Tattoos have long since expanded beyond an audience of tough-talking sailors with anchors on their biceps and remorseful women with tramp stamps from spring break. As the tattoo taboo has faded, it has also become a means for the most loyal and passionate brand fans to express their devotion to the products they love most.
It’s a marketer’s dream: Authentic brand advocates turning their flesh into mobile billboards. But it’s also one, experts say, that requires a bit of kismet rather than overt manipulation.
However, to date, that’s not really how it has played out in the marketplace.w York Magazine logo on his arm
Incentivized Ink
In July, publisher Hachette reportedly put out a call for a woman to get a back tattoo for the latest book in Stieg Larsson’s Millennium series, the first of which is the best-selling “Girl with the Dragon Tattoo”.
However, per the website, the promotion was later pulled after offending some consumers.
But there are plenty of other examples.
Noting, “Pain is temporary. Reebok is Forever,” the fitness brand rewarded the fan who got the biggest Reebok tattoo at a 2014 fitness competition with “a year-long fitness-packed sponsorship with Reebok worth 40,000 SEK [about $4600].”
The winner tattooed the Reebok logo on the entirety of her thigh. However, each fan who was tattooed at the Tough Viking competition received “a complete fitness kit from Reebok [with] a value of 5,000 SEK [about $600].”
In 2013, a Brooklyn real estate company reportedly offered its employees 15 percent raises if they tattooed the brand’s logo on themselves – and 40 obliged.
Remember the Indiana man who tattooed the 2012 Romney/Ryan campaign logo on his face after he was reportedly paid $15,000 by a Republican supporter on eBay? (He has since had laser treatments to have the tattoo removed and will not be supporting Romney in 2016, BuzzFeed reported.)
While most of these efforts have involved some kind of compensation, there are countless examples of brand fans going out into the world and getting inked of their own volition.
Take Jill Abramson, for example. The former executive editor of the New York Times has a tattoo of the Times’ T on her back, which she said she will not remove even after she was fired. There’s also rapper/entrepreneur Sean Combs, who has many other names, as well as the New York Magazine logo on his arm.
Three Ps
No matter what the product, each of these examples includes a degree of pain, permanence, and passion, which reveals an important truth about tatvertising: It’s really about love or compensation.
“Buzz is increasingly fleeting nowadays. Even if you break through the noise you’ll be talked about for a few days at best,” said Ryan Coons, a “well-tatted” copywriter at creative agency Struck. “So it’s odd to pair something so temporary with something that is so permanent. Long after the news stories fall off the front page, that person will still have that tattoo.”
The key is to connect with fans who already have brand tattoos rather than trying to incentivize ink, he said.
“Because they did it of their own volition, there is at least a small amount of authenticity there,” Coons adds. “When you offer up cash or fame or some other incentive to tattoo someone on behalf of your brand or book or movie you might as well just give them a T‑shirt for all the good you do for your brand because the conversation is always, ‘What kind of person gets a tattoo of [insert logo]?’ not, ‘Wow, that is one dedicated fan of [insert brand]!’”
A recent effort from Burger King is perhaps the closest illustration of this concept in action. In it, agency David found five consumers from around the world with Big Mac tattoos, which it then transformed into tattoos of Burger King’s rival Big King by adding grill marks and/or crowns to four of the five. (The fifth declined because he and his brother have matching Big Mac tattoos.)
Organic Ink Means Authentic Love
Dana DiTomaso, partner at digital marketing agency Kick Point, agrees there’s a big difference between paying a consumer to get a brand tattoo and a fan organically deciding to get branded ink.
“If brands are paying for people to do this, it takes away from what’s happening, but I think some people do feel so strongly, which indicates a brand is doing a good job of creating fanatical devotion that results in permanently putting a logo on your body forever,” she said, pointing to comic book characters as good examples of brands that inspire tattoos.
Motorcycle brand Harley-Davidson is another.
Per Faris Yakob, founding partner of Genius Steals, which says it is an “itinerant innovation consultancy dedicated to helping brands, agencies and rebels find the awesome,” consumers put symbols on themselves to show affiliation, to communicate personality and to remind themselves of something and brands like Harley have long inspired the kind of passion that leads people to ink their logos permanently on their skin.
“The logo becomes the distillation of all that a brand stands for. Packed with meaning, a signifier of the brand myth. When a fan takes on that symbol, it is no doubt a powerful statement of that person’s relationship with that myth,” Yakob said. “But, as is so often the case, when the brand has to explicitly ask for this behavior, it taints it.”
Mitchell Smith, a graphic designer at digital marketing agency Overit, who has brand tattoos of Denny’s, Grippo’s Potato Chips, and Seasons Skate Shop, echoes this sentiment, saying the act of spurring fans to tattoo logos feels contrived.
“Make sure that it’s genuine. I have a tattoo of the Grippo’s Potato Chips logo, which I got after eating a bag of their chips and deciding that I would never in my life experience a better chip. After a trip to Cincinnati [where Grippo’s is based], I got a tattoo of their weirdly adorable, potato-headed, tiny-bodied chef mascot,” Smith said. “To this day, I’ve still never had a chip that comes close. You want people that will vouch for your brand when someone asks about the tattoo.”
However, he nevertheless notes a benefit to brands versus less permanent logos like stickers in that tattoos imply dedication, regardless of whether it is genuine.
“Without taking the context into consideration, this could at the very least make someone take a second look at [the brand],” Smith said.
Love Them Back
While brands should generally steer clear of incentivizing tattoos, they – like Burger King – can use their passionate tattooed fans to create content with wider appeal once they find them, as long as brands make sure to adequately reward those tattooed superfans and demonstrate gratitude for their enthusiasm.
In fact, Smith said brands should work to keep their tattooed customers happy or risk seeing the tattoo covered up or lasered off.
“As a brand, you need to reward that and consider that they put it on their body forever. It’s expensive and it’s painful,” DiTomaso said. “And that’s not just at the moment they do it, but continuing to remember [that fan] and coming back for years to come.”
What’s your take on tatvertising? Is it always a cheap ploy? Or is there a time and a place?