FIAT Chrysler Changes Its Mind, Wants Creative AORs After All

We Hear: 72andSunny Wins Project Work for Jeep

We’ve run quite a few reports regarding the FIAT Chrysler Group over the past six months or so. Some big changes did indeed affect the business: we heard rumblings about the Jeep account changing hands as early as last December, but we couldn’t quite confirm the details.

In March, however, the news finally came through: Chrysler had ended its relationship with former Jeep brand creative AOR Global Hue, which subsequently closed its Detroit office and moved all operations to Manhattan.

At the time, the organization indicated that it would follow the lead of many other clients in moving away from the traditional AOR model in order to better utilize all of the agencies in its partner network. To that point, it did not announce a formal review when seeking an agency to promote the Alfa Romeo sports car line: it simply chose Doner and The Richards Group from its roster.

Earlier this month, we heard that the client would add 72andSunny to that list in order to work on future projects for the Jeep brand. We knew that, as before, there would be no official review.

Here is the statement we eventually received:

“The Company reaches out to many agencies throughout the year as part of brand(s) initiatives. Until any potential future marketing campaign officially launches, the company does not comment on collaborative agency partner.”

Note that the statement does not say “we are not planning to work with this agency”; it effectively identifies 72 as a member of the network.

The client has worked with 72 in the past: in summer 2011 it signed the agency for work including web design and “comprehensive digital marketing strategy.”

72andSunny hasn’t commented on the rumor, and we don’t have any details regarding campaigns to come. That said, everything we’ve heard indicates that 72andSunny will play a key role in project-based work promoting the client’s 2015 models.

The Richards Group Launches ‘Renegades’ for Jeep

The Richards Group introduces the new Jeep Renegade with a 60-second spot, straightforwardly titled “Renegades.”

The broadcast spot, which launches today, was built around the song “Renegades,” the new single by Interscope Records’ X Ambassadors, which was chosen in collaboration with the label as the foundation for the campaign. As it turned out, X Ambassadors were working with Alex Da Kid on a song that fit the bill.

“Through this unprecedented collaboration with KIDinaKORNER/Interscope Records, X Ambassadors and Alex Da Kid to build a campaign around an original song, we’re staking a new claim to music and setting the stage for the Jeep brand’s North America marketing launch for the all-new 2015 Jeep Renegade,” said Olivier Francois, Chief Marketing Officer, FCA – Global, in a statement.

“Olivier came forward and challenged us to deliver a song for him that had the theme and the spirit of the new Jeep launch,” Steve Berman, vice chairman of A&M Records, told Adweek. “Sometimes you just get lucky in the timing of how things works. [‘Renegades’] was a piece of art they [X Ambassadors] were already recording.”

While the process of the song selection and its integration as a fundamental building block of the campaign may mark new ground, it’s certainly not the first time Jeep have built a campaign around a song. Last May, the brand released a spot from GlobalHue built around the posthumous Michael Jackson single “Love Never Felt So Good.” The new spot feels even more like a music video than that effort did, complete with text referencing the artist and song title at the beginning of the ad. Shots of the band are interspersed with shots of the new Jeep Renegade and footage of millenials (hello, target audience) doing renegade-y stuff like hopping fences, nightswimming (on what appears to be a quiet night) and skateboarding.

“If you look at the words of this song, if I had given an agency that brief, they would not have cracked a better script than X Ambassadors did,” Francois told Adweek. “The script of the song is totally on brief, it’s spot on…But what really made me feel that [the song] was the campaign was the way they speak of the millennials being the modern renegades. The genius here is that you tie the name of the car, which is ‘Renegade’ to the mindset of the target, which is the millennial target.”

Jeep lança modelo 2012 edição especial “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3?

Já vimos edições especiais de carro de todo tipo por aí, certo? Mas a Jeep escolheu um caminho inusitado para lançar um modelo 2012 chamado de “o carro mais forte do mundo”.

A marca aproveita o lançamento e o hype de “Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 3″ para colocar no mercado um Jeep especial do game em edição limitada. Além da vida real, o carro também está dentro do jogo.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
Twitter | Facebook | Contato | Anuncie


Advertisement


Jeep: Husky & Camel

Jeep: Husky & Camel

Advertising Agency: BBDO Proximity, Malaysia
Executive Creative Director: Ronald Ng
Creative Director: MUN
Copywriters: Kevin Le, Ronald Ng
Art Directors: MUN, Eric Hor, Gary Lim, Willeon Leong, Hans Lee
Illustrator: Gary Lim
Account Supervisor: Dong Hyun Yoo
Advertiser’s Supervisor: Sally Hong

Jeep: Bushman & Eskimo

Jeep: Bushman & Eskimo

Advertising Agency: BBDO Proximity, Malaysia
Executive Creative Director: Ronald Ng
Creative Director: MUN
Copywriters: Kevin Le, Ronald Ng
Art Directors: MUN, Eric Hor, Gary Lim, Willeon Leong, Hans Lee
Illustrator: Gary Lim
Account Supervisor: Dong Hyun Yoo
Advertiser’s Supervisor: Sally Hong

Jeep: Mayas

Jeep: Mayas

Advertising Agency: BBDO México
Executive Creative Director: Héctor Fernández
Creative Directors: Rubén Rocha, Agustín Esteban
Art Director: Román Santana
Copywriter: Raúl Pineda / Daniel González Milán

Jeep: Traffic light

Jeep: Traffic light

Advertising Agency: BBDO México
Executive Creative Director: Héctor Fernández
Creative Directors: Rubén Rocha, Agustín Esteban
Art Directors: Agustín Esteban, Antonio Cué
Copywriters: Omar Sanchez, Diego Gonzalez