Pubdate: Sun, 14 Mar 2004 Source: USA Today (US) Copyright: 2004 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc Contact: http://www.usatoday.com/news/nfront.htm Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/466 Author: Theresa Howard Cited: Office of National Drug Control Policy (www.whitehousedrugpolicy.gov) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/campaign.htm (ONDCP Media Campaign) U.S. CRAFTS ANTI-DRUG MESSAGE NEW YORK -- Parents know how difficult it is to get teenagers to listen. Compound that with the temptations that abound for teen drug and alcohol abuse and parents can have a daunting problem on their hands. But now, they're getting parenting tips from an unlikely source: the U.S. government. As part of its $200 million anti-drug program, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) has created a new campaign of ads. For the first time, ONDCP's anti-drug ads address parents and friends rather than the potential user. Previous ads warning of the physical and mental damage from drug use may have gone unnoticed by the users they targeted. "Kids consider themselves immortal, so that limits how much they will be receptive to ads about drug use affecting health," says Tom Riley, public affairs director of ONDCP. "These are designed to give people permission to do something. This gets other people into the dialogue." As measured by Ad Track, USA TODAY's weekly consumer poll, the ads are a hit with young adults. Even more impressive, the ads also resonate just as much with middle-aged folks old enough to be their parents. The ads call on friends and families to help through early intervention. In one, a girl's party night plays in reverse, rewinding from its end -- drugged out and in trouble -- to that morning when she was walking out of her home. When it restarts, the girl's mother stops her and says they need to talk. In another ad, a girl stands on a dock by a lake watching a friend struggle in the water. The ad points out that a true friend would help a friend in distress. In a third ad, viewers see a husband and wife scream, argue and slam doors. But then they find out that the couple is not fighting -- they are preparing for confronting their child over drug use. In Ad Track, the ads were popular all around. Typically, such tough topics are unpopular, but of those familiar with the campaign, 34% like the ads "a lot." That's well above Ad Track's 21% average. The ads were most popular with both young adults ages 18 to 24 and with the 40-to-49 crowd: 39% of each group like the ads "a lot." "The subject matter hit home because it keyed into the values, attitudes and lifestyles of each of the generations it was trying to target," says Ann Fishman, president of Generational Targeted Marketing, a firm that monitors consumer trends across five generational cohorts. Fishman says that young viewers like the ads because the makers of the ads appear to "understand their real lives." People in their 40s like the ads because "they want the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, no matter what." Ogilvy & Mather in New York created the ad that shows a youth drowning, and Foote Cone & Belding in New York made the other two. Unlike most ads, the success of ONDCP's ads can't be measured in sales. But according to the University of Michigan's annual Monitoring the Future study, use of various illicit drugs by young people in 2003 was down 11% from 2001. "The good news is they are all headed down in the right direction," says Bob Denniston, ONDCP's media campaign director. The agency's messages have not always been popular. Most controversial were ads just after the Sept. 11 attacks that linked drug use to helping finance terrorism. Additionally, some taxpayers have complained about the agency now buying ad time in popular programming, including the Super Bowl, rather than using pro-bono advertising services. In the past, the Partnership for a Drug-Free America (PDFA), a non-profit anti-drug coalition, had rallied agencies to donate creative ideas and media outlets to donate ad space. Since 1998, ONDCP and PDFA have worked jointly on creative ideas. And ad placement is now backed by a budget matched dollar-for-dollar by media outlets. Under the deal this year, ONDCP's $110 million ad spending will bring $220 million worth of media ad time. The ad program has been under fire most recently for continued use of ad agency Ogilvy & Mather, which is the subject of a federal investigation. In January, an 11-count indictment charged that the agency's former director of finance, Thomas Early, and former Ogilvy executive Shona Seifert participated in an "extensive scheme to defraud the United States government by falsely and fraudulently inflating" labor costs in 1999. ONDCP will begin the hunt for new agencies in the next several weeks, but, Riley says, "The people we've worked with have nothing to do with any of this." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh