huffy bikes go from boys to mom new campaign is cool, but...

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1/5 www.adweek.com/news/advertising-branding/huffy-bikes-go-boys-mom-157417 Advertisement JOBS EVENTS TALENT GALLERY SUBSCRIBE TO ADWEEK NEWSLETTERS Follow Follow @adweek @adweek 260K follow ers HOME Follow Follow The Queen of Prime Time Shonda Rhimes rules ABC's Thursday slate this fall If You Build It, They Will Come Brands should create their own social networks Dad's Got it Tough, Too American Greetings tips the hat in honor of Father's Day Headlines: Press: All You, Cooking Light Group P… TV: Netw orks Pour Cash Into Summer… Tech: Yext Raises $50 Million Ads & Brands: Pinterest Users Don't Mind Ads… A t the dawn of the 1970s, the Huffy Corporation (which made gas station equipment before turning to bicycles in 1934) was losing air from its tires. Cheap bikes manufactured in factories overseas had grabbed nearly 40 percent of the market, and a recession was looming. So Huffy made a strategic marketing decision: It would shift most of its attention to the kids demographic. This 1971 ad proves just how good Huffy was at it, too. Skillfully deploying a dual sell, the brand excited kids with the idea of a new bike while also luring parents with the guarantee of a low price. Bikes have always been unique for their ability to deliver on an irresistible assurance: For a comparatively reasonable sum, most anyone can buy into fun, adventure and (as Tiger here, formerly Wilbur, would tell you) a near-instant social status upgrade. What’s more, as this 2014 ad for Huffy demonstrates, the tactic still works, though this time around Huffy is appealing to mom with the same enchantment it promised to the neighborhood boy 43 years ago. Huffy has distilled that promise in a single word: hooky, a term that doesn’t mean skipping Pinterest Users Don't Mind Ads—Up to a Point Editor's Picks Advertisement May 7, 2014, 10:06 PM EDT Advertising & Branding Huffy Bikes Go From Boys to Mom New campaign is cool, but the '70s were cooler By Robert Klara Search 243k Like Like

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Page 1: Huffy Bikes Go From Boys to Mom New campaign is cool, but ...katherinewintsch.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Huffy-Bikes-Go-F… · Clever Girls Collective, KidzVuz Create Family

1/5www.adweek.com/news/advertising-branding/huffy-bikes-go-boys-mom-157417

Advertisement

JOB S E V E N TS TA LE N T GA LLE R Y S U B S CR IB E TO A DW E E K N E W S LE TTE R S Follow Follow @adweek@adweek 260K follow ersHOME FollowFollow

The Queen of Prime TimeShonda Rhimes rulesABC's Thursday slatethis fall

If You Build It,They Will ComeBrands should createtheir own socialnetworks

Dad's Got itTough, TooAmerican Greetingstips the hat in honor ofFather's Day

Headlines: Press: All You, Cooking Light Group P… TV: Netw orks Pour Cash Into Summer… Tech: Yext Raises $50 Million Ads & Brands: Pinterest Users Don't Mind Ads…

At the dawn of the 1970s, the Huffy Corporation (which made gas station equipment

before turning to bicycles in 1934) was losing air from its tires. Cheap bikes

manufactured in factories overseas had grabbed nearly 40 percent of the market,

and a recession was looming. So Huffy made a strategic marketing decision: It would shift

most of its attention to the kids demographic.

This 1971 ad proves just how good Huffy was at it, too. Skillfully deploying a dual sell, the

brand excited kids with the idea of a new bike while also luring parents with the guarantee of

a low price. Bikes have always been unique for their ability to deliver on an irresistible

assurance: For a comparatively reasonable sum, most anyone can buy into fun, adventure

and (as Tiger here, formerly Wilbur, would tell you) a near-instant social status upgrade.

What’s more, as this 2014 ad for Huffy demonstrates, the tactic still works, though this time

around Huffy is appealing to mom with the same enchantment it promised to the

neighborhood boy 43 years ago.

Huffy has distilled that promise in a single word: hooky, a term that doesn’t mean skipping

Pinterest UsersDon't Mind Ads—Upto a Point

Editor's Picks

Advertisement

May 7, 2014, 10:06 PM EDT Advertising & Branding

Huffy Bikes Go From Boys to Mom Newcampaign is cool, but the '70s were

cooler By Robert Klara

Search

243kLikeLike

Page 2: Huffy Bikes Go From Boys to Mom New campaign is cool, but ...katherinewintsch.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Huffy-Bikes-Go-F… · Clever Girls Collective, KidzVuz Create Family

2/5www.adweek.com/news/advertising-branding/huffy-bikes-go-boys-mom-157417

school as much as it means the chance to ditch your responsibilities, go for a ride and be cool.

“Hooky is a nice bridge line from what is historically a child’s product,” said Katherine

Wintsch, founder of marketing firm The Mom Complex. Huffy, Wintsch believes, is saying

that “you too can play hooky and harken back to your younger years.”

But as charming as these ads are, a closer look suggests that Huffy might have actually lost

some of the magic it so capably practiced in the old days.

Huffy’s 1971 ad, Wintsch observes, casts a spell that is both human and genuine. The social

transformation that Tiger’s new bike has affected is believable because Tiger still looks like a

normal boy from the neighborhood. “The kid’s not perfect,” Wintsch said. “He’s got a chubby

little face and his hat doesn’t fit right. I wish they’d taken the same approach toward

motherhood in the 2014 ad.”

While Huffy’s avowal that a new bike represents carefree fun is the same, its application to

the millennial mom is, Wintsch said, stereotypical. “If the 1971 ad was about going after

boys, then the 2014 ad is about idealizing their mothers—and this one’s just a little too

perfect. She has beautiful nails, a big rock of a wedding ring—and she’s a myth.”

If, as this ad suggests, mom really is never too old to play hooky, Wintsch believes she should

be sailing down the street with the wind in her hair and to hell with the rest of it. “I wish

there were more here than a pretty mom standing by a pretty bike,” she said.

In other words, maybe a little more Wilbur would help.

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Comments

Topics: Marketing, bikes, hooky, Huffy, Katherine Wintsch, print ads, The Mom Complex, Retail, Sports,

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• Reply •

Steven Kluber • a month ago

Just a few questionable points:

-Targeting Moms? By escaping housework? That sounds very 1971.

-She's going to need a helmet when the thing starts falling apart after a few rides.

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Robert Klara is a staff writer for Adweek.com. Follow Follow @uppereastrob@uppereastrob

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