The Minneapolis ad agency Fallon made the pitch more than a year ago. Would its new client, gluemaker Loctite, be interested in a first-ever Super Bowl ad?
"We wanted to look at that category differently. Why not do it on the market's biggest stage?" said Chris Lawrence, Fallon's director of account management. "It's all about doing the right thing."
With little hesitation, the Ohio-based maker of Super Glue agreed, even though the $4.5 million price tag for 30 seconds of broadcast time dwarfed its previous advertising budgets for an entire year.
"This is where Loctite can get the level of engagement and conversation that it deserves," said Pierre Tannoux, Loctite marketing director.
But now comes the wait for both Fallon and Loctite.
The Super Bowl ad is in the can, but the stage for the most-watched event on TV is still eight days away.
Jeff Kling, Fallon's chief creative officer, says he feels no pressure as trade journals, newspapers and even the "CBS Morning News" start anticipating winners and losers in the advertising extravaganza that has become almost as big as the game itself.
"It's about making a wonderful spot like we always do but with maybe a longer timeline," Kling said in an interview.