Bad Idea Central: Toyota Sued After Viral Marketing Attempt Convinced Woman She Was Being Stalked

from the who-comes-up-with-these-things? dept

Lots of companies are aiming to create all kinds of “viral advertising,” and certainly automated “prank calls” that are really ads (often for movies) have become common in the last few years. But that doesn’t do much to excuse Toyota’s behavior. Apparently, the company put together a promotional campaign that allowed friends to freak out their friends, by convincing them they were being stalked. Here’s how Toyota described it:

YourOtherYou is a unique interactive experience enabling consumers to play extravagant pranks. Simply input a little info about a friend (phone, address, etc.) and we’ll then use it, without their knowledge, to freak them out through a series of dynamically personalized phone calls, texts, emails and videos. First, one of five virtual lunatics will contact your friend. They will seem to know them intimately, and tell them that they are driving cross-country to visit. It all goes downhill from there. The Matrix integrates seamlessly into the experience and you can follow the progress of your prank in real-time online. Each piece of the campaign assures that the experience is as Google-proof as possible.

Sound like fun? Not really. Especially not for Amber Duick, who “had difficulty eating, sleeping and going to work” after receiving a bunch of phone calls from this prank, believing that some “lunatic” stranger was on his way from England to see her. At one point, she even received a bill from a hotel that this stranger supposedly “trashed.” Har har. Buy a Toyota.

How does Toyota defend the campaign? By claiming that Duick agreed to it. How, you ask? Well, Toyota sneakily inserts “permission” into a personality test it sends the “victim” of the prank, from the “friend” who initiated it. It’s difficult to see how that kind of agreement stands up in court. Hiding an agreement for something entirely different (and pretty damn creepy) inside the agreement for a personality test from a friend? How is that informed consent?

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Companies: toyota

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Comments on “Bad Idea Central: Toyota Sued After Viral Marketing Attempt Convinced Woman She Was Being Stalked”

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43 Comments
Ima Fish (profile) says:

To me it doesn’t matter whether the agreement was even hidden. I highly doubt it said that,

“I Amber Duick agree that Toyota and all its agents and assigns have the full and legal right to pretend to stalk me.”

What the agreement probably said was that Duick was willing to accept marketing from Toyota. But that certainly didn’t happen here. As you point out, how can this BS sell more Toyotas?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Yeah. Didn’t she know that she could have talked to her doctor about Zoloft®?

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Pitabred (profile) says:

It was an asshole move by Toyota

But I’m not behind the whole lawsuit thing. Her claims don’t hold water… if she really thought she was being stalked, why didn’t she call the police? File a report? Willingly letting that stuff keep happening… it may be just my default “I distrust humanity” viewpoint, but this sounds like she’s just trying to get a deep pockets retirement. Kinda like the jerks that pull in front of you and slam on the brakes to get an insurance settlement.

Anonymous Coward says:

Doesn’t this fit in with the ads that shout at us (being yelled at makes me want to run away, so I mute them), show us something that is disgusting (I turn off Light&Fit ads and forget to come back to that network), have phones ringing subliminally (my This Needs Attention alarm goes off in my head), show us the horrible things that will happen so their product can clean up, and the like?
I think they teach getting the client to say yes to some irrelevant and nonthreatening topic (because saying yes once makes it easier for them to say yes to the purchase) in the same course where they teach that you should instill fear then offer your product to ease the fear. I wonder how buying a Toyota is protection from stalkers.

Alas, just like the 80/20 rule that forgets that the long tail is often what gets the customer in the store in the first place, a lot of marketing is based on unsupported myths.
The preponderance of marketing today seems very much like it came from Darren Stevens trying to cover up something that went horribly wrong for Samantha rather than trying to win customers and keep them.

Anonymous Coward says:

I love Toyotas, and I’ll continue to buy them, but this stinks a bit more of a stupid advertising firm than a company that makes cars. Yes, Toyota is to be reprimanded for hiring the fools that did this and approving of it, but as a company I just don’t think this is something they’d dream up on their own.

Great prank, though, and I’m sure a lot of less paranoid people got laughs out of it before the bad press.

keith (profile) says:

where can i sign up?

Does no one else think this is quite possibly the greatest ad campaign ever? I have at least 5 friends whom this would be absolutely hilarious to ‘sign up’ …. off to Google “Toyota stalk campaign”

Having said that, if there is any liability, shouldn’t there be some on the friend who signed her up in the first place, and not just Toyota? After all, it was her friend who gave them the link/info.

lux (profile) says:

RE: It was an asshole move by Toyota

“it may be just my default “I distrust humanity” viewpoint, but this sounds like she’s just trying to get a deep pockets retirement. Kinda like the jerks that pull in front of you and slam on the brakes to get an insurance settlement.

What’s your wife’s phone number, email and home address? C’mon, it’ll be hilarious, won’t it? Wrong. Get a grip dude, this goes way beyond the line of ‘practical joke’, just like all those shows where they ‘simulate’ people breaking into your house in murdering you (I think the show’s called ‘scare tactics’). They are just exploiting human fear for entertainment, and its extremely shameful.

Nick Tepper says:

The idea was not to sell cars to the victim. It was to sell car’s the friend who set them up by creating the victim/entertainment for them to “watch” virtually for five days as they were terrorized. The victim, in this case, my client Amber Duick, was just a loss leader who they cared nothing about other than to ensure she did not know what was really happening (ie advertising), was terrified, and then was humiliated. That’s the essence of her suit.

Nick Tepper says:

The idea was not to sell cars to the victim. It was to sell car’s the friend who set them up by creating the victim/entertainment for them to “watch” virtually for five days as they were terrorized. The victim, in this case, my client Amber Duick, was just a loss leader who they cared nothing about other than to ensure she did not know what was really happening (ie advertising), was terrified, and then was humiliated. That’s the essence of her suit.

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