Under Armour in a Box: Sportswear Brand Debuts Subscription Service


Baby clothes, kids clothes, professional attireand now, sportswear. Under Armour is getting into the subscription game with a new mailed offering where consumers receive a box and keep only what they want. This is a first for the Baltimore-based brand, which is calling the new product the ArmourBox.

Consumers can opt into the service, which does not include shipping fees, every 30, 60 or 90 days. After completing a personal profile, they’ll then receive a selection of products picked by one of Under Armour’s stylists. The company is using an artificial intelligence system to help stylists make recommendations based on the consumer’s profile and user data.

An Under Armour spokeswoman did not return a request for comment about the marketing behind the product or the prices.

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'Our Strategy Is Working:' Target Plows Into the Holidays


It’s mere days before the crucial holiday selling season gets underway and Target is rolling full-steam ahead. On Thursday, Brian Cornell, chief executive of the Minneapolis-based retailer, laid out a series of plans for the remainder of the year, based on a gameplan he unveiled in February. “Our strategy is working,” he said, speaking from the brand’s new 43,000 square-foot small-format store in Manhattan’s Herald Square. He noted that traffic, sales and digital growth have all increased in recent months.

Here are some other key takeaways as Target preps for holiday and 2018:

Expect more “Target Run and Done” messaging

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More Speakers Announced for Ad Age Next


The first Ad Age Next conference is just one month away. We’ve packed two days with speakers covering everything from augmented reality and blockchain and facial recognition, to millennials and collaboration.

Here’s a look at some of the new additions to the agenda:

MediaLink’s Chief Marketing Officer Dana Anderson will offer her thoughts on how today’s brand leaders can successfully navigate the complex network of industry players, and outline what the “partner of the future” looks like.

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35 Asian-Inspired QSR Innovations – From Wok-Fired Noodle Bowls to Asain Fusion Fast Food Menus (TOPLIST)

(TrendHunter.com) These Asian-inspired QSR innovations range from wok-fired noodle bowls to fusion fast food menus. When looking at memorable menu items with a savory flavor profile, standouts include 7-Eleven’…

Hip Winterized Sneakers – The Converse Chuck Taylor All-Star Waterproof Shoes are Winter-Ready (GALLERY)

(TrendHunter.com) The Converse Chuck Taylor All-Star Waterproof Shoes come as a stylish option when it comes to footwear for the winter that will work to keep your feet dry and comfortable no matter what the weather….

Slim Wallet-Tracking Cards – The Chipolo Card Slips Seamlessly into Your Wallet for Instant Tracking

(TrendHunter.com) The market for tracking devices is steadily increasing as consumers look to ensure that all of their belongings are never lost, so new options like the Chipolo Card are being developed to further…

Lexus positions CT hybrid model as perfect for urbanites with Time Out activity

Lexus has partnered with Time Out for its self-charging CT hybrid model to highlight how it is the perfect car for ‘busy urbanites’.

Após derrotar campeão mundial, AlphaGo aprende a jogar sozinho

Programa ganha novo upgrade e em três dias aprende estratégia que humanos levaram séculos para aprender

> LEIA MAIS: Após derrotar campeão mundial, AlphaGo aprende a jogar sozinho

Facebook testa ferramenta para informar currículo dentro da rede social

Mark Zuckerberg, CEO do Facebook, na Muralha da China

Ferramenta torna rede de Zuckerberg ainda mais próxima do Linkedin

> LEIA MAIS: Facebook testa ferramenta para informar currículo dentro da rede social

Chega de líquido azul: finalmente sangue em anúncios de absorvente

Em pesquisa com 10 mil pessoas, 74% disseram desejar comerciais de absorvente mais realistas

> LEIA MAIS: Chega de líquido azul: finalmente sangue em anúncios de absorvente

Party Coverage: Scene City: Departing Elle Editor Robbie Myers Gets Party, Tells of Fire

A little over a week after Ms. Myers stepped down from her position at the magazine, she and her two children had to evacuate their apartment.

Thursday Morning Stir

-mcgarrybowen London made chocolate brand Green & Black’s first-ever TV spot with a Red Riding Hood theme.

-Publicis Groupe shares dropped today after growth rates of 1.2% failed to meet analysts’ 1.8% predictions. CEO Arthur Sadoun warned of a “volatile” market but assured investors that he’s got things under control. And we wonder why they’re skipping Cannes this year.

-For context: Unilever and Nestle also reported disappointing sales for Q3. We have seen the future, and it is not CPG.

-PepsiCo marketer and former Kendall Jenner fan Brad Jakeman pulled a Mildenhall by leaving to start his own consultancy. And his first client will be … Pepsi!

-On the creative side, onetime copywriter Paul Burke argues that agencies should just admit when they’re “covering” old campaigns, a la Guinness.

-Goodby Silverstein & Partners launched a “Device Free Dinner” campaign for nonprofit Common Sense Media starring Will Ferrell.

-The Guardian is diving deep into VR, even though they have no idea when it might start to make money. Sound familiar?

Ogilvy India Managing Partner Chandana Agarwal Claims Sexual Harassment in the Workplace is ‘Part of Growing Up’

Ogilvy & Mather India managing partner Chandana Agarwal weighed in on the “Me Too” social media campaign with a post, screencaptured by an Ogilvy & Mather employee, in which she dismisses certain types of sexual harassment as “part of growing up.”

The Vagabomb reported that when the Ogilvy employee shared the status, she “requested anonymity and feared for her safety.”

In the post, Agarwal expressed “many issues” with the “Me Too” campaign “at many levels.” She went on to claim the issue should not be about things “like someone grabbing at you or pinching you and that “there are some experiences that are just part of growing up especially in India.”

She adds that “there are some experiences that are part of growing up anywhere in the world” and seems to suggest that these include “a boss/ a colleague/ a teacher trying to act fresh” and that “this is not about that.”

Agarwal concludes by saying the conversation should be about more traumatic experiences of abuse than the ones she suggested and that “By making it so general we are being unfair” to those “who have been scarred” with such experiences, ending with the hashtag, “#notme.”

Here’s a screenshot of the post:

Harnidh Kaur shared the screenshot on Facebook and explained: “This screenshot was sent to me by a current employee who chose to stay anonymous (for obvious reasons), who very rightly pointed out that this made her feel actively unsafe at work. Calling out women who propagate a toxic ability when they have the power to change things for the better is as important as calling men out.”

She likened Agarwal’s line of reasoning with the “line of minimising so many survivors face” and pointed out that Ogilvy & Mather is the agency behind Dove campaigns which she claims “exploits important ideologies and beliefs.”

This week we also learned that Ogilvy & Mather’s holding company, WPP, continues to employ Gustavo Martinez, who appears to be leading its operations in Spain, while a sexual harassment and discrimination case filed by JWT global head of public relations Erin Johnson continues.

Etisalat: Wellness, 1

Etisalat: Wellness, 2

ChipsAway: Before & After

Just imagine this was your car. That scratch would bug you, wouldn’t it? Just like it bugs the folks at ChipsAway who, with over 200 mobile car body specialists over the UK, are experts at repairing. Incorporating a scratched car door, we presented the consumer’s problem and brand’s solution as a simple yet effective before / after visual to run on successive magazine pages.

Callaway Golf: Golf Lives

Callaway, VICE Media and the KIMBA Group are releasing the final episode of branded entertainment series Golf Lives for Callaway – featuring rap legend Scarface and former NFL Player Arian Foster.

Golf Lives Part I: Scarface

Video of Golf Lives Part I: Scarface

Golf Lives Part II: Arian Foster

Video of Golf Lives Part II: Arian Foster

Golf Lives Part III: Arian Foster Vs. Scarface

Video of Golf Lives Part III: Arian Foster Vs. Scarface

Kansas City’s Mayor Reviewed Scores of Amazon Products in Sneaky Pitch for Company’s HQ2

Sly James, the mayor of Kansas City, Mo., is courting Amazon’s much-coveted second headquarters in a highly tailored medium–the site’s own product reviews section, where he’s been leaving 5-star reviews for scores of items his office recently purchased. Inside those reviews, he’s snuck some talking points for Kansas City itself. “10/10 would recommend this horse…

Svedka Vodka Uses Retargeting to Make Creepy Halloween Ads That Follow You Around

Ad retargeting is more trick than treat, right? Regardless, Svedka Vodka looks to leverage the unloved online marketing practice for a Halloween “Banner Ad Curse” campaign, created by Toronto agency Bensimon Byrne. This marks the third straight scary seasonal sojourn for the client-agency team, following their “Printable Costumes” in 2015 and last year’s “First World…

Bud Light's Big TV Play: 'Walking Dead' and 'Super Bowl'


Here’s more evidence that big TV events still matter to big brands: Bud Light is seizing on the season premiere of “The Walking Dead” on AMC and Sunday’s NBC rematch between last season’s Super Bowl teams, the Patriots and Falcons. The plotlines for the two ads play off the programming.

The spot debuting on AMC spoofs the program by showing a group of friends looking for cover from the zombie apocalypse. Their greatest fear is running out of Bud Light. The football-themed ad, meanwhile, is a colonial-themed dramatization of a man returning from a beer run at the Patriots’ Gillette Stadium. Both spots are by Wieden & KennedyNew York and continue the brew’s “Famous Among Friends” theme. They follow a “Game of Thrones”-inspired spot that debuted in August ahead of the season finale of the HBO show.

Bud Light, which is an NFL sponsor, has long weaved football storylines into its ads. But the concentrated effort to play off popular TV shows is a newer approach. The ads are “designed to be culturally connected and relevant contextually to what’s going on,” says Bud Light VP Andy Goeler. The Anheuser-Busch InBev-owned brand also seeds content in digital to push the themes.

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