Barclaycard launches ‘waterslide’ iPhone game
Posted in: UncategorizedLONDON – Barclaycard is launching a free iPhone game to link with the latest airing of its “waterslide” ad campaign.
LONDON – Barclaycard is launching a free iPhone game to link with the latest airing of its “waterslide” ad campaign.
LONDON – Mirror Group Newspapers is launching a football website in time for the new football season in August.
LONDON – BT has dealt a blow to Phorm, dropping the firm from any future business plans, which has sent shares in the controversial behavioural monitoring company down by as much as 30%.
LONDON – Discount retailer Primark has launched a staff investigation after several employees posted malicious comments about customers on social networking site Facebook, calling them fat, pikeys, and twats.
Advertising Agency: Ogilvy, Cape Town, South Africa
Executive Creative Director / Creative Director: Chris Gotz
Copywriter: Jake Bester
Advertiser’s Supervisor: Ryan Searle
Account Manager: Greg Tebbutt
Account Supervisor: Andrew Watson
Art Buyer: Merle Bennett
Art Director: Wallace Seggie
Photographer: Guy Neveling
LONDON – Today’s round-up of the biggest business stories.
LONDON – Tory leader David Cameron will today unveil plans to radically reduce the powers of media regulator Ofcom.
Superbe mise en espace du décor et de l’illusion par le photographe parisien Didier Massard. Un imaginaire imprégné de thèmes récurrents : le paysage, la nature, ou le carnet de voyage. Le tout autour de la construction de décors miniatures photographiés en studio.
AdWeek and Harris recently released a poll asking those not involved in the advertising trade what they thought of advertising’s “relevancy.”
The results show that most find that our jobs, as a whole, are rather irrelevant.
Advertising’s down, no doubt, and now Adweek’s heaping salt on the wound!
Well, Mr. and Mrs. America, let’s look at a life without advertising. A life of relevance.
First of all, without advertising, we would not have free access to television. Advertisers in essence pay for the shows we watch by running commercials. By the same logic, the web in that state would not be as comprehensive as the one we experience now. Radio would be a paid service with subscribers. Programs and shows with relatively lower ratings would be immediately slashed since they would no longer be able to support themselves.
The cultural art form of advertising would be lost. The circle of life would be disrupted. Just as life influences advertising, ads influence culture.
Without advertising, creatives would be cubicle-bound and non-imaginative. Serious. Boring. Sex would not sell, and neither would honesty. No one would fight for the cause. PETA would consist of two guys fighting for animal rights, and no one would care. Animals wouldn’t be cool to wear. Or not wear. Or own. Times Square would be dimly lit. Your favorite beer would be just “BEER,” as the term ‘generic’ would dominate store shelves. Color would be sparse. Trendsetters would be trend-less. No brands, no logos, no icons or spokespeople. No sexy models, sexy shows, or suggestive commercials. We wouldn’t know who to vote for, or why. Four hour erections? Who’d need the pills, let alone use them? No body-image, no silicone implants, no tummy-tucks. No Jon & Kate. Michael Jackson would just be another singer. No Hollywood trailers, stars, starlets, tramps, red carpets, or blockbuster openings. No E! TV, no TMZ. No Paris, Lindsay, Nicole, or reality TV. No Tila Tequila.
No PSA’s warning that your brain on drugs was scrambled. Or that kids shouldn’t smoke crack and that crack kills. Rather than axing the marketing budget first, corporations would axe employees. And that would be just fine, because there would be no PR effort, no big news story, therefore no downside.
Life would go on, but it would be bland and tasteless. Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and MySpace: no need for them.
Take a picture of the Cold War-era Russia and apply it to a life without advertising. Cold. Drizzling. Muddled.
The link to this study is now unavailable. Was the issue so unimportant that Adweek pulled the article? Or was the study published on the wrong day?
Luckily, I printed it:
In an AdweekMedia/Harris Poll last month, respondents were given a chance to say they don’t feel strongly about the industry one way or another, and nearly half of them took it. Asked to characterize their overall impression of “the advertising industry in general,” 47 percent said it’s “neither negative nor positive.” Predictably, those with a negative view of the business (9 percent “very,” 28 percent “somewhat”) outnumbered those with a positive view (2 percent “very,” 15 percent “somewhat”). (The total exceeds 100 percent due to rounding.)
If such numbers count as not-so-bad news for the ad business, responses were less positive on the question of whether consumers find advertising relevant to their lives (”By relevant,” Harris told respondents, “we mean how it connects to things that are ongoing in your daily life”). Given the effort put into aiming the right ad at the right target, the numbers here were pretty lackluster. Eight percent of respondents said advertising is “very relevant” to their lives, and 42 percent said it’s “somewhat relevant.” Thirty-two percent termed it “not that relevant” and 14 percent “not at all relevant,” with the rest unsure.
Can you say “OUCH!”?
Jeff Louis: Strategic Media Planner, Project Manager, and New Business Account Coordinator. His passion is writing. Reach out and touch him: www.linkedin.com or www.twitter.com.
Advertising Agency: Makani Creatives
Creative Director: Ashish Makani
Art Director: Bhushan B. Dalvi
Copywriters: Sameer Makani, Bhushan B. Dalvi
Photographer: Vibhash Tiwari
Sculpture: Avdut Chavan
NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — When a brand needs a fix, everyone's a doctor, and Ad Age readers are no exception. Now that Yahoo is taking its branding assignment to Landor Associates and tapping former Y&R managing director Penny Baldwin as senior VP-global integrated marketing and brand management, Ad Age decided to ask readers for a few ideas to remake the still-popular portal.
Do console para a televisão. A Nintendo chegou a um acordo com a emissora Channel 5, do Reino Unido, para a estréia do “Britain’s Best Brain“, um programa de televisão que vai entreter os espectadores com competições, bem como promover a sua enorme gama de jogos para “raciocinar”, informou o The Guardian e algumas celebridades, como Nicole Kidman (garota propaganda da Nintendo).
Este é o primeiro caso que um anunciante cria um programa de televisão no Reino Unido, ao estilo Branded Content. A transmissão da atração será em outubro e a produtora responsável para colocar o programa de pé é a Group M Entertainment (propriedade da WPP).
Os participantes irão disputar várias provas diferentes, mas cada uma com um foco em alguma função cerebral: coordenação, memória ou matemática. E as habilidades dos participantes deverá ser mostrada através de jogos da marca, tanto no Nintendo DS quanto no Nintendo Wii.
Digital Confetti est une installation interactive, créée par la société Rockwellgroup pour l’événement Metropolitan Home Design 100. Un véritable jeu de lumière et de musique à travers duquel les spectateurs et invités peuvent interagir. Vidéo disponible dans la suite.
Un projet d’art initié par l’artiste Christopher Baker avec comme processus la publication des statuts des différentes plateformes Twitter et Facebook, à travers 20 imprimantes thermiques. Une oeuvre conceptuelle et collective dans ce centre d’art contemporain.
This billboard with a human face starts to bleed when it’s raining to prevent from car accidents on rainy roads in Australia. Advertiser: Papakura / Franklin District Councils Agency: Colenso BBDO, Auckland Production Company: Roller Coaster Design Creatives: Steven Boniface (Photographer); […]
Advertising Agency: Ogilvy & Mather, Kolkata, India
Creative Directors: Piyush Pandey, Sumanto Chattopadhyay
Associate Creative Director: Sukhendu Mukherjee
Art Directors: Partha Chowdhury, Altaf Hussain
Copywriters: Sumanto Chattopadhyay, Alka AdhikariPhotographer: Sanjib Ghosh