Creative Chocolate Bar Promotion Despised by Manufactuer

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Well you’ve gotta love a great creative idea. And this Buzzman France-created work for French chocolate bar brand Milka is certainly creative. The agency put together a program based on the assumption the last square of a chocolate bar is the best.

Milka bars where then manufactured with one square missing. Those purchasing the bars were asked to decide whether they wanted that last square sent to them or to a loved one.
Great promotion. Although we’re guessing the manufacturing folks weren’t too happy with having to retool their production line to manufacture bars with one square missing.

What Happens When a Movie Marketer Gets Caught Trying to Game Reddit [UPDATED]


[UPDATE: Reddit has updated its post to say that,

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What Happens When a Movie Marketer Gets Caught Trying to Game Reddit


Reddit, as I wrote back in May, is one of the most powerful forces on the internet — a place where memes are born, a crib sheet for the mainstream media (especially Gawker and BuzzFeed) and a generator of massive amounts of traffic for sites that are lucky enough to capture the imagination of the Reddit community (such that it is).

But when marketers push their luck by attempting to manipulate Reddit — by, for instance, planting posts and links and generating fake conversations about their offerings in an attempt to pique the interest of real Redditors — it seldom ends well.

Last night just after midnight, a scold-y post titled "Don't try to cheat reddit: An after action report on a movie studio attempting to game reddit" hit the homepage of the site. (Posts on Reddit gain or lose momentum through an upvote/downvote system.) It amounted to, basically, Reddit bitch-slapping Warner Bros. for a hapless attempt at promoting its new thriller "Getaway," which opens tomorrow.

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Gawker Tries Native Ads in Comments, With Help From Bill Nye


Sometime next Wednesday, celebrity scientist Bill Nye will take a seat in front of a computer and invite the internet to ask him whatever it wants. But he won’t be taking the questions on Reddit, a medium famous for its “Ask Me Anything” sessions. Rather, Mr. Nye will be operating within the comments section of Gizmodo, a Gawker Media website on a page sponsored by State Farm. The entire interaction, from start to finish, will be an ad.

After declines in revenue brought about by rising mobile consumption and real-time auctions for ads, publishers are working harder to offer advertisers creative ways to reach their readers outside of banner ads. Stirring some consumer emotion, they now argue, gives them a better chance to win over coveted brand dollars, so that’s what Gawker is trying to do.

“At the end of the day our sales team is made up of marketers,” said James Del, head of Studio@Gawker, the company’s in-house creative department. “Their primary concern is helping their clients communicate their point, not simply slinging banner ads or logo slap sponsorships.”

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I’m Too Lazy to Write A Good Headline

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After developing the Nacho Cheese and Cool Ranch taco, Taco Bell had to come up with a third, equally awesome flavor. In a new Deutsch LA-created spot, people ponder what the next flavor might be but despite a few very obvious clues, they come up empty handed. Thankfully, the taste scientists over at Taco Bell had no problem coming up with the Taco Bell Fiery Doritos Locos Taco.

The Underworld Of Below-The-Line Advertising

This is what you call a “slot topper.” I didn’t write this particular one, but it’s exactly what it sounds like.

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Most copywriters, at one point or another, work on things considered “below-the-line.” But does this kind of work get any respect, or results?

Some people love to go around saying things like, “Advertising is the price companies pay for being unoriginal.” I’m not sure that’s true. We live in a world where only the top 1% of brands can avoid advertising because they get enough word of mouth or buzz, or they’re able to simply advance by power of sheer innovation or design. The rest have to advertise. Which means pretty much everyone’s doing it, and doing a lot of it.

It’s the subject of my new column on TalentZoo.com.

So what’s the oddest piece of below-the-line advertising you’ve ever worked on?

The post The Underworld Of Below-The-Line Advertising appeared first on AdPulp.

Meet the White Box That Can Make Your Entire Existence Ad Free


Mobile antivirus software firm Bluepoint Security is taking ad blocking to the next level with a router-like appliance that can block ads on any device connected to it via wifi including computers, tablets, smartphones and even streaming services like Apple TV.

Called AdTrap, the $135 device is the fruit of a successful Kickstarter project launched in December 2012 that raised $213,000 from 1,800 backers in 30 days.

Now, almost nine months since the end of that campaign, Bluepoint is gearing up to move beyond direct sales to work with distributors like Grand St., the new tech gadget commerce curator and extending the service to include devices on cellular networks with AdTrap Anywhere.

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Retro-Modern Office Hubs – The Intimo Secretary from CB2 is a Fresh Take on Vintage Design (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Intimo Secretary from home design retailer CB2 comes from the creative mind of industrial designer Jannis Ellenberger. The practical furniture piece features a compact design concept making it a…

Ad Age Digital for Just $3 a Month? Welcome to Our Labor Day Subscription Sale


An Ad Age Digital subscription is normally a great deal at $99 per year. But starting today, because you’re reading this post, you can get a ridiculous deal: just $9 for three months ($3 per month).

Why are we doing this? Because readers who have the chance to sample all Ad Age has to offer tend to get hooked. (The fine print: This special introductory offer is valid for new subscribers only. You’ll pay $9 for your first 13 weeks, then $25 for 3 months thereafter. Your subscription will be billed every 3 months. You can, of course, cancel at anytime.)

Your subscription will include:

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Robin Roberts Plans to Return Full Time to ‘Good Morning America’

A year after leaving the ABC morning show for a bone-marrow transplant, Ms. Roberts said she wants “to get back to my full life.”

    



Goofy Ad Urges You to Give Your Boss the Finger, Spend Time With Your Family

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Oh how we all wish a goofy song like this would break out when a call or text comes in from our boss when we’re trying to enjoy some down time with the family. Of course, the immediate reaction is to respond to your boss when he or she calls but after viewing this whacky video, you will be singing “No, no, no, no, no” over and over again when your boss calls you.

The ad, created by BBR Saatchi & Saatchi for Israeli telecommunications brand Partner Communications Company, is a bit of a public service announcement that wedges in a promotion for the brand’s Orange Ultralnet.

Are Copywriters Just Authors In Hiding?

Elmore Leonard’s recent passing prompted Bruce McCall to write a reflective piece for The New Yorker.

McCall worked on Chevy in Detroit at the same time Leonard was banging out Westerns on his typewriter and working as a copywriter. McCall notes how common it is for real writers to find “safe harbor” in the ad business.

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A fat book could be assembled, just listing all the later-to-be-famous writers who stopped briefly in the cubicles of ad agencies: Dorothy L. Sayers and Salman Rushdie and F. Scott Fitzgerald and James Patterson and Joseph Heller, for starters. Advertising is a morally squalid racket that demands one make a Faustian bargain by manipulating truth for money. But I’ll say this much for the murky intersection of morality and commerce and guess-who-wins that is the ad biz: it has perennially provided a safe haven and a decent income for writers while they were working out their higher destinies.

“Manipulating truth for money” is some pretty tough language. Or is it tough love? After all, it’s common wisdom that advertising is all about the bullshit. The agency dreams up some bullshit to present to the client, who has a whole list of bullshit reasons about why people ought to care and buy the bullshit they’re selling. After several high-priced bullshit sessions, the client then buys the agency’s bullshit about the client’s own bullshit, at which point the agency goes off to spends millions of the client’s dollars justifying all this crazy bullshit.

Here’s what I think. Common sense trumps common wisdom. And in this case, common sense dictates that advertising is no longer about the bullshit. It’s not that marketers woke up one morning and realized the error of their ways and opted for higher ground. No, it’s more like the Internet was unleashed on society and its industry-crushing reach has had its way with marketing communications, just like it did with the news and music industries.

Today, thanks to radical transparency and the popularity of people-powered, mobile and always-on media networks, your brand is who and what you do everyday, for real. You are not who your ad campaigns say you are and this is great news, provided you know how to operate in this new media environment.

When I consider my own higher destinies as a writer, I allow dreams of a best seller or a successful screenplay. But for me, it makes perfect sense to infuse advertising with poetry and art. Also with meaning, soul and passion. Advertising is a storytelling platform, like films and theater are storytelling platforms. The job is to convey memorable information in a moving way, and it’s far from easy to do.

McCall notes that advertising’s real writers rarely have much success in advertising. Clearly, for many, advertising is a payday and nothing more. In the beginning, I wondered if it would be like that for me. It wasn’t and isn’t and I am grateful for this.

The post Are Copywriters Just Authors In Hiding? appeared first on AdPulp.

Projeto brinca com tipografia de palavras para revelar seus significados

Não tem muito tempo que mostramos por aqui o Chineasy, projeto da designer ShaoLan que facilita o aprendizado do mandarim com um sistema visual que usa os ideogramas originais como base para uma ilustração que revela seu significado. É provável que facilitar o aprendizado do idioma inglês não tenha sido o principal objetivo do designer indiano Arun Raj, mas é impossível não enxergar esta possibilidade no projeto Tipography Word Play.

De um jeito bem minimalista, Raj cria representações gráficas do significado de cada palavra, usando a tipografia de cada uma. Por exemplo: o T de death vira uma cruz sobre um fundo preto, criando uma rápida associação com a morte. O P de jump aparece um pouco acima do restante das letras, como se realmente estivesse pulando. Já o T de helicopter é uma hélice, enquanto as duas letras O de baloon estão flutuando.

É tudo muito bem pensado e certamente poderia ser aplicado em diversos idiomas, como forma de ampliar o vocabulário.

O projeto pessoal é executado sempre que sobra um tempo para o designer, então vale ficar de olho para novas atualizações. Em seu portfolio no Behance é possível conferir todas as palavras, além de outros trabalhos assinados por ele.

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Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Newell Rubbermaid Starts Global Media Agency Review


Newell Rubbermaid has begun a review of its global-media-agency business less than a year after bringing on a new chief marketing officer.

Richard Davies (not to be confused with the Richard Davies of Reckitt Benckiser) assumed the role of Newell Rubbermaid CMO late last year. The New Zealand native most recently led global insights at Unilever. Strangely, Reckitt Benckiser’s Mr. Davies also recently left Unilever, where he oversaw media.

Alan Rutherford, chairman of media consultancy Axiology, is supporting the search. Like Mr. Davies, he also oversaw media at Unilever until 2007.

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‘RoboCop’ Teaches Abusive Soccer Parents A Lesson

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You know the type. You can hear them a mile away. And you want to run right over to them and punch them in the mouth. Or you want to run over to their kid and rescue them from a lifetime of verbal abuse.

Yes, The Soccer Parent. Loud. Abusive. Idiotic. Moronic.

Well, the UK’s Football (cuz that’s what they call it over there) Association with help from Man+Hatchet created a video which aims to diffuse parental rage at soccer games.

The video uses “corrective’ technology” – think ED209 from RoboCop – to deal with the problems of raging sideline parents, the loss of referees, foul mouthed players or abusive managers.

The Respect program was launched in 2008 and after five seasons across all levels of soccer on field discipline has improved, assaults on referees have fallen, 5,000 more match officials have been recruited and the environment of children’s soccer has improved.

Dermot Collins, The FA’s Respect Manager, said, “The application of technology is an ongoing discussion in soccer. This film takes a light hearted look at how it can be applied to improving behavior in the game but ultimately the solution is in our own hands. We all have a part to play.”

Agency Creates Greatest Ad for an Executive Assistant in the History of Executive Assistants

Rich Silverstein is apparently not an easy boss to have. The notoriously demanding co-founder of Goodby, Silverstein & Partners in San Francisco is looking for a new executive assistant, as his current assistant is leaving. And judging by the Craiglist help-wanted ad, and the crazy-fun accompanying website, you should almost certainly NOT apply for this job. Here's how the Craigslist ad starts out:

Have you ever looked greatness in the eyes—and cried because it was so damn beautiful it hurt your feelings?
     If not, you should really get to know Rich Silverstein.
     Rich has been inducted into halls of fame—yes, plural. His achievements read like a novel, albeit one written by Stephen King.
     You've probably heard stories. And they're every bit as true as they are misleading. He is tough and expects greatness. But he holds himself to the same impossible standards.
     The success he's had is the stuff of Mad Men. And the stuff of madmen.
     Rich Silverstein answers to nobody. And that nobody could be you.

Then there's a list of prerequisites for the job (one of them is that you must not be "an agency spy. Or ever have written for AgencySpy"), along with a link to work4rich.com.

That's where things get truly cray cray, as the application process turns out to be a series of ludicrous Web challenges, including transcribing a fast talker's gibberish and memorizing a set of names in just two seconds.

You have until Sept. 6 to get past that step in the process, and then "Rich will handpick his favorites and invite them to the Google Hangout of the century." That should be a doozy.

Yes, that's right, you enjoy your current job just fine, thank you.

Credits below.

CREDITS
Creatives:
Zach Canfield
Pablo Rochat
Adaye Worku

Creative Developers:
Chris Allick
Russell Shearer


    

Monistat Is Sorry (not Sorry) for Making Wearers of ‘Granny Panties’ Feel Bad

Monistat used "granny panties" in a recent ad as a metaphor for how women feel when they have a yeast infection. Now, though, after supposed complaints from the granny-panty-wearing community, Monistat is backtracking. On a new grannypanties.org website, the pharma brand—perhaps inspired by maxipad maker Bodyform's faux contrition—has issued the following heartfelt apology that's anything but heartfelt:

To the makers and wearers of granny panties everywhere, we here at Monistat offer our sincerest apologies.
     By helping millions of women feel like their sexy selves faster, we've seen some unintended repercussions. We have painted your treasured unmentionables in an unflattering light, and as a result, the market for bloomers is dwindling by the day, and the international granny panty industry has fallen on tough times.
     And though there will always be some who choose to allow their undergarments to ride up to their lower back for all to see, this does not mean they should be judged. Their choice of comfort over conformity is a bold one. Those very hip-huggers helped pave the way for the g-strings, thongs, and boyshorts of today.
     But the days of 10-gallon skivvies and support that stretches for yards are coming to an end. And honestly, we're not all that sad to see them go.

Monistat, of course, manufactured both the controversy and the apology. But it's nicely executed by ad agency Allen & Gerritsen. Particularly amusing is the accompanying video on the website depicting a faux talk show, Box Talk with Kitty Montgomery, in which women square off from both sides of the granny-panty debate. Check out the video below.


    

WWF animates dangers of oil exploration in African national park

A stylised animation draws the viewer into the natural and beautiful ecosystem of Virunga National Park to build support against the area potentially becoming an oil field.

Fingered

Dave Razor a imaginé cette vidéo appelée « Fingered » dans laquelle ce dernier propose de découvrir ses mouvements de mains filmées uniquement sur un fond vert, proposant ainsi de composer diverses formes par la répétition. Un rendu intéressant et original à découvrir en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.

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Top Do Not Track Man to Guide Obama on National Security and Privacy


Peter Swire, the man who has co-chaired a global Do Not Track coalition, is no stranger to the White House. Now he’s returned.

Mr. Swire was named to President Obama’s newly created Review Group on Intelligence and Communications Technologies on Tuesday, an appointment that emphasizes parallels between consumer data collection and the federal government’s surveillance operations.

Established Aug. 9, the small advisory board is tasked with helping the president determine how to balance privacy and civil liberties with national security efforts.

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