Moderators: jsumali2, richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
VC10er wrote:It is so disheartening that they are spending so much media money on such terrible creative. United: are you reading this?
I think, like Continental, that United could become a strong enough magnet for Manhattanites (except perhaps for the Upper East Side perhaps) and the northern Tri-state. I agree that legacy UA knew how to create an emotional pull with their adverting. Continental did a great job joining the emotional and rational in one ad. If people came to believe that United from EWR was a great experience, it would draw New Yorkers. In fact when CO was HOT, it was a favorite people were willing to travel for. I live on 10th st, and I find JFK much, much worse to get to and not much of a price difference by taxi, black car or UBER.
But United does not yet have the product and services in place to fight Delta. It could, it seems as if they will, but not yet. I am on my first 77W in Polaris soon and shall see.
I wish I could take a shot at redesigning those ads, and creating better content.
VC10er wrote:
If people came to believe that United from EWR was a great experience, it would draw New Yorkers. In fact when CO was HOT, it was a favorite people were willing to travel for.
ridgid727 wrote:So who in the last 30 years has had the best in your opinion. Give examples please.
FlyUSAir wrote:Even before the merger I was a lot of Continental ads in NYC. It doesn't matter though, unless you live in lower Manhattan UA can't be a NYC contender because they don't serve JFK, have a handful of flights out of LGA, and EWR is not NYC, it is NJ/PA traffic. Most in certain parts of NYC, the rest of NY state, and CT don't even consider EWR as an option, it's all JFK and LGA.
TW870 wrote:ridgid727 wrote:So who in the last 30 years has had the best in your opinion. Give examples please.
I think the late-1980s United Rhapsody in Blue ads were so compelling and dramatic:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mEpZNKAunIk
I love this one with the 747SP and all the mechanics being featured against the music. It not only draws out the excitement of aviation, but the Rhapsody in Blue makes it directly associated with United. I grew up in Minneapolis and Northwest was my hometown airline. But I always recall this series of ads that made me decide I wanted to dedicate my life to aviation.
theasianguy wrote:FlyUSAir wrote:Even before the merger I was a lot of Continental ads in NYC. It doesn't matter though, unless you live in lower Manhattan UA can't be a NYC contender because they don't serve JFK, have a handful of flights out of LGA, and EWR is not NYC, it is NJ/PA traffic. Most in certain parts of NYC, the rest of NY state, and CT don't even consider EWR as an option, it's all JFK and LGA.
That's a bit of an overstatement. EWR is very much a NYC airport. It is a viable option for all of Manhattan, which makes up the bulk of Greater New York's HVF traffic. Lower Manhattan is the closest and accessible via PATH, Midtown is only a 25 train ride away (fastest of all 3 via public transportation), and the upper West/East sides are just as close to JFK as EWR. Staten Island is also much better served by EWR. Additionally, for international or transcontinental flights, LGA is not an option, so it's just between JFK and EWR. Only Brooklyn and Queens residents would be strictly discouraged from using EWR. And if you offer even a $30 fare difference, I'm sure most pax would take the cheaper ticket in exchange for a longer commute.
VC10er wrote:Hello ALL,
Currently, NYC is filled with new UNITED "outdoor" advertising, mostly thousands of taxi-top and bus shelter ads. They remind me of legacy Continental's very effective "Work Hard, Fly Right" outdoor ads, each of which had a cleverly written message or claim...which worked for many years (during CO's heyday) until they ran out of "clever" messages. That said, for all of the years those ads ran, they were ALL very strongly BRANDED, so wether you read the clever line or not...it was, in the flash of the eye, a CONTINENTAL brand impression. Continental was deemed something special out of NYC for many and folks did go to EWR just for them.
It seems like UNITED has returned to that old effective ad strategy, but in my personal and professional opinion these new ads are no where near as good or effective as CO's, and have a critical fault that CO's ads never had. First, (IMHO) they are HORRIBLY designed or branded. They use the strangest dark, dingy and dull color of blue that does not visually pop, and so poorly branded that in a flash of an eye don't register as "UNITED" (or anything). "Fly the Friendly Skies" is small and buried in the corner. They carry zero emotional pull. But my major issue is with the headline that says "The New United in New York" - and rather than "clever" lines, they carry claims in LARGE type, all of which are the good claims UA can truthfully make. But, my major issue with these ads (aside from the design/branding) is the claim about being "The New United". I absolutely think UA is better than it's been in a very long time. The pain and agony pf the merger is over. But this "promise" of a "New UNITED" currently can't truly be experienced (especially for premium business fliers) as much of what is due to come has not arrived yet, and wont for a long time.
I have spent 30 years in branding (and advertising) and learned a very important lesson; that making that promise that a brand cannot really keep is deadly. The "promise" of a "NEW UNITED" for "New York City" is way too premature right now, and that wooing fliers back before Polaris is available, new Polaris lounges are far opening soon, no new aircraft (no 787's, 77W's), p.s. is not competitive yet, not enough of the new domestic F cabins and seats yet, the "new" beautiful United Clubs (except for the one in icky Terminal A) haven't even started renovations yet in Terminal C, that TC is under construction and while service has improved overall - the chest pounding over the "new spirit of United" isn't really palpable yet.
I honestly believe that Mr Munoz can get UNITED where he says he want to take it, and draw people to Newark and to a great airline. There can be an awesome "come-back story" one day. But, EWR is so lacking in any of that right now, that adverting a "new experience" for New York City is a mistake. It may bring someone back, one willing to give UA another chance, but when not fulfilled, they will have lost that customer once and for all. (fool me once....etc). In my opinion, once there is at least the majority of Long-Haul, and ULH flights have Polaris, a Polaris lounge, new United Clubs and better narrow body domestic product, and consistent customer focused service network-wide, that a UNITED RE-LAUNCH should wait.
Questions: Is this same message being sent in other UA hub cities? Anybody know who's is making these ads? Anyone disagree?
But, the last thing I do want to say is, that the UNITED team have (in my experience) made a 180 in service and attitude and I really appreciate the hard work you have done, thank you!
VC10er wrote:Questions: Is this same message being sent in other UA hub cities? Anybody know who's is making these ads? Anyone disagree?
KiloRomeoDelta wrote:Have not seen in New York, but United's new branding and advertising is meh and misleading elsewhere. Last week I was flying out of Kansas City where United flies RJs and at the most 737/A320 yet all advertising featured "brand new Polaris", 77W and 787. I get it that is your new cool thing, but why advertise something you cannot offer to that market?
MSPNWA wrote:Hmm, another strange negative thread towards UA.
MSPNWA wrote:I disagree and have a question for you. Why in your view is it not proper to advertise products and performances that exist and are available for purchase? I mean, is the airline supposed to wait X amount of years or something?
usflyguy wrote:Obviously the advertising is working as those of you that are complaining about it saw it... and saw it everywhere. That's all that it's meant to do is to create top of mind awareness and it looks like it's working.
ScottB wrote:I suspect the issue lies in the products in question not being widely available from the NYC market yet -- thus raising customer expectations while not being able to meet those expectations consistently. If your marketing convinces premium customers to plunk down a bunch of money for a product which can't be consistently delivered (even just most of the time), those customers may end up choosing the competition in future instead. Even though they are far from perfect, Delta does a better job of consistently delivering their product and service and that's part of why they have become the market leader in NYC. Similarly, even though Southwest's product is low-frills, they also are quite consistent in delivering the service their customers have come to expect.
jumbojet wrote:what most people recognize the united brand most for is cancelled, delayed and super subpar customer service. That's why the minions up to the super elites left in droves during the Smisek regime. Rest assured, all the advertising wont help, that is of course, unless they defected to AA in which case I can see UA winning back a few folks here and there. NYC for the most part is the home of Delta and JetBlue. UA can advertise all they want in the city, its a waste of money. They ply there trade across the Hudson in the swamps of Jersey.
jumbojet wrote:NYC for the most part is the home of Delta and JetBlue.
ScottB wrote:Even though they are far from perfect, Delta does a better job of consistently delivering their product and service and that's part of why they have become the market leader in NYC.
jfklganyc wrote:CO was a much smaller airline. They absolutely needed EWR. They were the sole airline hub in NYC area. EWR has most pax in the region. Ads reflected a hometown dominance and pride.
That was late 90s, this is today.
UA is a much larger airline. EWR is very important, but one of many hubs that is very important. Delta is just as big if not bigger. Huge LCC presence in B6. Those two have swung JFK into the dominant airport in the region by a large margin.
airzim wrote:jfklganyc wrote:CO was a much smaller airline. They absolutely needed EWR. They were the sole airline hub in NYC area. EWR has most pax in the region. Ads reflected a hometown dominance and pride.
That was late 90s, this is today.
UA is a much larger airline. EWR is very important, but one of many hubs that is very important. Delta is just as big if not bigger. Huge LCC presence in B6. Those two have swung JFK into the dominant airport in the region by a large margin.
But only one airline can take you nonstop to most business and leisure destinations, nonstop, with multiple daily frequency, from one airport on a single airline. United at EWR. This is not debatable. Delta can't, American can't, and jetBlue certainly can't.
United's ads are designed to educate New Yorkers, that Newark is a viable alternative to JFK and LGA. If single carrier service is important to you, United at EWR might be worth a look.
tphuang wrote:That's the goal, but it doesn't change the fact that it's just inconvenient compared to JFK/LGA for most people in Manhattan. I see EWR as a last resort airport and I live in midtown. Try to get through holland tunnel on Friday afternoon or go from east side to Penn station, wait for the nj transit. Not a fun experience.
On the other hand, Jersey folks see EWR as their only option for longer flights. My colleagues over there would rather fly economy out of EWR than business out of JFK.
FlyUSAir wrote:Even before the merger I was a lot of Continental ads in NYC. It doesn't matter though, unless you live in lower Manhattan UA can't be a NYC contender because they don't serve JFK, have a handful of flights out of LGA, and EWR is not NYC, it is NJ/PA traffic. Most in certain parts of NYC, the rest of NY state, and CT don't even consider EWR as an option, it's all JFK and LGA.
tphuang wrote:Try to get through holland tunnel on Friday afternoon or go from east side to Penn station, wait for the nj transit. Not a fun experience.
DoctorVenkman wrote:tphuang wrote:Try to get through holland tunnel on Friday afternoon or go from east side to Penn station, wait for the nj transit. Not a fun experience.
That's not fair. It's a nightmare to get to JFK from Manhattan by car just as often as it's a nightmare to get to EWR by car. I've been stuck in traffic for over an hour trying to get to JFK in a cab.
DoctorVenkman wrote:I live in Brooklyn Heights and work in Downtown Manhattan. It's faster for me to take public transit to EWR than JFK for both work and leisure.
tphuang wrote:
A normal afternoon experience to EWR for me on public transport has been an hour from penn station to the terminal (including the wait time for the train itself) and whatever amount of time it takes to get to penn station. Now try coming back to upper east side for a late night flight. The trains come once an hour by then and you have to figure out how to get home from penn station.
B737900ER wrote:tphuang wrote:But this debate has been beat to death on this site, so all I'll say is this and then I'm done. Its all about perception. If Newark was in the state of New York and JFK was in the hypothetical state of Long Island, people would complain about how hard it is to cross the east river and sing the praises of the convenience of EWR.
B737900ER wrote:tphuang wrote:
A normal afternoon experience to EWR for me on public transport has been an hour from penn station to the terminal (including the wait time for the train itself) and whatever amount of time it takes to get to penn station. Now try coming back to upper east side for a late night flight. The trains come once an hour by then and you have to figure out how to get home from penn station.
It's no different to/from JFK. It's a 40 minute train ride from the airport to JFK to penn station. It's 30 minutes from EWR to penn. And LIRR also runs a night schedule, so good luck coming from JFK after a late flight.
But this debate has been beat to death on this site, so all I'll say is this and then I'm done. Its all about perception. If Newark was in the state of New York and JFK was in the hypothetical state of Long Island, people would complain about how hard it is to cross the east river and sing the praises of the convenience of EWR.
jfklganyc wrote:Much more frequent trains Jamaica to Penn vs Newark Airport station to Penn
Land at 2pm (midday weekday) today and you're waiting 30 minutes at EWR for NJT to Penn.
That's not perception...it is very real.
VC10er wrote:but in my personal and professional opinion
quiet1 wrote:I'm catching up on a*net reading, and came across this thread. I was in Manhattan (mid-town east) from 11- to 18-April and never saw a single UA ad on a taxi. I only saw one ad on a bus-stop shelter. The last previous post on this thread says "3 weeks ago" as posting date which would mean around 8-April? Did UA pull the ads all of a sudden?