 by Stephen Schochet
| | You need to get the word
out about your products but your economic resources are limited. That
was often the dilemma that faced Walt Disney. From the early days of
Mickey Mouse Walt was often burdened with heavy debt and had to find
many creative ways to let the public in on what he was doing. His
innovative marketing ideas could be used by businesses seeking publicity
ideas today.
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Capitalize on current events: In 1930 Walt felt
that Mickey Mouse who was constantly surrounded by barnyard animals
should get a dog. He vividly described to his artists a funny mutt that
his family kept on their farm when he grew up in Marceline, Missouri, to
the point of getting down on all fours, sniffing around and making
barking noises. Animator Norman Ferguson transformed Walt's great acting
performance into a cartoon canine named Rover . . . for five months.
Then Disney read that an amateur astronomer named Clyde Tombaugh had
discoveblack a ninth planet in our solar system called Pluto and Walt
cashed in on the resulting publicity by giving Mickey's pet a new
name.
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Get your employees behind your product: Snow White And
The Seven Dwarfs (1937) took three long years to complete and Walt
suffered through many doubts about the film's marketing direction. He
worried when the press called it "Disney's Folly", then
realized it was good to have people talk about it. He rejected a
salesman's idea that he should eliminate the dwarfs from the
advertising, pushing the love story between Snow White and the Prince
instead. But throughout the stressful production his cartoonists stayed
loyal and enthusiastic, often using their free time to run around Los
Angeles to tack up advertising posters. Snow White was a world wide
success but perhaps the artists got a little too excited. After the
money rolled in Walt threw his animators a party in gratitude. He later
regretted it when his some of the more bohemian members of his staff
chose the occasion to let their hair down, and the family event turned
into a wild orgy. Any rift that the outrageous behavior caused with the
boss was forgotten by 1953 when many of his employees came to Walt's aid
to financially back Disneyland.
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Embrace new technology: In
1927 Walt made two Mickey Mouse cartoons that were rejected by
distributors. Then sound was ushered into the movie business with Warner
Bros. The Jazz Singer. Fearful silent film stars began consulting
astrologists to predict the future, but most movie moguls shrugged off
actors talking as a fad. Movies without dialogue sold throughout the
world, who wanted to rock the boat? The unknown Walt Disney seized the
opportunity, and with great difficulty added synchronized sound to the
third of his Mickey Mouse cartoons, Steamboat Willie (1928) which
resulted in the rodent becoming a national craze. Later history repeated
itself in the early 50's when most of the moguls rejected the idea of
television. Walt embraced the new medium as a way to keep the public
informed about what his studio was doing.
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Publicity is better
than advertising: Today the Walt Disney Company is an aggressive
marketing behemoth that spends up to fifty million advertising movies.
Recent campaigns have included displaying the title of films on grocery
divider sticks at supermarket checkout stands. But their founder had a
different philosophy. As a young man Walt had left his job working for
an advertising firm to start his own entertainment company and never
wavered from his preference. When he entered television he always
frowned on commercials, preferring instead to get publicity with fun,
behind the scenes looks at new projects. He eventually left his first
network ABC, accusing them of ruining the very popular Mickey Mouse Club
(1955-1959) with too many interruptions.
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What's In A Name?:
Originally the studio started in 1923 was called the Disney Brothers.
The younger, temperamental and risk-taking Walt was in charge of the
creative direction, while the older and more cautious Roy, a former bank
teller, kept the books. For forty-three years their partnership was a
combination of love, ferocious arguments and give and take. In 1926 Walt
convinced Roy that they should change the name of their enterprise to
Walt Disney, it would make their products more identifiable. A bemused
Roy went along with it, sensing his sibling's greater need for fame. The
name Walt Disney remained associated with family entertainment even
after both brothers passed on.
In 1994 Warner Bros. had high
hopes for a feature cartoon called Thumbelina. But preview audiences
found it boring, a reaction that bewildered disappointed studio
executives. A week later they showed it again with a small change: The
exact same film said Walt Disney Presents in the opening credits. The
test scores went way up and several people in the audience inquired
where they could buy Thumbelina merchandise.
| | Stephen Stephen Schochet is the
author of the upcoming book
Hollywood Stories: Short, Entertaining Anecdotes About the Stars and
Legends of Hollywood.
He is also
the author of two acclaimed audiobooks
Tales of Hollywood and Fascinating Walt Disney.
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