Exporting Portland’s Quirky, One Of W+K’s Greatest Accomplishments

Richard Read of The Oregonian visited London and Amsterdam in pursuit of a story about Wieden+Kennedy’s expanding global network.

He points out that W+K had some trouble recently in Amsterdam, their oldest overseas outpost. But it was nothing Chief Operating Officer, Dave Luhr, couldn’t handle, although Luhr did have to move to The Netherlands for several months.

Read also looks at the London office’s attempt to land Nokia, a global account thought to be worth as much as $300 million. Apparently, Dan Wieden took a look at the concepts in the brainstorming room and freaked, just days before the pitch, because he didn’t see a winning idea.

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It turns out there was a winning idea and W+K/London landed the Nokia business.

Read explains the agency’s style and their key point of difference:

The firm’s creatives say conventional ad companies, which they disdain as mere businesses, stick to a linear approach. In the W+K view, planners in such companies run surveys, crank numbers and produce polished reports listing business objectives, target markets and client budgets. They slip briefs under the creatives’ door, behind which advertising alchemy then unfolds.

Wieden+Kennedy, true to its organic Portland roots, prides itself on a more chaotic and democratic “swarm” approach. Planners, creatives and others collaborate to divine and convey what they call a brand’s “voice.” If The Wall goes “off-brief,” so be it.

Participants consider themselves above merely churning out commercials. Team members try to understand the people and philosophy behind a company, they say, translating them into messages that build a relationship between a brand and its customers.

“You can clever your way out of a problem,” says Kim Papworth, executive creative director with Tony Davidson in London. “But you haven’t worked out the problem.”

Sky to take on iTunes with download service

LONDON – Sky is to challenge the dominance of Apple’s iTunes with the launch of a music download service and has already signed up Universal Music, whose artists include U2, Kanye West and Amy Winehouse, as launch partner.

Barbeques Galore: Meat party

Meat party

Barbeques Galore: Farm animals

Farm animals

Barbeques Galore: Butcher

Butcher

Mais Printing House: Virus, 3

Virus, 3

Even the smallest printing flaw can contaminate your whole job.

Advertising Agency: Mohallem Meirelles, São Paulo, Brazil
Creative Director: Eugênio Mohallem
Art Director: Bruno Bomediano
Copywriter: Julio D’Alfonso
Illustrator: Darcy Vieira
Published: May 2008

Mais Printing House: Virus, 2

Virus, 2

Even the smallest printing flaw can contaminate your whole job.

Advertising Agency: Mohallem Meirelles, São Paulo, Brazil
Creative Director: Eugênio Mohallem
Art Director: Bruno Bomediano
Copywriter: Julio D’Alfonso
Illustrator: Darcy Vieira
Published: May 2008

Mais Printing House: Virus, 1

Virus, 1

Even the smallest printing flaw can contaminate your whole job.

Advertising Agency: Mohallem Meirelles, São Paulo, Brazil
Creative Director: Eugênio Mohallem
Art Director: Bruno Bomediano
Copywriter: Julio D’Alfonso
Illustrator: Darcy Vieira
Published: May 2008

Omnicom profits up 11% as international revenues leap

NEW YORK – Omnicom has seen profits jump 11% to $307m for the second quarter of 2008, matching Wall Street’s expectations.

Spokesdog accused of dropping an F-bomb

Churchill In the U.K., where it may be a slow news week, an insurance company is under fire for airing this ad, in which its cuddly, stuffed spokesdog appears to tack a curse word onto the end of his well-known catchphrase, “Ohhh yes!” “Baffled fans are at a loss to work out what else he could be saying,” according to press reports. Some viewers are reportedly “gobsmacked” over the whole affair. Others are enjoying it immensely. (“The more you listen to it the funnier it gets,” says one YouTube commenter.) The company itself has been unconvincing in its efforts to quell the outrage, claiming that the dog doesn’t swear but offering no explanation for what he does say.

—Posted by Tim Nudd

Holiland Sugar-Free Cake: Sugar cubes, 3

Sugar cubes, 3

Advertising Agency: W&K Advertising, Beijing, China
Creative Director: Li Chen
Art Directors: Ning Yang, Qi Liu
Copywriters: Miao Qiu, Shen Li
Illustrator: Ning Yang
Published: April 2008

Holiland Sugar-Free Cake: Sugar cubes, 2

Sugar cubes, 2

Advertising Agency: W&K Advertising, Beijing, China
Creative Director: Li Chen
Art Directors: Ning Yang, Qi Liu
Copywriters: Miao Qiu, Shen Li
Illustrator: Ning Yang
Published: April 2008

Holiland Sugar-Free Cake: Sugar cubes, 1

Sugar cubes, 1

Advertising Agency: W&K Advertising, Beijing, China
Creative Director: Li Chen
Art Directors: Ning Yang, Qi Liu
Copywriters: Miao Qiu, Shen Li
Illustrator: Ning Yang
Published: April 2008

McNews

Denver agency Karsh\Hagan, part of TBWA Worldwide, has helped insert McDonald’s coffee drinks into local news programming on Fox affiliate, KVVU in Las Vegas, according to The New York Times.

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McDonald’s products also appear on morning news shows on WFLD in Chicago; on KCPQ in Seattle; and on Univision 41 in New York City.

With the economy in rough shape and advertisers funneling more dollars to the Internet, the television industry is trying to increase its revenues. Neither the agency nor KVVU would reveal the price of the six-month deal.

Other stations owned by Meredith — including WFSB, the CBS affiliate in Hartford, Conn., and WGCL, the CBS affiliate in Atlanta — are also accepting product placements on their morning shows.

The three major network morning shows, ABC’s “Good Morning America,” CBS’s “The Early Show,” and NBC’s “Today” do not accept fees in exchange for product placement, representatives of the shows said Monday.

PETA, Consumers Outraged with Verizon

SKY: Stadium

Stadium

Spanish Soccer League. The whole world watches.

Advertising Agency: Giovanni + DraftFcb, São Paulo, Brazil
Creative Directors: Adilson Xavier, Ricardo John, Sidney Araújo
Art Director: Tiago Pinho
Copywriter: Guilherme Aché
Art Buyer: Érika Sartini
Illustrator: Big Studios
Published: July 2008

SG Pick-up: Load more

Load more

Advertising Agency: W&K Advertising, Beijing, China
Creative Director: Li Chen
Art Director: Miao Qiu, Li Chen
Copywriter: Shen Li
Published: September 2006

Infiniti performs without net in Cirque spot

Infiniti It’s pretty clichéd to rag on Cirque du Soleil (how can costumes that leave virtually nothing to the imagination be so unsexy?) and circuses in general (why are the seats sticky? will the clowns try to eat me?). So, I watched this “Double Lines” spot, touting Infiniti Canada’s Cirque sponsorship, with an open mind. And yet—can someone tell me just what the hell is going on? Why is that guy crawling (hanging?) from those things? Is he supposed to be dressed like a mouse, a ghost or a Klansman? At 30 seconds in length, the ad is still interminable (screw it, I can’t hold back), just like Cirque’s two-and-a-half-hour soul-killing extravaganzas! At old-time circuses, dozens of clowns would emerge from an impossibly cramped jalopy seemingly too small to hold them all. That bit sucked. I guess they’d wash off the grease paint and ride the bus to the next performance. Cirque prices are so outrageous, even the guy who sweeps up after the show can probably afford an Infiniti 35G. I guess you could call that progress.

—Posted by David Gianatasio

McIlheney promoted at Sport Media Group

LONDON – Lads’ mag guru Barry McIlheney is leaving his role as editor-in-chief of Daily and Sunday Sport owner Sport Media Group. He will be replaced by the former editor of the Cambridge Evening News, Murray Morse.

ATR: Russia

Russia

Advertising Agency: 31ème Arrondissement, Toulouse, France
Creative Director: Pierre-Yves Demarcq
Art Directors / Illustrator: Cedric Morvan, Caroline Castagna
Published: June 2008