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Dove Patches - is the latest campaign empowering or controversial?

13 April, 2014 - 09:13pm by - First Lady | 11 Comments

image: Dove

Article by BR Fiona

We all know that Dove has been pretty innovative with its media campaigns over the years, with its real beauty campaign including the award winning 'Sketches' video, where forensic artists helped to show women that strangers see us as more beautiful than we see ourselves, well now we have the Dove Patches campaign.

The latest Dove promotional move is described as a 'social experiment' and focuses on a group of American women who suffer from low self esteem.  This group of women met with psychologist, Dr Ann Kearney-Cooke and discussed how they felt about themselves, their anxiety about their looks and how it impacts upon their daily lives.  They were then 'prescribed' the 'RB-X beauty patch' which they were told was designed to help 'enhance the way women perceive their own beauty', they were instructed to wear them 12 hours a day, every day, for two weeks.  During these two weeks the women kept a video diary which documented their feelings and the changes they went through.  The video diaries became a visual representation of the changes they experienced with the women describing how much more confident they felt, and more comfortable in their skin, with one women even baring her arms in public for the first time.  It wasn't until after the two weeks and they went back to discuss their progress with Dr Kearney-Cooke that they were let in on the little secret…….the patch was nothing but a patch, a placebo.

For Dove this result reinforced their message, that beauty and confidence comes from within and is a state of mind and with 80% of women saying that they suffer some anxiety when it comes to their appearance it would seem that it is a valuable message for all.   However, not everyone was as positive about this social experiment as Dove was, with online media and beauty websites such as Fashionista and Huffington Post stating that they felt the women where 'punk'ed' and manipulated by Dove and that Dove should know better.

So which is it, a positive, soul searching, social experiment, or another example of a PR campaign manipulating the public?

Comments

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19th April, 2014

This is such a good idea! So many women, young and old, are not confident about their appearance. I always believe that the mind is a powerful thing, and that if you have the right mind set you can do anything! Such an inspirational experiment

17th April, 2014

I thought this was a great experiment. Most of the time we are told or shown on advertising that by using makeup and certain products and getting certain procedures done makes us more confident. To some extent it can, but I think they did it very well. We are told so many times that products will make us look this or look like that and we begin to believe it, and we start to see false results. But to be honest I agree with Dove, that confidence does truly come from within and its not going to happen with a product that promises you something and doesn't deliver, most are marketing ploys to get people suckered in. I have been sucked into so many of these so called marketing ploys. I don't see this as Dove manipulating and punking people, it was them showing a very caring side, and that they actually want to help people and show them that beauty is within. Good on you Dove :-)

16th April, 2014

I would have felt really embarrassed if I was part of it, but the placebo effect is very real. Dove is tackling controversial issues. Will always make waves, but if it empowers women, then good on them!

15th April, 2014

I'm in the "being Punk'd" camp. The dove campaigns are a brilliant marketing plan, instead of shaming you by showing you what you should be, they are cosying up next to you to pretend to be your best buddy. Dove is a Unilever brand, every other brand they sell uses the opposing type of marketing that body shames you to keep up with the trends, so they've probably got you whether you buy into the "Dove message" or not.

This type of campaign isn't about the quality of their products or how well the product actually works, its designed to give you a good impression of the brand and therefore make you more likely to buy it in the store.

Having seen the women in the ad campaigns the hope is to create a similar outcome as you witness in the ads, a placebo effect that makes you feel like the product is doing something more by having that positive psychological reinforcement associated with the brand.This means they can get away with doing less product development and simply sell off a reputation rather than actual results.

I'd rather stick to whether a product actually works rather than the impression that it does.

15th April, 2014

I love this and yes sometimes the best confidence booster is someone saying something nice to you .. or a compliment ...... everyday ...... esp true for those ladies who maybe have something that they are aware of that makes them feel less sexy (like for example a lazy eye or a scar or birthmark) that cant be fixed but sometimes others focus on ........

14th April, 2014

wow, Dove always pushes the boundaries of how women perceive ourselves. I personally love that about them. As the mother of three daughters, I have always tried to instil in them that they are downright gorgeous, and to always value themselves. Positive promotions like Dove do help with that. Having said that, we women aren't just about how we look. We are also about 'how' we are as people. No point in being beautiful if we are nasty. That saying "beauty is as beauty does" comes to mind.

14th April, 2014

I saw that ad recently and I was pretty sure before the ingredients of the patch was revealed that honestly nothing magical was in that patch. I think this was a good campaign and I can see why Fashionista would criticize it since their idea of beauty is based on using whatever products their currently promoting and current trends and a certain body shape rather than being confident as you are without the use of a thousand beauty products, a certain body shape and current fashion trends with Fashionista promotes.

14th April, 2014

I think that maybe for a campaign it could have been a bit rough due to the fact it would be made public and the women involved could have had negative reactions and created more self esteem and anxiety issues.

I really do like this idea though, placebos are used a lot in medications and so on, it's not an unusual concept and it's well known that subjects will often react and display signs their medication is working unaware that is a placebo. The fact these women overcame these anxieties surrounding their appearance or at least made great progress is amazing! they actually did it on their own and that is way better than using a medication to help it and far healthier in my opinion.

14th April, 2014

This ad came up on youtube before the video I had chosen to watch came on. Usually I skip all the ads but this one sounded very interesting so I watched it. I loved how it was nothing at the end, I think there have been a lot of studies on placebo effects and how strong they can be. I think this ad was positive, I love dove's messages and their beauty campaigns.

13th April, 2014

I personally don't think it matters what others (those reporters) think... it is what those women (and every other person) think about themselves! beauty from within regardless of method! It wasn't damaging to their psyche but encouraging. I am all for anything that makes us feel good about ourselves

13th April, 2014

Good old Placebo effect! I think this was a really creative experiment that emphasises how our self-value and confidence is internally driven. Yes it's a PR campaign but I think it's less manipulation and more getting the public to look at women's issues in an out-of-the-box way.

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