Wednesday, June 10, 2015

11 Embarrassing Spelling and Grammar Mistakes From Brands

June 10, 2015 at 12:00PM

Spelling_and_Grammar.jpeg

Did you know that Coke makes four times fewer writing mistakes than Pepsi in its posts on LinkedIn? Or that General Motors makes two-and-a-half more writing mistakes than Ford?

Even if you're not keeping score, it's likely that your spelling and grammar mistakes aren't going unnoticed.

While internet slang -- lol, ttyl, wtf -- is changing the way we communicate both online and off, there's still a case to be made for the importance of good spelling and grammar. 

In fact, after studying the LinkedIn profiles of 100 native English-speakers in the consumer packaged goods industry, Grammarly found that those who failed to progress to a director-level position within the first 10 years of their careers made two-and-a-half times as many grammar mistakes as their director-level colleagues.

Still don't understand why people are making such a big fuss over the difference between their and there? We've called up some embarrassing mistakes by companies such as McDonald's and Nike to help illustrate the true cost of spelling and grammar fails. 

11 Spelling and Grammar Fails by Brands

1) Old Navy

Lets_Go_Old_Navy.jpg

Source: Gawker

Apparently someone missed the memo about apostrophes ...

When Old Navy released its "Superfan Nation" collegiate t-shirts back in 2011, it quickly became evident that it could have used a second pair of eyes before moving to production. Talk about a costly mistake. 

2) Mitt Romney

Amercia.jpg

Source: The Huffington Post

There's a lot to be said about this typo featured on the Romney iPhone app, but we think this Twitter user said it best: 

Mitt_Romney_Amercia.png

3) McDonald's 

McDonalds_Anus_Burger_Sign_.png

Source: Go With The Flowski

In an effort to promote its Angus burger, this McDonald's in Hartford, Connecticut, accidentally promoted its anus burger.

Awkward.

Moral of the story? All it takes is one letter to throw off your entire message. 

4) H&M

HM_Genious.jpg

Source: Capital Bay

Yikes.

If Thomas Edison was capable of inventing the phonograph, the motion picture camera, and a little thing called the light bulb, we're certain that H&M should be able to handle the spelling of the word "genius."

5) Verizon Support 

Screen_Shot_2015-06-08_at_9.09.25_AM.png

Source: Twitter

Busted.

Although we commend the Verizon Support team for providing their customers with real-time customer assistance, their good deed was overshadowed by a sneaky spelling error. 

It's a good thing the Grammar Police stepped in to right their wrong before the situation escalated.

6) Miller

Miller_Billboard.jpg

Source: Mascola

What could possibly be worse than making a spelling or grammar mistake on behalf of your brand? Making a billboard-sized mistake on behalf of your brand. 

While this may appear fine at first, a closer look reveals a flip-flopped "t" and "c."

7) Lush 

Lush_Cant.jpg

Source: Twitter

It looks like Lush owes its website visitors a double apology.

While we're willing to forgive the brand for the 404 error (it happens), that misplaced apostrophe is just plain wrong. We cant' even, Lush.

8) Burger King 

Spongebob_Burger_King.jpg

Source: Scottjallen.com

Want to work for SpongeBob?

Word on the street is that he quit his gig at The Krusty Krab and is now hiring managers at Burger King. 

9) Nike

Nike_Grammar_Police.png

Source: Twitter

The Grammar Police strikes again.

This time, Nike Support got caught red-handed for failing to use the proper form of than. We can only hope that this run-in with the fuzz taught the brand a lesson. 

10) Kmart

Kmart_School_Supplies.jpg

Source: theCHIVE

"Spell check on aisle five!"

It looks like Kmart's staff was feeling a little too cool for school when they typed up this sign advertising school "suplies."

While it's certainly an innocent mistake, all it takes is one missing "p" to have every first grader questioning what they learned in class last year. 

11) HubSpot

HubSpot_Spelling.png

"Are your press releases been keeping up?"

Hey, we'll be the first to admit when we make a mistake ... and this was a particularly embarrassing one. Let this serve as reason #573 why you should always double-check your content before posting. 

What's the worst spelling and grammar fail you've ever seen? Share your favorites in the comment section below.

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