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Cool
Job. No takers. Oh well. I'll just
stuff these Benjamins back in my shorts. But don't count our
little DoubleThink out, just because we have no recruits and three
clients hitting off the same crack pipe.
Remember
we are not just building an Idea Company here. We are building
a test case for the intellectual precept that "Perception Is Reality"
We already have a Perceptional landscape going for DoubleThink.
Since Wednesday 1849 people were made aware of the existence of
DoubleThink as a business concept. Now Mr. Webster defines "business"
as any "purposeful activity." He doesn't get around to the revenue
part until halfway down the definition.
So
for my part, DoubleThink is an activity that indeed has a purpose.
It's purpose is to define how, by enhancing its Perception, we
can determine its definable Reality. And certainly this definition
will be based upon what activities DoubleThink engages in and if
the purpose of those activities is achieved. The purpose being
the creation of ideas for fun and profit.
Now
onto new business. Since our client invitation only yielded us a
good laugh, and nobody has yet stepped up to the plate as resident
genius, we will throw some more wood on the perceptual fire. Where
do we begin? Why with reality of course.
To
wit, the fact that recently faced with lowered second-half earnings
estimates, Coca-Cola Co.'s new chairman-CEO, Neville Isdell blasted
the company's recent performance and vowed to improve the
beverage giant's marketing operations. "The lifeblood of this
company is marketing," Mr. Isdell said in a call with analysts,
as reported by Ad Age. "We have to make sure our marketing is
more effective than it has been." Now what could be more realistic
than that?
The
latest Coke campaign effort from Coke is the "I Wish"
campaign, from independent ad agency Mother of London. It
was shot in South Africa and aired in 20 countries including the
U.S. The commercial echoes Coke's classic "Hilltop" spot
that taught the world to sing 30 years ago. According to Ad Age,
Coke is scouring its agency roster worldwide to try to recapture
such iconic advertising. Well DoubleThink isn't on Coke's agency
roster (yet) but there is nothing stopping us from jumping in and
helping Mr. Isdell and his new Chief Marketing Officer, Chuck
Fruit with their quest for new. "The goal is to be able
to run at least two spots and some billboard ads that are appropriate
for any country, regardless of culture, and reinforce the "iconic"
nature of the brand", sources said according to Adweek. We'll
be working twice as hard as those guys they're paying to come up
with something cool by next Wednesday.
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My
Heroes. O.K. I'll admit it. The
hardest part about writing this column is the fact that it
has to be done on Thursday night. After Survivor. After Apprentice.
Yes, my name is Harry Webber and I am addicted to reality-based
programming as produced by Mark Burnett.
A
couple people have pinged me about doing a review of fall
season lineup shows on the Networks, since they run in such
close approximation to the television commercials that are
the stated mandate of this column. First let me correct
a common misconception about Network Television.
Programming
Gurus, Corporate Holding Companies, The FCC? These are not
the Masters of Network Television. Madison Avenue is the
Master of Network Television. Agency Media Buyers are
the shot-callers at the nets and make no mistake about it.
William Paley, founder of the Tiffany Network, current
ratings leader, CBS had a small bronze plaque on the
wall of his office at "Black Rock." It read, "He whose
bread I eat, that's the song I sing."
This
is the natural order of things in Tubeland. But things they
are a changin'. For the past several
years the Neilsen Ratings for the national television networks
have been showing a phenomena known as "audience erosion."
Simply put, that means that every year less and less people
are glued to the tube from 8pm to 11pm Monday through Friday.
Less available eyeballs. Higher and higher production costs
to get those eyeballs back. The result has been More Bucks
For Less Bang. Little wonder that Advertisers have been
grumbling in unison, "What's Wrong With This Picture?" Now
it is true that their are still a few Neanderthal Marketing
Guys who think that there is still a "Mass Market"
out there, and that Network Television is the only way to
reach it.
Those
diehards have been the driving force behind what are known
as the "Upfront Markets" or the feeding frenzy for
television spot inventory on the new and top-rated Network
shows. This year the upfronts were categorized as "brisk"
in the industry trades. This is somewhat diminished from
last year's "Robust" and the year before that's "Dynamic."
What this means is that the guys and gals actually charged
with signing these multi-million dollar checks to CBS, NBC,
FOX and ABC are finally wising up. You knew they were
pissing their money up a rope, didn't you? I know I certainly
did. I knew it years ago.
In that book to your left,( "Divide and Conquer"
John Wiley & Sons, NY.) I announced to Madison Avenue
that "The Mass Market Is Dead." That was back in 1998.
Now that concept is catching on like a house afire. So what
does all this have to do with my hero? Everything. Imagine
some guy seeing the writing on the wall the same way I did
a few years back. A TV guy from another country. He sees
the U.S. genXers bailing; the cronies getting fat development
deals for shit shows; the Neilsens stumbling on their worthless
People Meters; the guys at the top worried about who owns
who; the agency gals braindead as media buying services eat
their lunch; the Internet booming because people would rather
read e-mail that watch ESPN; the cost of digital video diving
to below cheap; the marketplace fragmenting into smaller and
smaller segments; the worship of instant celebrity; the decline
of "Star Power; the onslaught of the WGA Strike.( Hi Rachel)
What
does my hero do, once he processes all of this data?. He
creates the low cost- high profit phenomenon we refer to today
as "Reality-Based Programming." Now I'm not saying that
Mark Burnett's "Survivor" was the first of it's kind.
I'm just saying nobody made Reality TV, "appointment TV"
until "Survivor." Nobody. And when the field was saturated
and everybody said the "reality fad" had run it's course,
Mark Burnett steps up to the plate with "Apprentice."
Lightning strikes twice.
Burnett
knows what we want. We want our heroes to be hunks. We
want our winners to be "Real." We want our Minorities to be
doomed from the start, because they reinforce our racist stereotypes.
We want our women to be both beautiful and ruthless. We want
our locations to be both seductive and deadly. That's what
America wants. That's what Mr. Burnett delivers, week
after week, after week with those two shows. Sure "Restaurant"
and "Casino" fell off the tracks, but they were based upon
dysfunctional principals and were both basically works for
hire.
Here's why the man gets my vote for Hero. He still
manages to give us memorable moments in television when we
least expect it. Like for instance this past Thursday. Donald
Trump gives some nabob lawyer a pass from being fired
and the guy renounces his immunity status. Trump looks at
him like he's crazy and spends the next five minutes telling
this guy Bradford how stupid he is. Then he tells him, "You're
Fired." I love this guy Burnett, for bringing this
moment into my home for me to share with my family. It sure
beats anything on the last five years with "Everybody
Loves Raymond."
My
second candidate for Hero is Mitsubishi Motors of North
America's Ian Beavis, the automaker's senior vice president
of marketing, product and public relations. Mr. Beavis
is no butthead ( I'm sorry. I couldn't resist) He has
unilaterally ceased all advertising on broadcast network TV.
He stated at the I-Media Summit last week that he pulled $120
million -- 75% of the automarker's advertising budget -- from
broadcast this year.
Mr.
Beavis also claimed that he finds nothing "compelling" in
network TV's fall schedule, so Mitsubishi would be moving
at least half its spending in the medium to national cable,
syndicated and spot TV while increasing magazine spending
by 50% and devoting more of its budget to Internet advertising.
Way to go Mr. Beavis. There you have it. One guy makes
Network Television more watchable. Other guy says "Too
little, Too late. I'm outta here." Heroic in any book.
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The
Good Stuff. In
its largest U.S. advertising effort in 20 years, DHL Worldwide
Network is spending $150 million to go after FedEx Corp. and
United Parcel Service head-on. They've repainted their trucks yellow
and red , they are on matching yellow and red billboards everywhere,
and when I called them the other day, they picked up on the second
ring and I got a real person.
DHL
started in San Francisco with a $3,000 investment back in 1969.
Now some 35 years and billions of deliveries later, they are an
$18.6 billion company. Not too shabby. I just love there attitude.
"The most exciting thing in shipping since bubble-wrap,"
is just one example of how their in your face messaging gets
their point across.
Their
tagline "Competition. Bad for them. Great for you." is clear,
concise and to the point. "As our red and bright yellow trucks begin
rolling through the streets, advertising increases and customers
see our expanded product offering, the realization will set in that
DHL is an even more powerful force in the American marketplace,"
claims Dick Metzler, Executive Vice President of Marketing, DHL
Americas.
Their
agency is Ogilvy & Mather, New York. If they came up
with the yellow and red motif, they deserve all the credit they
can get from this cut-through the clutter unified campaign. To see
the entire campaign click here.
Sometimes
a commercial comes along that is so simple and so compelling that
it makes you wanna say, "Damn, I wish I had done that."
Such is the case with the recent spots for Tylenol Meltaways.
Having a 2.5 year old, I know precisely how difficult getting them
to take their medicine can be.
This
spot gives me nothing but wall to wall smiling kids, opening their
mouths, sticking out their tongues and showing America that the
medicine is all gone. It's a product demo straight out of the
slimefests of "Fear Factor" and "Survivor" and
I loved every minute of it.
Of
course, when you first see this spot and these endless "Ahhhhs!"
you have no idea what the hell they could be advertising. But the
kids are riveting. Finally, when the title card comes up at the
end with "Stop. Think. Tylenol Meltaways" all you
can say is "Got me." This product is a definite
shopping list item in my household. For years Tylenol was
at Saatchi & Saatchi. A short while ago it bombed over
to Deutsch. Great stuff, Donny.
We
Last episode we talked a bit about dancing and how Mike Jackson
ruined that particular pastime for me by being so good at it.
Well a couple of recent spots are also killing the notion that
white folk can't dance, as well. The first is an excellent "Back
to school " spot by J.C. Penney which features some
of the dappest sub-tween thespians I have ever had the pleasure
to watch.
Those
kids in that spot get Dowwwwn!
Next
in line for the dance their ass off award is the current series
of spots from Lee Jeans to the song "Why should I
Cry" by Avia. Interestingly enough when I first saw the
spots I said, "Whoa! These hunnies can work!" I went to
the Lee jeans site to take another look and realized that it wasn't
just the dancing, but the entire movement of the talent that had
been wonderfully choreographed. But there was one hunnie in particular
that had it goin' on with her groove. Smoove. Check her
out
Stay
Tuned.
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MARKETERS
FROM
THE FOLLOWING COMPANIES
READ
MADISON AVENEW:
OGILVY
& MATHER
MULLEN ADVERTISING
THE MARTIN AGENCY
TBWA CHAIT/DAY
GSD&M
YOUNG&RUBICAM
McCANN-ERICKSON
LEO BURNETT USA
ADRANTS
NEW YORK TIMES
CHICAGO TRIBUNE
NEW YORK OBSERVER
BRANDWEEK
ADWEEK
BANK
OF AMERICA
NATIONSBANK
THE PRINCIPAL FINANCIAL GROUP
INDYMAC BANCORP
GUARDIAN LIFE INSURANCE
KMPG/PEAT
MARWICK
DEAN WITTER
VERISIGN
GENERAL MOTORS
MERCEDES-B ENZ OF N.A.
FORD MOTOR CO
ESTEE LAUDER COMPANIES
THE LIMITED, INC.
TIFFANY
CO.
BOEING
AMACO CORPORATION
20TH CENTURY FOX
DIRECTV
VISABLE WORLD, INC.
VIACOM INTERNATIONAL
UNIVERSAL STUDIOS
DISNEY WORLDWIDE SERVICES,
INTERNATIONAL CREATIVE MANAGEMENT
HOLLYWOOD GOWER CENTERH
SCREENVISION
DELTA
AIR LINES
S.C. JOHNSON WAX
MERCK & CO.
KAISER PERMIANENTE
CANADIAN MENTAL HEALTH ASSN
And
You.
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