Air Asia throws another creative punch at rival Tiger Airways

SINGAPORE – Malaysian budget airline Air Asia has caused controversy with a print ad poking fun at Singapore rival Tiger Airways’ recent flight cancellations.

Air Asia throws another creative punch at rival Tiger Airways

The full-page ad which ran in Singapore daily newspapers The Straits Times and The Business Times yesterday, leads, ‘If tigers were meant to fly, they would be born with wings.’

Followed by ‘Guaranteed to fly everyday!’, this is seen as a direct reference to a recent spate of cancellations at Tiger Airways that left passengers stranded and disgruntled.

With the flight disruption blamed on an apparent pilot shortage, Air Asia launched ads stating ‘We have the stripes to fly’ with the pun on stripes referencing both pilots and tigers.

Air Asia’s charismatic CEO Tony Fernandes said the ads were produced in-house from a budget that is two per cent of sales.

Tiger Airways responded with good grace, thanking its rival for paying for the publicity and driving traffic to its website.

Ng Tian It, Lowe's chief creative officer and global creative director, finds the Air Asia ads a refreshing change from the norm in that segment. "Most airline ads tend to be a bit stiff, this definitely brings a chuckle. Sometimes it's good to have a dig at each other, which is fine so long as it's done in a witty way."

JWT's regional executive creative director Tay Guan Hin tends to agree. "With every competitive advertisement it depends upon how much the rivals can roll with the punches. In this case, I think the tagline is witty, and smart in that it is technically true - tigers can't fly."

But Tay advises caution that adverts directly putting down a rival product can be in bad taste, "in which case they reflect badly on the brand that's doing the criticising."

This is not the first time Air Asia has poked fun at another airline. Highlighting the female cabin crew on its Singapore-Kuala Lumpur route, ads read ‘There’s a new girl in town and she’s twice the fun at half the price’, which was seen as a dig at Singapore Airlines icon the 'Singapore Girl'.

Air Asia also pushed boundaries with outdoor ads promoting destinations in Thailand with the tagline, ‘Cheap enough to say Phuket I’ll go.’

Follow us

Top news, insights and analysis every weekday

Sign up for Campaign Bulletins

Related Articles

Just Published

1 hour ago

M&C Saatchi details global rebrand and strategy ...

Rebrand will officially launch in March 2025 as the agency celebrates its 30th anniversary.

5 hours ago

'Measurement is the new currency': OMG APAC's Tony ...

As holding networks consolidate and AI reshapes the industry, Omnicom Media Group's APAC CEO talks about maintaining agency independence, China's future, weathering pitch losses, and why his biggest leadership lessons come far from the boardroom.

7 hours ago

Indonesia's VAT hike raises concerns about consumer ...

Consumer goods companies are preparing for a potential slowdown in sales as price-sensitive consumers reduce non-essential spending.

7 hours ago

Does your brand have the soul to succeed?

After shepherding billion-dollar brands at HP, Mars, and Unilever through an era where AI threatens to make marketing more mechanical than ever, veteran CMO Siew Ting Foo challenges conventional wisdom with a powerful argument: the future belongs to brands that dare to be human.