Deutsch Doubles Down on Digital Data

madonnaDeutsch solidified its ever-stronger focus on research and relevant data streams this week by hiring industry veteran Madonna Deverson to fill the newly created role of EVP/brand intelligence.

Deverson joins the Deutsch organization after spending four years with Ogilvy. She was the director of information and intelligence for Ogilvy North America before being promoted to the role of senior partner/executive director of the agency’s “Intelligence Group” unit, and she began her agency career by spending more than eight years in Leo Burnett’s London-based research unit Leo IQ.

Her work has not strictly concerned advertising, though. Before joining Ogilvy, she held media news and research positions with what might seem like two opposing parties: The New York Times and the Fox News Channel.

Deverson’s hire is one of the first visible moves made by Deutsch’s new North American CEO Mike Sheldon, who was promoted from his previous role as chief executive of West Coast operations in January as Donny Deutsch left to begin his new career as a scripted TV star and Linda Sawyer replaced him in the chairman role after an agency-wide restructuring.

The release itself furthers the Sheldon narrative by naming the new position “part of Sheldon’s initiative to align bi-coastal agency resources” and noting that, while Deverson will work primarily out of LA, she will report to chief strategy officers on both coasts.

What will Deverson do in the new role? Sheldon mentions “our development of original and shareable work” while the release says she will “simplify complex data and transform it into insights that provide a new foundation for clients’ marketing strategies.”

Market research, then. She will also drive self-promotional efforts from within the Deutsch organization by assisting in “the development of intellectual property and thought leadership.”

Deverson earned her Bachelor of Arts and English in Popular Culture from Australia’s University of Melbourne, and she teaches college courses in Branding & Integrated Communications as an Adjunct Professor at the CCNY CUNY Masters Program.

Deutsch LA Brings Back Ronald McDonalds for Taco Bell

Back in March, Deutsch LA used endorsements from real life Ronald McDonalds to help introduce Taco Bell’s new breakfast menu. Now, the agency has brought back the idea (which was actually recycled, intentionally or not, from an old Jack In The Box campaign), with their latest spot, “Ronalds.”

The 30-second spot features guys named Ronald McDonald sitting around a table and talking about Taco Bell’s breakfast burrito. In what amounts to yet another shot at McDonald’s (which seems to form the crux of Taco Bell’s recent strategy), a moderator asks, “Would you get a burrito from a burger place?” To which one of the Ronalds replies, “You don’t go to a sushi bar and order spaghetti.” That you could easily follow up the question with “Would you get breakfast from a taco place?” makes this seem like a bit of a misstep.

The Ronald McDonalds idea, which seemed stretched thin by the end of the last 30-second spot, now seems even more tired. It feels like it’s time for Deutsch LA to go back to the drawing board and put this idea to rest for good. Credits after the jump. (more…)

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Volkswagen Swims with Sharks for a Week


Discovery’s annual Shark Week extravaganza not only confirms that viewers go crazy for underwater creatures that can rip them into a thousand pieces, but that brands will use just about any tangential connection to a popular theme to try and wring out that extra dollar. Take the fat, colorful Tide billboard above the Lincoln Tunnel that I came across yesterday: “We get the blood out, too.” That’s one way to do it.

Volkswagen and Deutsch are going all in as well, bringing cars and sharks a lot closer than they’ve ever been before, a true sharknado of brand association if there ever was one. The VW campaign is loaded on social media, mainly focusing on sharable videos through Instagram and Vine. VW created a Beetle convertible that will be used as an underwater cage hooked up to cameras for the remainder of the week, hoping to conquer a chunk of the digital space floating around with these exclusive videos. Credits after the jump.

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