Archive for the 'advertising' Category

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Sony steps in it

Sony’s just released and pulled ad (more) in Amsterdam is over the top. I’m sure they thought they would create a little free PR; but the overtly racial overtones are too much.

Here’s what Sony says:

“All of the 100 or so images created for the campaign have been designed to show this contrast in colours of the PSPs , and have no other message or purpose.”

I’m sure a little testing would have served TBWA well in this case. Either way, this ad should have never made it out the door. They are getting attention, is it worth it? I’m not saying go back to boring product shots, but this crosses the line IMO.

technorati tags > advertising, sony, psp, bad taste, racist, tbwa

So, what’s this going to cost?

In my opinion, one of the most consistent hot-button issues when working w/ vendors is price. I’ve personally seen it more times than I care to think about in my life on both sides of the marketing communications table. I’ve asked the question to dozens of firms and I’ve answered the question from dozens of clients. So believe me, neither side has it easy.

As the client, you’re struggling between “good enough” and “best available”. You (and your customers) want best available, while the finance guys like good enough. Seth Godin talks about it here. You get this feeling deep in the pit of your stomach as you’re watching the agency go through their pitch. You just know that they would work hard for you. You know they would bring all of their world-class expertise to bear on your project. You’re thinking, “they know the industry, they know my business, we get along and their work is top notch”. It’s exactly what you’re looking for. But you have a feeling they’re going to be outside of your budget or at least outside of your idea of what their services should cost. You hate to bring it up because you know that budget shouldn’t be the ultimate deciding factor on what solves your problem or need. Sure there are cheaper firms out there, but these guys have it all and they’re right here in front of you.

From the agency side, you can see it in their eyes. During the discussion and demo the client’s eyes light up. They ask the right questions. They understand what you’re about. But there’s a hesistation, a slight glint of uncertainty. You know that sooner or later you’re going to get the price question. Charging by the hour isn’t really an option because clients demand to know at least of range of prices to consider before signing the dotted line. Charging by the project, or value pricing, is a strange magical mix of time, hourly rate to cover overhead, and some profit padding. Either way you sense there is going to be sticker shock.

In my experience, this scenario happens most often when agencies are presenting to budget spenders not budget deciders. Budget spenders are only worried about their bucket of money being spent efficiently. Solving greater business concerns are typically a secondary requirement otherwise known as “nice to have”. If you’re on the client side and this firm provides the solution you need, then move them up the chain if you cannot make or justify the decision yourself. Become their biggest proponent. Get them in front of the true budget decider. She/he can find the money required to solve problems. Your foresight and problem-solving abilities will be recognized and rewarded. Unless you truly do not have the money available, price is rarely a reason not to buy.

Back to the agencies; if you cannot get past the price question, one of two things is happening. You’re either not working with the right people (budget deciders versus spenders) or you’re not providing enough value to the clients and the price objection is an easy way to say no and move on to another agency with better relationships and/or better offerings and value.

technorati tags > price, client, agency, marketing, communication, budget, seth godin, vendors, value

Great TV Spot

I had to pass on one of the coolest commercials to come out in a while. It’s getting a ton of buzz right now…

Video link

W+K & PSYOP hit a home run w/ this one. And don’t forget to check out the new logo/tag at the end. I like it. Retro and classic with a modern twist.

technorati tags > coke, weiden kennedy, psyop, TV, commercials, viral, coca-cola

2 for the road…

Don’t be these guys. It’s not good for you nor the people that are trying to help you (internal staff team or outside agency).

courtesy: gapingvoid

technorati tags > marketing, advertising, product, superbowl, commercial, TV

It’s not about you….

Great post from Simon Sinek.

It’s all too common for businesses to focus on their products or services instead of their customers. Here is a sample from Simon:

“Apple’s iPod marketing serves as a good example. Apple states simply, “10,000 songs in your pocket.” The message is all about the consumer’s life or lifestyle. It’s a very different message than “20 gigabyte mp3 player” which is a description of the product. Even if 20 GB is a good thing or 30 GB or 40GB, who cares if a consumer can’t easily relate to and integrate it into their lives.”

Most manufacturers focus on the wrong thing – your feature versus the consumer benefits or wants. You can include the technical features; just don’t lead with them. Find those eight words, the hook, that resonate with your audience. The words that make them stop and pay attention. Talk about them, not about you.

Choosing the right agency/design firm

The good folks at the Small Agency Diary have a new post on choosing the wrong client. I thought I’d flip it around and talk a little about choosing the right agency/design firm.

You flip open the latest issue of AdAge or the Yellow pages and see a list of agencies so long your eyes cross. Some you may have heard of but most you have not. Some look like legal firms (partner + partner + partner + partner & assoc) and some look a little funny (watermelon toad, autonomy, or similar). All of their websites look similar (client list, portfolio, why we’re different – which doesn’t look that different after all). How do you pick?

Here are the highlights – in no particular order…

  1. Obviously you have to have some type of immediate connection w/ their account team. If you do not like them, there’s no way you’re going to be happy doing business with them.
  2. Check out their work, but don’t get too caught up in it. Any agency worth their salt puts a lot of thought into new ideas for a particular client & project. You’re looking for a consistent new-thought-generation process. You may or may not like their work for other clients, but that really doesn’t matter if the work was effective at meeting the goal for that particular client. The agency should be able to generate work that suits your organization, customers, and business objectives.
  3. Talk about budget early and often. Talk about how the agency will scope out the level of effort required to meet your goals. Doesn’t matter whether you’re buying months of international TV spots with a lot of high-end digital effects or just a local newspaper ad – talk about how they come up with their bid.
  4. Most importantly, you probably have an idea of what you’re looking for. TELL THEM! Don’t expect their account or creative team to be mind readers. I know you’re looking for new ideas and a fresh perspective, but tell them what you’re thinking. The last thing you want is for them go off on some tangent that you know the President will hate. If you are one of the very few people that really doesn’t have any idea what you’re looking for; then you have to be open to their suggestions when they come back. It’s a waste of your time & money to have something in mind and not discuss it. A test of their creativity is how well they function within boundaries – budget, timeframe, brand guidelines, etc… They are working from your direction, be sure to give it.
  5. And for pete’s sake, write everything up! Whether it’s your creative brief or theirs, make sure that both parties are working towards the same goal. You need to have detailed information on deliverables, scope, timeframes, and budget – and agree to all of it before work is started. I know you’re busy. I know this project has to be finished on time. But trust me, if it’s not written down and agreed upon, it will become a point of contention. Projects tend to show signs of success or failure within the initial 13% of the project. You have to have everything lined up before you begin. Otherwise you put a lot at risk – including your next promotion if not your career.

What’s the point of Marketing Communications?

To keep your name in front of your target audience? Yes, but that’s really about long-term branding not revenue or ROI.

To support the effort of your sales team? Sure, that’s important but they typically are just looking for another excuse to call the customer. A new white paper, brochure, or sales tool is a great reason to reach out.

How about differentiating yourself from your competition? Interesting, but Marketing Communication (marcom) is simply the vehicle for talking about your true differentiations like consumer benefits, unique business model, industry leading features, etc…

I believe it’s really about changing behavior.

It’s easy to make money off of run-rate business – typically you don’t have to work very hard to keep it flowing. The real challenge is getting a brand new customer to buy. Becoming a preference in his or her eyes – now that’s a big deal (a long term, strategic, profitable big deal).

Marcom is the art & science of combining your value to the audience, your unique elements, and a reason to act NOW. I believe that a “call to action” is a critial component of any marketing communications effort. It could be as simple as a unique URL to visit to or some type of bundled promotion, but you need something to keep a new customer moving towards a purchase.

Marketing communications is about creating a bread trail for your audience to follow. Get them hooked, keeping feeding them value, and they will buy.

Agency pitch fees. Good or bad?

Do you think clients should pay “pitch fees” for agencies to come in and pitch their ideas?

It’s a semi-new issue in the ever-changing environment that advertising/design/PR agencies face today. Historically agencies have not charged for the time staffers put into generating ideas/concepts to win new business. Typically the agency fees were so high after winning the business, they would make up any effort spent pre-contract. But in today’s increasingly competitive marketplace, there is not as much profit in advertising and design as there once was. Today’s agency is more concerned with doing the right thing for the client than excessively padding their own coffers by using media technologies that only they control.

One side of the argument (client side) says that if an agency is not winning new business then their ideas are weak and they need more experience or practice. Why would a client pay for an idea that they are not happy with or on target.

The other side (agency side) says it takes an enormous effort to brainstorm new ideas and put them into a format that elevates the clients value/brand. Their time is valuable and they wouldn’t be in the pitch process if the client hadn’t asked (or let) them in.

To make matters worse, clients have stolen brilliant ideas from outside agencies and handed them off to the in-house team for execution – without compensation. Or put a new agency thorough the ringer under the guise of potential business only to keep the incumbent agency honest. That is taking advantage.

The thought process is that if agency pitch fees were a standard procedure, clients would be less likely to drain ideas or abuse advertising/design agencies without compensation. I know from personal experience that agencies will spend an exorbitant amount of time generating concepts to win a new account. My opinion, if those concepts/ideas are not on strategy or completely off base, then it’s the fault of the agency. If the concepts/ideas were on target and another agency was selected for some other reason, then depending on the circumstance, the agency should be reimbursed for their time. If the agency was too small (whatever that means), not experienced enough, or couldn’t handle the work volume for the client, they should have never been part of the selection process in the first place. That’s the clients fault. They should take care of the agency for wasting their time.

The way advertising talks…

Hugh does it again…

Think about it as you plan your next campaign.

Why Ad Agencies don’t advertise

Great post by Simon Sinek

Like a lot of industry folks, I’ve thought that the mega ad agency model has been declining for a while. There are a ton of blog posts about it. You have to find a company that truly wants to help you grow your business – by whichever medium works best, not by the marketing medium that generates the greatest kickbacks. As an ex-Fortune 500 marketing manager, I saw my company go through ad agency after ad agency. Now granted they were, and are not the best at working w/ agencies. But they still spent multi-millions on ads that generated little to no direct impact on business performance.

The firm I’m with is more focused on delivering the tools you need to meet your goals/objectives. That may come in the form of an interactive sales presentation, online blog, magazine ads, whatever… The point is that the tools we create for our clients make a difference in their day-to-day operations. They are not 30 seconds spots that 99% of the viewing audience ignores, 100% of the non-viewing audience misses, and still makes the executives/employees feel better becuase they’re on TV. Some people call us an ad agency, but we’re not. Very few corporations in the world need the multi-million dollar branding campaigns. But a lot, if not all, companies need help getting through the day with better tools that the sales & marketing teams can use in the hand-to-hand combat they face every day.