Apple fully abandons disliked 'Genius' TV ads

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
Apple has completely moved on from its short-lived "Genius" television ads by removing them from both its official website and the company's official YouTube account.

The "Genius" advertisements, which featured Apple's retail support employees assisting troubled Mac users, debuted during the Summer Olympics, but stopped airing soon after. The ads were a stark contrast from Apple's more recent advertisements, which feature minimal human interaction.

After the "Genius" ads debuted, many panned the effort as below Apple's standards, and felt the commercials portrayed customers as incompetent and confused by Apple's products. A spokesperson for TBWA/Media/Arts Lab, Apple's ad agency, said earlier this month that the commercials were only intended for a "first run" during the opening weekend of the Olympics.

Though the commercials were no longer airing on television, they remained available for the past few weeks on Apple's official website and its YouTube account before disappearing this week. The removal of the videos was first noted on Wednesday by MacRumors.





A total of three "Genius" ads showed the retail employees called upon in outlandish situations: an airplane on final approach (entitled "Mayday"), a hot dog stand (called "Basically"), and an apartment where the Geniuses' wife has just given birth (dubbed "Labor Day"). Each of the short vignettes attempted to highlight in a humorous way the knowledge of the employee, and would allude to various products being used, such as iPhoto, Keynote, and the Cards application for iOS.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 51
    john.bjohn.b Posts: 2,742member


    Great.  Now if they'd just fire that new SVP of Retail, Apple could get back to being Apple.

  • Reply 2 of 51


    Good riddance.   

  • Reply 3 of 51
    jr1882jr1882 Posts: 17member


    No doubt.

  • Reply 4 of 51



    #next_pages_container { width: 5px; hight: 5px; position: absolute; top: -100px; left: -100px; z-index: 2147483647 !important; }
    Out of curiosity, which VP got to approve these?  Was it Schiller in Marketing, or Browett in Retail Sales?


     


    Anyone out there have an Apple org chart—not a guess, but an actual org chart?  Were these to turn out to be a Browett choice, coupled with the latest staffing snafu, I'd say we have an internal hiring disaster surpassing l'affair Papermaster.


     


     


     
  • Reply 5 of 51

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by John.B View Post


    Great.  Now if they'd just fire that new SVP of Retail, Apple could get back to being Apple.



    Agreed

  • Reply 6 of 51
    jozsoojozsoo Posts: 39member


    Too bad. I liked them. The genius guy was cute, too!

  • Reply 7 of 51


    awww but he was so cute! These ads really aren't nearly as bad as people say, they aren't exactly up to apple standards, but that doesn't make them terrible

  • Reply 8 of 51
    quadra 610quadra 610 Posts: 6,757member


    Good. They were quite un-Apple and had none of the usual Apple "culture" in them. They didn't evoke a sense of class and style. 

  • Reply 9 of 51
    sflocalsflocal Posts: 6,096member


    I didn't think the ads were that great, and they certainly did not (imho) live up to what I think Apple's quality should be.  I'm glad they removed it.  In the end, Apple needs slip-ups like these in order to stay alert and know which course NOT to take.



    Did they hire a new advertising firm or is the same one that did the other really good commercials??

  • Reply 10 of 51


    Thank Cheezus, This kind of ad I would expect from Best Buy, not Apple.

  • Reply 11 of 51


    Someone listened.


     


    Thanks, Apple.


     


    As John B. said, now the retail guy.....

  • Reply 12 of 51


    They looked more like something Dell would make and I thought Dell did it better before they fire Steven. I liked Steven, even though I hate Dell lol..

  • Reply 13 of 51
    simtubsimtub Posts: 277member


    John Browett probably had his dirty hands all over these ads, now he needs to come forward and admit messing up again.




    Apple retail boss Browett admits 'messing up' over store changes


    http://www.retail-week.com/5039937.article

  • Reply 14 of 51
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by simtub View Post


    John Browett probably had his dirty hands all over these ads, now he needs to come forward and admit messing up again.




    Apple retail boss Browett admits 'messing up' over store changes


    http://www.retail-week.com/5039937.article



     


    I'm pretty sure the head of retail has little input on Apple's TV advertising.

  • Reply 15 of 51

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Quadra 610 View Post


    Good. They were quite un-Apple and had none of the usual Apple "culture" in them. They didn't evoke a sense of class and style. 



    Bingo! I thought I read something that they reminded him of "Best Buy" advertising. Ugh! :)

  • Reply 16 of 51
    andysolandysol Posts: 2,506member
    awww but he was so cute! These ads really aren't nearly as bad as people say, they aren't exactly up to apple standards, but that doesn't make them terrible

    jozsoo wrote: »
    Too bad. I liked them. The genius guy was cute, too!

    Cute- but awful for apple.

    Let's make a cute way to help people when they are having problems? I thought apples whole strategy is that you rarely need help because you rarely (if ever) have problems.

    It just works is a much better strategy. And actually more accurate.
  • Reply 17 of 51
    c4rlobc4rlob Posts: 277member


    I know we're not supposed to compare Steve to Tim, but I think it's safe to say these ads are the best example of something Steve Jobs probably would have rejected!

  • Reply 18 of 51
    c4rlobc4rlob Posts: 277member

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Andysol View Post





    Cute- but awful for apple.

    Let's make a cute way to help people when they are having problems? I thought apples whole strategy is that you rarely need help because you rarely (if ever) have problems.

    It just works is a much better strategy. And actually more accurate.


     


    I have to agree with you. Sure the Geniuses are great, but they should be left as a benefit experienced, not advertised. For a company whose pillars are simplicity and "it just works" it's foolish to spotlight an employee whose primary role is to help you because something is confusing or something went wrong. These ads were a self-inflicted wound that Apple can absorb once or twice, but heaven help them if Tim doesn't know how to prevent from making this kind of advertising mistake again. 

  • Reply 19 of 51
    mike fixmike fix Posts: 270member


    It's sad that these commercial even aired.  When Steve said they shouldn't try to think like him, they shouldn't have listened.

  • Reply 20 of 51

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post




    <snip> A spokesperson for TBWA/Media/Arts Lab, Apple's ad agency...

     


     


    Maybe someone at, or even TBWA entirely needs to be fired?

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