Huge Celebrates ‘Commencement Day’ for Pfizer

Huge launched a new spot promoting Pfizer’s “Get Old” initiative, launched in 2012, entitled “Commencement Day.”

“Commencement Day” uses the familiar trope of summer graduation as a way to use “cultural experiences usually associated with youth to challenge conventional views of aging.” The effort is built around new Harris Poll research which found that “as people get older, the more open they are to experiencing new beginnings.” As one example, most millenials (95 percent) said that under 40 was the best time to get married, compared with 62 percent of Gen Xers and 60 percent of Baby Boomers. The spot shows an elderly couple making the decision to get married, interspersed with a commencement speech reminding viewers that “The moments that define you never stop, and the most rewarding ones may be just ahead.” The spot ends with the message “Every day is your commencement day,” followed by the unfortunate tagline, “Get ready. Get set. Get old.”

The “Commencement Day” spot is housed on the updated GetOld.com site, along with stories supporting the initiative, including that of Pfizer colleague and ovarian cancer survivor Alicia Dellario, “who is dedicated to inspiring others to live life to the fullest, no matter what challenges they face.”

“Through Get Old, we, at Pfizer, want to help people understand that each stage of life is an opportunity to begin again and experience ‘firsts,’” said Sally Susman, executive vice president, Corporate Affairs at Pfizer. “As our longevity continues to increase it is more important than ever to stay healthy, to live well, and that’s why Pfizer has always been supportive of healthy aging.”

Huge Created a New Agency to Serve Apple. Who Works There, and What Do They Do?

elephant screen

The IPG-owned, Brooklyn-based agency Huge recently created a separate San Francisco entity in order to serve a single client: Apple.

The new agency has a name (Elephant), a homepage, a Foursquare listing, an office several blocks from Huge San Francisco, and a not-quite-accurate entry on IPG’s own site. (The holding company apparently chose and registered the pachyderm name in 2012 before its newest operation came to be.)

Yet — as with Omnicom’s MAL, another agency created strictly for Apple — communications regarding Elephant are nearly nonexistent. Its website clarifies that visits to its office are “by appointment only,” and since its inception it has functioned as a secretive “black box” entity with no press mentions or public announcements.

Sam Weston, a Huge spokesperson, declined to comment save for the following:

“Almost a year ago we moved the Apple business to an independent entity called Elephant. Elephant works exclusively with Apple.”

This all started last April when, as reported in AdAge, Apple chose to greatly expand its digital marketing efforts by signing with four new agencies: AKQA and Huge on the West Coast and Area 17 and Kettle in New York.

Elephant came to be almost immediately and, while the agency did not specifically address the “why” behind the decision to create an “independent entity,”the move would appear to stem from a desire to avoid an overlapping of teams on competing accounts. (Huge has worked with Google and Samsung, two of Apple’s chief rivals in the digital space.)

Last year, Apple’s at-times-uneven relationship with MAL went public via internal emails revealed in court and reinforced the fact that the client is very particular about its agencies.

This is not a secret…and the existence of Elephant isn’t quite a secret either. For example, various employees have used the #helloelephant tag on Instagram to share images of the design themes in its San Francisco office:

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#helloelephant pic.twitter.com/QKfRyrGJTf

— Fernanda Saboia (@saboia) March 28, 2015

Here are members of the Elephant team celebrating in late 2014:

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…and here are some pics from the agency’s recent one-year anniversary party:

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What’s less clear is who does what at the shop. When the AdAge story ran last year, sources said that the four agencies hired by Apple would work on “user experience and digital strategy, among other elements,” and, given past work from Huge and AKQA, that would appear to be an accurate summary.

While Elephant’s work is all digital, it does not collaborate with any of the agencies Apple signed in 2014 (or MAL, for that matter).

Throughout the past year, members of the Huge team have moved over to Elephant. But the specifics regarding those changes are, again, not clear. A source estimates that Elephant currently employs 30 people who operate with complete independence from the larger Huge organization, but the social media posts above would appear to indicate that the two agencies do share some employees or, at the very least, that Huge staffers sometimes visit the other office.

The larger IPG organization has no comment on Elephant and, given Apple’s history, the client will not mention the work done by its newest digital agency anytime soon.

Huge Helps Morgan Stanley Proclaim That ‘Capital Creates Change’

After seemingly languishing on the advertising front for the last few years, financial giant Morgan Stanley has returned in a big way with a multi-faceted campaign that began earlier this year with a website refresh and continues with the spot above — both courtesy of Brooklyn-based, IPG-owned agency Huge.

With the “Capital Creates Change” campaign, Morgan Stanley aims to shift its identity from that of some faceless corporate power to one that’s both people-oriented and positive. As part of its efforts to “change the world” in its own way (as stated by the voiceover in the ad), Morgan Stanley shines a light on “visionary companies” like Alibaba and Netflix that it’s worked with with to go beyond just creating wealth.

On Morgan Stanley’s website, the company gets into specifics about successful collaborations with the two aforementioned brands; it helped Alibaba expand its e-commerce reach in China and wrote the “financial script” for Netflix.

The campaign, which also includes print, social and other digital components, marks the first major branding project from Morgan Stanley under the direction of CMO Mandell Crawley, who took over the position last September.

Move Over, #YOLO; Pfizer Brings the #FOGO

If someone asked you what sort of business would spark the next social media trend, odds are that the word pharmaceuticals would not come to mind.

Pfizer hopes to defy convention by capitalizing on its “Get Old” campaign–launched back in 2012–and introducing “FOGO“: fear of getting old.

The company thought that the initiative, intended to stimulate conversations on subjects like the challenges of aging, needed a boost. As reported in The New York Times, they traded original AOR SS&K in an effort to go HUGE.

(more…)

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Chief Experience Officer Michal Pasternak Leaving Huge (Email Included)

MichalToday we received confirmation that Huge veteran and Chief Experience Officer/UX strategist Michal Pasternak will leave the agency where she’s worked for the past decade.

From a spokesperson:

Michal Pasternak announced that, after ten years at the agency, this will be her last week at Huge. She hasn’t said what she’s going to do next, but she is stepping aside to be able to do more thought leadership in the industry and figure out her next big professional challenge.

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Huge Hires Tim Nolan as GCD from BBH Labs

8bb4241e6565c9e74627fb8242214606Today we got confirmation that former BBH Labs creative director Tim Nolan is group creative director at Huge as of this week.

We have no official statement or press release (and you didn’t want to read one anyway), but we do have a bit of background: before joining BBH, Nolan worked at JWT for just over a year, contributing to such accounts as Johnson & Johnson.

Prior to the stint at JWT, Nolan worked creative at DUMBO’s HUSH as well as Firstborn and Poke.

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