E-Trade talking baby quits during ad. Will retire.

E-Trade talking baby campaign comes to an end after highly visible six-year run. In new ad, E-Trade baby says he's 'done' after getting upstaged by a singing cat. 

In an ad for the 2010 Super Bowl, the E-Trade talking baby shows how online investing is so easy even a baby can do it. But E-Trade's new chief executive is dumping the iconic baby and taking a new direction in marketing.

E-Trade/AP/File

March 22, 2014

The E-Trade baby will finally stop talking.

In the investor site's new ad, the baby — who looks like a harmless, adorable tot but talks like a character out of "The Wolf of Wall Street" — is upstaged by a cat named Beanie that sings. The tot quits in disgust at the end of the ad.

"That's it, I'm done. I'm out of here. Amateurs," the baby says in the ad. E-Trade confirmed it is "retiring" the baby and will go in a different direction with its next ads.

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E-Trade began its "talking baby" campaign in 2008 during the Super Bowl, at a time when online investing was not as common. Having a talking baby trade stocks was a way to show people that E-Trade's investing services were so simple even a baby could make money trading stock on the site.

"It served its purpose when it first launched, to make it seem like anyone could trade online," said branding expert Allen Adamson, managing director of the New York office of branding firm Landor Associates. "But now online trading is so common the baby has lost its mission."

E-Trade's management has also changed. The company named banking industry veteran Paul Idzik as CEO in January 2013, and he has signaled a need for a new direction in marketing, replacing the company's chief marketing officer last summer. The company also switched ad agencies from Grey to Ogilvy & Mather.

E-Trade had created new talking baby spots for each Super Bowl since 2008, but sat out the big game this year.

There's no word on what the New York company's next marketing campaign will be, but Landor's Adamson said the talking baby will be a tough act to follow.

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"It's an advertising icon so it will be hard to follow that with something as memorable," he said.