Category Archives: ...Blogging

What words are worth

I read Rory Sutherland’s engaging blog post in Campaign today validating the continuing need for great copy in advertising. The only thing it was missing was a purposeful discussion on the subject within the digital world, so that’s what I’ll attempt here.

In our digital industry, we are seduced by the ever-expanding list of things technology allows us to do. With the emergence of technologies like Natal, Android and ARG, we exist in a wonderland of visual excitement and pioneering knowledge. It’s a great place to be. Even glancing back for a moment, our industry has been one that has up till now been sustained by audiovisual excitement of subservient poultry, wayward balloons and smartphone apps that really do make it look as if you are drinking that beer. We have been the Willy Wonka to the Cadbury factory of the good old traditional ads.

But social media has brought about one fundamental change and dusted down a discipline that I was worried had almost expired within the so-called ‘new media’ agency.

I doubt very much that readers can point to a piece of digital work whose awards were garnered by its masterful use of copy; the Ogilvys, Bernbachs and Abbotts would have little to detain them if they were to be brought into a judging panel for digital work. Yet, when I flick through my social media accounts, there is one thing that exerts a stopping power so great, I feel like a galloping, excited greyhound that’s just forgotten that it was tethered to a concrete wall.

You can see great copy coming. As you flick down the endless retweets and automatic blog posts, it’s almost like your eye sees the great words before your brain has had time to start reading. Beautiful writing never goes out of fashion, and it’s just about to become very important indeed.

On Twitter, there are certain people whose avatars are a prompt to stop scrolling out of pure habit. Charlie Brooker, Richard Herring and Paul Carr are all people who have the power to captivate you with no more than 140 keystrokes. They make you smile, think, flinch or disappear into a fit of giggles. On the other hand, there are people who should hold far more sway in the digital world who are truly undermined by the high volume and low readability of what they put out there. Please take a bow Robert Scoble, Piers Fawkes and Guy Kawasaki. Don’t get me wrong – once I connect with what these people are on about, they are as compelling as anyone, but words aren’t their forte.

I have seen precious few brands that have invested in a truly arresting voice.  Typically, their social media efforts are a mixture of platitudes, harmless observations and @answers dripping with well-intentioned banality. Granted, Brooker, Herring and Carr all push the boundaries to certain limits, and brands have reputations to manage.  But these same brands manage to approve the creation of advertising campaigns that are just as provocative and arresting as their social media voice should be. They need to develop a voice that is invested with the same brilliance and power as an ad campaign. Only this time, you add spontaneity. If that terrifies you, then it’s good confirmation of how things have changed. In terms of great examples lighting the way, it’s all a bit limited. Aleksandr_Orlov from Compare The Meerkat is only one I can think of, but I’d love to have some more voices to listen to.

So the recommendation is simple. Talking isn’t enough. Brands should actually pluck up the courage to write something involving, human and compelling. And for heaven’s sake, write it well.

Also posted in ...Marketing, ...Media, Advertising, The future, Twitter | Tagged , | Comments closed

Uniqlo calender

An interesting follow up to Uniqlock (thanks Peter for the heads up). A very simple calendar / screen saver with blog parts link, although with random views of the world going on in the background and an easy to listen soundtrack you can spend hours just watching it. Another example that keeping things simple, but executing brilliantly, will produce some of the best work. Does not quite it the heights of Uniqlock though.

Also posted in Branded Experience | Tagged | Comments closed

The Presets – Talk Like That

This campaign, developed for Universal Music Australia, was originally destined to be a rich media display campaign to support the ongoing hype around The Presets album “Apocalypso” and third single “Talk Like That”, in the lead up to the ARIAS (Australian Recording Industry Awards). As a result of an innovative concept and a lot of client coaxing, an integrated social media campaign was developed to tie in with the display activity.

The creative execution was based around a reworked version of the Talk Like That video and allowed users to type in a message that was dynamically updated across all display units, widgets and the campaign microsite talklikethat.com. Ultimately, the campaign was focused around a competition where users needed to figure out cryptic clues and type them into the chat window to unlock prizes. The campaign featured display units across major music sites, a Facebook group that was used to communicate competition clues to members, and widget seeding to influential blogs.

Within an industry that typically regards the internet as an adversary to album sales and facilitator of music theft, such a campaign has paved the way for digital advertising and promotion of artists and their music. It also shows that engagement and interaction with a target audience, especially those that exhibit the fickle online behaviours of digital natives, is now a vital part of an online campaign.


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Also posted in ...Music, ...Networks, Advertising | Comments closed

An audience with the brainchild of Uniqlock

At last month’s Click, Koichiro Tanaker of Projector, talked about his Uniqlock work, which is perhaps the piece of advertising which has best utilised social media at a global level in the last few years. Without any media spend it has generated 200 million views of the website across 214 countries which has been driven by 43,398 users who have generated clocks.

Anyway here is what he had to say about the campaign:

The starting point for any campaign is my own connection to the brand. To work on it for months I must love it. I focused on the blog element simply because everyday I reads blogs – I noticed that where there is interesting content, it spreads very quickly. Bloggers are buzz builders. However it is not sufficient to create content which is entertaining. That is because if there is something interesting it will soon disappear the next day (as bloggers start to talk about something else). I need to find something that would remain on the side bar and act as a utility e.g would you want to see the film a hundred times whereas you always wear a watch. It’s why I came up with the idea of a clock.

Utility + Entertainment

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Also posted in Advertising | Tagged , | Comments closed
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