Samsung Galaxy Alpha: Shadwell Chic

Advertising Agency: Cheil UK
Creative Directors: Dave Newbold, Jim Eyre
Copywriter: Dave Newbold
Planners: Tony Evans, Jason Kidd
Agency Producer: Alex Davis
Account Handlers: Andrew Boatman, Fraser Campbell
Media Agency: Starcom MediaVest

Homepride: Fred about the house

Advertising Agency: McCann, London, UK
Chief Creative Officers: Rob Doubal, Laurence Thomson
Creative Director: Mike Oughton
Copywriter: Jess Mallett
Managing Partner: Kate Modeland
Account Director: Kate Douglas
Planning Partner: Nicky Vita
Planner: Thomas Keane
Head of Integrated Production: Sergio Lopez
Agency Producers: Claire Hopkins, John Cheesemore
Director: Rosey
Production Company: Radical Media
Producer: Malachy Mcanenny
Post Production: Work Editorial / Craft London
Music: ‘Amusement’
Composer: Franco Micalazzi
Media Planning: Carat

Yakult: Forever

Advertising Agency: Piston, San Diego, USA
Creative Directors: Colin Ayres, Jessica D’Elena-Tweed
Production: Passion New York
Directors: Sam Mason, Jordan Bruner
Published: September 2014

Association of Shelter Volunteers and Animal Rights Istanbul: Dog

Every pet you buy from pet shops causes death of another. Don’t buy, let’s adopt from shelters.

Advertising Agency: Manajans JWT, Istanbul, Turkey
Deputy Creative Director / Copywriter: Kaan Ertüz
Creative Group Head / Art Director: Firat Yildiz
Copywriters: Erdem Güler, Cem Yolal
Photographer: Cihan Ünalan
Retouch: Zoo Istanbul
Account Supervisor: Pelin Karagöz

MediaLink Aims to Expand Consulting on Programmatic Ad Tech


MediaLink, the well-connected media consultancy, is expanding to offer consulting in programmatic ad technology, a fast-growing area that offers marketers new powers but new questions as well.

The company has hired Matt Spiegel, an industry veteran who most recently served as senior VP at MediaMath, for the newly created role of senior VP-general manager of the marketing and technology solutions group. He’ll be responsible for growing the practice as well as a nascent Chicago office.

“As we get more into ad tech and marketing solutions, Matt is a great person to come in particularly with a focus on programmatic,” said Michael Kassan, chairman-CEO at MediaLink, which employs about 70 people. “The world of programmatic is changing relationships in a lot of ways.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Vernel Fabric Softenner: Jean, Polyester, Velvet, Wool


Print
Vernel

Smooth as it seems.

Advertising Agency:King Kong, Bangkok, Thailand
Creative Director:Eaknarong Vijittrissadee
Art Director:Eaknarong Vijittrissadee, Athipon Vijittrissadee
Copywriter:Jittipa Tanasiripong
Illustrator:XIVIUS Studio
Photographer:XIVIUS Studio
Typographer:Eaknarong Vijittrissadee, Lalita Boratisa

Peugeot 508 with Hill Assist: Kid Ramp, Dog Ramp


Outdoor, Print
Peugeot

Resume the climb as if it wasn’t climb.

Advertising Agency:Y&R, São Paulo, Brazil
Executive Creative Director:Rui Branquinho
Creative Director:Rui Branquinho, Victor Sant´anna
Creative:Pedro Guerra, Kleyton Mourão, Renato Butori, Denon Oliveira

Ocean Beach Series

Le photographe Douglas Ljungkvist, basé à Brooklyn, est l’auteur d’une série très graphique intitulée « Ocean Beach ». Après la dévastation de l’ouragan Sandy, il a capturé les façades de maisons des années 50 avec des couleurs pastel et délicates, situées dans le Nord de la ville Lavallette au New Jersey.

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Six trends driving the future of social

As #SMW kicks off in earnest Nicola Kemp reveals the key trends driving the market.
While there are few certainties in life, there are many at social media week. Looking ahead at the week s events, undoubtedly there will be much chatter around conversational marketing, how social is impacting different sectors and a smattering of furrowed brows over the implication of trolling. Of course there will also be the obligatory seminar waxing lyrical about the wonder of Red Bull Stratos. (And who can blame them it remains a watershed moment in marketing and what’s more we’ve done the same here ).
But in the echo chamber that is social media, marketers are at risk of getting a distorted view of how effective their beloved medium is driving sales. Just as if they rely on social channels in isolation, they may fall victim to a distorted view of their customers at large. With this in mind here are the six key trends driving social media, for social media week and beyond.
1.The new visual economy
It was not how the models sashayed down the runway but how they looked on Instagram that was the real indicators of success at last week’s London Fashion Week. The smartphone – the camera in our pockets – is revolutionising not just how we see and record the world around us, but how we see ourselves . When an Instagram image has become a unit of speech in it’s own right the challenge for brands to better quantify and understand how their consumers interact with them is phenomenal.
As the popularity of the ice-bucket challenge demonstrates, consumers are increasingly willing to turn their hand to video. Jan Rezab, CEO of Socialbakers, says that on social channels “videos are the new photos”. He explains: “From short-form micro- content on Vine to longer videos on Facebook, the aggregation of video and content is a huge opportunity.”
2. The commerce connection
Social commerce is another key area of growth in social media. However, while platforms such as Facebook and Twitter are attempting to position themselves as direct sales channels, some believe they are not natural sales platforms.
Russian social network VK.com has taken a more nuanced approach to social commerce. The site empowers its communities to sell products by not only rewarding them with a percentage of sales, but encouraging brands to co-create with them to develop the right tone of voice and approach.
“The opportunity is for everyone to become a micro-brand ambassador whether that is through sharing an invite to Uber or sharing product recommendations. The challenge for Facebook is that it needs to learn to contextualise product conversations,” explains Socialbakers Rezab.
Nick Dutch, head of digital at Domino s Pizza Group, says that better linking sales with social channels remains the Holy Grail. “The key is not to over-value what it means if consumers engage the commercial value is hard to get a handle on. The reality is sometimes consumers share your content just because it is funny. Buy buttons are new but we believe that social media will become a bigger influencer in our consumer sales,” he explains.
3. Closed loop audiences
The days when having a Facebook strategy was an acceptable shortcut to a social media strategy are long gone. In an era where Facebook appears to be entering its awkward middle age, brands need to better understand a growing suite of platforms from SnapChat, WhatsApp and Tinder.
4. Growing Pains
The social media industry is facing up to a number of challenges, both commercially and ethically. Peter Thiel, the co-founder of PayPal and Palantir Technologies, recently declared that Twitter is mismanaged, underperforming and there s “probably a lot of pot-smoking going on there”.
Thiel s comments may well reflect just as much on the fact that he has a book to promote as the struggles to commercialise social media, but there is no denying that social networks have struggled to realise their potential as advertising platforms.
Jonathan Trimble, CEO at 18 Feet and Rising, says there is a huge sales push from social media platforms who are seeking to aggressively build advertising revenues. He explains: “They are not necessarily lending themselves to high value engagement. It is almost like the chuggers on the street, it is not a great experience for consumers.”
5. The evolution of the social newsroom
The social newsroom has long been a key buzzword for the industry. Having a comprehensive content strategy that embraces the rise and fall of consumers’ everydat life has long been seen as a cornerstone of content marketing. Yet barely a week goes by without a brand losing sight of the basics.
From furniture brand Made.com celebrating the Scottish independence that never was, to Gap’s almost unfathomably crass tweet declaring Hurricane Sandy as a fantastic opportunity to shop. However, smart brands are doing more than clumsily jumping on the social newsroom bandwagon. We remain in awe of Red Bull Stratos; a feat not just of marketing brilliance but evidence of the enduring power of human endeavor. Yet for the countless marketers left rolling their eyes that it is in the realms of economic possibility that they could pull a Red Bull, the evolution of the social newsroom provides more tangible examples for change. Perhaps the best example of this shift is Adidas’ World Cup campaign. In a marketing tour de force the sportswear giant trounced its competitors in a cluttered market by embracing the power of ‘ anticipated content’.
Instead of leaning back and waiting for consumers to shape the conversation Adidas looked beyond the traditional linear narrative of the social newsroom to create thousands of pieces of content based on almost every conceivable outcome.
This notion of anticipated content where brands invest in deeper, richer content around campaigns is set to be a key trend moving forward.
6. The context conundrum
It is the ugly underbelly of social media – and one that agencies, brands and marketers have struggled to come to terms with. There is no denying that social media channels have provided a platform for ferocity and extremism and gut wrenching acts of inhumanity.
Social media has transformed the context of our digital lives into a rapid feed. A shift which some commentators believe has stripped consumers of their ability to decide what they actually want to watch or read.
In many ways this context conundrum has been the digital marketing industry s dirty little secret. Certainly social media cannot guarantee the halo effect of traditional media channels such as glossy magazines.
The industry cannot afford to ignore the fact that the platforms developed to drive communication are also being used to drive a wedge between us.
@nickykc

UK agencies dominate Grand Clio Awards 2014

UK agencies are set to dominate the Grand Clio Awards this year, after winning five of the nine categories up for grabs.

Peugeot 508 ad harks back to Spaghetti Westerns

The tropes of the the Spaghetti Western – mysterious protagonists, frontier towns, close-ups of the faces of dirty, grizzled men, and guitar riffs – are paid homage in a TV ad for Peugeot’s 508.

Budweiser usa um simpático cãozinho para falar sobre a combinação de álcool e direção

Como não amar os labradores, esses cãezinhos tão fofos e simpáticos que mesmo depois de adultos, ainda continuam com aquela carinha de filhote? A Budweiser percebeu isso e, para o intervalo do Super Bowl deste ano, usou a receita tradicional de seus cavalos Clydesdale combinada a um sapeca labrador. Pronto: foi escolhido o comercial favorito dos norte-americanos exibido durante a final do campeonato da NFL. Só que não parou por aí.

Na sexta-feira, a Bud divulgou no YouTube Friends Are Waiting, um filme direcionado a conscientizar as pessoas sobre o consumo consciente de bebidas alcóolicas, lembrando que sua combinação com direção pode ser fatal.

Aqui, vemos um cara e seu cãozinho, que fazem tudo juntos – aquela história de amizade linda que aparece com frequência nos comerciais da marca de cervejas. Um dia, entretanto, ele deixa o amigo de quatro patas em casa para sair com sua galera, e promete voltar logo. O problema é que o tempo vai passando e nada…

A primeira coisa que vem à nossa mente é quantas vezes alguém se despediu dos pais, filhos e amigos, dizendo que voltava logo, mas nunca retornou por conta de um motorista alcoolizado.

Apesar de diversos veículos apontarem a criação como sendo da Anomaly, responsável por Puppy Love, a AdAge aponta que desta vez os responsáveis são os criativos da Momentum Worldwide. E só para constar, já foram mais de 6 milhões de views desde sexta-feira.

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Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Vernel Fabric Softenner: Vernel


Print
Vernel

Smooth as it seems.

Advertising Agency:King Kong, Bangkok, Thailand
Creative Director:Eaknarong Vijittrissadee
Art Director:Eaknarong Vijittrissadee, Athipon Vijittrissadee
Copywriter:Jittipa Tanasiripong
Illustrator:XIVIUS Studio
Photographer:XIVIUS Studio
Typographer:Eaknarong Vijittrissadee, Lalita Boratisa

Could Apple Pay Kill The Traditional Wallet?


Apple is going after wallet makers with its new mobile payment system, called Apple Pay, which threatens to disrupt the whole industry. The digital wallet introduced last week allows consumers to make in-store and online payments using their phones – effectively eliminating the need for a traditional wallet.

But billfold brands aren’t shaking in their pockets just yet. After all, we carry other things in our wallets besides credit cards. “It’s definitely going to have an impact, but I don’t think that it’s going to be a pervasive impact,” said Michael Lyons, inventor at Rogue Industries, a Maine-based wallet maker. “Even if people want to carry a smartphone that has the pay capability, some people are still going to want to carry some cash or IDs or credit cards.”

Digital wallets are also subject to the same fickle forces as our phones — battery life and connectivity.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

For Adland, Party Lines a Little Blurry Ahead of Midterm


The GOP may wrest control of the Senate from the Democrats in the mid-term elections and key lawmakers are retiring or are in danger of losing their seats. But the nation’s big advertisers are keeping their cool amid the political turmoil, confident they will have the right allies in the next Congress.

Dan Jaffe, group executive VP-government relations for the Association of National Advertiser, said the possible takeover of the Senate by Republicans, a party that’s considered more business-friendly than the Democrats, is not necessarily a boon for the advertising industry because the issues important to the marketing industry don’t neatly cross party lines. And despite a couple of years of gridlock, the next Congress is expected to consider a number of issues important to advertisers, including tax inversion and deductibility, advertising of e-cigarettes and privacy concerns.

“We will be able to have our voice heard no matter what party wins,” Mr. Jaffe said.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Stuart Smith to Succeed Chris Graves as CEO of Ogilvy PR


WPP’s Ogilvy PR has promoted Stuart Smith, its CEO for Europe, Africa and the Middle East, to global CEO. He succeeds Chris Graves, who is moving into a newly created chairman role.

“This is about not missing opportunities and focusing more on content where it meets social, where it meets mobile and where it meets big data,” Mr. Graves said.

Mr. Graves had been global CEO since 2009 and previously ran Ogilvy PR’s Asia Pacific region. He joined the PR agency in 2005 after a long career on the media side of the business, where he most recently served as managing director at Dow Jones.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Please Don't Compare This Designed-in-China Wearable To Google Glass


Continue reading at AdAge.com

Downton Abbey launch audience drops 1.1m from 2013

‘Downton Abbey’ returned with an average audience of 8.4 million last night, down from 9.5 million last year.

Holidaymakers eschew travel websites in favour of general internet searches

Holidaymakers are eschewing travel websites in favour of general internet searches when seeking ideas about where to book a trip, according to new research.

Kids health app wins Tesco hackathon

Tesco has launched an app that helps children chose healthier food, following a 48 hour hackathon.