Quantcast
Channel: Adweek Feed
Viewing all 4154 articles
Browse latest View live

Here’s How the NFL Is Beefing Up Its Digital Presence

$
0
0

National Football League games are the biggest draw in broadcast television, with national telecasts averaging more than 20 million weekly viewers last season for one network—NBC—alone. While the league's digital presence has also been growing (NBC's streamed games averaged a record 3.3 million unique users last season, up 9 percent year over year), the NFL this season plans to livestream more games than ever across multiple platforms, including digital partners CBS Sports and Yahoo, and offer fans a comprehensive paid subscription service featuring premium content.

To help make viewing a beefed-up, more seamless experience for fans, the NFL will announce on Tuesday that it has rolled up all its subscription offerings into one package called Domestic NFL Game Pass. The service, which will cost $99 per year, will include NFL Game Rewind, NFL Audio Pass, NFL Preseason Live and the subscription portion of the retooled NFL Now, which features NFL Films and other long-form content.

The free, ad-supported version of NFL Now will be added to NFL Mobile and become the basis for much of the video on that platform. NFL Now will no longer be a stand-alone app. The goal is to provide fans with a more user-friendly experience.

"A lot of people were confused by what they could get for free," explained Brian Rolapp, NFL's evp of media.

Perkins Miller, the NFL's chief digital officer, added that the league will employ dynamic ad insertion for NFL Now video. NFL Now advertisers will include National Car Rental, Geico, Coors Light, KFC and Lexus. Geico and Coors Light will also sponsor branded segments. "We've actually built up a fair amount of expertise in doing live, dynamic ad stitching into our live-game streams," said Miller. That will also extend to archived segments on NFL Now. "There will be postroll inventory available there for our advertisers to slide in on," he said.

Still, NFL Now remains a tricky sell. The issue is how to make it a destination without the feature that's most appealing to fans: live games. "The thing about nonlive NFL content, it's everywhere," said Jason Maltby, director of national broadcast TV at Mindshare. "Once you get live games, you're fine."

To that end, livestreaming of games will be bigger than ever this season. CBS will offer a pair of regular season streamed games, including the nationally broadcast Thanksgiving Day matchup, while Yahoo will become the first digital outlet to exclusively carry a game.

"This is a first step," said Rolapp of the Yahoo deal, noting that broadband distribution has reached a point where it can support livestreaming. "One of the reasons we're there is to see if this could be a viable distribution for more than just one game," Rolapp said.

While Mindshare's Maltby commends the league for taking a "methodical" and "well thought out" approach to the new digital offerings, he maintains that TV will remain a popular draw for brands looking to reach a mass audience because of the scarcity of the product. "Ultimately, everybody—the league, advertisers, agencies and broadcast partners—want to see what is the effect of adding these platforms," he said. "Are you cannibalizing one platform for another, or are you inviting new viewers into the franchise?"

This story first appeared in the Sept. 7 issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.


Q&A: Ogilvy's Worldwide CCO on Today's 'Breathtaking' and Limitless Era of Creativity

$
0
0

Tham Khai Meng, worldwide chief creative officer of Ogilvy & Mather, takes an almost ethereal tone when discussing his creative mission for his clients and agency. But that tone underlies the real-world fact that Tham has led Ogilvy to win Network of the Year at the Clio Awards four years running (2012-14) and at Cannes Lions four years in a row (2012-15).

A member of the Ogilvy & Mather worldwide board and executive committee and chairman of Ogilvy & Mather's worldwide creative council, Tham this year chaired the Clio film jury, which, while selecting gold, silver and bronze winners, did not name an overall Grand Clio winner in the very hot category.

Adweek checked in with Tham about his thoughts on the evolving role of creativity in a transforming business landscape, and about the decision to not award that top film prize.

Adweek: What are the creative highlights of 2015?
Tham Khai Meng: Personally, winning Network of the Year for the fourth year running at Cannes. For the industry, seeing work like "Holograms for Freedom" and "Ice Bucket Challenge" do so well at Cannes. Work like this is a real game-changer. It means we can stop lying about what we do for a living at parties. You know what I mean. For most of my life, the public has been pretty hostile to advertising; we were up there with bankers and used-car salesmen. It was like the old joke, "Don't tell my mum I work in advertising; she thinks I'm the piano player in a brothel." That perception is changing, and work like this is partly the reason.

Any epiphanies or lightning bolts of clarity?
I think it was midway through this year when it suddenly hit me that reality is past its sell-by date. Reality is just so "last century," it belongs in a museum. But now, like everything else, they found a way to improve it. This was the year when virtual reality finally came of age. The harbinger was Facebook buying Oculus Rift last year. We all knew then the game had got serious. There have been numerous forays into VR in the past, but the technology wasn't mature enough. Now it is, and suddenly we have a new world to put our messages in. The possibilities are breathtaking.

What is igniting passion, and the resolve to express it, in Ogilvy's youngest creatives?
There is definitely something big in the air, a palpable sense that we are standing on the threshold of epoch-making change. There have been so-called golden ages before, quite a few, but this feels different. Both the emergence of the digital technologies and the game-changing rise of social media are potent enough, but combined with the undreamed of possibilities of VR and AI, 3-D printing, robotics … it seems anything is now possible. If you can dream it, you can make it. Creatives have been given the keys to Harry Potter's spell box.

You recently served as the film jury chair for the Clio Awards. What was that experience like?
As usual, it was a strange mixture of stimulation and exhaustion, watching so many brilliant pieces of creativity on an endless loop. The judges were a fun bunch—smart, savvy and quite argumentative. We certainly all had different points of view, but two things seemed to unite us. We were constantly looking for the nugget of the big idea in the work, and we were looking for rewatchabilty. That is, work that you want to watch over and over again, which makes it shareable. In the past, rewatchability was a bonus, but in the social media age it is essential.

But ultimately, you didn't name a Grand Clio winner in what one would think is a very hot and important category. Why?
There are so many awards these days, and an ever-widening repertoire of new categories. Against that background, I think it is important not to allow the kudos to get diluted. If the Grand is to mean something, it has to refer to work that towers above all the merely great stuff. It needs to have that special quality, that hugeness that you can't define but you just feel. Like Sony "Balls" or Cadbury "Gorilla." We were close, but at the end of the day, you could say we heard plenty of roars but there was no 800-pound gorilla in the room.

Is the notion of craft holding up against the tide of automation flowing over the ad business?
Yes. I think we craftsmen are safe for the time being. Because really, we are just storytellers. When you tell a child a bedtime story, a look of wonder spreads across her face. That same look of wonder was seen in the crowd of the Paris marathon when the African woman [Siabatou Sanneh of Gambia, who carried a jerry can of water on her head and a sign that read "In Africa, women travel this distance every day to get potable water" to bring awareness to the charity Water for Africa] walked by. In all history, there has only been one piece of equipment capable of producing that look: the human heart. So I would say, "Move over, AI. You don't have feelings. At least not yet."

Have you been genuinely surprised by anything in the past year?
Lexus Hoverboard. Pure magic! Such clever use of technology. OK, I agree it's expensive building the skateboard park, and it's impractical having to cool the hoverboard with liquid nitrogen. … People criticized these things, but they missed the point. The whole thing is about something bigger than practicalities.

If you could snap your fingers and fix one thing about advertising that is getting in the way of progress, what would it be?
Really? I could go on all day. OK, just one: procurement officers. I mean, they are killing creativity; quality of the work is just not something that figures on their radar. They are creative passion killers. It's like inviting a beautiful girl round for a candlelit dinner and when the bell rings you open the door to find she's brought along a chaperone.

What's the best digital creative you've seen recently?
The work that has really impressed me in the past year has been the work that changed hearts and minds in the way I described in the first question. In the Burger King "Proud Whopper" ad, for example, one of the girls in the restaurant is heard to say, "A burger has never made me cry before." I love that line; it really encapsulates what our industry is capable of if we aim high and reach for the stars. Yes, in the past our work may have made people cry for the wrong reasons, but if you can do it for the right reasons, that's amazing. The same goes for that image of the African woman walking through the Paris marathon with the 20 kg of water on her head. It's unforgettable. We can't always work on such lofty briefs, of course, but it's great when you can. It's a joy to be associated with an industry that produces such wonders.

How do you keep your focus in such a transforming environment?
Thinking about zombies helps. That's something I learned long ago, when I first started writing ads and began a lifelong quest for something called the idea. It's all about the idea, and always will be. When the ad doesn't have an idea, it's got no soul—like a zombie. The job always is to find it. Get down the mine shaft and look for the nugget of gold, and don't come back without it.

What do your most valued creative people at Ogilvy have in common?
The ability to astonish, consistently. Everyone can have a flash in a pan, but it takes genius to do it on a daily basis.

What will be your most daunting creative task in 2016?
The No. 1 problem that faces us every day is growth. Not growth at any cost, but growth through great work. Then, there is the daily struggle to solve our clients' problems and help build their business against the background of a volatile world with constant disruption and transformation. We have to not only be courageous, but also be eternal optimists. And finally, we have to try and not fall off the high wire. We've won much, and done well in the past few years; the need to maintain momentum becomes a source of intense pressure. It's like walking a high wire with the crowd down below wondering when you'll fall. All we can do is plow on and remember not to look down. Although occasionally we come down for a while and dance with the clients. That's something I've done at quite a few award shows.

This story first appeared in the Sept. 28 issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

Lexus Built a Working Cardboard Version of a Car, and It's Incredible

$
0
0

You can't spell "cardboard" without "car."

In the U.K., Lexus has made an impressive driveable replica of its IS model sedan, using 1,700 pieces of precision-cut cardboard—all to demonstrate the automaker's dedication to craftmanship. 

To be fair, the car also includes a steel-and-aluminum frame and an electric motor. Oh, and "driveable," means "only take it out very slowly, in a highly controlled environment."

The cardboard car is inspired, according to Lexus, by an origami test the company requires of workers on its production line—and is, at its heart, an incredibly complicated paper sculpture. 

The behind-the-scenes video (shown below) delves into more detail about how Lexus and its creative partners—LaserCut Works and Scales and Models—actually made the . 

In short, the team took the same computer-design files that Lexus uses to create the real IS, then applied those specs to carve into a series of cardboard sheets with a laser. Even though the result is clearly a prototype showpiece, it still boasts a full interior and functional doors and headlights. (Presumably, the headlight bulbs aren't cardboard, either.)

The end result is certainly cool. Daniel Ryan, of LaserCut Works, aptly describes the effect as a "crossover between animation and reality. There is a dreamlike quality to seeing a familiar form in an unfamiliar texture. And the project shines a much-deserved spotlight on both his company, and Scales and Models. 

Beyond that, though, it doesn't say much that Lexus' current marketing hasn't already covered under the "Amazing in Motion" tagline. It's not, after all, a hoverboard

 

How the Steady Stream of Creative Talent Moving From N.Y. to L.A. Became a Flood

$
0
0

A dyed-in-the-wool New York advertising professional, Patricia Korth-McDonnell had heard all the clichés about Los Angeles as an endless parking lot, a cultural wasteland and, perhaps most relevant, a professional dead end at best and career suicide at worst.

Before becoming a partner and managing director of Huge L.A., she had spent a judicious amount of time in Southern California, working on the agency's Disney business in the early to mid-aughts. She didn't know the city in any meaningful way, and didn't think it mattered. Why would she ever leave the Mad Men center of the universe for this overgrown surfer town?

Cut to three years ago when Korth-McDonnell packed up her young family and did just that, planting the flag at Huge with a permanent office in mid-city Los Angeles, just down the street from the giant fiberglass mammoths lodged in the La Brea Tar Pits. She prepared to be underwhelmed by the move, but about a year into it, after working with clients including Lexus, Scion, FX network and Hulu, she had a sort of epiphany.

"I knew immediately that the lifestyle was better, especially as a new mom, but I had wondered if I'd be satisfied professionally," she says today. "Then I looked at the caliber of the talent, the clients, the work and I realized I was doing really rad shit here. I wasn't trading anything for this."

Korth-McDonnell has not been alone in the cross-country migration. Plenty of other industry veterans have done the same. But what was once a trickle has become a flood, with people relocating not only from New York but other industry strongholds like Boston and Chicago and points further afield like the U.K., the Netherlands and South America.

L.A.'s getting creative

The number of jobs in Los Angeles County's creative industries swelled by 6,000 in 2013, according to an Otis College of Art and Design study released this spring. The 355,600-strong workforce in creative fields in the county accounts for $30.4 billion in total wages, and projections call for still more growth, with an estimated 415,000 jobs in the area by 2018. (Creative occupations include advertising managers, art directors, producers, directors and related positions.)

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, speaking this past August at the site of a major construction project on the city's West Side—where many ad agencies, tech companies, video game producers and other creative enterprises are based—touted the area's draw. Los Angeles ranks at the top of manufacturing, green and tech jobs in the U.S., is home to Silicon Beach and the likes of Google, Snapchat, YouTube, Hulu, Facebook, Netflix and innumerable startups, and is also one of the busiest travel destinations.

There has also been a sharp uptick in film shoots in the city, spurred by new state tax incentives for movie and TV production. Commercial shoots for automakers and other major advertisers are in part responsible for that upswing, according to the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp.

The draw for agency types

For the founders of the agency Mistress, the city's appeal has been clear as far back as 2010. One of its partners, Christian Jacobsen, was already ensconced in L.A., having moved there from New York to work on the Red Bull business for Kastner & Partners. A veteran of agencies including Ogilvy & Mather and Lowe & Partners, Jacobsen thought he would spend a few years "soaking up the sun" before pitching himself to West Coast stalwarts like Goodby, Silverstein & Partners in San Francisco or Wieden + Kennedy in Portland, Ore. "I figured if I was going to have a serious career, I'd have to move on," Jacobsen recalls. "L.A. was temporary."

But he saw that L.A.'s agency scene was beginning to catch fire and move beyond its legacy auto business, with agencies including 72andSunny, Deutsch, TBWA and its Media Arts Lab and Omelet building rapidly and churning out some remarkable work. Meantime, hybrid creative shops were also sprouting up, boasting a combination of skills across traditional, digital and social marketing.

Multihyphenates like the writer-director-producer and the social-media influencer—which tended more often than not to inspire sneers in New York—began to find a home in Los Angeles, giving agencies there an eclectic pool of talent for one-off projects as well as staff jobs. "We saw great potential here," Jacobsen says. "And it completely lacked that old-guard network where it mattered if you went to the right schools or not."

It was that sense of freedom and lack of bureaucracy that drew Michael Sharp, a veteran of TBWAChiatDay New York, who launched his own shop, Standard Time, about seven years ago, before the East-to-West wave really started to pick up. To Sharp, L.A. felt like a place where he could rewrite the rules. "The environment is such that you have the chance to wipe the slate clean, prove yourself and do things in a completely new way," he says. "And no one is going to ask why you didn't spend 10 years at McCann Erickson."

Shortly before Sharp launched his company, William Gelner left BBH New York to establish his own beachhead in L.A. The chief creative officer of 180LA had, like others, not necessarily thought of this town as a "place you'd put your roots down" in the ad industry. But the budding branded-content business inspired him to look at the city a little more deeply. Gelner was struck by the number of highly experienced directors, musicians, actors, designers and production facilities the town had to offer—not to mention a famously temperate climate that makes outdoor shooting possible nearly year-round.

Gelner set up shop in Santa Monica, which sits right alongside the beaches of the Pacific, and never looked back east. From his perch there, he has watched the area's creative community expand and mature.

"New York is very much about making it," he says. "L.A. is about making things."

The city's maker community is responsible for some of the freshest, most groundbreaking work in the industry today, Gelner notes, inventing "a more modern storytelling approach." Agencies like his, with specialties in multiple disciplines, are now the rule rather than the exception in town.

As the line between ad agency, tech firm and entertainment company continues to blur, creative talent from all over the U.S. and abroad continues to be drawn to Los Angeles, and ad professionals like Gelner are seeing themselves more as storytellers, not unlike their Hollywood counterparts.

A world of difference

Agencies in Los Angeles in recent years have become noted brand builders and marketers, as well as arbiters of popular culture, observes Jae Goodman, chief creative officer and co-head of CAA Marketing, as the industry "has shifted toward content creation instead of just media."

While it was once "fashionable at a mass level to disparage L.A.," as Korth-McDonnell puts it, that, too, looks to be changing. Newcomers to the area have learned what established Angelenos have known for some time: There exists, generally speaking, an emphasis on work-life balance that makes Los Angeles a healthy place to live and work versus cities such as New York and Chicago.

"There are fewer angry and depressed people walking the hallways," says Chris D'Rozario, executive creative director at Team One, who divides his time between Los Angeles and New York and who earlier was an executive at Havas. "Everybody works really hard in L.A., but they're just not so tightly wound."

Frannie Rhodes, a native Californian who spent most of her ad career in San Francisco and New York, left StrawberryFrog in the summer of last year to become the director of creative services at the agency David&Goliath, based in LAX-adjacent El Segundo. It was a welcome homecoming for her, she says. Not only did she land at one of the hottest boutique shops in town (David&Goliath recently won the Jack in the Box business), but she also happily shed her winter coats.

To her, everything about Los Angeles tends to be lighter and brighter. "I drive up the coast on my way to work, and I have a moment of Zen," she relates. "And no matter how under the gun you are, you realize that life's just not that bad."

Rhodes' colleague, Mike Geiger, managing partner and chief digital officer at David&Goliath, didn't ditch his C-suite job at JWT North America for a wardrobe change—rather, he wanted to be closer to the day-to-day creative process and work for a respected independent shop. That said, he adapted quickly to the Southern California lifestyle since arriving this past summer.

Geiger and his family went all in, settling in Manhattan Beach, and buying a Jeep, beach-cruiser bikes and wet suits. "I saw that it was booming here," as Geiger puts it. "And, I love the ocean."

Wesley ter Haar, co-founder of digital production company MediaMonks, which counts Beats by Dre, Xfinity and Acura among its clients, plans to relocate to Los Angeles this winter from the company's headquarters in Amsterdam, a decision that would have been unheard of a few years ago, he says.

He will arrive in L.A. around the one-year anniversary of the opening of MediaMonks' outpost in L.A.'s Venice Beach. And ter Haar says if he could have a do-over, he would have made the move even sooner. That is because the company's West Coast operation is the busiest and most successful of all its offices, including New York and London.

"There's so much buzz, and we've found that it's the place where we can work on the most exciting projects," says ter Haar. "And there's a certain way of working in L.A. that I think is not just enjoyable but smart. It allows creative people to stay creative."

Luring talent to town

The word is clearly out at Huge. Korth-McDonnell says the agency's human resources department actually had to institute a policy to stem the flow of employees from East to West. Nearly half of the L.A. office's 120 employees relocated from New York, she says.

L.A. agency people say the recruitment of talent gets easier with every polar vortex and every award-winning campaign from a Southern California shop. Gelner, whose chief marketing officer Stephen Larkin relocated from Boston in recent years, has an effective way—albeit a little cruel—for luring candidates to 180LA. "I Skype them and turn my computer around to show the view—there's the sunset over the ocean, maybe a few dolphins swimming by," says Gelner. "It doesn't suck."

Even though the destination tends to sell itself, finding great talent, even in L.A., is not without its challenges. And holding onto those employees is yet another concern. Tech companies and startups are among those chasing after agency talent, offering equity stakes and other perks. "The fight is real," explains Korth-McDonnell. "There are more players vying for talent."

And yet, as her own agency discovered, luring still more eager and gifted ad professionals to the West Coast is a given these days, and it's often the transplants who are the city's most reliable proselytizers. For every strip mall and jam-up on the 405, there's the thriving arts scene, the beaches, and the almost comically perfect weather.

Sure, many of those new to town might occasionally lapse into longing for life back East. "Remember the good old days?" they will lament. But they also speak of the culture shock they experience on those business trips back to New York, Chicago and Boston.

"What I notice now are the bags of garbage on the sidewalk, and I'm always getting rained on or sweating like crazy," says Jacobsen. "It's just a sea of tan trench coats and I'm getting trampled in Grand Central Station."

Korth-McDonnell says she could never imagine returning to New York, especially now that her young daughter "is a full-fledged California girl."

"There was the idea that New York was the only place to be in advertising—nothing else was even on the radar, and you wouldn't leave unless you were retiring, period," she says. "Now the world has changed, and L.A. is leading where that world is going."

This story first appeared in the Nov. 16 issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

How Roger Ailes Built Fox News Into a Media Powerhouse

$
0
0

Roger Ailes' first moon shot came when he was 29 years old. He was in the Oval Office setting up the first interplanetary split screen. "Eagle" had just landed on the moon.

"I had video from the Earth and I realized I could set up a split screen," Ailes, chairman and CEO of Fox News—and this year's Adweek Media Visionary—recalls during an interview in his midtown Manhattan office. "The problem was, I couldn't control Neil Armstrong. He could walk across Nixon's nose if I wasn't careful." In the end, Ailes made it work.

Just like that day in 1969, Ailes has spent a career straddling the worlds of politics and media. He worked on four presidential campaigns before returning to TV in 1993.

"CNBC was completely in the dumper when I went there," he relates. "In fact, [NBC president] Bob Wright said, 'This is kind of a white elephant. We're thinking of selling it. Do you want to take a crack at running it?' I thought, well, that'd be good—change my image from politics, get back into television."

But his run was nearly over by the time it began. "I turned around, had a fight with NBC and quit," Ailes says. Then the phone rang. News Corp. chief"Rupert [Murdoch] said, 'Can you build a network that'll beat CNN?'" He did. It took just five years.

Today, Ailes runs one of the most valuable networks, on track to bring in $2.3 billion in revenue this year, per SNL Kagan, twice that of CNN. And now, the net has another jewel in its crown, boasting the most-watched non-sports cable program ever, with 24 million people tuning in for the first GOP debate this past August.

As for Ailes, he might just have another moon shot ahead of him.

Adweek: So, you are Adweek's Media Visionary for 2015.
Roger Ailes: Another mistake by the media (laughs).

And Fox News Channel is the Hottest News Network.
Well, we are, by all accounts. I look at that list of 200 channels and we're always up there. Even with the disconnects going on.

Does cord cutting concern you?
Well, it does if it keeps up. There's an advantage to being the No. 1 channel. I think we'll get hurt less than most. So, yes, I'm looking at it. Anytime there's an attack on the money, you have to look at it.

The other part of the money is ad revenue. Who are some new advertisers? Who's been the most loyal over the years?
The most loyal is Norfolk Southern. I don't know why. But many of them are pretty loyal. Infiniti, Lexus, Jaguar. We're good with the car companies. New advertisers: Oppenheimer, Ace Hardware, Allstate. So we're doing well. Our ad revenues are up 9 percent year to date.

Do you think Fox News gets enough credit for what it adds to 21st Century Fox?
Nobody ever thinks they get enough credit for what they do. I don't complain about it or whine about it or bitch about it. When asked, both [21st Century Fox co-chairman] Lachlan [Murdoch] and [CEO] James [Murdoch] have been very forthcoming and very supportive and very complimentary about what we're doing here. They probably don't want us to get a big head, so it's fine.

How's the relationship with James and Lachlan?
It's very good. I don't think they knew, and I don't think I knew, how it was going to work. But it's fine. I went to the off-site in Palm Springs and I spent a lot of time with them and they came over and sat at my table. And they've called me a few times for information and we've been cooperative on some stuff, and it's been really pretty smooth. It's not contentious in any way.

You now have the most-watched TV show ever on cable, nonsports, and you just signed on for another contract extension. What more do you have to accomplish?
I don't feel any different in my brain than when I was 30 years old. I have the same sort of reaction to new ideas and new things as I did then. I realize I look bad, but I don't feel bad. I'm constantly trying to invent different ways to do things. If you're going to be a television executive, you have to change with the times.

How's the relationship with Donald Trump? I saw he tweeted about Megyn Kelly, and then for the first time she …
... smacked him back a little. Because he got it wrong. Look, I've always had the same relationship with Donald for 30 years. It's a friendly relationship, surprisingly enough. I did call him after the first go-round and I said, "What the hell is wrong with you? The United States is at war with every goddamn country in the Middle East and you're at war with Megyn Kelly and you think that looks good? It doesn't look good."

Did you ever want to run for office?
I was asked many times, and about 20 years ago somebody actually tried to get me to run. And I concluded I would never do what I advised people to do, which is to behave and not punch people if they say something I don't like.

But it's working for Trump.
Yeah, but he hasn't physically done it yet.

This story first appeared in the Nov. 30 issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

Check out the rest of this year's Hot List honorees:

Marketers Should Look Beyond the Dazzle of CGI and Embrace Storytelling

$
0
0

One day this fall, thanks to an Internet rabbit hole I happened to tumble down, I saw an Audi commercial, "Birth," which had come out six months earlier. That's dog years in today's world, so why did this particular ad stop me cold? Because a few days earlier, a somewhat similar commercial, "Fireflies," for Tesla, had been released. And to me, the story of these two spots perfectly defines how the landscape of marketing continues to radically evolve.

Let me back up. Last spring, "Birth" was released by a great agency, working with a terrific production company in "creative consultation" with a hugely successful filmmaker, and was directed by a talented graphics artist who partnered with one of the largest, best effects house in the industry. It is a good car ad, and notable because it was made completely in CG. Plus, the score and SFX are suitably imposing. It got more than 800,000 plus views on YouTube in five months.

Nick Childs Alex Fine

But here's the thing. If you don't know the all-CG part, the story isn't very intriguing. The concept is fine—one car giving birth to another—but it certainly isn't deep storytelling; it's two minutes of a visually sexy assembly line that shows off an effects team's capability. Most importantly, it doesn't have a lot to do with Audi. The ad could be for BMW, Mercedes, Lexus, Acura, Cadillac, you name it. And I'm guessing it was very expensive to bring to life. Credits via one industry magazine, where it was an Editor's Pick, list 19 creative and production leads (no space to name the worker bees) for the five companies involved in bringing it to life.

That's one highway to take. But I want to applaud a different path—the one taken with "Fireflies." Also an all-CG auto ad, this beautiful, one-minute film was made by a small, nimble production company, ParachuteTV, and was the brainchild of one person: visionary director Sam O'Hare, someone most people in the industry haven't heard of. It was created as a spec spot for the love of the brand. There is a clear story at its heart, brought to life brilliantly and driven home in a smart and strategic way, and it only could have been made for one company: Tesla. And a handful of people touched the entire process—as in, you can pretty much count them on the fingers of one hand.

In a few days, the spot had more than 200,000 views on Vimeo (with zero paid media), was covered by the Huffington Post, Fast Company and many other outlets (including Adweek), and was tweeted about by the founder of TED. A different path for sure.

I'm excited. There's clearly a new direction we should celebrate and explore. One that truly brings directors and production companies into the full creation process (and, heretically, might even allow them to come up with ideas); pushes for interesting ways to collaborate and make things happen for less money; uses film as a means to continue a story that goes beyond the spot; and aims to get an actual message out, one that resonates deeply with an audience who cares about the thing they like more than they care about who brought a commercial to them and how.

To be clear, I'm not saying this new route is the only way, or the best way. I'm just saying it ain't Robert Frost—there isn't one road, there are many. And some of the branches are the ones I want to head down to see where they go. Most likely, they lead to interesting, unexpected places.

So here's to Sam. And the team at Parachute. Thanks for showing us an off-ramp from the highway of just plowing ahead.

Nick Childs (@NickChilds) is the CCO of Initiative. 

This story first appeared in the Dec. 14 issue of Adweek magazine. Click here to subscribe.

You Too Can Live a Jude Law-Worthy Life in This Swingin' First-Person Ad for Lexus

$
0
0

Hey, was that Jude Law in CHI & Partners' new "The Life RX" campaign for Lexus Europe?

Indeed it was, though if you blink you might just miss him: The Hollywood A-lister appears only at the opening and close of this minute-long commercial.



Well, that parking attendant sure had all sorts of wild, wondrous adventures tooling around the Italian Riviera in Jude's luxury Lexus RX SUV! That's what happens when you "borrow" a superstar's car for a few hours. And the actor, last spotted pitching Johnnie Walker, didn't even lay down the law afterward. Jude's a cool dude. (Note to self: Avoid valet parking.)

The connection between driving the vehicle and living the high life works pretty well, and the likable ad—shot in splashy style by Smuggler's Adam Berg—never goes too far over the top. Glossy fantasy feels like a smart direction for the nameplate.

Law, who's set to appear in more Lexus spots, grins a lot but never says a word. Here, he proves the old saw about there being "no small parts," adding considerable charm and gravitas to the breezy scenario in little more than a cameo. 

If you'd like to try other lifestyles of the rich and famous on for size, there's also Guy Ritchie's classic soccer ad for Nike, which birthed the first-person POV genre in modern advertising (though porn arguably had first dibs). 

CREDITS
Client: Lexus
Head of Brand, Communications: Spiros Fotinos
Senior Brand Manager: Christopher Taylor
Creative Agency: CHI&Partners
Executive Creative Director: Jonathan Burley
Creative Director: Rob Webster, Alexei Berwitz
Copywriter: James Crosby
Art Director: William Cottam
Agency Planner: Rebecca Munds
Agency Account: Tilly Cooper, Gary Simmons
Agency Producer: Roz Prentice, Bebe Kiffin
Media Agency: ZenithOptimedia
Media Planner: James Wrigley, Nisha
Production Company: Smuggler
Director: Adam Berg
Production Co. Producer: Gustav Geldenhuys
Post-production Company: Moving Picture Company
Audio Post-production: 750 mph
Digital Design Company: Amaze
PR Agency: Freuds

ABC and Lexus Team Up for Special VR Mini-Episode of Terror Drama Quantico

$
0
0

ABC and sponsor Lexus are hyping the midseason return of Quantico with the network's first virtual reality experience, which takes viewers inside a specially scripted mini-episode of the terrorism drama. 

Quantico's writers helped agency Team One create the 3:30 video, watchable by anyone on YouTube 360 and via the Littlestar Cinema VR app for users of Samsung smartphones and Samsung VR gear headsets. The YouTube 360 perspective mimics the head-swivel of better-equipped VR viewers: You navigate the screen with your cursor, or click the arrows to turn the camera angle, as you help two series characters find and capture a bad guy (or rather, an FBI agent playing one).

In the clip, Johanna Braddy and Graham Rogers play FBI trainees Shelby Wyatt and Caleb Haas, who trade the kinds of quips you'd expect from a promo for a broadcast thriller built around young law enforcement recruits in the age of global terror. (The dude agent is irrepressibly horny. The lady agent is horrified she ever dated him.) 

You, the newbie, get to wander into a club and look for aforementioned "bad guy." Once Shelby gets him outside, there's another twist. 

How does it all end? The good guys win, naturally.



The piece prominently features a Lexus LX 570 SUV. ABC and the automaker also promise two easter eggs with additional content for those dedicated enough to find them. And while ABC bills this as the only VR experience the network has scripted thus far, the gimmick is not Lexus's first foray into VR marketing. Other auto marketers have been playing with ways to use the technology as well.

But it's a nifty enough idea and execution, especially once the scene actually moves inside the bar, where there's more to see. A behind-the-scenes video includes fun technical tidbits about the production—that it had to be done in one take, and that the camera was helmet mounted—once you get past the pap about how great it is to have the viewer "on the scene" with the actors. (Alas, the viewer is still far removed, sitting at home or maybe alone in the office, engaging in a slightly different form of make-believe.) 



Beyond the novelty, it's not a bad way to blend the respective interests of both ABC and Lexus. "It's a much deeper level of engagement for a sponsor while still remaining organic and true to the storyline," says Jeffrey Weinstock, vp and creative director for integrated marketing at ABC.

Brian Bolain, corporate marketing communications and product marketing manager at Lexus, adds: "This project allowed us to seamlessly integrate Lexus into Quantico's storyline so fans could explore the new LX virtually while enjoying the show's 360-degree bonus footage."

As for how it compares to other similar tech-driven experimentation, at least as a desktop experience, it falls short of simpler split-or-toggle-screen ideas, like Converse's Valentines ad and Honda's "The Other Side."

Worse, for anyone afraid of heights or public speaking, it's probably not the best use of a Samsung VR headset—even if it is more fun. 

CREDITS
Agency: Team One
Executive Creative Director: Alastair Green
Group Creative Director: Jason Stinsmuehlen
Associate Creative Director: Jon King
Creative Technologist: Mike Rozycki
Account Director: Joel Dons
Account Supervisor: Trina Sethi
Associate Media Director: Elaine Evangelista
Media Supervisor: Noopur Chhabra
Public Relations Account Supervisor: Kat Kirsch
Senior Producer: Chad Bauer
Social Media Account Director – Meredith Gruen
Social Media Account Supervisor – Robin Watkins

Media Partner: ABC
VP & Creative Director: Jeffrey Weinstock
Director, Integrated Marketing: Chris Powers
ECD, Entertainment Marketing: Charlie Bowyer
Senior Manager, Integrated Marketing: Meg Smith
Digital Account Executive: Tara Smith

Production Company: Unit 9
Director: Jonathan Pearson
Executive Producer: Luca De Laurentiis
UK Production Manger: Kane Phillips
VR Lead Tech: David Crone
VR Tech Assistant: Chris Belcher
Post Production Supervisor: Zlaten Del Castillo

Production Company: Wee Beastie
Executive Producer: Monica Hinden
Executive Producer: Josh Shurtleff
Line Producer: Monica Monique
Production Manager: Vlad Doclin


These Are the Brands Slam Dunking March Madness on Social Media

$
0
0

Measurement company Origami Logic analyzed the social engagement of 55 March Madness-focused marketers—19 official NCAA sponsors and 36 nonsponsors. And heading into this weekend's Final Four matchups, these are the top four brands: Reese's, KFC, Lexus and Capital One. 

Origami Logic found that those four companies really ramped up efforts this year to connect with consumers—compared with 2015—on Instagram and Twitter. The tech player examined those platforms as wells as Facebook, YouTube and Google+ from March 1 through March 30.

Below are three charts showing the social buzz around the NCAA Tournament, which began two weeks ago. 

1. Sweet success

The Mountain View, Calif.-based company said Reese's, the official candy partner of March Madness, has garnered around 260,000 engagements on Facebook alone. The chocolate and peanut butter cups marketer has been running a #MarchMood campaign around the tournament. 

 

 

 

2. Prolific posters

Origami Logic also measured how many times brands posted on social. Degree Men proved to be the most active so far with an even 100 messages, though Bing isn't far behind. 

 

 

 

3. Brand babble

The analytics firm also parsed out how brands performed in terms of three different types of engagement: "applause," entailing favorable responses and including metrics such as likes and favorites; "conversation," accounting for consumer responses including metrics like comments and replies; and "amplification," measuring brand advocacy and including metrics such as shares and retweets.

Reese's once again was the biggest winner, taking the top spot for both applause and amplification. 

 

 

 

Pandora Is Overhauling Its Ads to Amp Up Native Video for Mobile Users

$
0
0

Pandora is overhauling its ads to create a more dynamic experience for some 80 million monthly users—blending images and sound, and integrating native video into its mobile experience.

The streaming-music service is introducing responsive mobile display ads that automatically adjust to a phone's screen size and that live in the square space housing album art. The format, which also applies to images that accompany audio ads and first impression takeover ads, is a move away from pop-up ads. A second major update for the app is the introduction of muted video ads, which will allow advertisers to serve promos within a responsive display unit that can be unmuted and watched in full-screen view.

According to Jonathan Eccles, senior product manager at Pandora, the goal is to let users move around the app in a way feels visually "native but styled."

"So often it's easy to think of Pandora as a listening format," Eccles said in an interview. "And it's a wildly successful listening format—we see over two hours of time spent per day per listener—but a tremendous amount of attention is also visual attention."

The new formats let users swipe to dismiss ads, and while Pandora wouldn't disclose the entire list of brands included in the pilot phase, officials said it saw twice the number of listeners engage within an advertiser's landing page. 

Pandora, which runs around 18,000 campaigns during any given month, can target 1,000 different audience segments. A beta test for the new formats will launch in August with nearly a dozen brands, including clothing line Express and auto organization Lexus Dealer Association.  

Express chief marketing officer Jim Hilt said advertising on the app has been effective for the brand. "These beta opportunities with Pandora have really pushed the boundaries of finding new ways to break through, but in a way that is super relevant and targeted to the customer, which we think is critical to our success and Pandora's success," he said.

Hilt added that the brand will promote a new denim campaign, which focuses on how denim, like music, is meant to be personalized. The mobile formats are important, he said, especially as the brand sees customers increasingly using their smartphones in stores. Express already has a Pandora station that it uses to create stronger relationships with customers.

"Music and entertainment has always been synonymous with fashion," he said.

KitchenAid Brings Aspen's Food & Wine Classic to Your Home

$
0
0

If you're not one of the 5,000 food fans attending this year's sold-out Food & Wine Classic in Aspen, KitchenAid is bringing the culinary world's preeminent event to you.

This afternoon, the home appliance brand, which has a 30-year relationship with the annual festival, will launch "Have Dinner With Us," employing Facebook Live and other social content to enable anyone to follow along with cooking demos by headlining chefs in Aspen and to get additional information about recipes, techniques and shopping. This is the first time live video has been produced at the event, founded in 1983.

Beyond Facebook, content can be found at the websites of KitchenAid and Food & Wine and via both brands' other social channels. Food & Wine and KitchenAid have a potent social following, with more than 2 million total fans on Facebook and 1.5 million via Instagram.

The activation is in partnership with Chris Cosentino, winner of Top Chef Masters, a frequent guest on Iron Chef America and chef/owner of Cockscomb in San Francisco.

"This is the quintessential food event in the world," Bill Beck, vp, brand marketing at KitchenAid, told Adweek at the Classic. "When you look at the top events, whether the Super Bowl or the Indianapolis 500, this is the event you want to be attending, not just from a brand perspective or a chef's perspective but from a consumer's perspective."

Participants pony up $5,000 to attend the Food & Wine Classic, which typically sells out. The event hosts celebrity chefs, journalists and brand marketers from around the world. Aside from KitchenAid, brand partners of this year's event include American Express, Celebrity Cruises, All-Clad, Lexus and Patrón.
 

3 Brands That Stood Out at Aspen's Food & Wine Classic

$
0
0
Adweek responsive video player used on /video.

Aspen wasn't just a destination for hard-core foodies over the weekend—brands hungry to connect with them also made the sky-scraping trek up the Rockies.

The annual Food & Wine Classic, whose principal sponsor is American Express, also featured lectures, tastings, parties and other experiences from of a range of other consumer brands, including Patrón, Celebrity Cruises, Lexus, Stella Artois, All-Clad and KitchenAid. Marketers also have relationships with many of the celebrity chefs and restaurateurs on hand, among them Hugh Acheson, Richard Blais and Scott Conant. (Watch the video above for our exclusive interviews with these and other personalities from the festival.)

Here, some of the best brand activations we sampled in Aspen:

Patrón Spirits
Tequila—it's not just for margaritas anymore. A sponsor of the Classic for the ninth year, the leading spirits brand definitely had attendees buzzing. At its activation outside the Grand Tasting Pavilion, which was styled after a typical south-of-the-border hacienda, the marketer showcased the versatility of its product by inviting guests to "upgrade" their favorite cocktails with Patrón—like a Moscow mule made with tequila instead of vodka. Patrón also gave visitors a cool, virtual tour of its Mexican agave fields and factory by way of Oculus headsets and hosted a tasting and mixology seminar led by its director of brand education, Chris Spake.

Celebrity Cruises
Aspen may be hundreds of miles from the ocean, but that didn't stop the luxury cruise line from giving attendees a taste of the high seas. Each day of the three-day festival, the Royal Caribbean-owned brand, a first-time sponsor of the festival this year, hosted a "grand tasting" of a different variety, replicating the diversity of cuisine offered aboard its ships and their multiple restaurants. Our favorite: On Sunday, the final day of the festival, guests were invited to indulge in a seafood-centric menu inspired by the Galápagos Islands.
 
Lexus
One too many Moscow mules? No worries—Lexus is your designated driver. The luxury automaker had a fleet of 25 branded SUVs in Aspen to whisk festivalgoers from place to place free of charge. Meanwhile, at its booth at the Grand Tasting Pavilion, Lexus gave foodies an up-close-and-personal look at its LC Hybrid model while serving up sliders.

Putting People at the Heart of the Equation With the CEO of Sabra

$
0
0
On this episode of Marketing Vanguard, Sabra CEO Joey Bergstein sat down to talk about how he's navigating the transition from marketing to CEO all while putting people first. "For me, business was always about creating value, creating growth. But the center of that is really understanding human needs and understanding how you can meet...

Warner Bros. Pictures Uses Augmented Reality to Promote The Flash

$
0
0
Warner Bros. Pictures is letting people dress up like superheroes in augmented reality to promote the premiere of The Flash in theaters June 16. Superhero fans can download Perfect Corp.'s AR-try on application, YouCam Makeup, to access this sponsored content. The Flash AR lens will place the superhero's red mask on the user's face through...

Why TV and Streaming Networks Are Taking Over the Festival of Creativity

$
0
0
Though upfront week focuses on the U.S. marketplace, Cannes Lions is where media companies think globally. "There is not a single streaming partner that we work with that doesn't have a desire to be global, if they don't already have a global footprint," said Kelly Metz, managing director of advanced TV activation at Omnicom Media...

Think Like an Engineer: How Flock Freight Pulled Off a F*ckload of Success

$
0
0
In an environment hyperfocused on cost management, marketers should always be prepared to justify their value. Thinking about your next campaign like an engineer--the people who test and design your product--can help you do that. As a marketing leader who pivoted from global consumer brands to a b-to-b freight technology company, Flock Freight, I've learned...

Purpose Work Has Dominated Cannes. Creatives Are Eying a Shift Toward Business Results and Humor

$
0
0
Purpose is a driving force behind what wins at Cannes. Last year all but a handful of the 32 Grand Prix winners contained a purpose element in the piece work. This year, there are 17 pieces of work shortlisted for the Dan Wieden Titanium Lion. Nearly every single one of them is purpose-driven. Brand purpose...

20 Campaigns Creatives Think Will Win Big at Cannes

$
0
0
Purpose-driven campaigns have dominated the Cannes International Festival of Creativity over the past few years, but this year creatives told Adweek they're looking for more than purpose. They want business results and humor to have their moments in the spotlight again. In a survey done in the lead-up to Cannes, Adweek asked creatives what piece...

After 57 Years of Chilling Out, 7-Eleven Is Stirring Things Up With a Slurpee Makeover

$
0
0
Like any CMO, 7-Eleven's Marissa Jarratt is effusive about the brand she markets. Unlike most of them, however, Jarratt is also refreshingly forthright--at least when it comes to 7-Eleven's signature brand, the Slurpee. "I like to say it's the drink that there's really no good reason why it should exist," she said. "But also, that's...

The Speed of Culture Podcast: Transforming the Slurpee for a New Generation

$
0
0
7-Eleven has been a part of American culture for almost a century, and its most famous proprietary product, the Slurpee, has been delighting customers for more than six decades. For a peek into how the iconic 7-Eleven Slurpee came to be and where it's headed, join us for an exciting conversation with Marissa Jarratt, evp...
Viewing all 4154 articles
Browse latest View live