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But one analyst said it will take much more than a marketing blitz to turn things around at the chain. "They have larger merchandising problems," said Wall Street Strategies analyst Brian Sozzi. "I just don't think they've had the right sizes, fits and colors within the women's business, and there's a lack of interesting products in the men's business." The campaign follows a series of management and organizational changes Gap made this year. In February, Art Peck became the brand's president, its fifth in nine years. The San Francisco-based company also established a Global Creative Center, which consolidates all of Gap's design, marketing, fashion public relations and production in New York. It hired Farbman from Ogilvy & Mather in New York and shifted marketing duties to that advertising agency from longtime agency Laird & Partners in San Francisco. And in May, it ousted Patrick Robinson, design director for the Gap chain. The campaign features videos that show shots of the airy, loft-like denim design studio with its hardwood floors and exposed brick walls. In the videos, Gap workers talk about the process of making certain jean styles and washes and why they love their jobs. The videos will air on a dedicated Facebook page, YouTube, on sites like Hulu, and embedded in banner ads elsewhere. The campaign also includes print ads and "Pico de Gap" taco trucks with celebrity chefs that will hit New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco beginning Monday and broadcast their location via Twitter. The tacos will be $1.69 but free if you show Gap clothing. Gap would not disclose how much it is spending on the campaign, but said it was similar to what it spent last year, except with a much heavier focus on social media and the Web. Farbman said the online push is a way to reach Gap's new, slightly younger demographic
-- a "highly connected" 28-year-old -- rather than Gap's traditional focus on people in their early 30s. Although, he adds, the broader target is anyone with a "young American mindset."
[Associated
Press;
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