Alibi marketing
Alibi marketing and alibi branding are marketing and branding strategies used by companies to circumvent restrictions on advertising certain classes of products by instead advertising an "alibi", which does not directly reference the restricted product but is likely to remind many viewers of the brand. The alibi may be a different product or simply a word or symbol reminiscent of the restricted product. Common advertising restrictions are on tobacco and on alcohol, especially in sports sponsorship, and so these are areas where alibi marketing is also common. Regulators may see alibi marketing as a loophole needing to be cut off by redrafting the restrictive regulations.
Examples of alibis include:
- The Dunhill Links Championship, a golf tournament sponsored from 2001 by Dunhill cigarettes, was sponsored after 2005 by Alfred Dunhill Limited, the parent company which also makes luxury goods.[1] A spokesman for the luxury goods side said "our Dunhill has a lower-case d, while Dunhill the cigarette company has a capital D".[1] In 2006 the tournament was renamed the Alfred Dunhill Links Championship.
- The Évin Law prohibits alcohol advertising on television in France. International sports events hosted there by international federations (IFs) based elsewhere may have sponsorsip deals with alcohol companies, who need to be creative to avail of the IF's opportunity without falling foul of the French law.
- When the European Rugby Champions Cup was branded the "Heineken Cup", it was known in France as the "H Cup".[2]
- At UEFA Euro 2016, sponsor Carlsberg referenced its widely known slogan "probably the best lager in the world" in pitchside hoardings reading "Probably" and "…the best in the world".[3]
- At the 2023 Rugby World Cup, sponsor Asahi Breweries advertised its alcohol free beer, and used other words in the same typeface as that on its Asahi packaging.[4]
- In 1997 Liverpool F.C. used "Probably…" instead of the Carlsberg logo of their shirt sponsor at a televised pre-season friendly in Norway.[5] (In contrast, when Liverpool played Auxerre in 2003, the shirt front was blank.[6])
- Makers of beer, cider, and hard liquors like rum and gin have extended their brands to non-alcoholic equivalents; some critics see this effort as motivated at least in part by alibi marketing for the full-alcohol product.[7]
- The Scuderia Ferrari team in Formula One motor racing was sponsored by Marlboro. After the ban on tobacco sponsorship in 2007, the car's livery continued to have a design reminiscent of the Marlboro packaging, which the team justified on the basis that the colour red was also associated with Ferrari.[8]
See also
References
- ^ a b Donegan, Lawrence (5 October 2005). "No smoke without fire for Dunhill sponsors". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 December 2025.
- ^ "Rugby's relationship with alcohol under the spotlight as Heineken Cup prepares to kick off". The Guardian. 5 October 2009.
- ^ Murray, Rachael; Breton, Magdalena Opazo; Britton, John; Cranwell, Jo; Grant-Braham, Bruce (December 2018). "Carlsberg alibi marketing in the UEFA euro 2016 football finals: implications of Probably inappropriate alcohol advertising". BMC Public Health. 18 (1). doi:10.1186/s12889-018-5449-y.
- ^ Chew, Victoria (16 January 2024). "AB InBev's Olympics deal has rewritten the alcohol sponsorship playbook". The Drum. Carnyx Group. Retrieved 3 December 2025.
- ^ George, Ric (1 August 1997). "Fowler scare takes shine off Reds' show of class". Liverpool Echo. p. 83 – via British Newspaper Archive.
- ^ Aldred, Jessica; Ingle, Sean (12 March 2003). "The Knowledge; Liverpool or Celtic: who Walked Alone first?". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 December 2025.
- ^ Critchlow, Nathan; Moodie, Crawford; Houghton, Frank (August 2023). "Brand sharing between alcoholic drinks and non-alcoholic offerings: a challenge to Ireland's restrictions on alcohol advertising". Irish Journal of Medical Science (1971 -). 192 (4): 1975–1977. doi:10.1007/s11845-022-03161-0.
- ^ Grant-Braham, Bruce; Britton, John (November 2012). "Motor racing, tobacco company sponsorship, barcodes and alibi marketing". Tobacco Control. 21 (6): 529–535. doi:10.1136/tc.2011.043448. ISSN 1468-3318. PMC 3595501.