Advertising and Branding Timeline - M&S Archive

  • Home
  • About
    • About the Archive
    • Archive Policies
    • Archive Team
    • The M&S and University of Leeds Partnership
  • Contact
  • Visit
    • Plan Your Visit
    • Group Visits
    • Learning Visits
    • Family Visits
    • Community Visits
  • Collection
    • About the Collection
    • Research
    • Reading Room
    • Archive Catalogue
    • Digital Archive
    • Donate to the Collection
  • Discover
    • Timelines
    • Online Exhibitions
    • Films
  • Learning
    • Schools
    • Home Educators
    • Families
    • Higher Education
    • Community
    • Past Projects
  • What’s On
    • Exhibition
    • Events
    • Sparky Saturdays
    • M&S Heritage Trail
    • News

Timelines

Home // Discover // Timelines // Advertising and Branding
Back to all timelines

Advertising and Branding

Download this timeline
1884
1894
1900
1909
1910s
1913
1928
1932
1930s
1930s
1930s
1931
1941
1949
1951
1953
1954
1958
1958
1959
1959
1960
1961
1965
1967
1969
1970
1974
1980s
1988
1990s
2000
2000
2001
2002
2004
2004
2005
2006
2006
2007
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2011
2012
2012
2013
2013
2014
2014
2015
2015
2016
2016
2017
2017
2018
2018
2019
2019
2019
2019
2019
2020
2020
2021
2021
2021
2023
Marks’ Penny Bazaar 1884, Van Jones 1950s
Zoom

1884

Michael Marks opened his first stall at Kirkgate Market in Leeds. The signs he used to advertise his penny price point became well known, stating ‘Don’t ask the price, it’s a penny’.

Marks & Spencer Penny Bazaar, Van Jones 1950s
Zoom

1894

Michael Marks formed a partnership with Thomas Spencer.

The brand name Marks & Spencer was born.

Paper bag, c1903-1905
Zoom

1900

Goods were branded with Marks & Spencer from c1900 and Marks & Spencer Ltd from 1903 onwards.

Early own-brand names including Monster, Welbeck and Marspen were also used on a range of goods.

Customers took their purchases away in paper bags printed with a list of all M&S stores and an illustration of our head office and warehouse on Derby Street, Manchester.

Marks & Spencer's Grand Annual Volume 4, 1912-1913
Zoom

1909

The Advertisement and Publication department was set up, and our first known form of advertising emerged, The Grand Annual.

This was a promotional magazine produced until the First World War. It advertised all sorts of items, including products not sold at M&S, from pharmaceuticals to boot polish.

East Ham store, 1914
Zoom

1910s

M&S started to expand into the south of England and came into competition with other chain stores.

To reinforce our brand we introduced consistent signage and colour schemes, with ‘Originators of the Penny Bazaar’ and ‘Admission Free’ in gold lettering on store fronts.

Marks & Spencer's Grand Annual Volume 4, 1912-1913
Zoom

1913

An advert in the Grand Annual reads ‘The Penny Universal Providers. Value, Variety, Quality, Quantity are the Firm’s Watchwords. Everybody’s requirements catered for at the price of ONE PENNY’.

St Michael trademark, 1928
Zoom

1928

We registered the trademark St Michael, inspired by one of our bestselling lines (St Margaret hosiery made by Corah of Leicester) and named in honour of our founder Michael Marks.

The St Michael brand was given to only our best quality products, made exclusively for M&S.

St Michael was later extended to cover more goods sold in store as we improved the quality of all our lines. By the 1950s all M&S products carried the St Michael branding.

Marks & Spencer magazine, Christmas 1932 
Zoom

1932

Two editions of the Marks & Spencer Magazine were produced. These were customer magazines, sold for 2d, filled with articles and advertising for items available at M&S.

This included St Michael products as well as other brands, like Siro Watches and Cadbury chocolate.

Aspirational colour illustrations showed elegant people in comfortable surroundings.

Paper bag, 1930s
Zoom

1930s

Illustrated paper bags featuring Art Deco designs helped to cultivate our reputation for quality.

Window display of men's shirts, 1937
Zoom

1930s

Window dressing developed into a fine art.

Window displays were a platform for promotion, with key messages being the quality of materials and design of products.

They played such an important role in attracting customers that we would sometimes update displays on a daily basis.

Advert for store opening, 1938
Zoom

1930s

We opened new Super Stores, accompanied by a nationwide newspaper advertising campaign featuring the slogan ‘The Family Store’.

Store décor included posters promoting the M&S values of Trust, Quality and Value and M&S clocks appeared outside our stores.

Advert for new food department, 1930s
Zoom

1931

New food departments were opened with the taglines ‘Fresh supplies daily’ and ‘Finest quality – keenest prices’.

St Michael CC41 labels, 1941
Zoom

1941

During the Second World War very little advertising could be implemented, with store windows covered for black out and paper rationing reducing the size of newspapers.

Much of our wartime clothing carried the Utility Scheme label.

St Michael garment branding, 1940s
Zoom

1949

Our Chairman Simon Marks stated, ‘Our trademark, St Michael, is a guarantee of our standards of value and has become a well-known brand throughout the land’.

By this time the St Michael logo was green and contained within a shield shape.

St Michael branding, 1950s
Zoom

1951

The St Michael logo changed from a simple font to a handwritten style.

St Michael News, October 1953
Zoom

1953

We introduced St Michael News, an in-house newspaper-style staff magazine.

Staff were encouraged to take the magazine home and show new ranges to friends and family.

Many stories focused on new synthetic fabrics and manufacturing techniques that provided convenience and quality for customers.

Fruit creams packaging, 1950s
Zoom

1954

We started to bring food products into the St Michael brand.

It’s thought that the first food product to bear the St Michael branding was Almond Crisp biscuits in 1954.

Advert in Woman Magazine, 1958
Zoom

1958

Our first colour advert outside of St Michael News appeared as a four-page spread in Woman Magazine in May 1958.

Described as an experiment in large scale advertising, the Sales Promotion department estimated that up to 8 million women would see the advert.

St Michael branding on tinned carrots, 1950s
Zoom

1958

All goods sold at M&S now carried the St Michael brand.

St Michael the brand name of Marks & Spencer, 1959
Zoom

1959

The St Michael brand featured prominently on carrier bags and was now descried as ‘the brand name of Marks & Spencer’.

Our advertising stated ‘You can buy St Michael only at Marks and Spencer’.

Fashion Time TV advert, 1960
Zoom

1959

Our first television adverts appeared in 1959, as more customers now would have had television sets in their own homes.

The adverts were seven seconds long, showcasing Tricel womenswear in partnership with Courtalds.

Later that year several longer adverts appeared on regional and national TV, followed by more extensive TV adverts like the 15-minute ‘Fashion Time’ in 1960.

It’s Wool it’s St Michael advert, 1961
Zoom

1960

Cinema adverts were our key form of advertising throughout the 1960s

Our two-minute adverts were often filmed in stores, but we also produced several studio adverts in conjunction with She Magazine.

Our adverts were shown in over 500 cinemas and accompanying images were displayed in store windows.

A is for Acrilan, 1963
Zoom

1961

We started to make jointly produced films focusing on specific fibres.

We worked with the British Nylon Spinners, makers of Bri-Nylon, and with the International Wool Secretariat.

Adverts like On The Town with Acrilan used Broadway choreographers and dancers, and some featured famous singers like Janie Marden.

Still from Carefree Summer, 1965
Zoom

1965

Our advert Carefree Summer won 2nd prize at the 12th Annual International Advertising Film Festival in Cannes.

It was filmed in Portugal, the first time we’d used a foreign location.

Our adverts had Hollywood-style storylines and reportedly received spontaneous applause in cinemas.

Junior Miss dresses, 1960s
Zoom

1967

For the first time, celebrity models promoted M&S in print advertising.

Twiggy made her M&S debut modelling our teen ranges, like Junior Miss (introduced in 1965).

We started to use the phrase ‘99% made in Britain’ across our marketing of St Michael merchandise.

Fashion supplement Spring/Summer, 1969
Zoom

1969

Full-colour seasonal fashion supplements were introduced and distributed with St Michael News, often featuring themed photoshoots set in well-known locations.

Young St Michael leaflet and carrier bag, c1970
Zoom

1970

Our Young St Michael range was introduced, aimed at younger customers.

The brand had its own logo and carrier bags.

TV advert for M&S chicken, c1974
Zoom

1974

M&S food started to gain a higher profile in the 1970s as our TV advertising expanded to encompass our food ranges.

A series of adverts used the slogan ‘Marks & Spencer – we never compromise on quality’ and ‘It’s a pretty good price too’.

Fashion supplement, 1985
Zoom

1980s

We stopped making TV adverts in the 1980s, as very strong sales made expensive TV campaigns unnecessary.

We made greater use of celebrity designers, launching a number of fashion collaborations.

For the first time we advertised in Vogue magazine, reflecting a new focus on high-end fashion.

‘Quality’ and ‘British Made’ continued to be the core messages to our customers.

Marks & Step Aside and Marks & Spicy advert, c1988
Zoom

1988

Print advertising included a series of adverts with the taglines Marks & Step Aside, Marks & Spicy, Marks & Self-Assured, all coupled with the slogan Have you been to Marks & Spencer lately?

Carrier bag, 1990s
Zoom

1990s

The core message to our customers throughout the 1990s was Quality, Value, Service, which featured on advertising, in-store décor and carrier bags.

Autograph marketing, 2000
Zoom

2000

We phased out the St Michael brand, although The St Michael Promise (M&S’ guarantee of high-quality merchandise) was carried forward.

A new logo and visual identity were introduced. We started to develop a range of sub-brands targeted at different groups of customers, starting with Autograph and per una.

Exclusively for Everyone TV advert, 2000
Zoom

2000

We returned to TV advertising for the first time since the 1970s with the ‘I’m normal’ poster and TV campaign.

Linked to a major resizing project, the main message was ‘you’ll be pleased to hear that if you’re not average, you’re normal’ along with the tagline Exclusively for Everyone.

Christmas 2000 also saw an M&S Food TV advert hit the airwaves.

Christmas TV advert, 2001
Zoom

2001

Magic & Sparkle Christmas TV adverts launched with a cast of celebrities, with the Exclusively for Everyone tagline still in use.

Blue Harbour branding, 2002
Zoom

2002

We continued to expand our sub-brands, with Blue Harbour arriving in 2002.

Your M&S branding, 2004
Zoom

2004

We updated our logo and introduced Your M&S across the business.

The simple addition of ‘Your’ reinforced our customer focus through this new branding.

This is not just food... advert, 2004
Zoom

2004

Our famous ‘This is not just food… this is M&S Food’ campaign launched.

One of the most iconic TV adverts from this series featured the Chocolate Melt in the Middle pudding. When this advert first aired, sales of the product increased by 3000%.

What’s Your M&S? TV advert, 2005
Zoom

2005

Twiggy returned to M&S, along with a glamorous line-up of stars including models Erin O’Connor and Noemie Lenoir, and popstar-turned-TV presenter Myleene Klass.

These were our first womenswear TV ads for nearly five years.

Look Behind the Label advert, 2006
Zoom

2006

Our Look Behind the Label campaign across print advertising and store décor featured a number of ethical sourcing and healthy eating messages.

From Your M&S with Love, 2006
Zoom

2006

Our Christmas TV advert starred singer Shirley Bassey in a James Bond-style ad, timed to coincide with the cinema release of Casino Royale – the first Bond film with Daniel Craig in the title role.

Plan A teardrop trailers, 2000s
Zoom

2007

We launched Plan A and publicised it through a dedicated website, press releases on specific Plan A initiatives, carrier bags and print advertisements.

Autograph advert, 2007
Zoom

2007

Pop group Take That starred in our Autograph menswear autumn campaign.

Dine in for Two £10, 2008
Zoom

2008

In May of this year we launched our iconic Dine in For Two promotion.

The price remained at £10 for more than a decade.

Quality Worth Every Penny, 2009
Zoom

2009

For our 125th anniversary our branding used the phrase Quality Worth Every Penny across food and clothing, referencing our Penny Bazaar roots.

TV advert featuring Caroline Quentin, 2010
Zoom

2010

Our food adverts moved away from the ‘This is not just…’ campaign.

We focused on showcasing food at the heart of family life.

Some adverts featured the line, Trust M&S to come up with that.

Only at Your M&S, 2010-11
Zoom

2011

We shifted to the Only at Your M&S tagline, focusing on innovation.

Ads featured singers VV Brown and Dannii Minogue, footballer Jamie Redknapp, models Twiggy, Ana Beatriz Barros and Lisa Snowdon.

Autograph campaign, 2011
Zoom

2011

Model Rosie Huntington-Whiteley and actor Ryan Reynolds fronted the Autumn/Winter 2011 Autograph campaign, while model David Gandy became the face of Collezione.

For Every Woman You Are, 2012
Zoom

2012

We launched a new womenswear campaign with the tagline For Every Woman You Are, featuring women with different looks, aged from their early twenties to mid-eighties.

Simply M&S, 2012
Zoom

2012

Simply M&S, a range of everyday food products and must-have kitchen ingredients that offered M&S quality at great value prices, arrived on store shelves.

Leading Ladies campaign, 2013/14
Zoom

2013

The Meet Britain’s Leading Ladies campaign celebrated 12 inspiring British women from diverse backgrounds and professions.

The campaign was shot by fashion photographer Annie Leibovitz and signalled a reassertion of M&S’ quality and style credentials.

The full line-up for the 2013 campaign was: Nicola Adams – boxer, Monica Ali – Award-winning author, Helen Allen – Nurse of the Year 2011, Darcey Bussell – ballerina, Grace Coddington – Creative Director of US Vogue, Karen Elson – supermodel and singer, Tracey Emin – artist and Professor of Drawing, Ellie Goulding – singer/songwriter, Helen Mirren – actor, Laura Mvula – singer/songwriter, Katie Piper – burns survivor and campaigner, Jasmine Whitbread – CEO of Save the Children.

Magic & Sparkle Christmas gift guide, 2013
Zoom

2013

Our Christmas advert revived the Magic & Sparkle campaign with an Alice in Wonderland-themed advert starring Rosie Huntington-Whiteley, David Gandy and actor Helena Bonham-Carter.

Leading Ladies campaign, 2014
Zoom

2014

Leading Ladies continued in Spring 2014, again shot by Annie Leibovitz, but with a new line-up including actors, a chef and a structural engineer.

The new campaign featured: Emma Thompson – actor, Annie Lennox – singer/songwriter, Rita Ora – singer/songwriter, Baroness Lawrence – campaigner, Alek Wek – supermodel, Rachel Khoo – chef, Lulu Kennedy – designer and Roma Agrawal – structural engineer.

Only M&S logo, 2014
Zoom

2014

For the first time food and clothing were brought under the same Only M&S brand identity.

We also launched our Adventures in Food adverts celebrating the creativity, craftsmanship and passion behind M&S Food.

The Art of Tailoring, 2014
Zoom

2015

Our The Art of… adverts launched in clothing.

This campaign focused on whole product categories and themes across our women’s, men’s, kids’ and home ranges.

M&S Est. 1884 logo, 2015
Zoom

2015

The M&S Est.1884 logo was introduced, reflecting the value that we and our customers place on our unique heritage.

Adventures in Wonderfood, 2016
Zoom

2016

Our Adventures in Wonderfood ads featured on TV and social media and focused on healthy eating.

Christmas with love from Mrs Claus, 2016
Zoom

2016

Our Christmas advert starred Mrs Claus, and was created with customers, putting customer feedback at the heart of our strategy.

M&S World magazine, Feb 2017
Zoom

2017

To help customers feel connected to their local store, our Marketing team began a roll-out of targeted local emails to customers.

The emails included messages with photos of individual store staff.

By June 2018, six million customers had received local ‘store manager’ emails.

Spend it Well, 2017
Zoom

2017

We launched our new campaign Spend it Well.

More than just a tagline, Spend it Well was a call to action, designed to inspire and enable customers to make every moment special by focusing on the experiences, people and things that really matter.

This was the first time we’d united our food and clothing divisions under a single tagline and philosophy.

Holly's Must Haves, 2018
Zoom

2018

We restructured our previously top-down marketing approach in favour of separate clothing and food functions.

We also began working with TV personality Holly Willoughby. The new campaign Holly’s Must Haves initially centred around a 20-piece edit including a sell-out navy boiler suit.

Holly also featured in our Christmas Must-Haves advert, alongside David Gandy. The ad was designed to be mobile-first and was shared across all our channels.

#MyMarksFave, 2018
Zoom

2018

#MyMarksFave, our social media campaign for colleagues to share their favourite food products with customers launched.

We also debuted What’s New at M&S Food, a series of social media films featuring celebrities Amanda Holden, Rochelle Humes, Paddy McGuiness and Emma Willis alongside Jon Jones, M&S Development Chef.

This is not just food..., 2019
Zoom

2019

We reinvented our iconic This is not just food… adverts with a new campaign designed to remind customers that we’re not just about special occasions.

The adverts focused on real-life scenarios with a tongue-in-cheek approach.

M&S Insiders, 2020
Zoom

2019

Our M&S Insiders launched – 12 M&S colleagues were selected from 400 applicants to showcase our style credentials on Instagram.

M&S with Britain's Got Talent, 2020
Zoom

2019

We announced that M&S Food would be the sponsor of Britain’s Got Talent, our first ever headline TV sponsorship deal.

Remarksable Value, 2020
Zoom

2019

November of this year saw the arrival of Re-Marks-able Value, a new way of talking about our great value everyday prices.

Each featured product or range was price benchmarked against key competitors and represents our unrivalled quality and sourcing standards.

Go Jumpers Christmas advert, 2019
Zoom

2019

Our Go Jumpers Christmas advert showcased our knitwear, featured M&S colleagues and went viral on social media. We followed it up with an extra Go Pyjamas advert.

Meanwhile our Christmas Food advert was set in a market and starred our M&S Food celebrity panel and a Welsh school choir.

Start a Denim Love Affair TV advert, 2020
Zoom

2020

We launched our first ever TV ad campaign for our biggest product category – denim.

We sell 15 pairs of jeans every minute, providing every member of the family with the very best denim on the high street.

This campaign encouraged customers to start a #denimloveaffair.

All in this together t-shirt advertising, 2020
Zoom

2020

In the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic, we highlighted our support for NHS charities with our All In This Together branding.

We produced a range of All In This Together t-shirts in aid of NHS Charities Together, and launched our Rainbow Sale, with 10% of purchase prices donated to the NHS charities.

Jaeger, 2021
Zoom

2021

We purchased the Jaeger brand, products and supporting materials as part of our wider Brands at M&S strategy.

The first collection of womenswear launched in October 2021 with a new look and feel for the Jaeger brand.

Brands at M&S launch video, 2021
Zoom

2021

We launched Brands at M&S, with the aim of giving customers even more reasons to shop with us.

The first guest brands were introduced from September 2020 onwards (including Nobody’s Child and Early Learning Centre).

The full launch included many more including Hobbs, Jack and Jones, Joules and Triumph.

Anything but Ordinary billboard, 2021
Zoom

2021

The Anything but Ordinary campaign marks our biggest marketing push for clothing since the start of the pandemic.

After just one month the campaign of TV adverts, billboards, print and digital publications had been seen by over 38.9 million people.

Our YouTube advert had a view-through rate of 65%, well above the 25% industry benchmark.

Menswear campaign, 2023
Zoom

2023

We launched our ‘Anything but Ordinary’ Autumn Menswear campaign – our first standalone menswear campaign since 2015.  ​

Captured against the vibrant city of Manchester, we described the campaign as ‘bold, disruptive and embodying the attitude and style of today’s menswear customer’.

You may also like

A black and white image of a food section.

Food

From covering the basics to making every day delicious – how our food has developed since 1884.

A colour image of an illustration of the Earth.

Corporate Social Responsibility

M&S doing the right thing since 1884.

Colour image of blue packaging for hooks and eyes.

The M&S Story

Discover the remarkable story of Marks & Spencer.

View all our timelines

Be first to hear about our upcoming events

Join the mailing list

Information and links

Location

M&S Archive
Michael Marks Building
University of Leeds
LS2 9LP

Opening hours

The Archive will be closed for the Bank Holiday from Friday 18th, re-opening Tuesday 22nd April
Monday-Friday and second Saturday of every month
10am-4pm
Bank Holidays - closed

Contact us

Email: archive@mands.com

Tel: 0208 7182 800

Social networks

Facebook Twitter

Visit

  • Plan Your Visit
  • Group Visits
  • Learning Visits
  • Family Visits
  • Community Visits

Collection

  • About the Collection
  • Research
  • Reading Room
  • Archive Catalogue
  • Digital Archive
  • Donate to the Collection

Discover

  • Timelines
  • Online Exhibitions
  • Films

Learning

  • Schools
  • Home Educators
  • Families
  • Higher Education
  • Community
  • Past Projects

What's On

  • Exhibition
  • Events
  • Sparky Saturdays
  • M&S Heritage Trail
  • News

About

  • About the Archive
  • Archive Policies
  • Archive Team
  • The M&S and University of Leeds Partnership
Visit England Quality Assured Visitor Attraction

Copyright © 2025 Marks and Spencer plc (UK)

The Registered Office of Marks & Spencer, Marks and Spencer Group plc, Waterside House, 35 North Wharf Road, London, W2 1NW. Telephone: 020 7935 4422. Registered number: 4256886. Place of registration: England and Wales.

Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy | Accessibility | Modern Slavery Statement

Website by Castlegate IT