Conde Nast Is Looking to Hire a Top Digital Executive


Conde Nast, the publisher of Vogue and Vanity Fair, is looking to hire an executive to lead its digital efforts, Ad Age has learned.

It could not be determined precisely what responsibilities the post will entail, and it remains possible that Conde Nast won’t fill the position, which is not listed among the job openings on its website. But four people with direct knowledge said the company is quietly searching for either a digital president or a chief digital officer. Conde Nast President Bob Sauerberg is heading up the search, they said.

Mr. Sauerberg is “telling people he needs someone to think about digital,” one person added.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Deezer Enters U.S. Market With High-Fidelity Music Service

The French streaming service, available in 180 countries, is introducing Deezer Elite in partnership with Sonos, the wireless speaker company.



Chris Pratt to Host the 40th Season Premiere of ‘Saturday Night Live’

Mr. Pratt, the young comedy actor from NBC’s “Parks and Recreation,” will be joined for the Sept. 27 show by Ariana Grande as the musical guest.



GSD&M Brings Back ‘Aim High’ for the Air Force

GSD&M has a new campaign for the Air Force, bringing back the slogan “Aim High,” after a fifteen year absence.

The campaign, entitled “American Airmen,” launched Monday with two spots and a website. In “New Frontiers,” Airforce Chief of Staff General Mark A. Welsh III becomes the first Air Force general to be featured in an advertisement. The 30-second spot seeks to inspire with a celebration of technological innovation from the Air Force, such as breaking the sound barrier, and space exploration. “America’s Future,” meanwhile, draws on U.S. Air Force Academy commencement speeches from former Presidents John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush.

The campaign also includes online video content entitled “Barrier Breakers’ hosted on the Air Force website, and a multi-platform digital media buy, which will make the Air Force the first military branch to partner with PlayStation via a link on the PlayStation store menu. It will also make use of mobile advertising platform TapJoy and Spotify, where “users will view ‘Barrier Breakers’ video content while a custom playlist generator suggests music based on their current selections.”

The campaign arrives as the Air Force faces bad publicity for its decision to deny reenlistment to an atheist airman for refusing to sign an oath including the phrase “So help me God.” (more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

How Working With An Affiliate Marketing Agency Can Dramatically Improve A Brand's ROI

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Smart brands realize they need experts to help them craft advertising programs that resonate with their customer base, deliver ROI and make the cash register ring. An agency provides an unbiased, 50,000 foot view of the media landscape and can choose what’s right for the brand in a media agnostic manner.

This differs from, shall we say, a less-than-smart brand that decides to work directly with individual media outlets. If a brand follows this path and decides to work directly with a media outlet, they are going to end up with a biased media recommendation because this resource is not going to offer an unbiased, 50,000 foot recommendation. They are going to offer only what’s in their portfolio. And that’s not in the best interest of the brand.

Working with an agency is how brands become successful using traditional and online media. And that’s exactly how brands launching affiliate programs will become successful; by engaging with an affiliate marketing agency that can provide that 50,000 foot, unbiased view of the affiliate marketing landscape.

Why Not Just Work With An Affiliate Network?

Brands entering the affiliate marketing space should not rely solely on an affiliate network for guidance. Why? Because they are a platform, a technology provider and not marketing experts. Much in the same way Google Search is a platform for search engine marketing and does not offer search marketing expertise. When a brand works with an affiliate marketing agency, they will they will receive proper guidance regarding individual affiliate merchant strategies and obtain intimate knowledge of the real and perceived value of individual affiliates promoting those brands.

If you think of affiliate marketing as a loaded gun, in a way, affiliate networks simply say, “Start shooting. Shoot everything. See what you hit and go from there.” But these bullets are money and smart brands, with help from an affiliate marketing agency, need to act more like snipers to be effective and garner positive ROI.

As to why a brand should work with an affiliate marketing agency, dgm Australia General Manager John Matthews said, “Affiliate marketing as a channel has been in existence for over 15 years and has been successfully implemented on an ongoing basis by the world’s leading brands, including Amazon, eBay and Apple. As with any marketing strategy, affiliate needs close alignment between agency, network and client in order to drive the best possible result.” An agency is best suited to manage the overall process.

But Won’t Working With An Affiliate Marketing Agency Cost A Lot?

Now, lest you start to believe this argument for working with an affiliate marketing agency is all about lining the pockets of agencies with cash, you would be wrong. Why? Because it’s all performance marketing. Yes, an affiliate marketing agency will do media buys just like a traditional ad agency but it will be compensated by the brand based on a percentage of sales.

And if you think your traditional ad agency can handle your affiliate program, think again. Handing your affiliate program to a traditional agency actually creates a conflict of interest. Traditional agencies get paid through fees and media commissions. Why would they work on performance if they can get a big, fat, recurring fee and media commissions that are not tied to actual sales? And, to make matters worse, often affiliate marketing is an after-thought and the agency assigns a junior person to just “deal with it.” They aren’t experts and they don’t understand how to build and sustain a high performing affiliate channel.

If you think about it, affiliate marketing really delivers the best ad spend ROI a brand can find as affiliates which carry a brand’s offering are only paid when a sale is made. They are not paid for returned sales, cancelled orders, or sales that are made by violating a merchants marketing policy and the commission that they are paid is the amount the merchant chose. Furthermore they are paid after the sale (in many cases, 30 days after) and not before, unlike traditional relationships between brands and their agencies and/or media.

In essence, affiliate marketing is simply a means through which to pay for advertising. A brand can launch a full-on advertising campaign and never pay a dime until a sale is made.

What Else Does An Affiliate Marketing Agency Bring to the Table?

If that isn’t compelling enough reasoning to work with an affiliate marketing agency, consider these points. Affiliate marketing is a dynamic industry as technologies are often born within it and a brand has to be made aware of these changes in a timely fashion. An agency that is dedicated solely to affiliate marketing is well equipped for this. An affiliate marketing agency can also ensure a brand makes proper use of affiliate networks; the right mix, the volume of affiliate within those networks, the quality of the affiliates and how a brand’s unique requirements dictate individual affiliates with which to work.

Affiliates need to be judged on an individual basis, not on a broad brushed affiliate channel as each has their own specific strategies and competitive advantages. Why is this importance? Because brand compliance comes into play. Each individual brand has their own unique set of requirements that must be taken into account. An effective affiliate program has to go beyond the broad categorization of an affiliate channel. There will be affiliates with in a channel that will work well for a brand and there will be those that don’t. An affiliate marketing agency can properly parse this out for a brand so ROI is maximized.

If you’re a brand with an affiliate program or a brand considering launching an affiliate program, do yourself a favor. Don’t try to launch or manage an affiliate program without help from experts. Just like one who enlists the aid of a lawyer when legal expertise is needed, smart brands looking for affiliate marketing expertise should consider working with an affiliate marketing agency.

Comansegur alarms and security company: Alarm

An app that, after being download and installed on a computer, protects the user from “socialjacking” – the act of unwanted users posting embarrassing or problematic messages on social media accounts which have been accidentally left open.

http://www.socialjacking.com

Advertising Agency: BAR Lisboa, Portugal
Creative Directors: Diogo Anahory, José Bomtempo
Copywriter: João Gomes de Almeida
Art Directors: Carlos Gorjão, João Amaral
Programming and Development: Nuno Moura
Design: Carlos Gorjão
Web Designer: Gonçalo Antunes
Accounts Executive: Rita Bidarra

Cancer Society of Finland: The Breath Holder

Advertising Agency: Havas Worldwide, Helsinki, Finland
Creative Director: Marko Vuorensola
Planner: Johanna Vuorensola
Art Director: Jon Gustavson
Copywriter: Marko Vuorinen
Account director: Nina Myllyharju
Project planner: Muusa Salminen
Communications Consultant: Laura Lyyvuo
Web Developer: Mika Niemi
Production Company: Studio Arkadena
Executive producer: Hana Kovic
Director: Mikko / Sauna International
Director’s Producer: Kojo Abban
DoP: Jure Verovsek
Editor: Simon Sedmak
1st AD: Sara Isa Djukanovic
Colorist: NuFrame/TeoRiznar
Line producer: Urska Vardijan
Set designer / Art director: Spela Kropusek
Stylist: Katja Hrobat
Make Up: Natasa Sevcnikar
Sound design: Silencio Helsinki
Music: Accu “Rock”
Digital production: Havas Worldwide Helsinki

Esquire Sets Up Paywall to Benefit James Foley Marquette Scholarship Fund


Ahead of the 13th anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks, Esquire magazine is putting “The Falling Man” — Tom Junod’s 2003 article about the photograph of a man falling from the World Trade Center — behind an optional paywall and suggesting readers pay $2.99 to read it.

Proceeds will be donated to the James Foley Scholarship Fund at Marquette University. Mr. Foley is one of two American journalists beheaded by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Mr. Junod has written a new introduction that establishes a connection among the photograph, Mr. Foley and Steven Sotloff, the second American journalist killed by ISIS.

“We’re all in mourning,” said David Granger, editor-in-chief of Esquire. “These two awful things have happened to people in our profession.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Apple – Perspective

En marge de la présentation de ses nouveaux produits iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus & Apple Watch, Apple a dévoilé en introduction de sa Keynote une très belle vidéo appelée « Perspective » jouant en anamorphose sur différentes installations et illusions d’optiques pour délivrer la philosophie de la marque.

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Red Bull, BMW and Samsung among brands to sign up to Facebook's new 'client council'

Unilever, Red Bull, Mondelez, Samsung, BMW, Procter & Gamble and Volkswagen are among the advertisers that have signed up to join Facebook’s new EMEA ‘client council’.

What Apple Pay Means for Marketers


Apple Watch was certainly the shiniest object in the room at Apple’s big event Tuesday, and there are, no doubt, interesting opportunities for brands to play into its functionality. But Apple Pay — a new mobile payment system — presents many opportunities for marketers looking to reach and influence consumers at a most crucial point: purchasing. Before we dive into those possibilities, here’s a breakdown of how the new mobile payment system works:

Pay replaces the need for a physical debit or credit card in an in-store transaction — you just hover your phone (or your Apple Watch) over a near field communication (NFC) reader at the register and it near-instantaneously transfers payment information after a one-touch authorization.

Registering a debit or credit card with Pay is pretty simple — you take a picture of the card, Apple verifies it, and the “card” becomes accessible through the Passbook app.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Sony Will Carry Viacom Networks on Internet-Based TV Platform


Viacom will make its networks available on Sony’s planned internet-based TV service, the companies announced on Wednesday.

Sony will carry 22 Viacom networks at the start, including MTV, Nickelodeon and Comedy Central.

This is the first deal Viacom has struck to provide its networks for a cloud-based TV service, which would compete with pay-TV providers such as cable and satellite companies.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

OKRP Holds Pet Focus Group for Big Lots

Chicago-based agency O’Keefe Reinhard & Paul has a new campaign for Big Lots, promoting its pet food and merchandise offerings with a focus group for pets.

Instead of writing a scripted ad, the agency got a group of pets together for “Pet Focus Group,” a digital video series. The videos feature moderators treating the group of pets like a focus group, with actors asking questions about Big Lots products and interacting with dogs, cats, and other pets. O’Keefe Reinhard & Paul chose to cast improvisational actors to interact with the pets, under the assumption that the animals would create funny situations on their own.

“We realized that instead of scripting this, it would be so much more fun to let pets be pets, and get really good improvisers to react in real time to whatever those animals are doing,” explains Sue Gillan, creative director at OKRP. And because you have these human facilitators in the room with the pets, they get to do the heavy lifting around uncovering the quality of the products without the event feeling commercialized. The result feels like a genuine discovery of the products.”

Stick around for “Cats Only” and “Pets with Style.” (more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

TBWAMAL and Apple Go Light in New iPhone Spots

In case you caught some of Apple’s super epic product launch event yesterday amidst all the Chinese translations and tech glitches, the company announced new versions of its signature product along with the much-discussed Apple Watch. Apple and its AOR TBWAMedia Arts Lab also launched a couple of new spots to promote the iPhone 6 and the slightly larger iPhone 6, which includes the “Plus” designation.

The celebrity hand models are Jimmy Fallon and Justin Timberlake. In the first spot, the two break it down in what we choose to read as a (slightly off-key) a capella tribute to the late, great Stanley Kubrick:

The second spot is more straightforward, and it’s less a collaboration than a competition. (Spoiler: JT wins.)

(more…)

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

Optics Brand Does Honda Cog…Except With Light

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Remember Honda Cog? That Rube Goldberg exercise in amazement? Many brands paid homage to that stunt. Well. here’s one more.

Japanese optics brand au Hikari has worked up its own two minutes of awesome except the whole thing is powered by light. You know, the way you can use a magnifying glass to burn paper? Well, apparently, there’s a lot more fun you can have with light.

Give the video a watch.

Making of video:

Save the Children: Ten minutes a day could change everything

Advertising Agency: Don’t Panic London, London, UK
Creative Director: Richard Beer
Art Director: Frederick Allsop
Copywriter: Joe Wade
Published: September 2014

Walkers Crisps: Twitter vending machine

Advertising Agency: AMVBBDO, UK

Björn Borg: Gaming inspired catwalk

A gaming inspired SS15 show that featured runway models in masks walking like game characters. The catwalk show is a teaser for their new advertising campaign and Björn Borg First Person Lover computer game that will launch in January 2015 along with the Björn Borg Spring-Summer 2015 collection.

Advertising Agency: Garbergs, Sweden
Art director: Lotta Mårlind
Music: Erik Haal
Show director: Bea Åkerlund
Production company: Link details
Producer: Marcus Pettersson

Itaka Foundation: Welcome Signs

Advertising Agency: Isobar Poland, Warsaw, Poland
Creative Director: Maciej Nowicki
Creatives: Wojciech Kowalik, Maciej Kozina
Designer: Maciej Listwan
Project management: Martyna Go??biewska, Magdalena D?ugowolska, Krzysztof Szymczak
Production: Filip Gieleci?ski / Posterscope
PR: Katarzyna Szlendak
Additional credits: Tomasz Pisanko, Pawe? Sitnicki

Roofings: Raid

Advertising Agency: Scanad, Kampala, Uganda
Creative Director: Amol Kulkarni
Art Director: Manasi Sankhe
Copywriters: Timothy Kasirivu, Andrew Karemani
Production: Ahoy Films
Client Service: Nachiket Sant, Abel Mugume
Published: September 2014