
Celebrity Endorsements Are Never Forever!
By hiring Jennifer Hudson as their celebrity spokesperson, Weight Watchers differentiated themselves from many of the other products and systems in the market-place. This differentiation clearly worked because Weight Watchers extended their original endorsement deal with Jennifer Hudson, utilized her on their national television ad campaign, on-line and off line vignettes, print ads, in-store point of purchase, etc. As of late, Ms. Hudson has been slowly phased out to make room for the shoe manufacturing maven and singer, Jessica Simpson. Ms. Simpson was hired as Weight Watcher’s celebrity spokesperson after she gave birth to her child. Utilized in a similar manner as Ms. Hudson, it would outwardly seem that Ms. Simpson is resonating with the core consumer of Weight Watchers, is very relevant and generates a substantial amount of free PR through her placement in such fan favorites as People and US magazine, E! Entertainment and many other on-line Hollywood bloggers. The star of such movies as Dukes of Hazzard, Ms. Simpson has a much broader appeal in the general lexicon of celebrity.
The one absolute when it comes to corporations, brands or service providers that hire celebrities to be their corporate ambassadors and spokespeople is that no one has this role forever and even the best fits eventually grow stale. Re-working a program once a celebrity spokesperson has been with you for several years is always a good idea! Look, even the ever present voices of Samuel L Jackson for Capital One, Dennis Haysbert for Allstate or Morgan Freeman for VISA have iconic commercial roles for these monster companies, yet someday, they, like the dinosaurs will be a mere memory!