Thursday, December 31, 2009

A Digital Ninja in Tel Aviv

A month ago, I attended Cellcom's second media conference. The truth is the main reason I went to the conference was that I wanted to hear Faris Yakob – McCann Ericson's EVP and Chief Technology Strategist speak. Faris turned out to be a self assured and charismatic speaker with an almost magical stage presence…he however is far more modest and just presents himself as a "Digital Ninja".

The subject of the lecture was "How technology is changing the world of advertising". His point was that technology today is everywhere. We all have access to computers, laptops or cellular devices. We consume and produce information all the time and for many of us, the boundaries between the online and offline worlds have blurred to a point where differentiating between the two has become not only impossible, but quite pointless.

These two factors coupled together have generated a collaborative culture where consumers together, through a variety of platform interfaces – are jointly weaving the story of the brand. They do this on whatever platform is available and most comfortable for them to use – but the principle is that all the pieces of narrative produced – contribute to the larger narrative: the brand story. This is what Faris calls "Transmedia storytelling".

But consumers will not contribute to building your brand's narrative if you do not know how to engage them. Faris offers 4 principles of action:

1. The principle of Ubiquity
Make more content. A lot more content. When President Obama ran for President, he produced a slew of clips for YouTube. Naturally, no one person has watched them all. But given those bits of information have already been posted – they can be watched whenever – forever. Hence, when you no longer have a captive audience and you can not compel people to give you their attention, it makes sense to produce much larger quantities of content and make many more things.

2. The principle of Alacrity
Respond faster. Make things faster. Today, thanks to technology, the time it takes us to respond has become significantly shorter. In certain countries, the spread speed of information is so rapid, that response time has come to ache to zero. Therefore, the time it takes us to respond and react to things has become critical. Schweppes understand this and have launched a biweekly print campaign called "Experience Matters "which refers to actual news events and stories.

3. The principle of Utility
Give your consumers things that are functional or helpful or otherwise things they are willing to devote time to. Today brands no longer need mediators or middlemen to communicate with their consumers; they can develop a relationship with them directly. But a relationship between a brand and its consumer will exist only under two conditions: Either the brand offers the consumer something useful or he offers him something he finds of interest – or both. Two good example s of this are Burger King's "Whopper Sacrifice" campaign and Cadbury's amazing "Gorilla" viral.

4. The principle of interactivity
Let consumers play a role. Digital culture is collaborative in nature. People want to be involved and play a role. Allow them to. Example –"Simpsonize me" application allowed people to picture what they would look like as a character in the animated "Simpson" television series..

And finally one other recommendation: Adopt a Fail Whale mentality
Embrace failure. Try many things. Let them run. Some of them will be successful, some of them will fail. From the latter you will actually learn the most. Correct them quickly. Launch them again. Reassess and carry on. One who does not fail, does not learn.

Posted via web from trendspotting's posterous

Digital Advertising Trends For 2010

My favorite: Google flicks the switch on their phone and Collablogs.

Posted via web from trendspotting's posterous

Transmedia Presentation by Gunther Sonnenfeld

Transmedia Development & The New World Model

Posted via email from trendspotting's posterous

Thursday, December 10, 2009

A Day In The Life Of The Internet


The internet is, like, BIG!
This infographic shows just how crazy huge it is and what:
  • 210 billion emails
  • 3 million Flickr images
  • 43 million gigabytes sent by phone on an average day really means.
Amazing.

Posted via email from trendspotting's posterous

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Redscout Presents ‘Spur’ Episode 1: Is Planning Impotent?

Dan Cherry - "ANOMALY": Everyone thinks that the craftsmanship comes in the doing and not in the planning...(but) If you have a point of view on the strategy and on the plan, why the hell wouldn't you be involved in the doing?

 

Posted via web from trendspotting's posterous

Is strategy really the new creative?

I came accross a really great article by Alexander Wipf on the Leo Burnett Frankfurt blog. I think it very much relates to the issues discussed during the Planningness conference in San francisco last month during Adrian Ho and Rob White's work session. I am reblogging it here for your benefit. Hope you enjoy reading this as much as I did.

Recently, say over the last years or so, planning and strategy has gained sex appeal. Lots of clients are all about “insights” these days and seem to have developed quite a hankering for that one inspirational bit of information that can transform business ideas, product ideas, marketing innovation ideas. Oh.. and, I almost forgot: communication ideas. Meanwhile, the agency landscape seems to be filling up with a formerly less commonly heard title: Chief Strategy Officer.

So, understandably, the trade press comes out with articles entitled “Is strategy the new creative?”.
But what does this really mean? I believe a headline like this is a great eyecatcher. But really, it is written that way to make you look. Strategy is not the new creative. It’s simply that the definition of strategy and creative and how both have to work together has changed.

However, what the headline really does, too, is to ignite a conversation. And conversations, or rather making sure that people talk about your brand and brands themselves are part of those conversations is what is actually behind the fact that the definition of strategy and creative has changed.

In a communications landscape where marketers have begun understanding that people aren’t interested in your messages  obviously the old form of creative product, i.e. the delivery of ads, is losing importance. Or, at a minimum, ads need to be complemented with different creative products that provide context-relevant experiences, content and participatory elements alongside before they can be effective again.

Arguably, before strategy and creative were seperated, creative directors or account people did the strategy. Now it looks like everyone has to do strategy and creative. Why?
Having moved from the brand era to the people era has not only increased the need for agencies to offer a different or extended creative product, it also forces agencies to change the way they work to achieve the delivery of idea platforms that work channel-agnostically. Agencies have been offering full-service for decades, but in siloes and all services and creative executions tied back to the might big brand idea.

The most apparent differences of doing creative work now vs before is what happened to team structure and process: the traditional art director / copywriter duo who was responsible for “the big idea,” and represented the creative fulcrum of the agency, now has to live with the fact that the team responsible for creative output just got bigger. In order to deliver idea platforms that work in all channels, it does not suffice to come up with a “communication idea” and then adapt it into channels. You have to have ideas about experiences, content, functionalities, technologies and the brand’s product or service itself. Also, to be creative for those kinds of deliverables you need to do more than call your brand planner for some “consumer insights” about people’s attitudes: you need behavioral insights, channel insights, technology insights, experience insights. As a result, you need more people adept at a lot of different things to get the job done. And yet another result is that you need to completely step away from the linear process of research -> creative -> production. Your process needs to iterative and co-creative, from writing the brief to coming up with little ideas that tie into one idea platform instead of just one big-ass communication idea.

So, in order to accomplish all the above, you need someone to keep provide a bigger sandbox for everyone to play in. And guess who stepped up to the plate for that one? Strategists. Being that “sandbox provider” means that the traditional research and briefing job of a strategist has become much more about actually staging the discovery experience of the whole team and making that experience visceral. In a way, the frame in which an entire team of art directors, copywriters, concept developers, content strategists, social media strategists, interface designers, technologists, motion designers, experience planners, and brand planners tries to solve for a communication-, brand-, business- or product issue has to be staged and stewarded. To me, this doesn’t mean the strategist also has the creative ideas, but it means he provides the environment in which it happens. This means that strategist can’t sit in their office and pump out a creative brief anymore and that’s it. It means that they have to become a part of the creative process itself. And vice versa, creatives being part of the discovery mean they have to think a lot more about insights, as well.

So it doesn’t just look like everyone has to do strategy and creative. This is the way it has to be. In fact, if you do things right, you could also ask “Is creative the new strategy?”

To me it looks like after a long hiatus, you have to get ready for strategy and creative to move in together again. Just don’t let the strategist pick the furniture.

Friday, October 30, 2009

The Planning Rebels

Redscout is launching SPUR, a video series about brands, strategy and innovation. The first five episodes will revolve around the world of planning and wll be hard-talking some of the planning elite but also its rebels and newbies.

The series which starts next Tuesday will address some of the planning industry's most pressing issues: asking questions amongst others, about the planner'' role but also about the tools we should be developing to carry that role out.

Some of the people that will be interviewed i
* Dan Cherry, Managing Partner, Director of Brand Strategy; Anomaly
* Piers Fawkes, Founder; PSFK
* John Gerzema, Chief Insights Officer; Young & Rubicam
* Heidi Hackemer, Senior Planner; BBH
* Gareth Kay, Director of Digital Strategy; Goodby & Silverstein
* Domenico Vitale, Founder; People, Ideas & Culture
* Paul Woolmington, Founding Partner; Naked Communications NY

Here is the scheduled release of the series:

* Tuesday, November 3:
Is Planning Impotent? Overcoming Account Planning’s Identity Crisis
* Tuesday, November 17:
What Makes a Good Planner? Talent Specs and Extra Credit
* Tuesday, December 1:
Are We Just Glorified Researchers? The Myth of the “Voice of the Consumer”
* Tuesday, December 15:
What is the Real Value of Planning? Agency Politics and Client Perceptions
* Tuesday, January 5: What is the Future of Planning? Thinking as Doing

I'm sure the series will be well worth watching so keep tuned. I'll be posting more about this.

Posted via web from trendspotting's posterous

Monday, October 26, 2009

Smart Designs Achieve Friendly UI

Some of the workshops at the last Planningness Conference in San Francisco dealt with product design and designing User Interface friendly applications. To name just a few: "How to (really) design a successful user experience into a product" by Nasahn Sheppard and Nellie Hsu Ling and "How to build a successful web experience? by Posterous' very own Garry Tan.

Bouncing off the ideas and principles of design they put forward: keeping the user interface clean but friendly, making features discoverable and making UI intuitive and effortless , I thought I should share this nugget I found on the net with you.
Basically a redesign of the computer screen and desktop interface using multitouch iphone technology.


10/GUI from C. Miller on Vimeo.

Let me know what you think.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Awesome #Planningness


  
When Mark Lewis invited me to come talk at the San Francisco Planning-ness conference that was held last week, I really didn't know what I was in for. Business conferences in Israel are usually quite general - people come, speak and leave. What you're left with most of the time are some great stories (mostly of successes) and a bunch of additional case studies you can include in your next presentation. So although you may have spent a really interesting afternoon, you ultimately leave feeling cheated: Having come to learn something, but going home still wondering "how the hell do they do it?

 
In this sense, the Planning-ness conference was very different. The whole point was to actually get people to roll up their sleeves, and get dirty. Pick each others brains and build on whatever clever insights and comments were put forth without ruling anything out and with the starting point being all ideas are good and welcome.

 
There were a lot of great workshops to choose from - beginning with "How to design a product", "How to Design a Successful Application", "How to Create Advocacy and Conversation", "How to do Connections Planning in 2009", right down to the amazingly clever Zeus Jones guys: Adrian Ho and Rob White's closing presentation:"How to plan in the 21st Century".

 
They really touched a soft spot: many planning and marketing tools were invented over 40 years ago - way before television was invented and way, way before the internet ever emerged - not to mention social media. Their amazing session revolved around getting people to think about new tools for marketing. So, after a quick preview on Modern Branding,

they asked everyone to call out loud tools for planners that were obsolete and not really useful anymore. The whiteboard filled in less than 5 minutes:

 


 
Rob then split the audience in groups based on month of birth, and asked them to think about a new "tool" that would replace the ones on the board.This is what Rob Perkins and his team came up with: replacing the messaging model with the invention model. The goal being to create brand experiences that surprise and delight.

Workshop
View more documents from Zeus Jones.
This is not the only idea submitted and for those of you who are curious, I suggest you visit the Zeus Jones Blog to watch the other months' ideas as well. Whatever the case, lots of people came away from this session feeling really hyped and inspired and the Planningness guys have promised to start a wiki page on this to keep ideas coming and evolving. Some of the learnings as Adrian and Rob put it:
  1. We’re all pretty clear on the fact that many of the tools we use currently aren’t working
  2. We’re much more interested in dynamic processes than static tools
  3. We want our new tools to be social, to be participatory not just for individuals
  4. We’re looking for our tools to reveal complexity and depth rather than hide it with simple-mindedness
  5. We need tools to plan the company as much as we need tools to plan the customer
  6. We want to learn by doing rather than by thinking and strategizing

 
The difference between this conference and all the others I've been to: this time I've gone home thinking "So that's how they do it!". That's a great feeling, a great thing to be a part of. Can't wait to hear how this evolves and definitely look forward to the next Planning-ness conference.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

SOCIAL MEDIA LIVE STATS API

Liked the dynamics of this social media online engagement counter.
Just thought I'd share it with you.



Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Hard Rock Cafe Wall Rocks!

This is the Rock Wall at the Hard Rock Cafe in Vegas, possibly the most technologically advanced restaurant in the world.
The display wall is amazingly interactive and can accommodate up to 6 users at once.
It literally lets you browse the entire inventory of Hard Rock photo and video memorabilia in real time, and at full resolution.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Confusing Social Media with Media

The relationship between media and social media is like the relationship between egg and eggplant: They share a couple of the same letters, but they are not in the same taxonomy.” – Kevin SlavinArea/Code
This post is an exploration of a quote by Kevin Slavin from the Storytelling Throwdown panel at the CaT conference in 2009. The reason being that I find the comment so insightful and interesting I felt it deserved some increased attention. (video below)
Traditional media is a battle between stories. Where the reader, viewer or listener is already engaged in a story, the main story, the content. And the goal of the advertising is to create an even more interesting story so that the engagement switches focus. It’s a story competition.
In social media we are not engaging in stories, we are engaging in the exchange of ideas. Be that a conversation between friends, or the need to define ones identity or role in a group by sharing something. Social media is not a competition of stories, it’s a competition for the attention to each other.
In social media the relationships aren’t short, superficial, cliched or stereotypical, quite the opposite. People spend more and more time, delving deeper and deeper in into each other, connecting more and more.
This setting is very difficult to displace with storytelling in its conventional sense.What we need are narratives and systems that engage and work within this context of attention between people. Stories that accelerate or facilitate increased exchange of ideas, increased connections.
Our stories need to increase the social fabric between people, understanding the systems and drivers that come in to play when people connect to each other and help them continue strengthening their relationships.
“One way to think about it. It’s like the relationship between media and social media is like the relationship between egg and eggplant. They share just a couple of letters but they’re not in the same taxonomy. That it’s a fundamentally different experience.
And that it used to be when you where storytelling, that what you were competing for attention against where other stories. It’s sort of a story competition.
And the attention we are competing for now is the attention to each other.
That basically what we are doing during the day these days is spending more and more time, deeper and deeper connected to each other. And that’s very difficult to displace through storytelling in the conventional sense of storytelling. And I think its important to figure out how to think about narratives as systems that can engage that, and can sort of work within that type of attention rather than to pull away from that exclusively.”
 

Sunday, September 6, 2009

Posterous is web-anything on steroids

I’ve been studying the socialmediasphere for a few months now. I must have inscribed to every single web-app ages ago but never really got round to really studying it. A few months ago, I decided enough was enough. Working in advertising, there simply was no excuse not to know the ins and outs of social media. So, I started updating my Facebook account (opened way-back-when, when my sister got on my case about it ), reactivated my YouTube account, got onto Twitter and even opened my own blog!!!

But I quickly discovered that updating all of these account was amazingly time consuming and actually hard work. The app I enjoyed most was Twitter and I quicly became a twitterholic, simply because its 140-character-only-microblogging update feature made it easy and uncommitful to post stuff. It allowed fast updates and microglimses into all that was happening on the web and in the world. Enter Posterous, basically web-anything on steroids.

"A dead simple way to put anything online using email.”  All you have to do is email content (a link, text, photo, video, even MP3) to your email address at Posterous and it automatically posts it to your Posterous site – as well as over a dozen other social media platforms that you specify.

For any heavy social media user, Posterous is a huge asset. Forget one off apps that cross post your Tweets on Facebook.  Posterous does that and way, way more – removing the human syndication lift that we all did day in/day out.

Posterous fills a gap we didn’t even realize existed.  Twitter thrived because it helped facilitate personal, microinteractions – reinforcing, rather than competing with, long form blog posts.  Posterous fits nicely in the middle, as Guy Kawasaki said on his Posterous “Holy Kaw!” it’s, “For everything that’s slightly less than a blog post but slightly more than a tweet.”

From a “that’s so simple I can’t believe no one’s done it like that yet” standpoint the email link up is genius.  Email is still the fundamental way we communicate and underpinning of most of our devices.  You may not always be able to access your blogging app, or hop online to craft a post, but 99.99% of the time you have something with you that lets you send a simple email.

Posterous is simple enough that anyone publishing or participating on more than one platform should climb aboard.

Posted via email from trendspotting's posterous

The 4Ps are Dead! Long Live the 4Es

Brian Fetherstonhaugh - OgilvyOne's Chairman & Global CEO gave a great address that became the topic of one of my agency newsletters. The examples I give are a little different, but the rethoric is the same. For those able to read hebrew, here is my newsletter. For those who can't, here is a reproduction of Fetherstonhaugh wonderful and insightful article together with a short youtube video and link to the entire presentation.
Download now or preview on posterous
newsletter-0809.pdf (522 KB)
MANY OF US GREW UP with the Four Ps of Marketing: Product, Place, Price and Promotion. Do you know when the Four Ps of Marketing were invented? In 1960, by Jerome McCarthy. They were made leading-edge by Philip Kotler in his book Principles of Marketing in 1967.
The Four Ps thrived in a different world. It was a wonderful fantasy world. Marketers were king. Product differences lasted. Big, obedient audiences could be reached with big, efficient media.
What is the world of marketing today? The consumer has seized control. Audiences have shattered into fragments and slices. Product differences can last minutes, not years. The new ecosystem is millions and billions of unstructured one-to-one and peer-to-peer conversations.
Marketing is in the hot seat. So many of the tools and assumptions we grew up with are no longer valid. Many marketing leaders around the world got promoted into their jobs because they did two great product launches and three great TV campaigns, and figured out how to work with a few major retailers.
According to a recent study by Spencer Stuart, the average tenure of a CMO is less than 24 months. And only 14 percent of CMOs have been in their positions with the same company for more than three years. A CMO Council 2007 report concludes that only one-third of board members are satisfi ed that their marketing leaders can explain the ROI of marketing.
We need a new framework. And a new tool kit. For starters, we need to throw away the Four Ps and embrace the Four Es:
from Product to Experience
from Place to Everyplace
from Price to Exchange
from Promotion to Evangelism
bf onmind pictures
Left: The Orange Babies campaign offered a simple exchange – in return for a donation, you receive a smile. Center: The Hershey’s store in Times Square has one of the highest sales figures per square foot of any retail space in America. Right: Johnnie Walker’s Personal Digital Assistant engages loyal drinkers when they are on the go.

from product to experience
Classic marketing instructed us to look at “product” features, fi nd a single consumer benefi t, and promote this over and over again to our target audience.
But in a world where most product advantages last less than six months, this strategy is losing relevance. A six-month, product-based advantage is a huge luxury. In financial services, an advantage may last a few weeks. On eBay, you may be special for a few seconds.
My advice is to stop thinking just about your product and start thinking about the full experience. And the fi rst step is to discover the Customer Journey. Do you know how customers shop for your category? Do you know who infl uences their purchases, and where and when their purchases happen? Do you know what happens after they buy?
If you don’t, you cannot understand the end-to-end customer experience. And you cannot know where to focus your precious marketing effort. When you think about the experience, not just the product or the advertising, you can do amazing things.
A few years ago, Hershey’s, an iconic U.S. chocolate company, asked us to put up a billboard ad in New York City’s Times Square. But instead of thinking about products and advertising, we imagined a brand experience and created an entire Hershey’s store for customers who visit Times Square.
The retail space is playful and full of childhood memories, inviting people in for a real-life experience with Hershey’s and its full range of products.
The store is a huge hit. It’s a focal point in Times Square, as well as a retail store with one of the highest sales figures per square foot in America.

from place to everyplace
It used to be that retail was a “place,” but now consumers create their own paths. Marketers need to understand the full range of possibilities in reaching people.
Instead of interrupting people, today we want to “intercept” them and make contact when they are most receptive to engaging with us as they go about their day. Here’s what we are doing about it at Ogilvy. We have created a global network of digital innovation labs, in Singapore, New York, London, Beijing and São Paulo.
We are hiring different kinds of people. Mark Seeger, the leader of our Ogilvy Digital Innovation Lab in Singapore, is an engineer, a product designer who worked on the Apple iPod, and a former rocket scientist at NASA. Not your average agency hire.
Mark and his colleagues invent interesting ways for our clients to connect their brands with their consumers. Recently, Mark and his team invented a virtual personal assistant who lives on a mobile phone – and helps the customers of a liquor brand in Asia enjoy life to the fullest. She tells them about upcoming entertainment promotions, and helps them get reservations and VIP access. She even has a webcam feature to show them which bar is hot and which bar is not.
It’s no longer only about interrupting to grab attention when people are watching television, reading a magazine or visiting a retail location. Today we have to intercept consumers on their turf and on their terms, and that could be anyplace or everyplace.

from price to exchange
“Price” used to be very simple: I give you a product, you give me money and I put it in the cash register.
For many marketers, the focus was on the cost side of the equation: keep costs down so we can keep prices competitive. Marketing leaders were highly aware of the cost of marketing inputs – commercial production, agency compensation, TV airtime and print production. But as Oscar Wilde said, “The cynic knows the price of everything
and the value of nothing.”
Today’s marketing leader needs to be aware of the value of things. In particular, you need to know what it takes for a consumer to give you precious things like their attention, their engagement and their permission.
Ogilvy Amsterdam brought the concept of exchange to life in a campaign for an organization called Orange Babies, which supports African mothers and children who are HIV positive. To raise money at a big trade show, they offered a simple exchange. People who donated money saw the effect immediately – in exchange for their donation, they got a big smile. And Orange Babies earned thousands and thousands of dollars for a great cause.
So, do you understand exchange? Do you know the value of your customers – what they really bring to you in revenue and profi t over their lifetime? What are you willing to offer your consumers in exchange for their attention, their engagement and their permission? The marketer needs to take the first step.

from promotion to evangelism
Through much of marketing’s history, “promotion” was sufficient. A single-minded product benefi t, creatively and persistently promoted, would often be a winning approach.
But increasingly, we are seeing a new and more powerful approach – evangelism. By this I mean creating a mission and brand experience that are so inspiring to consumers that they engage with you – and share their enthusiasm with others. What makes evangelism so powerful today is how it marries the oldest form of persuasion – word of mouth – and the newest – social networking and Web 2.0.
Marketing in a fragmented, multichannel world needs a powerful heart. The key ingredients are emotion and passion. As a marketing leader of the future, you must know how to find the energy and passion in what you are selling.
Which brings me to what we at Ogilvy call the The big ideaL™. Simply stated, a Big Ideal is a universal, enduring theme that a brand stands for. It’s the emotional center. And we have found that the best way to locate this emotional center is to start with a deep understanding of what your brand is really great at – your brand’s best self – and then to connect this to an important cultural truth or trend that is going on in society. This is a place where you will fi nd energy and passion.

bf onmind chart
The Dove brand is over 50 years old. Its heritage was in selling simple and honest beauty products to women. It was successful, but we all believed there was more potential. It was when we linked together the brand’s best self with a cultural truth about women and beauty that the business really took off.
It started with a research insight: after decades of stereotyping by the fashion and beauty industries, global research revealed that only two percent of women believe they are beautiful. The leaders of Dove took a different view – women’s beauty today is much more diverse in age and size and color. Real beauty is what matters.
And so Dove’s Big Ideal was articulated as: “Dove believes the world would be a better place if women were allowed to feel good about themselves.”
Rather than just tell women its theory, Dove decided to engage women around the world in a debate. And so the Campaign for Real Beauty was born. It started with a website and a public relations campaign. Women were invited to join the debate, and millions did. One Dove viral video, Evolution, achieved such astonishing consumer sharing and free media support that it has been seen by an estimated 500 million viewers. And the Campaign for Real Beauty has helped drive Dove sales to record levels.
So it’s time for marketing to move on. Retool. Evolve.
EXPERIENCE Discover and map out the full Customer Journey on your own brand – in your own country.
EVERYPLACE
Develop your knowledge of new media and channels the way a chef masters new ingredients. Try new things – do something that doesn’t start with TV or print.
EXCHANGE Appreciate the value of things, not just the cost. Start by calculating the value of your customers – and what their attention, engagement and permission are worth to you.
EVANGELISM Find the passion and emotion in your brand. Inspire your customers and employees with your passion.

Posted via email from trendspotting's posterous

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Not your regular "Coming Soon" Page

Remember how everyone use to have under construction / coming soon pages with the little man digging… Well times have changed (obviously) and everyone moved away from that to staging sites among other things. But today I came across perhaps the best coming soon page I’ve ever seen, on the Henderson Bas website!

Not only did it let me know they must be building an amazing new site, but the “coming soon” page was so interesting that I actually explored all its elements and it didn’t for a moment feel like a boring coming soon page.

I can’t say that everyone should start putting up coming soon pages just to have fun, but this might actually just be the best one I’ve seen to date! Nice work Henderson Bas, I’m now eagerly awaiting your new site (which better be good!). Click here to check out the website.
via DigitalBuzz.com

Friday, June 26, 2009

The Hierarchy of Digital Collaboration


Digital technology is changing our world and advertising as we knew it may be a thing of the past.

Brands today need to offer consumers more than just a one-dimensional message. They need to offer the consumer an experience that is engaging. An experience that involves the consumer without pushing itself onto the consumer. The name of the game is positioning your brand so that it fits seamlessly into the consumer's life.

Some brands have understood that message and are implementing it. Others are just beginning to understand how the world has changed. They will either have to catch up or suffer the fate of brands that are no longer relevant: redundancy.

Clay Shirky outlines the three main modes of digital collaboration, in order of difficulty, they are: Sharing, Cooperation, and Collective Action.

I have no doubt that in the next year we're going to see many more brands starting to think about these challenges. The question once we've brought people together (through Twitter or Facebook) around a shared interest: How can we help them to take action?

The answer: As Henry Jenkins likes to say, you need to both bring people together and give them something to do.

John Hunt: Brands are defined not by ads, but by the ideas (Part 2)

3. It’s not my idea, it’s our idea – John Hunt explains how big egos suffocate creativity and why ideas benefit from being shared.



4. Your brain needs room to breathe. In the last of four short films, Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt describes how a relaxed environment can lead to greater creativity.

Recession: 5 Dominating Advertising Approaches

Here is a really nice short presentation about advertising
in recession.

The truth is I did quite extensive research about advertising in recession and the long and short of it is that it actually pays to keep advertising in a recession.

In fact brands that actually increase their adspend may find they boost themselves so far ahead of the competition, it may take competing brands up to 6 years to close the gap formed.

Other brands like Kellogg's, made such a leap during recession it left their fiercest competitor, 'Post cereals" biting the dust. "Post" has never regained it's #1 slot since.

What ever the case, advertising should be seen as a time of opportunity. A time for brands to move ahead and create more meaningful and positive connections with their consumers.

Tali Weiss' presentation is not only concise and to the point, but also well up to date. Most clients are not interested in history; they want to know how their competitors and other big brands are reacting and handling the recession issue.





View more presentations from Taly Weiss.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

John Hunt: Brands are defined not by ads, but by the ideas (Part 1)

In a series of four short films, TBWA Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt answers questions about creativity, disruption and media arts. Prepare for inspiring thoughts about instinct, sharing, humour – and coat hangers.

1. Brands are defined not by ads, but by the ideas behind them. In the first of four films, Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt shares his definition of the ‘coat hanger’ idea:


2. What does a big idea look like? In our n ext fi lm, John Hunt tells us how to spot those vital signs!

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

This is my first post

And these are the first lines of my blog