IAA --'AThe Michigan Dliv -- Wednesdav. September 6, 1995 I5 Vf~S~' ~*J . * r ,- I .1V rt -- l l w xvll.l llr, T 1 lwlq - -- " .. v..v.wv) 1 v.. pr. v.....v. v, . --- 1.YOU RAN OUT OF RETURNABLES. 2. YOUR BEST hIND EANERREDTOTEUNIVERSOF IDAHOAND YOUR PHONE BILLIS K" ' yr "ikSr" '. : w 3.uY'VENAD 1,433 MAWAlIE UNIONAND COUAGE INN IS CALUNG AL UN U OUF M BEAT ST AI 60 YOU WANT TOCALLAL 41PRTAi IN NEI 5YL T 51 BCAUt YUR IENDSWNIFL O U : 9 Phone ads a'turnoffi to many customers 0 Attack ads lead to boomerang effect between companies WASHINGTON (AP) -The multi- million-dollar mudslinging contest the phone companies are waging on TV is "really annoying ... a turnoff," com-. plains Mark Jaffee, an AT&T customer in Meriden, Conn. And he's hardly alone. Though the long-distance companies say the ads work, TV viewers and ex- perts suggest they do more to repel customers than attract them. The ads are biting and direct: In one MCI ad, former game show announcer Don Pardo is host of the "AT&T True-False Quiz" Pardo asks whether "every AT&T customer gets true savings." A buzzer goes off "False," he says. "Forty million sav nothing." In another ad, AT&T attacks MCI's discounted calling circles in which "MCI asks you for the names and numbers of your family and friends so they can solicit them to switch to MCI. ... At AT&T, we don't ask you for names and numbers.... Privacy, that's your true choice, AT&T." "I don't get anything out of them," said Jaffee, the annoyed AT&T cus- tomer. Jack Kramer, an MCI customer in Washington, agreed, calling the ads "phone soup." To make a true rate comparison, he said, one has to look at a complex set of factors. To this end, the ads are of little help. "It's too confusing to figure out. That's why I tune out." AT&T and MCI blame each other for the use ofnegative ads, which, they say, account for less than 20 percent of all their advertising. "We're goingto answer AT&T when- ever it comes into the market and bashes MCI," said MCI's advertising director William Pate.AT&T, MCI and Sprint combined spend $1.2 billion a year on advertising. Nearly 19 million people switched long-distance companies last year. And both AT&T and MCI, the main users of negative ads, contend they are effective in acquiring and retaining customers The companies decline to quantify such gains. Dan Clark, an AT&T vice president, noted his company's ad attacking MCI's calling circles emphasized pri- vacy. "That's a hot-button issue to consumers and they responded favor- ably," he said. Prof. David Stewart, chairman of the University of Southern California s marketing department, said, "We don't have a lot of evidence that these ads have been particularly effective in get- ting people to switch from one carmerto another." Esther Thorson, associate dean for graduate studies at the University of Missouri's School of Journalism, said, "There's good evidence that compa- nies run the risk of the boomerang ef- fect." Stewart and other experts said pro- motions are more powerful inducements to switch long-distance service. In using the negative ads, AT&T and MCI run the risk of confusing and an- noying people, losing credibility and smearing themselves as well as their rival, the experts suggested. "The companies must believe their message is working, but in my mind they are canceling each other outand confusing the public," said Joseph Turow, a communications professor at the Annenberg School for Communi- cations at the University of Pennsylva- nia. In one MCI ad, an operator peeks out from behind a computer and asks: "Are you out there, AT&T? ... You're not going to like this." She then says that MCI, responding to an AT&T accusation that MCI doesn't tell customers the truth about savings, will provide customers with 'a written statement. "I hate to say it, AT&T, but you asked for it," she says. With such ads, Thorson said, "stud- ies have found that companies can dam- age their own reputations at the sam time they are trying to diminish thei rivals'." Another unintended consequence of the negative campaign between AT&T and MCI is that it may hel Sprint. TO BREAK A S2O ET {r.:rr e , v rr i tM P m j s y+i' , .uS EM S 3 NOR CON Ngtv lip DE I YM DON 14 YOUR UU 91, 1 rS 2:3@Lm; YOU'VE GOTTHE 1f m8 DAD IS GETTING SICK OF ALL THE COLLECT CALLS. 9. YOU'RE TOO EMBAEASSED TO WRlE A CHECKFOR$1.49. 10.GRADUATION REURS. 5' K ' r y 1, 3, 1yi A '% r S . yet Y -. r. as .1° :ar L Su4S9 R. r{ s / .............. ' , , ; , ; :. > .- a ;: ' ^ - ' _ ..: , z. , s s a . ' y ,h :: r gyp. Z. 9'.:{ .: .2 L ,,{{ R " I 2 . & .. , : v .., . ., k All s AT LEAST ILIBRARY ISIT PER YEAR.