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The echo effect gives P&G a bigger bang for its nearly 9 billion bucks a year spent on advertising. "It is such an effective advertising campaign that we are getting impressions that we did not pay for," CEO Bob McDonald told investors recently, recounting that he saw an editorial cartoon showing Obama on horseback, a takeoff on Mustafa's "I'm on a horse" Old Spice catch-phrase. For a company known for measuring just about everything, P&G touts big numbers from Old Spice tracking: Number of impressions (people who saw, read, or heard about commercials): 1.8 billion. Number of YouTube views for Old Spice
and related videos: 140 million and counting. Increase in Twitter followers for Old Spice: 2,700 percent. P&G also said Old Spice sales are growing at double digits, taking more of the market for body washes and deodorant. Just 20 months ago, P&G hosted "digital night" at its Cincinnati headquarters by inviting Google, Facebook, Twitter and other online experts to help test ways online and digital media could be used in marketing. By the Vancouver Winter Olympics last February, P&G was coordinating TV commercials with Facebook messages and tracking instant reactions to new commercials on Twitter. P&G, which sponsored Team USA, unveiled sentimental "Thank you, Mom!" commercials at the Olympics that it estimates added $100 million in sales. The campaign has included Facebook essay contests and e-Cards for mothers. P&G says it's still exploring new uses for social media. "It's kind of the oldest form of marketing -- word of mouth -- with the newest form of technology," Pritchard said.
[Associated
Press;
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