The No-Nudity Playboy Is Doing Well With Advertisers, So Far

As Playboy CEO Scott Flanders tells it, Playboy didn't drop full-frontal nudity because it wanted to appeal to more advertisers. But Mr. Flanders is certainly happy to see that brands are getting behind the new and improved Playboy, now on newsstands.

"The early indications seem quite positive," Mr. Flanders said. Ad pages in the March issue increased 55.5% year-over-year, to just under 42, according to numbers submitted to MPA-The Association of Magazine Media.

Playboy made waves back in October when it announced that it would move away from full-frontal nudity as part of a larger redesign aimed at appealing to more millennial men.

Brands that got an early look at the March issue have been impressed and have committed to advertising in future ones, according to Mr. Flanders. "I thought advertisers might need to see three or four issues before they'd be comfortable that we were very serious with this commitment," he said.

Sensing that the magazine's first non-nude issue would be a "collector's edition," Stoli Vodka, a longtime Playboy advertiser, jumped at the chance to be part of the March issue in a big way.

"We believered it was really, really important for us to have a significant presence," Stoli Brand Director Russell Pareti said.

Stoli also saw a kindred brand spirit in Playboy. "This change for them, to ... cast a wider net with a wider audience, was a really great fit for what we're also looking to do in terms of our consumer target," Mr. Pareti said. "Millennials are also a big part of our recruitment strategy."

Stoli opted for a premium, gatefold advertising spot in the back of the book, designed by The Martin Agency. Its ads allude to Playboy's new no-nudity policy with lines like "Here's to leaving just a little to the imagination."

The goal was to show "a little wit and humor" while also nodding to Playboy's decision "to shake things up," said creative director Neel Williams, VP-creative director at The Martin Agency. "Creatively, from a messaging standpoint, we certainly wanted to applaud that decision and be supportive of it, as a like-minded brand," he said.

Continue to Advertising Age.

THE MARTIN AGENCY

About The Martin Agency

We are a full-service creative agency with a proven ability in leveraging audience and cultural intelligence to build distinctive brands globally. We’re committed to fighting invisibility with ideas that permeate culture, work that drives results for our clients, and a culture our employees are proud of. From creating the beloved GEICO Gecko, to modernizing UPS, a 115-year-old brand, by making them relevant to a new generation of culture-shifters and entrepreneurs, to lighting the internet on fire with Solo Stove’s “Snoop Goes Smokeless” campaign, we’ve been behind some of the most significant brand transformations in history. We're creating steady buzz for brands like Papa Johns, OREO, CarMax, UPS and TIAA, to name a few. And as Ad Age’s Agency of the Year (2023), 2x Fast Company Most Innovative Companies (2023 and 2024) and back-to-back Adweek Agency of the Year (2020 and 2021), our momentum is only building. For more information, visit www.martinagency.com.

Media Contacts:
The Martin Agency | Katherine Sheehan | katherine.sheehan@martinagency.com

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