Thursday

3 reasons I dislike Twitter

1. Auto DM's
The junk mail of twitter. This pointless, generic one size fits all crap makes me want to unfollow everyone who sends it. I began following you because I had personal interest in you, your posts, your company or your life. Visit my profile, check out my blog, review my posts and decide if you feel the same. If you do follow me, maybe send me a DM to talk about shared interests or direct me to someone or something you think I would appreciate. Don't Auto-DM me. Actually I am going to go an unfollow every Auto DM I received right now.

2. Get Rich Quick Schemes
I have a career. I have some money. My dreams are bigger than crap like scrapbook software to stay-at-home Mom's, boring Aunt's and people who don't realize Facebook is the easier, more interesting and the scrapbook of the future. I am also not interested in setting up my own shitty .com scam, a ponzie scheme or becoming apart of Amway. Get a life, get a real job, leave me alone. Ohh, and I probably unfollowed all of you after my post above.

3. People with no friends
You've seen them on Twitter. People who in real life have no friends but they seek acceptance by following 34, 568 people that they have nothing in common with knowing 22,346 of them will follow back. This makes them feel popular. This makes me unfollow them.

At the same time there are plenty of reasons I like it. Lucky for you Twitter ;)

Three sites Adverblog introduced me to this week


I am unique - a great use of Papervision 3D. If you like unique sites, new experiences and a strong use of technology click on the link.

YouTube
- This site allows you to share videos. Pretty cool. Even cooler it allows you to make your own commercial, upload it and have a chance to win a trip to Cannes. There is currently 6 days, 20 hours, 14 minutes, 14 seconds till the brief and the charity are revealed. This deserves a bigger post but I am tired.

The Mummy Experience
- I played all games and made the leaderboard. I think you can too. The UXD, imagery and well thought out site are worth the visit. All this for a museum of some sorts in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.

Thanks Adverblog.

Intel's Rockstars

Intel doesn't just want to be a processor to the consumer. They want your purchase decision to be about what computer chip the computer has.

Cue Intel's first "brand promotion" campaign ever. Not about processors, chipsets or motherboards; this campaign is about building the intel brand.





Thank you to Alyssa Brown for bringing our attention to this beauty of a campaign.

Wednesday

My Favorite Campaign of the Year (So Far)

I just watched the latest Creativity Top 5 and I've found my favorite campaign of 2009 (so far). Created by ACNE, Sweedish Airport Coaches created an installation of 50 junk cars in the shape of one of their airport coaches. The large installation was created on the main freeway to the airport and caused a national stir (resulting in traffic jams and dozens of news stories).

The campaign used this iconic OOH placement and created a simple microsite that counted the number of cars that passed it and measured their carbon footprint in real time. It then converted the number to show how much carbon would have been saved if all of the cars were airport coaches instead.

As more and more people began to talk about the campaign, Sweedish Airport used the image across all integrated pieces - magazine, traditional OOH and print. Check out the short case video here to see the full overview:



What I love most about this idea is that it is so simple. 50 cars = 1 coach. Let's make a literal installation of that fact and use it to be the foundation of the entire campaign. They could have simply made this a one-off tactic to 'add-on' to the integrated work. But they didn't. And it became something much bigger. 

I can't find the link to the microsite but if anyone does, please flip it my way. Great work to all those involved. 

Tuesday

T-Mobile turns Subway Prank into a campaign

A few week ago, we posted about the stunt that T-Mobile put together in Liverpool station. Hundreds of 'planted' tube travellers broke out into a dance that left unaware travellers stunned (and sort of excited). The video became a hit (especially among idea-starved agencies and clients) and T-Mobile is rolling out a number of stunts across Europe and Asia to continue to support their 'Life's for sharing' campaign.

Their newest, and my favorite, occured on April 30th. T-Mobile took over Trafalgar Square in London and gave 13,500 people microphones. They set up a huge screen and broadcast Hey Jude by The Beatles for everyone to sing along too. What transpired was a great video that built on their campaign and is sure to be noticed (and watched) by millions:


I think that the digital possibilities for this campaign are endless. The idea of bringing people together and sharing is perfectly suited for the medium and I hope that T-Mobile evolves the campaign from location-specific stunts to global ways to rally a group of people around a common passion.

Rona gets creative



Yesterday morning in Quebec, Rona created a special OOH placement to target morning commuters. The placement (see video below) used a Apple ad (with the colours dripping) and changed it into a Rona one - by catching the dripping colours with Rona paint cans.

I really love creative placements like this - especially when they are highly targeted and specialized. Not sure what Apple would have thought of their ad being 'changed' but I'm sure people driving to work thought it was excellent.

Thanks to Kerry for the link!

Monday

Doritos has a new Guru


A few months ago. Doritos Canada launched an integrated campaign that asked consumers to name their new chip. The bags featured large question marks and users were asked to submit a 30 second spot to a Doritos YouTube page. The top spots, by votes, were selected to the finals and a group of Doritos clients selected the final winner. The winning spot won a $25K cash prize as well as 1% of total Canadian sales of the chip for as long as it is in production.

Prior to reading on, click here and watch the spot that is going to hit national airwaves soon (can't embed the clip for some reason).

I'll admit, when this campaign first came out I was pretty interested in entering the contest. I sent out an email to some colleagues suggesting that we enter and they were interested too. Then I bought some bags of chips and had an impromptu tasting in my living room. Things were going well, until I realized that there was zero chance I was going to take the time to think of a script, shoot a spot, edit it, rally my friends to vote for it and spam everyone I knew in the hopes of winning a prize.

I realize that I'm not in the 13-24 target and I also know, based on the 2100 entries and 1.5 million unique visits to the YouTube page over the campaign period, that there were people who had the time and desire to enter the contest. The results are good, for sure, but what does the brand get out of this?

For starters, I don't think the spot or name do Dorito's justice. I don't think that it is funny, off-beat or memorable (except for it's crudeness) in any way. I'm also not a fan of the name (I'd prefer 'Sweet Heat' but whatever).

Overall, is user generated content all that it's cracked up to be? I realize that Doritos has been doing this for years - highlighted by their 'Crash the Super Bowl' work - but is it paying off? Moreover, are the creatives unable to develop their own ideas that can become long-standing campaigns?

Social media thrives on user generated ideas. And some campaigns work well (especially ones that use the crowd to generate ideas for them). But others fall flat for me. They don't seem to build the brand as much as maintain it. These spots aren't interesting unless you know that someone random created them for a one-off contest. What happens next year? A repeat? Probably.

In the end, this campaign will receive a number of nominations and good press. The results are good and it was highly integrated. But looking back on the final product that was created for the brand, was it worth it?

Saturday

Why am I not absolutley pumped and engaged in the Vancouver 2010 Olympics?

The Winter Olympics are coming to Vancouver, British Columbia in 2010. I imagine that most of us are aware of this fact but outside of some OK, some good and mostly shit TV spots I am not being engaged by the games.

The winter Olympics is a chance for not just Vancouver but all of Canada to be in the spotlight for the rest of the world. Every airport, hotel chain, car rental service, restaurant and Canadian has a chance to show the world how great our country can be. For those of you who are not Canadian I will use an analogy to tell you how I feel about our Countries current attitude.

I feel like we are a guy who a few years ago proposed. We got really excited, put countless hours into picking the ring, planning the proposal, writing the speech, re-writing the speech, then after 8 ounces of scotch got the nerve up to ask her father that we were sure would say no. To our relief and excitement he said yes, then a few days later so did she.

For months it was all we talked about, showing off the ring, saying the word "fiance" until our single friends got sick and then we started planning the wedding. By we I mean we approved the location and then left it to our future bride and her bridesmaid. Currently we are waiting for an invitation to find out when it is happening and what, if anything we need to do.


In 1988 I was lucky enough to carry to the Olympic torch for a feet as my Mom was carrying it for a Kilometre or two and I have always loved the Winter Olympics more than any other sporting event on a world stage.

About 8 Months from now we will be welcoming the wolrd. Our Atheletes will be challenging the world and all I know is Coke is giving me a chance to carry the flame.

Here are 5 ideas for VANOC to run with:

  1. In the spirit of IdeaStorm challenge Canadians to share ideas about how they think we should share our Canadian Spirit with the world. Ways Canadians think we can make the 2010 games unique.

  2. Crowdsource a Canadian visitors handbook. Have Canadians share their favourite Canadian traditions, meals visitors must try, places they must visit and historical facts and figures that have shaped Canada. Let all of Canada decide what we want the world to know about us.

  3. User-generated tours of Canada and Vancouver. Create a website where Canadians can upload videos where they showcase their town, city or neighbourhood. International travelers may want to extend their stay and see more of Canada. I love the Vancouver Islands, Whistler, Banff and Jasper as much as the next person but there are other cities and places that world may want to know about. Think Drumheller, Kananaskis, Niagara Falls...all of PEI, etc. Let the world get a real understanding of where else they can go while they are in our Country.

  4. Podcast tours of Vancouver. Have users create and upload Podcast tours of Yaletown, Gastown, Granville, Kitsalano and all of the pockets of Vancouver. Let them be beer tours, art tours, architectural tours, etc created by actual residents of Vancouver for free. Proved a map and directions so they can listen as the travel the town.

  5. Thank the world. Our economy (fingers crossed) will get a kick-start, Vancouver will benefit from improved infrastructure and facilities and our nation will have had a chance to showcase the best of our country. In standard Canadian style lets say Thank you bigger, better and more heartfelt than any nation has thanked the world after hosting the games before. Where can unsold t-shirts go (Darfur, Somalia, etc)? Who can use our extra winter jackets and pants, toques and gloves? How can we collect money to help the countries of our world in need? AND most importantly lets ask all of Canada, the visiting athletes and visiting tourists to help us decided where we should direct this help. Lets make the games about more the Vancouver, more than Canada and more than sports. Lets make them about spirit, about a world coming together to showcase sportmanship, friendship and excellence.
Please add your thoughts in the comments section below and for the love of God Vanoc let me get involved.

Microsoft, it's Everybody's Business is Good.

I have meant to talk about these ads for a while because I really like them. I enjoy them on a number of levels and I think that this campaign does what I think all ads do. Build a brand while communicating a message.

Why do I like these ads:

  1. Featured companies. The companies choosen are a great selection of loved brands (Coca Cola, Nestle) and some more unique challenger brands such as Method, Quiksilver, and WestJet. Delivering a Microsoft message to the beat of a surfing CEO is not how the world perceives Microsoft. In my eyes these brands associations help to make the Microsoft brand a little more current and cool to a 14 - 18 year old, while delivering what is essentially a B2B message.

  2. The visual style. Obviously inspired from the "I met the Walrus" interview video created by Josh Raskin and illustrator James Braithwaite this is not the look and feel one would expect from Microsoft. The visual narrative of the spots helps to effectively deliver the message, while making the spots "cool" and "hip". I also find I focus a lot more on the audio as I listen to see how the visually connect the art direction to the audio.

  3. Talking about ideas, culture and making a difference. Microsoft used to be about powering the machine. These spots flip it so that it looks and sounds like Microsoft's technology and products don't just help the man eliminate jobs, increase reliance on technology but that their technology brings ideas to life, inspires, facilitates collaboration and are a friend to the creative class. Nice.






Friday

Onward by Nike

Onwards from AKQA on Vimeo.



Big thanks to Ricky for this link. Hadn't seen this short before but it's really nice. Love it when brands think outside the product box and create content that is brand-focused (and different).