As Subway moves forward with Tennessee Titans quarterback Marcus Mariota, its brand face is arguably still healing from the black eye dealt by former spokesman Jared Fogle. While most branding experts agree Fogle won’t single-handedly eliminate the use of spokespersons en masse and brands will certainly perform more due diligence from this point on, there are plenty of other marketing lessons that can be derived from the Fogle debacle.
Here are 20 insights on the future of spokespeople and influencers.
1. A Paid Spokesperson Can Overshadow Brand Meaning
Per Jon Bailey, chief relationships officer at marketing agency The i.d.e.a. Brand, when a brand pays a spokesperson to represent it, the act devalues other components of brand meaning and it becomes more about the person than the company.
“That’s the danger with spokespeople – they become the embodiment of the brand and when you’re charging them with really becoming the front face of your brand, that comes with consequences,” Bailey said. “For Subway, that worked very well for many years, but when [spokespeople] don’t work, they really don’t work. It’s not like having a brand ambassador that is sort of there because they love your brand and are genuine, authentic people. When you pay a spokesperson to be the front of your brand, there are all kinds of consequences.”
He points to recent examples such as Lance Armstrong and Tiger Woods, which caused headaches for the brands they represented for this very reason.
Indeed, Jorge Aguilar, executive director of brand strategy at brand consulting firm Landor Associates, agrees brands should ask themselves if they need to rely on spokespeople to begin with and to perhaps instead do some soul searching and question what their brands really stand for.
2. Brands Can’t Have Their Cake And Eat It, Too
Annie Weber, managing director of public affairs and corporate communications at market research company GfK, said the Subway situation underscores that brands must not only find spokespeople who are really good fits, they will also no longer be able to get away with claiming they have a meaningful relationship with someone who represents their values as long as the relationship is working and then later claim it was so superficial it can be severed with a single tweet.
“They can’t both say the relationship is meaningful and not,” Weber said. “I don’t think consumers are going to be as open to that kind of an attitude…consumers are hungry for authenticity and that you’ve done your due diligence, so I think it is going to be part and parcel that they will have to think closely about who they align themselves with and ensure it’s a really good fit down to the foundation and values of the company.”
3. Bona Fide Celebrities Have Their Own Reputations That Aren’t Intrinsically Tied To A Given Brand’s
According to Bailey, the reason this particular case is so unique is because Subway made Fogle famous. However, if the brand had used a celebrity famous in his or her own right with his or her own sphere of influence, Subway could have dropped him or her with relatively little damage to the brand.
“In this case, Fogle has become synonymous with Subway over 15 years, so it could only reflect back on the brand – it’s hard to extricate the two,” Bailey said.
Chad Reid, director of communications at web-based WYSIWYG form builder JotForm, agrees Fogle existed in the public eye only because of Subway, which is why the brand took a harder hit than Nike did with Woods or Macy’s with Donald Trump.
“Woods was already a public figure whose reputation wasn’t necessarily tied to Nike’s,” Reid said. “Jared’s personal life was made public by way of Subway. It created a much harder fall for the company.”
Andy Ferguson, freelance writer and creative director, concurs that by shining a spotlight on this anonymous man, Subway created Jared the Subway Guy and gave him influencer status.
“Up until this point, you can’t do much better than creating a spokesman/character who goes from totally unknown to global influencer. The only equity Jared has to the world at large is his association with Subway,” Ferguson said. “He’s not an athlete or musician or actor who has been paid to say nice things about the brand. He’s a bona fide brand enthusiast whose story inspired millions.”
4. Human Beings Will Screw Up
Paige Arnof-Fenn, CEO of marketing network Mavens & Moguls, notes there is risk in attaching a brand to a human being, who is inherently flawed.
“Humans make mistakes,” she said.
In fact, Bianca Lee, founder of White Rose Marketing Solutions, goes as far as saying human spokespeople are a bad idea in this day and age.
“It was perfectly fine back in the days of the Marlboro man, but he didn’t get caught sexting or licking donuts or humping the Nicki Minaj wax sculpture at Madame Tussauds or whatever else because there wasn’t an always-on social media culture,” Lee said. “In 2015, if you hire an athlete, artist or any other celebrity and plan to have them as the face of your brand for a long period of time, you are going to be disappointed because they are human. It is only a matter of when and how badly.”
5. There Are Infinite Ways To Get Caught
With omnipresent mobile devices, Kyle Reyes, creative director and president of boutique agency The Silent Partner Marketing, said every company is bound to have some kind of a faux pas in the digital age.
And Ralph Legnini, senior creative strategist at digital marketing services and consulting agency DragonSearch, points to a not-so-distant future full of drones in which it will be even easier to get gotcha footage of bad behavior, which is, and will remain, big news online and in social media.
6. Variety Is The Spice Of Life
For this part, Aguilar said the Jared debacle is really something that can only exist in this always-on digital age, which underscores why brands shouldn’t rely on a single spokesperson. (And, to be fair, Subway has diversified its efforts with athletes like Mike Trout and Nastia Liukin, but Fogle remained a brand face for many years.)
Liam Brown, CEO of business coaching firm Sidestep Coaching, goes as far as calling it “incredibly stupid and risky” for a brand to tie itself to a single spokesperson and said it’s unlikely we’ll see this again, using brands like Jenny Craig, Proactiv and Nike as examples of those that cycle through spokespersons, never hanging on to one for too long.
“That way when one of their influencers goes sideways with the public…the overall hit to the reputation and credibility of the brand is somewhat safeguarded,” he adds.
The downside is that these brands have to monitor multiple influencers’ behavior, but it’s a necessary evil, Brown adds.
7. Don’t Rely On Any One Spokesperson For Too Long
Lee said Subway should have gotten rid of Fogle long ago and held a contest to replace him, rinsing and repeating over the years.
“Had they done this, the Subway brand could stand for health in the same way Wheaties stands for champions,” she said. “The mistake Subway made was depending on a single human being to be the representative for their brand in an era where reputations can be ruined with one tap of a smartphone…and the variation strategy engages many more people in a way that can drive deeper relevance for the brand.”
Dana DiTomaso, partner at digital marketing agency Kick Point, agrees Subway’s big mistake was highlighting Fogle for so long.
“They could have come out with multiple success stories, had ads that didn’t just focus on him — many options that would have taken away the spotlight and thus the fallout would have been a bit easier to take,” she adds.
8. Characters Are Safer
Instead of flawed human beings, however famous and influential they may be, marketers know precisely what they are going to get with animated characters like the Geico Gecko, Mr. Clean and Rice Krispies’ Snap, Crackle and Pop, which they can actually control, Lee said.
“The animated characters can last you forever without scandal,” she adds.
Reid agrees fictionalized spokespeople – even human characters like Flo from Progressive, Mayhem from Allstate and the Trivago Guy – are also smart choices.
“At the end of the day, character spokespeople can be replaced without much hiccup,” he said. “So in the event of another crisis, it wouldn’t create the same media frenzy as a real person.”
9. Regular Joes And Janes May Be Easier
While influencers are certainly powerful in their own right – and perhaps more authentic – and experts anticipate influencer marketing will continue to grow and thrive, DiTomaso notes these company representatives may simply be easier to work with than traditional celebrities and questions whether this will spur brands to rely on them more frequently as a result.
10. More Niches Are Coming
As technology advances, Ferguson said he expects to see more niches, which will, in turn, mean more opportunities for influence that are even more specific and varied.
“I think that there’s always going to be ways to reach broad audiences on common themes like love, success, dreams, etc.,” he said. “But there’s going to be more need for brands to connect with a wider variety of influencers if the brands want to have deeper, more authentic connections with the audiences they’re hoping to reach.”
Ferguson also points to a Variety survey that found the top five influencers for teens are YouTube stars.
“As technology advances, influencers are going to emerge from unexpected places,” he said. “Brands will have to be more engaged in more specific communication to capture those audiences.”
11. Influencers Are Good Filters
For his part, Dave Wakeman, principal at Wakeman Consulting Group, points to information overload in the digital era and said trusted resources like influencers help consumers filter through.
Indeed, Nancy Harhut, chief creative officer at digital marketing firm Wilde Agency, agrees consumers are hardwired to follow the lead of people like them or the people they like.
“Celebrities become authorities of a sort when they endorse a product, even if there’s not an especially close relationship between them and the product they endorse,” she said. “Similarly, ‘someone like me’ who uses a product with favorable results will always be motivating to that product’s target market. We, as people, assume that person has done the research, or knows something we don’t. It’s the kind of decision-making shortcut we all rely on.”
12. Due Diligence Is More Than A One-Time Affair
While experts universally agree companies will increase due diligence at the onset of new relationships, Bailey said he also expects smart brands will make a point to perform due diligence more frequently as well.
“It’s possible Fogle was squeaky clean at the outset, but Subway should have checked in periodically,” Bailey said. “If a company does embark on that kind of relationship, they’re going to be more careful. Contracts will have a shorter duration so they can be reevaluated and reissued.”
13. Character Counts
Your due diligence may explore the essence of who the person is.
“It’s not enough to have a great smile or an inspirational story, a spokesperson needs to have more than a good reputation,” said Andy Beal, CEO of social media monitoring firm Trackur. “They need to have a great character.”
14. Relatability Is Key
But regardless of who a brand chooses, consumers must see a bit of themselves in that person in order for the relationship to have brand value.
“It’s my Harvey Dent hypothesis,” Reyes said. “In the movie ‘The Dark Knight’, Bruce Wayne did what he needed to do to protect Harvey Dent when he turned into Two Face. He did it because Bruce Wayne/Batman believed that people needed a hero. They needed someone to look to and to trust. It’s the same with spokespeople. It’s the same reason why Donald Trump is crushing it in the polls. People want someone they can relate to and someone who they feel can speak their language.”
15. Money Talks
The practice of using spokespersons and influencers will continue, simply put, because it works.
“Parallel this,” Legnini said. “Sports teams continually sign players who have questionable pasts – because they are renowned in their field and have influence to sell tickets. The gamble often outweighs the risk.”
16. Protocols Should Be In Place
Mel Carson, CEO of consultancy Delightful Communications, likens the Fogle aftermath to the 2008–2009 timeframe “when you had a whole bunch of big social media whoopsies,” which was followed by brands putting social media protocols in place.
“This would be a moment for brands to really do the same thing and have a bit of a reset to make sure they are using the right influencers and spokespeople, but also that they have the right processes in place and they have worked with their PR companies and agencies to make sure they have a solid plan in case anything does go wrong,” he said.
Huma Gruaz, president and CEO of Alpaytac Public Relations/Marketing Communications, agrees brands that implement strategic crisis communication strategies in case of an implosion can protect their brands and sometimes even enhance bonds with customers.
“Case in point, when [Armstrong’s] lies were revealed, everybody felt cheated — not only its sponsors,” Gruaz said. “In a way, fans of Armstrong who kept on believing in him and supporting him commiserated with the sponsor brands and shared their devastation.”
17. Face The Music
But, even if the worst happens, DiTomaso notes the brands that own their mistakes and values can minimize overall damage.
18. Memories Are Short
“There have been scandals of all sorts that happened before the Fogle incident and there will be plenty afterwards,” Brown said. “The consumer has a very short memory.”
19. Think Big Picture
Regardless of who they work with, brands that employ a spokesperson as part of an integrated marketing mix are the ones who are really on to something, Bailey noted.
20. Don’t Be Scared
Smart brands won’t let the Subway example deter them from using a spokesperson as part of a larger marketing strategy – they will simply be smarter about it, notes Callum Beattie, partner at branding and communications agency Honest Agency.
What other lessons do you think marketers can glean from this situation?