GoDaddy Steps Away From the Jiggle

The action movie star Jean-Claude Van Damme appears in a new GoDaddy campaign that avoids the raciness of past ads.
A MARKETER whose sexy advertising polarized consumers for years is trying to distance itself even more from its previous provocative approach, as executives seek to strike a balance between being noticed and being castigated.
In a commercial scheduled to begin running on Thursday, GoDaddy, the Internet services company, will recast itself as a helpmate to small-business owners by adopting a new theme for its advertising, âItâs go time.â The commercial, by Deutsch New York, part of the Deutsch division of the Interpublic Group of Companies, features the action movie star Jean-Claude Van Damme playfully embodying the new GoDaddy brand personality by enabling entrepreneurs to meet whatever challenges they face.
In interviews and news releases, GoDaddy executives are describing the new brand personality with phrases like the one a family newspaper would paraphrase as âenabling our customers to kick tail.â But the sassy unparaphrased version is missing from the commercial, which will appear on godaddy.com as well as on television, initially during the NBC coverage of the first game of the N.F.L.âs 2013-14 season.
The changes in GoDaddyâs approach arrive as marketers and consumers debate how far is too far when it comes to language and imagery in mainstream ads. The original GoDaddy brand personality was characterized by buxom, scantily clad women called âGoDaddy Girlsâ; ad copy replete with double entendres, many delivered by the racecar driver Danica Patrick; and online commercials that were racier than the eyebrow-raising television versions. Bob Parsons, the founder of GoDaddy who was then its chief executive, originated and reveled in those tactics for what he called âGoDaddy-esqueâ ads.
Warren Adelman, who took over from Mr. Parsons when GoDaddy came under new ownership in 2011, ended that approach in favor of a tack focused on products and services. In June 2012 he hired Deutsch New York, the companyâs first outside agency, which a month later brought out a commercial that paired the sexy side of GoDaddy with a smart, technically proficient side. The âsmart meets sexyâ idea was reiterated in a spot that ran in February during Super Bowl XLVII, which drew attention for a long kiss between the model Bar Refaeli and a nerdy actor, Jesse Heiman By that time, GoDaddy had another chief executive, Blake Irving, who was even more determined to put the âGoDaddy-esqueâ ads in the past.
âWe got a lot of attention â" we were edgy, funny,â Mr. Irving said in a phone interview, referring to the original brand personality. âWe were also on the edge of inappropriate.â
That affected GoDaddyâs dealings with the online marketplace Etsy, he said, which âhas a contingent of women business owners,â adding that executives at Etsy told him they were âgetting so much pressureâ for doing business with GoDaddy.
There is another way to advertise, Mr. Irving said, that âdoesnât have to push customers away: still edgy, still fun, still entertaining, still irreverentâ but âtalking in a more grown-up way, doing things that are hilarious, memorable and donât polarize.â
The Van Damme campaign is âmeme-able,â he added â" that is, likely to generate positive attention through being shared by consumers in social media.
In the commercial, a baker who needs dough sees on his PC that his business, Benâs Bread Box, has 25 new orders to fill. Suddenly, Mr. Van Damme appears in the kitchen, not as an actor but as a one-man band, playing a peppy tune, performing some of his trademark splits and declaring, âItâs go time.â Motivated, the baker completes kneading the dough for all the orders. On screen, the words âMore business. More ready. Itâs go timeâ appear as Mr. Van Damme whispers: âItâs go time. GoDaddy.â
Greg DiNoto, partner and chief creative officer at Deutsch New York, said: âWe wanted an inspiring line that sounded consistent with the GoDaddy brand. âItâs go timeâ says we support small-business owners, helping them get ready to do battle, ready to step up. Jean-Claude Van Damme is representative of the spirit of this go-getter target audience; he winkingly says, âLetâs do business, letâs kill it.â â
For all the consumers who were turned off by the âGoDaddy-esqueâ ads, there were many hard-core fans who delighted in them. âThose folks who loved GoDaddy in the past and are small-business owners will feel even more understood by GoDaddy,â Mr. DiNoto said. âTheyâll think, âNow GoDaddy is really bringing it, with substantive tools.â â
On the other side of the coin, âwhatever weâve lost in âsexyâ we hope weâve gained in smart and substantial,â he added.
Competitors are watching whether GoDaddy can walk the line between keeping its fans and changing minds among critics. For instance, Anthony Casalena, chief executive of the New York-based hosting service Squarespace, said: âCompanies have a DNA. Itâs difficult to say youâre different from the way you were the past 10 years. Thatâs a challenge for them.â
Mr. Casalena described Squarespace â" which recently introduced a low-key campaign, on television and online, that was created internally â" as a company that didnât need to reset its image.
âThe image you put online is important,â he said. âWe want to create a platform where designers and art directors, people serious about image and branding, align with us.â
Barb Rechterman, executive vice president and chief marketing officer at GoDaddy, said the new campaign would benefit from a decision to âmove some advertising dollars forwardâ into the fourth quarter from next year.
In the first quarter of 2013, the most recent period for which data were available, GoDaddy spent $11.6 million to advertise in major media, the Kantar Media unit of WPP reported; ad spending totaled $34.6 million last year, $35 million in 2011, $31.4 million in 2010 and $22.3 million in 2009.
