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[1 - 3 of 3]

Thought Maybe You Would Like to See This Wreath I Made for Last Christmas.

10 May 1996
2 pp

Author: Quarles, H.; Sc Mccormick
Recipient: R.J. Reynolds
[ 1 of 3 | landman/517303417-3418 ]

A loyal smoker of MORE cigarettes writes to R.J. Reynolds to share her creative, environmentally sensitive use for the scads of empty cigarette packs she generates: "More Cigs:

Thought maybe you would like to see this wreath I made for last Christmas. It's made out of your MORE cig packs. I empty so many of them -- I thought there ought to be something I could do to recycle them and one day I thought of this. Enjoyed my wreath and wanted to share it with you.

Hazel Quarles

P.S. - They also make great bows for packages."

Consumer letters like this show the special relationship that many smokers develop with their cigarette manufacturers, and their brand. R.J. Reynolds curries those relationships by sending smokers holiday cards, coupons, lighters and free packs of cigarettes. In the past, RJR mailed out special packs of Camels with the phrase "Season's Greetings" printed on them. These packs became treasured items for many smokers. See this letter from a smoker who proudly displayed her husband's CAMEL "Season's Greetings" pack on top of the family TV set, where the couple's 2 year old daughter got ahold of it and destroyed it. The woman wrote RJR to ask for another pack: http://tobaccodocuments.org/rjr/517546428-6429.pdf.

Dave's

16 Jan 1994
32 pp

Author: Young & Rubicam
Recipient: Philip Morris
[ 2 of 3 | landman/2044826305-6336 ]

This Philip Morris document provides insight into the creation of "Dave's" cigarettes, a discount brand targeted at "YAMS" (Young Adult Male Smokers). The idea was to create a discount brand that would make broke YAMS feel as though they were buying by choice, not because they were broke. This presentation, by the advertising firm Young and Rubicam, describes the plight of YAMS and the gap "Dave's" would strive to fill: "Economic reality forces a trade down...Nothing comes close to cigarettes in terms of a degrading trade-down...In a category that is supposed to be a reward and indulgence, a discount cigarette stands for the antithesis of what smoking is all about. Therefore YAMS can't feel good about purchasing discount cigarettes when they have to. In their heart of hearts, they would like to feel that when they buy a discount brand, it's because they choose to -- not because they happen to be cheap, broke or desperate."

Dave's was designed to be that magical brand that would make it okay for YAMS to buy discount cigarettes.

To sell "Dave's," Philip Morris created a fictional cigarette company run by a fictional, independent, honest, hard-working guy named "Dave" who got around in a down-to-earth 1957 yellow pickup truck. Ads for "Dave's" cigarettes touted "Dave" as a youthful renegade who got fed up with the establishment and struck out on his own. There was no hint in the ads that the product was made by Philip Morris.

(One ad read:

"Dave was fed up with cheap, fast burning smokes. Instead of just getting mad, he did something about it. He read some books, cleared twenty acres and got to work. He put a down payment on a tractor and traded his lawn mower for a weather radio. And then it was just a matter of waiting for the final frost of the season and a new moon. In early April, Dave sowed his first seeds. A few sunny days later, Dave's Tobacco Company was born. Word spread about Dave's "different smokes." His tobacco leaves were hand picked, then barn cured and barrel aged for rich taste. And to make sure they burned perfectly, each smoke was packed tight. People started buying these new smokes that didn't burn fast and tasted great. They told their friends..who told their friends. Now Dave works for nobody but himself. And it all started with a few tobacco seeds..and a dream." [See the ad, The tale of Dave's Original Blend Link: http://tobaccodocuments.org/pollay_ads/Dave01.06.html]

Focus group testing showed, though, that if and when YAMS did find out that "Dave's" cigarettes were really made by the Philip Morris Tobacco Company, the felt disappointed and betrayed. PM minimized the importance of this finding, however, and pressed ahead with the marketing brand [see the PM document Dave's Seattle Research (1994) http://tobaccodocuments.org/pm/2045165728.html]

Shortly after "Dave's" hit the market, humor columnist Dave Barry wrote a scathing column ripping "Dave's" cigarettes:

I want to stress that I'm not bitter about what the Philip Morris Corp. is trying to do with the name "Dave." In case you didn't know, Philip Morris is test-marketing a new brand of cigarettes called "Dave's." Over the past year I've seen big billboard advertisements for "Dave's" cigarettes in Seattle and Denver. These are folksy ads; one of them features a tractor. The message is that "Dave's" is a folksy brand of cigarette, produced by a down-to-earth, tractor-driving guy named "Dave" for ordinary people who work hard and make an honest living, at least until they start coughing up big folksy chunks of trachea. .." http://www.s-t.com/daily/07-96/07-28-96/e02li154.htm:

A 1995 Wall Street Journal article also ripped PM's effort to deceive smokers with "Dave":

"Dave's Cigarettes" has become a trend setter in anti-establishment marketing. The promotional literature describes Dave as "an entrepreneur who believes in the value of home made products and the concept of offering folks quality cigarettes at the right price." Dave is such a populist he tells store owners he doesn't even want his folksy cigs to "mix with the 'corporate' cigarettes." Now take a guess as to which $60 billion tobacco giant owns Dave's? If you said Phillip Morris you win a half case of Red Dog beer (also owned by PM). Nowhere does Phillip Morris, in it's self-described effort to "convey cutting edge hipness," acknowledge it's relation to "Dave." Just being "plain folks" I guess. (WSJ 3/2/95)

Today "Dave's" appears to be a failed brand, along with another brand PM proposed to be targeted at young men (but that never made it off the drawing board), "Barking Fish" cigarettes http://tobaccodocuments.org/landman/2041490669-0681.html )

Camel Brainstorming. Camel Heritage.

19860000;19861231
20 pp
[ 3 of 3 | landman/506880623-0642 ]

This 20-page treatise on the philosophy and symbolism of the Camel pack discusses the psychological symbolism of each of the visual elements on the pack, and their effect on consumers. It states, "...the very idea of putting philosophy...on something commercial and commonplace...is shocking...R.J. Reynolds, a consumer products company, dared in 1914 to offer the American people a piece of philosophy, while pretending to merely be selling cigarettes." [Page 16 "Camel Heritage."] The phallic symbolism is touched on briefly, as are the themes of independence, rebellion, self-sufficiency, serenity, etc.

The document was apparently written by an advertising agency working for R.J. Reynolds. It makes clear the value to marketing of cigarette logos and brand identification. It also indicates that a measure requiring plain packaging for all brands of cigarettes could be a potent public health policy.