The first radio commercial jingle aired in December 1926, for Wheaties cereal. The Wheaties advertisement, with its lyrical hooks, was seen by its owners as extremely successful. According to one account,
General Mills had seriously planned to end production of Wheaties in 1929 on the basis of poor sales. Soon after the song "Have you tried Wheaties?" aired in
Minnesota, however, sales spiked there. Of the 53,000 cases of Wheaties
breakfast cereal sold, 40,000 were sold in the Twin Cities market. After advertising manager Samuel Chester Gale pointed out that this was the only location where "Have You Tried Wheaties?" was being aired at the time, the success of the jingle was accepted by the company. Encouraged by the results of this new method of advertising, General Mills changed its brand strategy. Instead of dropping the cereal, it purchased nationwide commercial time for the advertisement. The resultant climb in sales single-handedly established the "Wheaties" brand nationwide. After General Mills' success, other companies began to investigate this new method of advertisement. Initially, the jingle circumvented the ban on direct advertising that the
National Broadcasting Company, the dominant broadcasting chain, was trying to maintain at the time. A jingle, it was discovered, could get a brand's name embedded in the heads of potential customers, despite not fitting into the traditional definition of "advertisement" accepted in the late 1920s. In this sense, the rise of the jingle marks a critical milestone in the development of comprehensive marketing, which would become the inclusive interdisciplinary term for the field. A host of American companies—mostly small local businesses—recognized the potential of jingles and began turning to the general public as a means of outsourcing their own jingle development via mail-in contests in the 1950s and, to a lesser extent, in the 1960s. Individuals who emerged triumphant from these contests won prizes of all sizes and varieties, usually dominated by items that the sponsoring company had ready access to provide (e.g. a three-year supply of
Ivory soap, a car, etc.). Submissions would be collected (always accompanied by proof of purchase), scrutinized, scored, presented to controlling boards, and then a winner would be declared.
Contesting developed as a form of
side gig for a small but notable number of lyrical and sharp-witted American housewives, bringing with it an understated brand of feminism that harmonized so well with the housewife vocation that it remained largely unnoticed and undocumented. In
The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio, author Terri Ryan chronicles the adult life of her late mother, virtuosic
contester and jingle-writer
Evelyn Ryan, who used the winnings from hundreds of such contests to effectively support her family of twelve as their primary breadwinner without shortchanging the domestic responsibilities impressed on her by wider society at the time. The art of the jingle reached its peak around the
economic boom of the 1950s. The jingle was used in the advertising of branded products such as breakfast cereals,
candy,
snacks,
soda pop,
tobacco, and
beer. Various
franchises and products aimed at the consumers' self-image, such as
automobiles, personal hygiene products (including
deodorants,
mouthwash,
shampoo, and
toothpaste), and household cleaning products, especially
detergent, also used jingles.
Jingle downturn In August 2016,
The Atlantic reported that in the United States, the once popular jingle was now being replaced by advertisers with a mixture of older and recent
pop music to make their
commercials memorable. In 1998, there were 153 jingles in a sample of 1,279 national commercials; by 2011, the number of jingles had dropped to eight jingles out of 306 commercials. ==Types of jingles==