(continued from previous page) P&G, already considered innovative,
hired Bernays in 1923 to provide support for advertising Ivory soap and
Crisco. He began with a survey that showed a preference for "white
unperfumed soap." Ivory was the only white unperfumed soap on the market
and when the media reported the results, Bernays objective was met.
He used events to further obtain media coverage for Ivory: a soap yacht
race in Central Park, a resolution by the Ziegfeld Follies Girls to use
"nothing but warm water and pure white, unscented, floating soap on
their faces," and distribution of household hints recommending pure
white soap from the National Household Service. He even advocated that citizens
should nurture their civic pride by washing their town statues and municipal
buildings with Ivory.
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Bernays liked contests. For a quarter of a century, the National Soap
Sculpture Competition in White Soap inspired millions of school children
to find "creative and artistic expression... Children, the enemies
of soap, would be conditioned to enjoy using Ivory." Winning sculptures
were sent to national exhibitions in New York and museums around the country
earning international media coverage. P&G made it an annual event, "symbolizing
white floating Ivory soap."
When the Norge made the first blimp trip across the North Pole in 1926,
Bernays made sure that everyone knew it used P&G glycerin. "The
cooling water for the engines was mixed with glycerin at Kings Bay to prevent
it from freezing," reported The New York Times, The St. Louis Dispatch
and broadcast journalists across the country.
Public Relations for P&G dramatically changed when, in 1943, Bernays
accompanied R.R. Deupree, president of P&G, to Washington for a meeting
on war production. They discussed public relations and Deupree was impressed.
"For the first time in my life I have been exposed to the power of
public opinion," said Deupree. "I realize how important it is
for a corporation to have public opinion's support." |