marketing Nissan Motor Corporation :
- Allyson Witherspoon
- Director Marketing :
- Erich Marx
- Senior Manager Brand and Cross-Carline Marketing Communications :
- Ty Webb
- Sr. Planner, Marketing Communications :
- Jeff Simmons
- Chief Creative Officer :
- Chris Beresford-Hill
- Executive Creative Director :
- David Banta
- Creative Director :
- Mike Blanch
- Copywriter :
- Al Merry
- Copywriter :
- Josh Peterson
- Copywriter :
- Laura Vancil
- Art Director :
- Lauren Piccirillo
- Art Director :
- Alexander Holm
- Head of Production :
- John Doris
- Producer :
- Regan Wallace
- Producer :
- Garrison Askew
- Business Lead :
- Val Tyll
- Business Director :
- Tony Burman
- Business Manager :
- Michelle Darnell
- Business Manager :
- Raquel Devariel
- Managing Director :
- Scott Kavanagh
- President :
- Nancy Reyes
- CEO :
- Rob Schwartz
- Production House :
- Biscuit Filmworks
- Director :
- Aaron Stoller
- Executive Producer :
- Holly Vega
- Producer :
- Jay Veal
- Editorial House :
- MackCut
- Editor :
- Gavin Cutler
- Editor :
- Ryan Steele
- Asst. Editor :
- Megan Heard
- Executive Producer :
- Gina Pagano
- VFX :
- House of Parliament
- Creative Director :
- Phil Crowe
- Executive Producer :
- Enca Kaul
- Producer :
- Michael Novo
- Color :
- The Mill
- Colorist :
- Mikey Rossiter
- Producer :
- Evan Bauer
- Audio :
- Wave Studios
- Sound Engineer :
- Chris Afzal
- Executive Producer :
- Vicky Ferraro
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