Project Re:Brief- Old ads, new technology

Finally, the word is out. I’ve been holding Google’s secret for the past 4 months.

Dentsu sent me to attend the Google presentation of the work in Project Re:Brief in November at the New Museum in NYC.

I was at first impressed with the heavy hors d’oeuvres and fancy cocktails, but by the end of the presentation, it was the simple Coca-Cola that had us all really amazed. We enjoyed hearing from an impressive cast of advertising icons and some of the creative minds that originated the classic campaigns that were getting an overhaul. It’s amazing that ads were running before I was born are still quoted as normal conversation today, e.g., when I say “I can’t believe I ate the whole thing”, every day, after lunch.

One of the most exciting parts was seeing the World Coke vending machine in action. They had a working model in the auditorium. The speaker had someone record and send a message live. We watched the animation take off and the machine come to life with the video message we just saw recorded and an ice cold Coca-Cola. I was instantly thirsty and wanted to try it myself, sending it to everyone I know. Literally buying the world a Coke. Not bad.

It was actually amazing. To think this works around the world is pretty impressive and really touched a soft spot seeing the genuine excitement of the machine users who got to try it (watch the video here).

The concept behind the Google Re:Brief project is fantastic and can serve as an inspiration for the possibilities of any great piece of work. It was really fun to hear how the creatives of then worked with the creatives of today to make the past relevant to the world right now, despite their feelings of doubt and general feelings of out-of-the-loopedness.

These re-imagined campaigns prove that the medium is not the idea. The idea is the idea. And if it’s great, it can live anywhere, in any decade, on any device.

See Creativity Online’s write-up here

  • by Sarah Chase
  • Comments (0)

SES New York 2012 Features Dentsu Network pros

This month, our very own EVP of Media, Scott Daly and Managing Director at STEAK, Mark Schwartz will be speaking at SES New York. Their talk focuses on best practices for how a traditional and digital media agency can partner together. Using real client data, they’ll show how a truly holistic approach to advertising yields great benefits for agencies and the clients too. Incisive Media’s SES Conference & Expo is a leading global conference and training series focused on search engine marketing. Visit SES NEW YORK for more information and how to register.

  • by Sarah Chase
  • Comments (0)

Game-Changer

You are a robot. You stand beside a sealed door. In your hand, you hold a gun. A gun that doesn’t shoot bullets. Instead, it shoots…portals. Doorways that allow you to teleport, instantly, between two distant locations. You have to get through the sealed door. But how? When you flip that switch on the other side of the room, the door opens — but it closes by the time you can get to it. You sit and think. What if you shot a red portal on the wall next to the door, and a blue portal on the wall next to the switch? Then you could flip the switch without getting too far from the door. You try it. It works. You just beat Level 1.

Portal 2 is probably the best video game I’ve ever played. It didn’t just blow my mind. It changed my life. In case the rambling and incoherent paragraph above this one didn’t give you a good sense of the gameplay, feel free to watch this charming commercial for it: http://bit.ly/glKiuW. If that’s not enough, try this one: http://bit.ly/glKiuW. If you didn’t click either of those links, just read this: it’s a puzzle game. You use your “portal gun” to reason your way out of one sealed room and into another.

But describing what the game is doesn’t convey how it feels, and that’s the part that changed my life. In short, it makes you feel like a genius. Like a true, empirical, scientific genius — as if someone combined the brains of Einstein, Hawking, and Tesla and smushed it right into your skull. When you look around that sealed room and suddenly, it all clicks, and you know exactly how to point that laser at that mirror and refract it through those portals – you experience something transcendent.

The experience was particularly transcendent for me. I’ve been playing video games for a long time, but I’ve never bought a “puzzle game.” That’s because the left side of my brain has always been a little scrawny. High school math gave me posttraumatic stress disorder. I once asked my Dad how many quarters there were in a soccer game (which he politely pointed out was “idiotic on a number of levels.”) Needless to say, the idea of a “puzzle game” appeals to me about as much as the idea of a Phil Collins concert followed by back-to-back screenings of Notting Hill. If I ever played a game like Zelda or Resident Evil that unexpectedly had a puzzle in it, I’d just turn the controller over to my sister. She’d solve it in a matter of seconds, and then I could go back to blasting my way through the Zombie apocalypse.

Portal 2 changed all that. It wasn’t the dark humor, the voice acting, or the graphics, all of which have received extraordinary praise. It was the sense that only you could have devised that solution. Only you could have perfectly manipulated gravity, friction, and momentum to get through that sealed door. It wasn’t like other games. It wasn’t a puzzle in a world. It was world that was a puzzle.

For the first time ever, I was relishing an opportunity to flex my weakest neurological muscles. I learned to love something I’d always hated. Because I was good at it.

Moral of the story?

The best creative doesn’t make you think differently about things. It makes you think differently about you. And only one medium can really do that. We call it “digital.”

  • by Peter Weinberg
  • Comments (0)

Lucas Watson from Google: YouTube and the highly tailored ad.

Last week Lucas Watson, Google’s VP of Sales and Marketing for YouTube kicked off our Speaker Series and spoke in the café at 360i, our downstairs neighbor. YouTube is restructuring its content and advertising platforms and Lucas Watson gave us the deets.

To compete with cable and general content providers like Hulu, YouTube must surface from its position of being a cluttered, unorganized internet junkyard and become a destination—not simply a URL you’ve ended up at.

The new plan for YouTube is to organize everything around Channels. So instead of the 300+ channels we all have, you can have 20 (or 3 or 50) that have exactly what you want. This lets the advertising become increasingly more tailored.

Google with YouTube has the awesome goal of keeping the creative behind the content in the benefit. They have a twofold goal of being 1) the best platform for artists, creators, and innovators. 2) To make an economically efficient system that pays the artists, not the middle men. Ideally paying the content creators directly to host their content.

To keep advertisers relevant, YT is introducing The TrueView approach to advertising, which allows viewers to skip an ad. If the ad is skipped before its full play, Google doesn’t pay for it. So if someone isn’t getting paid even if an ad technically runs, then what does this mean for advertising? That the creative must get better. It will cease to be an obligatory 15 or 30 seconds before your show and become something viewers can opt out of. Not unlike fastforwarding with a DVR, but with highly tailored ads, but now it’s a more personal blow.

This is of course a call to creatives, but also a call to the clients to be willing to serve the viewer. To blatantly skip the one single spot that comes before a show? You gotta make that spot shine. Or else someone doesn’t get paid, and it’s not the content creators.

But with better tailored content, it can become a worthwhile investment. Think Google ad words gone big. (Lucas assured us that it would not be in a creepy way, but in a “yay, I love that ______” kind of way.) Of course, traditional pre-roll ad space will still be offered, but knowing you can skip might lead you to watch because you can decide if you want to skip.

Interesting concept and it will be exciting to see where it goes. Here’s to making the unskipable ad!

  • by Sarah Chase
  • Comments (0)

The most wonderful time of the (advertising) year.

It’s a special time of year when we sit around with our loved ones, eat for hours, drink too much, and yell at the tv. Yep, it’s the Superbowl of Advertising, with a few football interruptions. If you’re in the ad world, you can probably consider these 4+ hours billable time because you need to be savvy come Monday. And your sodium hangover is no excuse for not having an opinion.

What’s your favorite superbowl pastime? Is it discussing the possible conversations that happened during brainstorms and client meetings to make that terrible ad come to life? Is it hopping online to that obscure URL to “see the rest of the saga unfold!”? Is it going on facebook and inadvertently finding out who’s playing and what the score is? If not, then I have no idea what you normal, non-ad world people do.

You probably watch the game. Let me know who wins.

  • by Sarah Chase
  • Comments (0)

Did You Just Pee in that Bottle and Call it Beer?

That’s usually the first question I ask the bartender of my favorite Manhattan biker bar but upon further reflection, that’s probably the question consumers should be asking some of our preferred brands. We buy into imagery or as some layman call it, lies, and not into the actual utility or lack thereof, of the product they’re spending their money on. Brilliant people like myself (did I just humbly call myself brilliant?) know that and we take advantage. Does the product actually do what it claims or do we, as both marketers and consumers, ignore that completely and willingly accept a fantasy? I can think of a few marketing fantasies that my colleagues have been serving with piss beer for years.

“Hello, nice to meet you. So, you can’t seem to attract women no matter what you do. You’re sexually frustrated and there’s no hope. ” Logically that conversation should descend to evaluating that persons approach, the aura they project and maybe what they’re looking for in a relationship and where they’re looking. But no, someone like me decided that making you sexually desirable had nothing to do with making yourself a better human being. No, what you need, my sexually inept friend is Axe body spray. You splash a gallon of this on you and women will start throbbing from miles away. Bras will become sling shots as they swing from lamp post to lamp post with Spider-Man type precision to attack you with violent and repeated pelvic thrusts. Sound ridiculous doesn’t it? But it’s not. Axe is a category leader in the young adult male fragrance category and they did it by playing with every man’s greatest insecurity…women. Has anyone actually done a survey to see if sexual encounters have increased after using the product? Have we measured the number of voluntary and involuntary pelvic thrusts that have been…uh…thrusted? Hell, did anyone even ask a woman if Axe encouraged her to liquidate her morals? I sound like I’m pitching a long form video for Axe that could end up being a big viral hit.

Y’know, I’m starting to think this beer really is pee. It’s so…foamy.

Nothing says bad ass more than a bad ass on a motorcycle, particularly a Harley Davidson motorcycle. It’s an image cultivated by biker behavior and myths and legend supported by Hollywood movies and recently the popular show Sons of Anarchy. Wisely enough, Harley Davidson has embraced the image as well. Recent ads feature the Harley logo and the caption reads, “Customers who purchased this also purchased…” and they have a picture of a streak, brass knuckles and a cobra. All of which aren’t exactly found in your dad’s suitcase as he goes to work in the morning unless of course your dad is a mongoose who beats up cobras before eating them for lunch after tenderizing them with raw meat. My neighbor rides a Harley and not only is he not a mongoose. He’s a vegetarian dentist with a Paris Hilton sized briefcase…I mean dog. You can’t tell him he’s not a badass because on weekends that Harley Davidson Softail comes out and that mild mannered dentist becomes a wild and wooly mild mannered weekend warrior who rides exactly five miles to the bar and wraps his meticulously manicured hands around an imported lite beer with blissful gay glee. What’s so great about the Harley brand is that even after you’re sold into the idea of being an American bad ass after you’ve purchased the product, the fantasy doesn’t die. You may be a pleated-pants wearing dentist between Monday and Friday, but come the weekend you’re the one her momma warned her about. Harley by far has cultivated their brand to transcend merely being labeled a brand; they are a cult. They are an exclusive sect who look down on others (and by others, I mean other riders with superior motorcycles) simply because they believe by wearing or riding anything that says Harley makes them a badass. It doesn’t matter that most motorcycles come with air cooling systems and Harley’s don’t. It doesn’t matter that the smallest Japanese cruiser is quicker off the line then most big Harley beasts and it certainly doesn’t matter that you get considerably more technology on almost any other bike then a Harley. None of that matters because Harley = Bad Ass and bad asses like pee in their beer.

Please understand I’m not rallying against what these brands are doing. I’m actually praising the marketers behind the brands who have identified the core emotional bond between the brand and the consumer and have woven it into credible marketing messages which have resonated with their audience. These messages speak to them knowing their brand, accepting the limitations of their product, understanding their consumer and exploiting all of it to everyone’s benefit. Brands that have the right minds on their business both internally and associated agencies will always succeed because they know people don’t care what beer you actually serve. As long as you convince them that it’s top shelf the consumer will buy it.

Other brands that have pulled this off with marvelous results include Subway which has convinced people that eating their sandwiches will produce amazing weight loss results. Newport ads have not changed their visuals in years and so we’re left to think that smoking produces big white smiles instead of yellow teeth fueled by cancer ridden throats and lungs. Nike has promised me for years that I will eventually grow up to be Michael Jordan and somewhere deep inside, I still believe that.

By now we should all have figured out we don’t need to ask the bartender if he or she peed in the glass and then served it as beer. We drink the pee all day long and if someone ever gave us “real” beer we’d probably say, “Y’know, I usually drink this served really warm.”

  • by Dentsu America
  • Comments (3)

The Devil Works On Madison Avenue

The Devil Works On Madison Avenue

I was at a dinner party the other night and in a revelation as powerful as Darth Vader admitting to being late on child support payments, I was shocked to learn I was employed by one of the new white collar Axis of Evil. Of course initially I was excited to hear that because employment by the Axis in my mind meant I automatically got to wear those cute ill-fitting military uniforms that Middle Eastern tyrants favor but alas… 

We all hate lawyers.  Lawyers hate lawyers. Lawyer’s mothers hate lawyers. I always joke that the only homicide you can get away with is when you murder a lawyer because there will always be another lawyer ready to get you off.  And of course how can you have a white collar Axis without having an address on Wall Street? While President Obama was repeating ad nauseum “during these unprecedented economic times” the Wall Street guys were using their fifty dollar bills to wipe clean their hundred dollar bills.

So, where do I fit in this?

Because apparently ad men have been elected as the new scum pollutant of civilized society and everyone forgot to tell me because I totally would’ve designed a shirt that read, “Newly Minted Scum” but that I was told, is why we are so horrible. We no longer see people as people, we see them as impressions or GRPS or a Nielsen rating. While we target people, we don’t see the people we target as persons but rather statistics to be manipulated to push brands and products. We are indeed soulless. Being called soulless meant I could actually sin for the rest of my life and not fear reprisals in hell because I’d have nothing the Devil could possibly want but I kept that thought to myself.

I contemplated my soulless advocacy for a second and reflected on how despite working on Brown & Williamson and increasing the market share for Kool cigarettes I never, not once asked anyone to pick up a cigarette and embrace cancer. I remember how my team and I developed single day promotions for Mohegan Sun that never, not once asked anyone to liquidate their life savings and waste their lives losing money.  I smiled fondly recalling how our ideas to reenergize the Playboy brand called on gentlemen to stand up and be counted but never demanded that they get their Charlie Sheen on.  I sipped on my beverage with a Cheshire cat grin because of the great work we did on Hendricks gin but I struggled to remember us putting the laptop in anyone’s hand and asking them to drunk Facebook  ex-girlfriends.

Actually I realized I was more in contact with people than your average soulless corporate executive not because I really wanted to, but because I had no choice. I can’t tell you what and why to buy unless I understand your motives why or why you wouldn’t.  I know where you live, where you work, what sites you surf when you should be working and even know what brand toilet paper you prefer and unlike evil telemarketers, I don’t use that information against you. In fact, I can recommend a better toilet paper if you’re really interested. I don’t sell your information to people looking to sell you that must have subscription to Ducks Unlimited. I don’t go door to door selling you salvation and I’d never tell your wife that you frequent Ashley Madison.com more then you should.

Nope. Not me.

A well trained communication strategist is actually a cultural anthropologist who studies the world around him. How does modern technology and the ever-in-flux media landscape change and affects what and how we do it. Curiosity is the fuel that drives an effective strategist to re-imagine traditional approaches and animate those cold and very sterile MRI and Simmons quintiles and indices.  A well trained communication strategist is more human than the humans they’re asked to dissect and analyze.

Which brings us back full cycle…

With the same Cheshire cat smile I mentioned above I smiled and said to this person, “Where do you think I can get one of those fabulous Moammar Gadhafi military cape oufits?”

  • by Dentsu America
  • Comments (7)

Dakar - The Finish Line


“I’ve had the privilege of these 7,000 plus miles to think a great deal about life, time many of us never give ourselves the opportunity to spend thinking. Travel and when I say travel, I mean adventure is so critical for us all to really understand life. I’ve been blown away by these two countries, the land and the amazing people that live here. I’ve been pushed to the edge of my ability and have regained the respect of what we really can achieve and how you must always believe in yourself. Push away negative types – they are the rot that holds optimism, opportunity and growth back. We all die for sure, but only some of us really live! What an amazing day and amazing trip, the last few hours were meandering heaven after what seemed like several visits to hell. I sit knackered but full of happiness, that I have completed the route of the worlds hardest land race – the Dakar Rally. This good gin and tonic tastes fabulous!!”
via willindakar.wordpress.com

Read more about Will’s entire trip over at willindakar.wordpress.com.

  • by Dentsu America
  • Comments (0)

Dakar - Day 11

“The first 200km of the 750km day ahead involved some sand and off-road and now the pack had divided as many of the team had lost inner faith to ride it. So we split and a team of five of us set off to face the raw elements and the others took a longer but safer route. Their choice was a good one, for within 300yds of the start of the dirt we hit four sand pits four feet deep and a hundred yards long. Again gunning the bike and dismissing all logic was the only way to cross these patches and I launched my 1200 GSA headlong into the obstacle with unaware of boulders or trenches. The bike thrashed side to side like writhing snake and my training of loosening my grip, leaning back and just riding quickly to skim the surface proved critical and I appeared safe at the far end. Others weren’t as fortunate.”
via willindakar.wordpress.com

  • by Dentsu America
  • Comments (0)

Dakar - Day 10

“Compared to the trip into Chile, the passing back into Argentina was a breeze and the worry that this day was going to be a monstrous 13 hours of riding drifted away, it looked like it was going to be a breeze after all. That thought was short lived. The dust from the trucks, the three feet deep sand trenches that panned the roads and the 16,000 foot altitude at -4C were all waiting for us and the accidents started to happen.”
via willindakar.wordpress.com

  • by Dentsu America
  • Comments (0)