72andSunny, Sonos Say You Deserve Better Than Crappy Speakers

72andSunny launched a new campaign for Sonos, presenting the wireless speaker brand as the solution to common home audio problems like weak computer speakers and poorly integrated sound systems.

The 60-second spot at the heart of the campaign touches on all such problems, opening with a scene borrowed from 2009 bromantic comedy I Love You, Man which features Paul Rudd‘s character playing a Rush song for an unimpressed Rashida Jones on his computer speakers. From there we see a man holding his cellphone up to his ears, straining to hear the music, a noticeably grossed-out woman cleaning off earbud headphones she’s sharing with a guy, a man nearly having a panic attack while putting together a complicated speaker system and a rather unfortunate Bluetooth interruption. There’s also the problem of a father straining to hear dialogue while watching a show, only for the explosion in the next scene to wake up his sleeping baby.

It’s a relatable approach as most people who have listened to music (or watched Netflix) anytime in the past decade or so has likely encountered at least one of these problems. The spot ends with the tagline “You’re better than this,” implying viewers deserve a better listening experience. A series of 15-second spots explores each situation and dilemma specifically, and more clearly explains how Sonos offers a solution, something that 72andSunny doesn’t make much time for with all the scenes thrown into the mix.

Zambezi Kicks Off Football Season for Autotrader

Los Angeles agency Zambezi launched a new spot for Autotrader to coincide with the start of the NCAA and NFL football seasons entitled “Kick.”

“Kick” follows the agency’s installation and interactive event for the brand in Miami this summer, as well as June’s “Driven by Sport” effort. The new addition to the agency’s “Life is the Filter” campaign  shares an athletic focus with that ad, but in this case tells the story of a father and his daughter/multi-sport athlete. “Kick” opens on the daughter enthusiastically kicking the back of her father’s seat from her spot behind him, as an image of an Autotrader search for a car with more legroom appears onscreen. From there she turns to karate, prompting dad to go for the wagon, soccer and finally football, as dad surprises her with her first car after she kicks a winning filed goal. The spot ends with the tagline “The only car search engine driven by you.” 

“Kick” succeeds thanks to its narrative fluidity, as well as its decision to focus on a father-daughter relationship with a concluding football scene ahead of the new season. The scenes transition well with different sports accompanying different vehicles as the girl grows up from scene to scene, establishing the connection between father and daughter while also emphasizing a connection to the brand. It’s not groundbreaking, adhering to its share of category conventions, but it’s boundary pushing in its own little way and it’s easily the best Autotrader spot we’ve seen from Zambezi.

“Kick” makes its broadcast debut today during CBS’ coverage of SEC football and will also run during the network’s NFL coverage, as well as other major cable outlets, VOD and Networks.com.

Credits:

Client: Autotrader

Agency: Zambezi
Founder, Chief Executive Officer: Chris Raih
Executive Creative Director: Josh DiMarcantonio
Associate Creative Director: Ben George
Associate Creative Director: Nick Rodgers
Jr. Art Director: Paula Coral
Jr. Copywriter: Erin Meulbroek

Head of Content: Alex Cohn
Producers: Jordan Sider, Andrew Gage
Managing Director: Pete Brown
Account Director: Matt Kline
Account Supervisor: Lauren Bondell
Assistant Account Executive: James Almazan
Project Manager: Courtney Szews
Chief Strategy Officer: Kristina Jenkins
Group Strategy Director: Ryan Richards
Production Intern: Will Stiles

Production Company: Sanctuary
Director: Scott Pickett
Director of Photography: Damian Acevedo
Producer: Christopher Cho
Executive Producer: Preston Lee

Editorial: Blink Studios
Post Producers: Jordan Sider, Katrina Nahikian
Editor: Ling Ly
Assistant Editors: Sasha Perry / Paul Oh

Audio: Lime Studios
Audio Mixer: Zac Fisher
Audio Assistant: Kevin McAlpine

Executive Producer: Susie Boyajan

Color Correction: Company 3
Colorist: Sofie Borup
Producer: Clare Movshon
VFX: Arsenal
Flame Artist: Chris Noellert
Senior Producer: Pravina Sippy
Music: “Check Me Out”
Composer: Little Denise
Music Supervision: Good Ear Music
Music Supervisors: Andrew Kahn & Jackie Shuman

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Rebranded Americana Clothing – Abercrombie & Fitch's Fall Clothes Reveal a New Style for the Brand (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) Abercrombie & Fitch has experienced its fair share of controversy and drop in sales for many reasons, especially those regarding the brand’s inability to move with the constantly changing…

If 'Character Is Destiny,' What Does That Mean for Our Industry?


“Character is destiny.” It’s an aphorism I first encountered in high school and dates back over 2,500 years to Heraclitus and the Greeks. And for many months, both “character” and “destiny” have been much on my mind as a result of 2016’s acutely surprising and sadly disappointing revelations regarding gender and racial bias, sexual harassment and blatant sexism within the advertising, news and entertainment industries.

“Character is Destiny” is also the title of an op-ed piece that appeared on the opinion page of the New York Times, written by the late William “Bill” Safire in January 2005 (not to be confused with the book of a similar name written by Senator John McCain in 2007).

I knew Bill Safire, the legendary political speech writer and New York Times columnist. We both served as trustees of Syracuse University. When he spoke, I listened. Actually, when he spoke, most everyone listened. And when he penned this particular column, many took notice.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

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Google Injects Machine Learning Into Analytics App


Google said Friday it will provide a new stream of automated insights in its Google Analytics mobile app, allowing marketers to see key data metrics in matter of minutes.

Previously, it could take marketers several hours to discover the same data points, Google said. The new feature is available today on both Android and iOS.

Other companies offer analytics products to their customers through machine learning — IBM and its Watson Analytics comes to mind — but few, if any, offer similar features on a mobile app. This can be especially useful for marketers who are on the go, about to head into a meeting or unfamiliar with analytics products.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Departed Barbarian Group CEO Says You Shouldn’t Believe Everything You Read on This Blog

Last week, we wrote about The Barbarian Group interim CEO Aaron Lau taking over for Peter Kim less than nine months after he succeeded Sophie Kelly, who had served in the position since 2011, as chief executive. Multiple sources told us that Cheil Worldwide made the decision to replace Kim, but he disputed that claim in a blog post yesterday, which arrived on the heels of a Digiday article in which co-founder Rick Webb told the publication the agency is “literally being run into the ground.”

Kim wrote that when he took over as CEO last December, he was “tasked with turning an agency around that was in worse shape than anyone realized,” a statement which seems to be corroborated by the aforementioned Digiday piece. 

According to Kim, “the actions we’ve taken over the past three quarters have allowed the agency to continue producing great work for global brands and left the financials cleaner and more transparent than they’ve been for many years,” and “With this phase of transformation complete, I made the decision to separate from The Barbarian Group and Cheil Worldwide.”

He added: “don’t believe everything you read in the trades. Many articles are tipped by people with personal agendas and written for today’s Gawker-engendered media environment, designed to maximize clicks, shares, and gossip. The truth is out there, but only half of it will ever make Agency Spy.”

Any enlightenment on this topic from the comments section?

HelloFresh: Challenge accepted

For Heineken, Formula 1 is 'More Than a Race'


Heineken’s $200 million Formula 1 sponsorship kicks off this weekend at the Milan Grand Prix, spearheaded by a TV commercial that urges racing fans, “When you drive, never drink.”

The deal between the brewer and the global motorsport brand attracted controversy from public health campaigners when it was announced in June. The Heineken launch spot’s strong stand against drinking and driving could be seen as a response to critics of the partnership.

Anuraag Trikha, Heineken’s global brand communications director, said, “It’s a natural question to ask our point of view on drinking and driving. For Heineken, it’s an obligation and an opportunity to promote responsible behavior, because people do want to listen to a brand like us. We are the only brewer to show people rejecting our own product.”

Continue reading at AdAge.com

HP Sent Out ‘A Challenge to Agency Leadership’ Regarding Diversity

General Mills made headlines this week by revealing on Tuesday that it has specific diversity requirements for the agencies competing in its creative review, requiring the creative departments of its future agency partners to include 50 percent women and 20 percent people of color.

Today we’ve learned that HP CEO Antonio Lucio sent out a letter to current agency partners with a similar call to action regarding diversity on August 30. After making an effort to foster diversity internally, with a specific eye toward closing the gender gap with female hires, HP is now asking the same of its agency partners. Among the recipients of the letter were BBDO, FleishmanHillard, Gyro, Fred&Farid and Porter Novelli.

“Diversity gives HP a competitive advantage. It helps drive new business, fuel innovation, and attract and attain the best employees,” an HP representative said in a statement offered to AgencySpy. “This letter is a call to action. Now that we have built our business case and begun to put our own house in order, we are relying on our agency partners to do the same; we are expecting these marketing and communications leaders to actively embrace diversity and actually do something about it.”

HP is expecting its agency partners to act fast on plans to increase diversity. “We have called upon each of our agency partners’ CEOs to develop a plan that significantly increases the representation of women and people of color in top creative and strategic roles,” the representative added. “Without exception the responses we have received are of true enthusiasm and commitment. Our agency partners now have 30 days to deliver their plans and 12 months to make good on those plans – and we intend to monitor each firm’s performance along the way.”

While the letter makes reference to a “a scorecard that will track multiple levels of diversity,” which HP has implemented for its own efforts and now expects to be adopted by its agency partners, it’s unclear if HP has specific diversity quotas for its agencies, as with General Mills’ demands in its creative review, or if it is working with its agency partners to determine the best way to reach its ultimate diversity goals. It’s also unclear if HP is echoing General Mills’ targeting of creative departments in particular. But it is clear that the company has set out a very specific timeline for agencies to set up and implement plans for increased diversity.

We’ve included the letter in full below:

A Challenge to Agency Leadership

August 30

Dear Friends,

Earlier this month I spoke with you — the CEOs of all of HP’s advertising and marketing agency partners — to ask

that we all join in making an important commitment to radically improve the percentage of women and people of

color in leadership roles in our organizations. I’m delighted that without exception you gave your enthusiastic

support for this pledge.

 

How successful we are will define our legacies. So, as you set your goals and make your plans, I ask you to keep

these points in mind:

 

At HP, our vision is to make technology that makes the world a better place for everyone, everywhere. But we

recognize that we can’t realize our vision if our business leaders don’t represent everyone, in color, gender, and

geography. We take great pride that HP has the most diverse board of directors in the technology industry, and

that we make diversity an explicit business goal. Yet I know we can do even more. I know we must do more.

Including women and people of color in key roles is not only a values issue, but a significant business imperative.

HP thrives on innovation. Study after study confirms that innovation is improved and accelerated by broad

perspectives and diversity of thought. Marketers are expected to have deep understanding and insight about their

markets, about decision makers, and about customers.

 

We are more likely to create solutions that amaze our customers if our workforce represents the communities we

serve. As a global company, we need to take a broad view of diversity as increased representation will take

different forms in different countries. We have decided to start by addressing women.

 

We make printers and personal computers. Who buys them? Women: 53 percent for computers, 45 percent for

printers. We are focused on ensuring that our marketing department has the right talent composition to capture

our business opportunities. Over the last 12 months we have invested in programs designed to ensure that at

least half of our top marketing jobs are held by women. It is important to understand that these were not random

moves to increase representation. Instead, they were new opportunities for high-potential people and strategic

hires and the quality of our team output has never been better.

 

To measure our own efforts, we are creating a scorecard that will track multiple levels of diversity of our own

global marketing organization. We are far from perfect, and I know there will be challenges, but I am committed

to immediate, global, impact, rigorously measuring our performance and being transparent about the gaps to

overcome.

 

I am asking the same of each of you.

My expectation is that in the next 30 days, you will deliver formal plans – and within 12 months make good on

those plans. Thank you for working to significantly increase the percentage of women in top creative and

strategic roles on our account.

 

We owe this to ourselves, to each other and to future generations. By making the important and necessary

changes today, together we can bend the arc of history in favor of inclusion and opportunity.

Now comes the proof of our commitment. Thank you for joining us.

 

Antonio

Antonio Lucio

Chief Marketing & Communications Officer

HP Inc.

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Attention Note 7 Users: Samsung Recalling Your Smartphones Due to Battery Fault


Samsung Electronics recalled its Galaxy Note 7 smartphones because of a faulty battery and announced a global replacement program, days before archrival Apple is set to unveil its newest iPhones.

Sales of the large-screen device will be halted in 10 countries, Koh Dong Jin, head of Samsung’s mobile division, said Friday. He said there are about 2.5 million units in the hands of users and carriers as he apologized for the battery issue, which has been linked to explosions of the phone when charging.

The recall is a blow to Samsung’s reputation and robs the company of momentum it had built in smartphones by capitalizing on a lull in demand for iPhones between new models. Demand for the iris-reading Note 7, which debuted to glowing reviews, and the release of the company’s biggest profit in two years had driven its share price to a record as analysts raised their price targets.

Continue reading at AdAge.com

Droga5 New York Celebrated National Toilet Paper Day for Quilted Northern

Last week (August 26 to be precise) was National Toilet Paper Day. Somehow we missed the memo on that one, but Droga5 New York didn’t, as the agency created a digital spot and mini popup shops to celebrate the holiday (if you can even call it that) for toilet paper brand Quilted Northern.

To ring in the event, Droga5 New York crated the online spot “A Most Forgettable Holiday,” which drove traffic to the brand’s one-day sale on Amazon. In the spot, Quilted Northern admits that National Toilet Paper Day is unlike holidays in that there are “no gifts, no parades, no jolly people in suits, and no one gets this day off work.” But, while the brand admits the day is nowhere near as important as Women’s Equality Day, which it share a date with, the brand does bring people together with its deal, “designed for each and every American with a butt.” The spot ends by suggesting viewers subscribe to the brand on Amazon so they never have to remember buying toilet paper again.

The whole approach is a continuation of Droga5’s “Designed to be Forgotten” campaign, launched in May of 2015, centered around the entirely forgettable holiday. Its self-effacing qualities lead into a subtle push for the Amazon sale while leading into some quirkiness (sign-spinning bunny, etc.) designed to keep the video watchable.

Additionally, Droga5 created a series of pop-up shops around New York and Seattle…with a small catch. The mini pop-up shops were too small for human entry, and didn’t actually sell toilet paper. Instead, visitors could pop their heads into the shops and were directed to the brand’s Amazon sale. Hmm, that actually seems kind of memorable…

QN_NTPD_Flatiron_Selects-05267-2
Credits:
Agency: Droga5 NY
Creative Chairman: David Droga
Chief Creative Officer: Ted Royer
Group Creative Director: Don Shelford
Associate Creative Director: Erica Pressly
Associate Creative Director: Emmie Nostitz
Jr. Copywriter: Ted Meyer
Jr. Art Director: Tommaso Fontanella
Copywriter: Yahkeema Moffitt
Sr. Art Director: Kat Dudkiewicz
Executive Design Director: Rob Trostle
Designer: Dan Kane
Designer: Nate Moore
Chief Creation Officer: SallyAnn Dale
Senior Broadcast Producer: Anders Hedberg
Social Producer: Luke Bumgarner
Music Supervisor: Ryan Barkan
Music Supervisor: Mike Ladman
Head of Interactive Production: Niklas Lindstrom
Executive Interactive Producer: Tasha Cronin
Interactive Producer: Andrew Puzzuoli
Associate Interactive Producer: Alyssa Cashman
Global Chief Strategy Officer: Jonny Bauer
Strategy Director: Elaine Purcell
Senior Strategist: Mara Buta
Senior Communications Strategist: Delphine McKinley
Senior Data Strategist: Brad Mumbrue
Data Strategist: Remy Lupica
Group Account: Director Brett Edgar
Account Director: Ross Gillis
Account Supervisor: Kate Tyler Monroe
Associate Account Manager: Kyra Gembka
Project Manager: Michelle Yee
Client GeorgiaPacific / Quilted Northern
CMO: Douwe Bergsma
SVP & General Manager, Tissue: Vivek Joshi
Senior Brand Director: Jason Ippen
Director Brand Center: Shari Neumann
Brand Building Leader: Aviral Singh
Brand Manager: Ricky Busby
Brand Manager: Melissa Blunte
Senior Associate Brand Manager: Lauren Freedman
Senior Associate Brand Manager: Dalyn Mathews
Social Media Manager: Gisela Carapaica

Production Company: Pet Gorilla
Director: Luc Schurgers
DOP: Ralph Kaechele
Executive Producerz: Dominic Bernacci
Producer: Alana Mitnick
Editorial: Friendshop
Editor: Adam Longo
Assistant Editor: Alex Pirrone
Executive Producer: Melissa Mapes
Producer: Adam Roe
Flame Artist: Matt Stroub
Post Production: The Mill
Producer: Natalie Westerfield
Colorist: Mikey Rossiter
Sound: Heard City
Mixer: Eric Warzecha
Executive Producer: Gloria Pitagorsky
Producer: Sasha Awn
Interactive Production: Company Unit 9
Executive Producer: Rebecca Hudson
Project Manager: Martina Sogni
Architecture Director: Kate Lynham
Creative Director: Thomas Davies
Installation Developer: Christian Bianchini
Product Designer: YuChang Chou
Illustrator: Sophie Conchonnet
Designer: Gosia Pawlak
Technical Lead: Zbigniew Czarnecki
UX Designer: Simon Bauchet
QA Manager: Eve Acton
QA Manager: Andrew Heraty
Head of QA: Dominic Berzons
Frontend Developer: Rafael Gomes Alcantara