• mozz
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    11 months ago

    I think this may have been an early prototype of the philosophy: “It doesn’t matter what your advertisement says, it matters whether people remember it and are impacted by it.” I’d be genuinely a little curious to find out how well this ad performed in practice.

    • IninewCrow
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      911 months ago

      Or you just lie to everyone about your product until someone proves you wrong or even tries to sue you for the death of a family member … and even then, you fight any accusations as much as possible until you either win or are forced to pay penalties.

      And once the costs of accidental deaths out pace the cost of lying about it all, then you can change your message or your product.

      Ford Corp was famous for balancing the cost of recalls that could prevent deaths to litigation. The last time I read about it 20 years ago, the company had narrowed it down to valuing human life at about two million dollars. If litigation per person rose above that level, then it was cheaper to announce a recall.

      • mozz
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        111 months ago

        * learned to better disguise our advertising philosophy

        There are still kids in the houses that store the firearms being sold today

        • quirzle
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          211 months ago

          That seems like it’s more on shitty parenting than something affected by advertising, no?

    • @FireTower
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      311 months ago

      Between 1899 and 1908 ~700,000 were sold. But I’d attribute it more to a more successful campaign they ran called “Hammer the Hammer”

      Link for info on that:

      https://lemmy.world/post/10228746