Next up is TBWA, discussing the Nissan Qashqai work.
Enthusiasm > Pain !
Nissan wanted to rival VW Golf in terms of sales and perception, which involved needing 80% of sales coming from people who don’t normally have any association with Nissan.
Objectives: Make Qashqai a household name, create interest, build intrigue and engage for long launch period.
As TBWA rightly point out, the name is odd, yet it worked for the Nintendo Wii… it’s also harder to make puns about the word Qashqai!
They came up with a fictitious urban sport of Qashqai, with rules, ads, history, galleries etc. Not an easy task they say, but it actually became fun. The aim was to make the content the media, not about buying media.
Difficulty in tying it all together, what with being a “traditional” agency (eurgh…).
Made how to guide – rule book, including one for each country.
When people started to point out it was fake (of course..) they started to join in, such as whether things were mathematically possible.
The campaign does appear to be a good example of how big agencies can work together; with 12 involved in this case.
Results: Gave Nissan employees pride in the car, improved the profile of Nissan Europe within the company. Awareness / views / sales a lot above expectation.
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Future Marketing Summit Day Two - Part 2
Mike Mathieson and the other guy whose name is not in my booklet – the founders of Cake talking about entertainment insights.
Firstly, I absolutely love the fact that Cake was names after the Cake episode of Brass Eye. They also showed some interesting examples of their work.
They talked about the Internet as a social transformer, about entertainment as an ice breaker; and about how focus is moving towards shared experiences.
They showed some good examples, including work for Motorola and Nintendo Wii (hurrah!). They seem to be very good at creating attention and press coverage gaining events… but the question for me is, how good are they outside their safety zone, which appears to be mostly music?
Firstly, I absolutely love the fact that Cake was names after the Cake episode of Brass Eye. They also showed some interesting examples of their work.
They talked about the Internet as a social transformer, about entertainment as an ice breaker; and about how focus is moving towards shared experiences.
They showed some good examples, including work for Motorola and Nintendo Wii (hurrah!). They seem to be very good at creating attention and press coverage gaining events… but the question for me is, how good are they outside their safety zone, which appears to be mostly music?
Future Marketing Summit Day Two
The first item of the day was a talk from Mike Bennett, Creative Director of Digit.
He spoke about the importance of moments, what happens at the point the customer meets your brand or product. Emphasising that communication is about people not technology.
Moments of interaction matter just as much as a big idea or strategy.
The battle of form and function vs the experience, with the good example of the iPod. The wheel is not the most useful way of navigating the system, but it provides a great experience.
A great point was about websites not being as lateral as people think they, most people search – find – view – and go.
Another good point is that digital is not just about the office or indoors on your pc.
He also spoke of how flawed manuals are, people don’t read them; maybe they could follow the route of video games, taking you through the product gradually.
He spoke about the importance of moments, what happens at the point the customer meets your brand or product. Emphasising that communication is about people not technology.
Moments of interaction matter just as much as a big idea or strategy.
The battle of form and function vs the experience, with the good example of the iPod. The wheel is not the most useful way of navigating the system, but it provides a great experience.
A great point was about websites not being as lateral as people think they, most people search – find – view – and go.
Another good point is that digital is not just about the office or indoors on your pc.
He also spoke of how flawed manuals are, people don’t read them; maybe they could follow the route of video games, taking you through the product gradually.
Future Marketing Summit Day One - Part 2
The first presentation of the day was from Kevin Roberts – CEO Saatchi and Saatchi worldwide; discussing the topic of Sisomo (Sight Sound and Motion).
Here are the main points of his talk:
Retailer and consumers are now the boss, power has shifted away from the brands.
Consumers are ahead of the industry, they know what they want; the only people confused are clients, who are terrified of this new world, as they cant quantify it. But everything that has gone before is irrelevant.
TV is not going to vanish, and mediums will not replace each other, but we will live in an “and” environment, where all mediums exist side by side.
People are driven by emotion, and we need to use stories and storytelling to create ‘Love and Respect’ and ‘Loyalty Beyond Reason”.
Return on Investment no longer matters, things are now about Return on Involvement.
The world and media is changing so fast that the latest trends have come and gone before research figures them out.
---------------------------------------------
The second event of the day was a discussion panel on the topic of Reality Check, featuring among others; John Shaw (Planning Director at Ogilvy UK) and Russell Davies.
The main topics here were:
Have consumers always owned the brand, with a great example about how Camra (The Campaign for Real Ale) stopped Watneys brewery from limiting the choice of beers in their pubs.
A quote from Russell on the topic of the 80/20 rule (80 percent of everything is crap): “The Business Model for Crap is Going Away”
There was a lot of talk on User Generated Content, while much of the things on there may be ‘rubbish’, they are usually all good to the circle of three or four friends who they are made for.
Are customers recognising that brands are evolving in terms of their ethics and responsibilities? The seeming disappearance of the anti-brand movement of a few years ago seems to show that. But also, many brands have started to place much more importance on ethics.
-------------------------------------
The next discussion was on Design, including Ben of the Design Conspiracy.
They spoke about how design should be important through everything, that designers often have difficulty talking and explaining things to clients, and those who can move between disciplines will be the winners of the future.
A good topic was how most agencies fail to understand how to take the feeling of ads into a 3d space, with the example of the Hersheys store in Manhattan.
Finally, a good comment; if Jonathan Ives was announced as the new design head of GM (General Motors) their shares would rocket.
Very true.
-----------------------------------------
The two afternoon panels were on Technology and Delivery. The first being chaired by Richard Huntingdon, and the latter by George Bryant, head of planning at AMV BBDO.
After managing to bring old pictures of Donald Rumsfeld into the talk, and not being able to resist talking about Dirt is Good again; the panel spoke:
Future proofing brands was a major topic, especially about brands in places like myspace. How these communities have rules and etiquette, and to be accepted brands need to remember that.
Interaction by its very nature is 2 way, and brands need to remember that the viral model is not about selling. Its not the same as making a tv ad.
The time has come to abandon demographics, most people agrees that they are outdated and do not represent people in a relevant way anymore.
Also, there was the battle between the “BIG idea” vs “An ideal with lots of little ideas under it”. This topic was touched on again later…
The Delivery panel spoke again about how useless demographics now are, how they don’t show any understanding of people.
We listen, but do we understand?
Honesty is now a pre-requisite. If you are not honest you will be found out, with communication so quick and simple, you can no longer hide behind falsehoods.
People don’t trust big brands anymore. With Innocent Drinks growing as such a big rate, are they risking being seen as a big brand, and then end up facing a backlash?
----------------------------------
There was also an interesting talk by Justin Bovington of Rivers Run Red about how brands are getting involved in virtual worlds, particularly Second Life.
Its not something I know a great deal about, but with some big clients like Vodafone and Adidas/Reebok, the online virtual world appears to be the next big thing (which sadly usually means its about to be replaced with something else).
The use of Second Life areas to encourage brand communication between brand and consumer is also a very interesting area, with some good examples, such as being able to choose the shoe colour of your avatar, then buy the shoes in real life through the virtual world.
[I will update with videos and pictures once I return home after day 2]
Im highly enjoying this event so far, please let me know what you think of the topics discussed. Is this the way marketing should be heading, and are these the right topics?
Here are the main points of his talk:
Retailer and consumers are now the boss, power has shifted away from the brands.
Consumers are ahead of the industry, they know what they want; the only people confused are clients, who are terrified of this new world, as they cant quantify it. But everything that has gone before is irrelevant.
TV is not going to vanish, and mediums will not replace each other, but we will live in an “and” environment, where all mediums exist side by side.
People are driven by emotion, and we need to use stories and storytelling to create ‘Love and Respect’ and ‘Loyalty Beyond Reason”.
Return on Investment no longer matters, things are now about Return on Involvement.
The world and media is changing so fast that the latest trends have come and gone before research figures them out.
---------------------------------------------
The second event of the day was a discussion panel on the topic of Reality Check, featuring among others; John Shaw (Planning Director at Ogilvy UK) and Russell Davies.
The main topics here were:
Have consumers always owned the brand, with a great example about how Camra (The Campaign for Real Ale) stopped Watneys brewery from limiting the choice of beers in their pubs.
A quote from Russell on the topic of the 80/20 rule (80 percent of everything is crap): “The Business Model for Crap is Going Away”
There was a lot of talk on User Generated Content, while much of the things on there may be ‘rubbish’, they are usually all good to the circle of three or four friends who they are made for.
Are customers recognising that brands are evolving in terms of their ethics and responsibilities? The seeming disappearance of the anti-brand movement of a few years ago seems to show that. But also, many brands have started to place much more importance on ethics.
-------------------------------------
The next discussion was on Design, including Ben of the Design Conspiracy.
They spoke about how design should be important through everything, that designers often have difficulty talking and explaining things to clients, and those who can move between disciplines will be the winners of the future.
A good topic was how most agencies fail to understand how to take the feeling of ads into a 3d space, with the example of the Hersheys store in Manhattan.
Finally, a good comment; if Jonathan Ives was announced as the new design head of GM (General Motors) their shares would rocket.
Very true.
-----------------------------------------
The two afternoon panels were on Technology and Delivery. The first being chaired by Richard Huntingdon, and the latter by George Bryant, head of planning at AMV BBDO.
After managing to bring old pictures of Donald Rumsfeld into the talk, and not being able to resist talking about Dirt is Good again; the panel spoke:
Future proofing brands was a major topic, especially about brands in places like myspace. How these communities have rules and etiquette, and to be accepted brands need to remember that.
Interaction by its very nature is 2 way, and brands need to remember that the viral model is not about selling. Its not the same as making a tv ad.
The time has come to abandon demographics, most people agrees that they are outdated and do not represent people in a relevant way anymore.
Also, there was the battle between the “BIG idea” vs “An ideal with lots of little ideas under it”. This topic was touched on again later…
The Delivery panel spoke again about how useless demographics now are, how they don’t show any understanding of people.
We listen, but do we understand?
Honesty is now a pre-requisite. If you are not honest you will be found out, with communication so quick and simple, you can no longer hide behind falsehoods.
People don’t trust big brands anymore. With Innocent Drinks growing as such a big rate, are they risking being seen as a big brand, and then end up facing a backlash?
----------------------------------
There was also an interesting talk by Justin Bovington of Rivers Run Red about how brands are getting involved in virtual worlds, particularly Second Life.
Its not something I know a great deal about, but with some big clients like Vodafone and Adidas/Reebok, the online virtual world appears to be the next big thing (which sadly usually means its about to be replaced with something else).
The use of Second Life areas to encourage brand communication between brand and consumer is also a very interesting area, with some good examples, such as being able to choose the shoe colour of your avatar, then buy the shoes in real life through the virtual world.
[I will update with videos and pictures once I return home after day 2]
Im highly enjoying this event so far, please let me know what you think of the topics discussed. Is this the way marketing should be heading, and are these the right topics?
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Future Marketing Summit Day One
Hi! After bashing my dads laptop (metaphorically dad, dont worry), I can finally post about todays event. I will update on the mornings events later, but here is the details of the first talk of the afternoon:
The first part of the afternoon session was with Tim Ashton – Founder of Antidote.
After taking part in the earlier design conference Tim talked about “A Fresh Perspective”. Here are some of the key points of his talk:
Choosing ideas that people want to spend time with rather than interrupting things that people are interested in. Simple big ideas are more important than ever before. This is something that has been discussed a lot on blog’s recently.
He talks about forgetting the idea of 360, bringing ideas in across channels.
Content is everything, no ideas hierarchy.
Changing the team, creative teams should mean more than just copywriting and art directing. They should embrace collaboration. Multi skilled teams, they should include a planner and a comms planner.
Bored of “headline pun” and “coincidence visual ads, everything starting to feel the same. This might cause small tremors along most teams who work on car ads. Small car with big features anyone?
Design is a crucial opportunity to differentiate. Not enough design skills in ad agencies, and probably visa-versa.
So much bad design about. (Really? I hadn’t noticed, though that may be the point…)
The first part of the afternoon session was with Tim Ashton – Founder of Antidote.
After taking part in the earlier design conference Tim talked about “A Fresh Perspective”. Here are some of the key points of his talk:
Choosing ideas that people want to spend time with rather than interrupting things that people are interested in. Simple big ideas are more important than ever before. This is something that has been discussed a lot on blog’s recently.
He talks about forgetting the idea of 360, bringing ideas in across channels.
Content is everything, no ideas hierarchy.
Changing the team, creative teams should mean more than just copywriting and art directing. They should embrace collaboration. Multi skilled teams, they should include a planner and a comms planner.
Bored of “headline pun” and “coincidence visual ads, everything starting to feel the same. This might cause small tremors along most teams who work on car ads. Small car with big features anyone?
Design is a crucial opportunity to differentiate. Not enough design skills in ad agencies, and probably visa-versa.
So much bad design about. (Really? I hadn’t noticed, though that may be the point…)
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Microogle or Goosoft
Google, are they turning into the new Microsoft?
When I first started using google (I was the first person I know to do so) it had a wonderful brand personality (The Goooooooogle images were one great touch). It was renowned for being a great tool designed by students, which made searching so much easier.
However now I worry that they are simply turning into the next conglomorate. They produce lots of useful consumer tools, but they appear to be fleecing businesses for all they can get.
The google ad words system, whereby businesses pay to appear on search results is the big point here. Their new system has just appeared which pushes the already massive costs of using the system even higher under the guise of improving results for consumers...but it is most effective at raising costs.
Google are literally printing money with ad words, some terms make them over £10 per click; with up to 10 people advertising on that one term. Yet:
Google know a large number of their clicks come from competitors clicking terms to raise other competitors costs. But they tend to ignore it.
They allow dodgy ads on terms. Including those which quite literally steal chunks of other sites to make money. Helping consumers?
For the particular terms we use, we currently find other search engines to be upto a quarter of the cost for the same results!
Google know they have so many visitors they can keep raising costs as much as they like; but in doing so they are seriously risking their brand image. I hope they see sense soon.
[Ironic of course that Blogger is owned by google...]
When I first started using google (I was the first person I know to do so) it had a wonderful brand personality (The Goooooooogle images were one great touch). It was renowned for being a great tool designed by students, which made searching so much easier.
However now I worry that they are simply turning into the next conglomorate. They produce lots of useful consumer tools, but they appear to be fleecing businesses for all they can get.
The google ad words system, whereby businesses pay to appear on search results is the big point here. Their new system has just appeared which pushes the already massive costs of using the system even higher under the guise of improving results for consumers...but it is most effective at raising costs.
Google are literally printing money with ad words, some terms make them over £10 per click; with up to 10 people advertising on that one term. Yet:
Google know a large number of their clicks come from competitors clicking terms to raise other competitors costs. But they tend to ignore it.
They allow dodgy ads on terms. Including those which quite literally steal chunks of other sites to make money. Helping consumers?
For the particular terms we use, we currently find other search engines to be upto a quarter of the cost for the same results!
Google know they have so many visitors they can keep raising costs as much as they like; but in doing so they are seriously risking their brand image. I hope they see sense soon.
[Ironic of course that Blogger is owned by google...]
Wednesday, March 14, 2007
Getting Excited!
I am very much looking forward to the Future Marketing Summit, as it would normally be impossible for me to attend something with so many intelligent people talking about ads/marketing/design/etc.
I asked a little while ago for ideas as to what people think the Future Marketing Summit should be talking about, and here are (most of) the answers I got:
I asked a little while ago for ideas as to what people think the Future Marketing Summit should be talking about, and here are (most of) the answers I got:
- "what people think about Big Ideas v a collection of little ones.
- Whatisface was on about this in Campaign, defending the Big Idea - but most of the examples he used were brands that have a long history, back into the old days of messaging."
- With such product parity, do people think Brand Advertising is MORE or LESS relevant in marketing today?
- Is the future of brand growth, product led?
- Will cause marketing become a core driver for brand differentiation/growth?
- Is brand activation a fad or is it here to stay?
- Why is creativity not so highly valued as media efficiency?
- Who are the future powerbrokers of business success? [ie: The retail trade now have the power over the Coca-Cola's of the World which is radically different from past times]
- Is communication about selling or leaving a positive impression on consumers?
- How much has innovation got to play in brand success?
- What is the real power of communicating on the net?
- Will the impact of copywriting on the public change the importance of creativity in an age where we need to keep doing more to interest people...?
- Why are their not enough bald men in advertising when there are so many shiny headed planners?
Saturday, March 10, 2007
Mr Campbells Alter Ego?
I am an avid fan of Charlie Brookers Screenwipe, a brilliant show in which he basically reviews and slags off the tv industry in a very "you tube" format.
Its informative, witty and sometimes brilliantly offensive. This week he turned his attention to the biggest cocks in advertising, and guess what, he is spot on.
Hitting the nail on the head with the awful Kellogs ad with Ray Winstone, and of course Coke Zero.
Geez, I cant even say Coke Zero without wanting to type PRODUCT SHOT NOW!...gah.
Rob Campbell in disguise maybe?
(oh and thanks to Scamp for the link to the vid, I was struggling to find it!)
Its informative, witty and sometimes brilliantly offensive. This week he turned his attention to the biggest cocks in advertising, and guess what, he is spot on.
Hitting the nail on the head with the awful Kellogs ad with Ray Winstone, and of course Coke Zero.
Geez, I cant even say Coke Zero without wanting to type PRODUCT SHOT NOW!...gah.
Rob Campbell in disguise maybe?
(oh and thanks to Scamp for the link to the vid, I was struggling to find it!)
Tuesday, March 06, 2007
Two Non-ad Updates
Just because one thing made me happy, and one pissed me off!
1. Im engaged! Yes, Ad Pit Rob is officially off the market for good! :D
2. Daily Express readers...are you not fed up with them putting Lady Diana on the cover every week despite the fact she has been dead for nearly 10 years?
Even before this enquiry, ANY excuse to stick her on the cover and they would. "Burrell latest book about Diana", "Queen says... ' here is a picture of the Queens former relative, Lady Diana' ", "William and Harry, shown here with their mum". ARGH!
I wasnt one of those people upset at her death, it was sad yes; but while hundreds of people die everyday from starvation and man made wars I think its a small event.
But seriouly people, let her rest in peace.
1. Im engaged! Yes, Ad Pit Rob is officially off the market for good! :D
2. Daily Express readers...are you not fed up with them putting Lady Diana on the cover every week despite the fact she has been dead for nearly 10 years?
Even before this enquiry, ANY excuse to stick her on the cover and they would. "Burrell latest book about Diana", "Queen says... ' here is a picture of the Queens former relative, Lady Diana' ", "William and Harry, shown here with their mum". ARGH!
I wasnt one of those people upset at her death, it was sad yes; but while hundreds of people die everyday from starvation and man made wars I think its a small event.
But seriouly people, let her rest in peace.
Thursday, March 01, 2007
Negotiation by Ad
Wow. I cannot believe that noone on the blogs I read has mentioned the all out war of words that is going on between Sky and Virgin Media.
The story is that they are negotiating to keep Sky channels on Virgin services, and Sky (alledgedly) would only accept extortionate prices and have no withdrawn their channels. Sky however, say that they have offered numerous alternatives and Virgin have refused.
The amazing bit is that this war is being carried out everywhere in print ads in newspapers. This is AFTER sky put ads on Virgin's feed of their channels asking people to call Virgin and tell them how much they want the channels!I have never seen so much advertising between two companies in such a short space of time.
They are talking straight at the public, with Virgin appearing to come off slightly more positive.
I will try and photo some of the ads tonight, but just get a paper from today or (probably) tomorrow and read a battle going on before our very eyes.
The story is that they are negotiating to keep Sky channels on Virgin services, and Sky (alledgedly) would only accept extortionate prices and have no withdrawn their channels. Sky however, say that they have offered numerous alternatives and Virgin have refused.
The amazing bit is that this war is being carried out everywhere in print ads in newspapers. This is AFTER sky put ads on Virgin's feed of their channels asking people to call Virgin and tell them how much they want the channels!I have never seen so much advertising between two companies in such a short space of time.
They are talking straight at the public, with Virgin appearing to come off slightly more positive.
I will try and photo some of the ads tonight, but just get a paper from today or (probably) tomorrow and read a battle going on before our very eyes.
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