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December 10, 2017

“For Man’s Flavor Come to Marlboro Country.” The Marlboro Man and its Advertising Success

“The Marlboro Man is dead” read the morning headline once again. Eric Lawson became the fourth “Marlboro man” in a row to die from a smoking-related disease. Aside from Lawson’s sad death, what made this international news? For two decades, the “Marlboro Woman” had been the marketing image for the filtered cigarette brand Marlboro for the Philip Morris Tobacco Company. That changed in the 1950s. Marlboro came to be associated with more than just “the flapper” of the 1920s, or the “classy lady” of the 1940s. Why limit the brand to women? By replacing the feminine imagery with masculine characters, men might start buying filtered cigarettes; but would they? Would they buy a cigarette that was made for women? In fact, they did, thanks to the new advertising campaign put together in the early 1950s, one of the most successful advertising campaigns in advertising history. This is the story of the Marlboro man.

1930’s Marlboro Advertisement| Courtesy of Advertising Archives

Marlboro was a brand of filtered cigarettes created in 1924 targeting young women consumers. Marlboro cigarettes were marketed as being “safer” due to their filters; they were light cigarettes, “Mild as May,” sold in white boxes, and accompanied by a red cellulose around the filter to hide lipstick stains, which was very appealing to women. The idea of the Marlboro Woman began to crumble, though, when a report was published in the early 1950s, which prompted an initial 40 percent of Americans to agree that cigarettes were the leading cause of lung cancer. In the early 1950s, the Philip Morris Company, makers of Marlboro cigarettes, made the decision to change the image of their Marlboro brand and target a new market, young males, who were concerned about the dangers of smoking unfiltered cigarettes. Philip Morris and other cigarette manufacturers learned a valuable piece of information during the early 50s; male smoking was still popular, but the dangers of getting lung cancer from smoking led many to seeing filtered cigarettes as somewhat healthier than unfiltered. The sales of filtered cigarettes, like the Marlboro brand, increased, while cigarette brands that were unfiltered saw their sales falterA new branding could have many advantages. Philip Morris already had a filtered cigarette, meaning that it was only a matter of repositioning the Marlboro brand to appeal to male customers. Not only did men start to buy these filtered cigarettes, but they did so not completely because of the perceived health benefit. They did so because they came to identify with the new branding images associated with it, namely the image of the Marlboro Man. The new packaging and toughness was also targeted to men, who wanted to protect their cigarettes in rough conditions, along with a flip-top that was designed for smokers to look at while taking out a cigarette. Its new and “improved” look was easily recognizable on TV screens, along with the “Marlboro” brand.1

Joining Philip Morris’s advertising team was Leo Burnett, a former newspaper reporter who had moved to Chicago to open his own advertising agency in 1935. This Chicago-based advertising agency was known for being able to target new audiences and craft ad campaigns that emphasized brand image, focusing on the highly visual qualities of products. While both the Leo Burnett Co. and Philip Morris  gathered their thoughts, knowing that they wanted to shift their consumer focus to men, they came up with the idea of presenting the Marlboro brand, not as a health alternative to non-filtered brands, but as a cigarette especially made for rugged archetypal masculine characters. More specifically, they chose the cowboy character as the best and only vehicle for their campaign.2 They had the focus. Now they needed the man who would become the Marlboro Man.

Clarence Hailey Long, first Marlboro Man | Courtesy of Advertising Archives

The initial Marlboro Man is said to have been inspired by the Life Magazine’s publication of Leonard McCombe’s photo essay featuring Clarence Hailey Long. Long, the foreman of the JA Ranch, was catapulted to national attention in 1949, when McCombe’sseries of photographs on ranching in the American West were published. The Texas cowboy was the first model to appear in a Marlboro advertisement. Long would subsequently be followed by other “Marlboro Man” cowboys over the next decade, including Wayne McLaren, Dick Hammer, and Eric Lawson, along with Andy Armstrong who was the ad agency’s art supervisor. Later, there came others, like the director of sales promotion for Philip Morris, Robert Larking, and from the Leo Burnett ad agency, Lee Stanley and Owen Smith.

Quickly, this Marlboro rebranding became one of the most successful in tobacco advertising, indeed in all of advertising. Its impact on sales was immediate. Within a year, the Marlboro brand went from the bottom-tenth to the top-fourth position in the U.S market. By 1972, Marlboro was America’s most popular cigarette brand, a position it still holds to this day.3

Many now ask why this marketing plan worked so well? Why was it so powerful and why does it continue to be powerful in some markets to this day? Many researchers have found that the Marlboro man brings together at least three powerful psychological drives. The first is its use of archetypes. The cowboy from Marlboro Country is a “Warrior and Traveler,” a unique American vision of what a typical Explorer should look like.4 He is what represents a lone traveler, and what many audiences began to feel attracted to. They wanted to be like the Marlboro Man and experience the Marlboro Country. The second psychological drive is visual semiotics, which is the science that analyzes how a sign brings meaning to a reader or a viewer. From the perspective of the The Marlboro Man as a visual, the viewer sees a universal masculinity and values connected to rugged independence and egoism.5 Along with the drive of liberty, which is what most American white men, who were mostly from the middle-class in the 1950s, sought. Marlboro Country itself symbolized a natural and clean world that was not polluted by issues at the time. It was America’s heartland, overlooking large vistas of “America” along with its terrain, which attracted a wide range of audiences and captured Americans’ imagination.

Marlboro Country Advertisement| Courtesy of Advertising Archives

The tough, self-sufficient and hardworking Marlboro Man was one of the most famous ad campaigns. One of the many commercials shows a man getting off a helicopter, arriving to “Marlboro Country.” The commercial is followed by narration by a man who states how there is “always Time for a Marlboro,” while the package image is featured, the men are lighting their cigarettes and enjoying the scenery, giving the viewers a taste of what it is to be like them and “go to where the flavor is.”

The role of advertising agencies were known to have set far-reaching advertising trends in the 1950’s, like establishing a cultural and economic environment at the time. The traditional media consisted of radio, newspapers, and magazines, which remained vital during the early years of the decade. But later, television became the turning point for many advertisers with national media plans. Throughout this decade, advertising expenditures increased to surprising levels. Advertising agency J. Walter Thompson Co., for example, saw its billings rise from $78 million in 1945 to $172 million in 1955, and by 1960, $260 million.6 This was the decade of rising demand for consumer products, such as clothing, automobiles, refrigerators, and other appliances. Marketers continued to offer the “new and improved” products to maintain that high consumer demand. Such marketing drew on a new science of advertising, as seen in motivational research, demographic targeting, and generational marketing. But one, if the most important, factor in influencing advertising in the 1950s was the growth of TV.

1956 Marlboro Advertisement| Courtesy of Advertising Archives

By 1951, live television network services reached the West Coast via microwave transmitters, which established coast to coast national coverage. At the time, television programs would typically promote the name of the sponsor but not the star; for example, “Hallmark Hall of Fame,” “Texaco Star Theater,” “Colgate Comedy Hour.” “Goodyear TV Playhouse” and “Kraft Television Theater” were just a few of the sponsors who were mentioned. Madison Avenue continued to raise profits from the dramatic increase in TV spending. By 1949, TV spending was $12.3 million; after two years it had grown to $128 million. By 1954, TV had become one of the leading media for advertising, while radio suffered losses, since their audiences moved to TV. By the end of 1960, televisions were owned by 90 percent of households.

1950’s USA Marlboro Magazine |Courtesy of Advertising Archives

During the post World War II period, from 1946 until 1964, the overall meaning of a cigarette in American life underwent a significant transformation. Social acceptability of cigarette smoking was reaching historical high points and the rates of consumption were increasing exponentially. During this time, smoking was “cool” and “glamorous.” Hollywood stars like James Dean and Humphrey Bogart were never seen without one. Screen beauties, such as Audrey Hepburn and Marlene Dietrich, made smoking look sophisticated and sensual. So much so that by the late 1950s, around half of the populations of industrialized nations smoked, because the product was cheap, legal, and socially acceptable.7

Some of Hollywood’s biggest names from the 1950’s were appearing in films with cigarettes. The promotion of cigarettes was seen as a sophisticated and healthy task, almost as if it was created for the acting profession. Cigarette makers have had a long history of getting placement of their product in Hollywood. Films such as Breakfast At Tiffany’s, which is a 1961 film that starred Audrey Hepburn and George Peppard, where Hepburn was constantly shown as a chic, long, black cigarette holder. Many other films portrayed the positive image of smoking, which was seen as an object with symbolism, and an instrument that showed power and class, and ultimately accepted by society.

The Marlboro advertising campaign, created by Leo Burnett Co. and Philip Morris Co., is said to be one of the most brilliant advertising campaigns of all time. They turned the product from the slogan “Mild as May” which targeted a feminine lifestyle, into something ruggedly masculine in a matter of months. There was a time when cigarettes were originally sold as expensive handmade luxury goods for the urban elite, but no matter how you may feel about the tobacco industry, one thing is undeniable: cigarette manufacturers employed the best marketers in the business in the 1950s, making this one of the first and best success stories in the history of branding, never allowing us to forget the Marlboro Man and what he declared, “Come to where the flavor is; come to Marlboro Country.”

  1. Cameron White, John L. Oliffe, and Joan L. Bottorff, “From the physician to the marlboro man: Masculinity, health, and Cigarette Advertising in America 1946–1964,” Men and Masculinities 15, no. 5 (December 2012): 527-531.
  2.  Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, March 2017, s.v. “Leo Burnett.”
  3. James L. Hamilton, “The Demand for Cigarettes: Advertising, the Health Scare, and the Cigarette Advertising Ban,” The Review of Economics and Statistics 54, no. 4 (1972): 401-404.
  4.  Ira Teinowitz, “Philip Morris USA rolls Marlboro Milds to national audience,” Advertising Age 71, no. 10 (June 2000): 5-7.
  5. John P. Pierce, Elizabeth A. Gilpin, and Won S. Choi, “Sharing the blame: smoking experimentation and future smoking-attributable mortality due to Joe Camel and Marlboro advertising and promotions,” Tobacco Control no. 1 (1999): 34-37.
  6. Stepháne Pincas and Marc Loiseau, History of advertising (Hong Kong: Los Angeles, 2008), 24-26.
  7. Linda Kulman, Madison Avenue’s Marlboro Man (American Ingenuity, 2004), 76-82.

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Josselyn Arrieta-Meraz

I am a Marketing major at St. Mary’s University in San Antonio, coming from Austin, Texas. My passion is to help others in need. I love to serve and give back to my community, and to meet new people. I enjoy spending my free time with family and friends and with those that I love.

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Recent Comments

66 comments

  • Tyanne Pearcy

    This article gave great detail on the story to how the well known Marlboro cigarette company and success came about. The most interesting part of this article was the outstanding marketing of this “beneficial” product. This just proves how much marketing can affect the success and a product or not. Also the most concerning part of it all is the fact that they gave false advertising of the benefits of this product and how influential this has become even today.

  • Sienna Guerra

    This is an interesting article because certain things such as a cigarette make a huge impact on today and the people in it. I love how they used business marketing as a face on a scary and tough looking man that can sell the product better. I learned that a cigarette was created by a woman but when the man advertises it, it sold.

  • Donte Joseph

    Initially I had no knowledge of cigarettes alone, but with this article I had learned things such as the fact that cigarettes were marketed primarily to women till they eventually switched to marketing to men is something I would have never guessed. Another piece of information I had not known prior to reading this article is that all the faces of Marlboro had been masculine looking cowboys to convince men that smoking was for “cooler people”. This use of marketing helped Marlboro increase sales and popularity overtime.

  • Gilberto Gomez

    Very informative article. I had no idea that Marlboro cigarettes had been made for women first. It shows how times have changed and how marketing managed to changed how the cigarettes were viewed. Although cigarettes are proven to cause cancer, people still purchase cigarettes making companies millions in profits. I think overall that the Marlboro marketing campaign set the standard for advertising and caused a boom in our economy.

  • Destiny Flores

    Really interesting article! It’s sort of mind blowing that something so physically small could have such a huge impact on things such as our economics, entertainment, and culture. I also found it extremely interesting that these cigarettes that still play a huge part in our culture, were originally created for women but through skillful advertising, made its way to the male consumerism.

  • Suvesh Vasal

    When I see the history of people thinking certain items are beneficial for us but then they end up being harmful it worries me about all the thing that I eat and drink that are “beneficial”. when in reality they might be harmful or have a nil effect on me. Their marketing strategy was amazing. Put a tough looking man on the front and then not so tough men will swarm to the product. very interesting article.

  • I find it absolutely ludicrous that prior to it coming to light that smoking causes lung cancer, cigarettes were marketed as being beneficial to one’s life. I thought this article was very interesting in how you examined every facet of the ad for the Marlboro Man. I had seen this advertisement before, however, you went a step further and dove into the psychology of the ad and how it would have evoked an emotional response from consumers who may have seen it.

  • Peter Coons

    This is a very interesting article on one of pop cultures most impactful brands. I have always known of the Marlboro Man, but I never knew the original history behind the filtered cigarette and its aim towards women. To think that a tiny Styrofoam end piece at the end of a cancer stick would magically reduce the odds of contracting cancer blows my mind, however times were different back then and corporations could get away with a lot.

  • Miranda Alamilla

    As a person who really hates smoking, this article was an interesting read. Although cigarettes were originally made for women, it is undoubtedly noticeable that men have taken over that industry quite quickly. You would think, with all the evidence and research done on how cigarettes are the leading cause if lung cancer, people still go out and buy the little packs anyway. Overall, a great read and excellently put together!

  • Julio Morales

    It truly blows my mind how 40% of the population believed that cigarettes were related to lung cancer and 4 Marlboro men died due to smoking, and still big marketing influenced the lives of many Americans. I will say its pretty impressive how they changed something seen as feminine to masculine. In todays world smoking is no longer seen as sophisticated and is often seen as a lower class habit. This was a good article with a lot of detailed information that really informed me. I never would have known that Marlboro targeted women at first.

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