What Advertising Slogan Has Been Around the Longest?

While driving through the Mark Twain National Forest with Mrs. HeyHomie last weekend, upon entering the forest we noticed a sign with Smokey Bear on it. It said: “Only YOU can prevent forest fires.”

That slogan (not really an advertising slogan, but you get my drift) has been around since as early as the 1970’s, as I remember hearing it when I was a wee lad.

Maxwell House, OTOH, has been using “Good to the last drop” since, IIRC, the 1940’s.

So, can anyone think of an advertising slogan, still in use, that has been around longer?

Well…there is a jingle on local television that goes something like:

“Arvid Benson Furniture
The name you’ve known and trusted
Since 1949.”

As it is a catchy jingle, I like to sing:

“Arvid Benson Furniture
The jingle hasn’t changed
Since 1949.”

In God We Trust

It’s much older than that, since most sources say it was coined by Teddy Roosevelt (though dates vary). In any case, the brand went national in the 1920s using the slogan.

Maybe “Get it here.”

Hello sailor?

How long has the NY Times been using the slogan “All the news that’s fit to print”? Probably since the 19th century.

Me love you long time GI?

I can’t seem to dredge up a cite, but I think Coca-Cola’s been using “Enjoy” practically since they jerked their first soda.

Ivory Soap has been apparently been marketed as “99-44/100% Pure” since 1891.

It depends on what you mean by “advertising slogan”

  • as others have humorously offered, standard come-on lines have been around for a while, but since these are not considered exclusive or protected, I don’t think they fit the question…

  • if you are looking at trademarked/copyrighted sayings, legal protection for such sayings has only been around for 1 - 200 years or less (off the top of my head). An associated question would be what companies and products have been around that long and had a slogan that they have kept in circulation?

    Ivory Soap - P&G - 99 & 44/100% Pure (purely made up, that is, and around since the late 1800’s)
    Morton’s Salt - When it Rains, It Pours - at least since the early 1900’s

    Those are the first two that come to mind, but I am sure there are many, many others.

  • Finally, if the you consider the category to be broader than commercial companies and products, you would have to consider the mottoes of families and kingdoms or other institutions. For example “S.P.Q.R.” (The Senate and People of Rome) was used by the Roman Republic and Empire thousands of years ago and is still understood today, and while not legally protected, per se AFAIK), it is certainly associated exclusively with Rome. I know of Harvard’s “Veritas” (Truth) but would assume that Oxford, Cambridge or earlier learning institutions have similar mottoes. Religious orders and other institutions no doubt have mottoes that are hundreds, if not thousands of years old, etc…

my $.02

PS: I looked up the plural of “Motto” and got both “mottoes” and “mottos” and went with the former…

Do’h - Umbriel - you beat me to the simul-post regarding Ivory!

It’s been a long time since I read any advertising history, but I think Umbriel is right about Ivory Soap. I believe that line is the longest continuously used U.S. advertising slogan.

And I believe “Bib” – the Michelin Man – may be the longest continuously used advertising symbol.

1852 - First advertisement for Smith Brother’s Cough Candy (drops) appears in a Poughkeepsie, New York paper - the two brothers in the illustration are named “Trade” and “Mark.”

1886 - Coca-Cola is invented in Atlanta, Georgia by Dr. John S. Pemberton. Pemberton’s bookkeeper, Frank Robinson, penned the name Coca-Cola in the flowing script that is still used in advertising today.

1896 - J. Walter Thompson Company begins using the Rock of Gibraltar in its advertising for Prudential Insurance Co.

1901 - The Victor Talking Machine Company acquires the American rights to the famous painting of the dog Nipper listening to a phonograph with the caption “His Master’s Voice” and begins using the image in advertisements. RCA, which bought the Victor Company in the 1920s, still uses Nipper in ads.

1904 - The “Campbell’s Kids” are created by Grace Weidersein. These images are still used in Campbell’s Soup advertising with few modifications to the present day.

(Of course, I’m sure there are European ad slogan much older than these!)

Of course, Smokey no longer has his longevity-his slogan was recently changed to “Only you can prevent wildfires.”

What about slogans that don’t have longevity?

I can’t remember the last time I saw a Hooty Owl “Give a hoot, don’t pollute!” commercial.

Whatever happened to those.

The great PSA triumverate of McGruff the Crime Dog, Smokey the Bear and Hooty Owl has been shattered, and the world is a darker place for it.

Woodsy (not Hooty) Owl is still out and about, although he now encourages us to “Lend a hand-care for the land!”

Some whiskey distillers have that beat. “Old Grand Dad” has been marketed since the 1840s.

The bottoms of the sandals of ancient (@ 5000 BC) Sumerian prostitutes (I don’t know if there are any sandals extant; if there were, they probably just got stolen from a museum in Bhagdad) had embossing on the bottom which left the impression of letters in the dirt. They read “Follow me”.

I recall reading about this, and my recollection is that it’s not quite that old. The “99 and 44/100% pure” isn’t “purely made up” – it refers to the modern definition of a “soap” as “the salt of a fatty acid”, and Ivory soap is demonstrably that to better than 99%. I thought the slogan had originated in the early 20th century.