Marketer: The first playboy cover and use of the playboy logo
"The first cover of Playboy, since there was no advertising to announce the magazine, had to stand out on the newsstands. Magazine distributors insisted white covers could not be sold, so there were none, and so I made our cover white. Advertisers insisted covers be crowded with plugs of type, so I used very few. Photographers promoted an expression, on models and celebrities, of arrogant distain, but our smiling Marilyn Monroe was waving in the photo we bought of her in a ticker-tape parade. I painted the background out and integrated our few cover plugs into the design as 'confetti' surrounding Marilyn. Amid the type-cluttered, color-clogged, smug 'sophistication' of the other covers, this strategy worked.
"As a logo needs the broadest possible use to promote its recognition, I began using ours wherever possible. To familiarize our readers with it, I used it in particular in some way on every cover, making this into a game of sorts - and who can resist a game? At first it was sometimes the rabbit 'mascot,' but increasingly the bunny logo. Throughout the 29 years I was there, we kept our covers graphically daring and mentally engaging but approachable, a sign that we did not take ourselves too seriously - and key to this sense of playfulness and engagement was this game of integrating the logo into each cover design.
"Proof this worked was the steady stream of letters from readers with snapshots of where else they'd found the bunny logo: in clouds, x-rays, shadows - everywhere imaginable. Finally, we received a letter from California with nothing on the envelope but the logo. Ultimate proof that the log's spirit of playfulness was really taken to heart." –Art Paul