Category: Uncategorized
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What an ad agency has to go through?
Advertising Agency: Del Campo Nazca Saatchi & Saatchi, Argentina
Executive Creative Directors: Maxi Itzkoff, Mariano Serkin
Creative Directors: Diego Medvedocky, Ignacio Ferioli
Creatives: Guilherme Souza, Breno Costa
Producer: Camilo Rojas
Agency Producers: Adrian Aspani, Lucila D’Amico
Account director: Jaime Vidal
Account Executive: Manuela Sorzana
Microwave product development: Marcelo Da Torre / Creavis
Production Company: Pank
Directors: Pablo Fusco, Juan Chappa
Executive Producer: Lucas Urquiza
Photography Director: Federico Cantini
Post Production Company: La Sociedad Post
Music: Diego Grimblat -
“Some of the best logos are obvious, that’s what makes them resilient.”
— MICHAEL BIERUT
Red Cross, designed by Henri Dunant, 1863
Penguin, designed by Jan Tschichold, 1949
Blue Circle, designed by F H K Henrion, 1970
Shell, designed by Raymond Loewy, 1971
Apple, designed by Rob Janoff, 1977 (updated 1999)
Bell System, designed by Saul Bass, 1969 -
Åkestam Holst and Society 46 created “The Sound of Football” to give visually impaired people a better football experience and maybe, in the future, create new aides that enable you to “see” with sound. As a first test, we arranged a football match between a team of visually impaired players and a team of former professional footballers. We wanted to see how they would perform under equal conditions – in a match where no one can see.
How it works: We used tracking technology, the same used at the latest FIFA World Cup. Through the system we can get the position of each player in real time on the football pitch. This information is then fed into an iPhone located on each player’s head and converted into binaural 3D sound. We created sounds for things important on the pitch like the nearest players, the ball and the goals. Through headphones each player can hear what is happening and get a sense of distance between things. And the sensors in the iPhone allow players to locate where the sounds come from when they move their head.Agency: Åkestam Holst, Stockholm, Sweden
Creative Director: Martin Cedergren
Art Director: Björn Kusa
Copywriter: Patrick Dry
Executive Digital Producer: Alex Picha -
bnet.com | By Steve Tobak
Business strategy seems to confound and confuse people. I don’t know why. The concept is straightforward enough. Just answer the question: How are we going to accomplish our goal of market domination?If you can present the answer to your management team, board, and shareholders with a straight face and they don’t laugh at you, you’re probably good to go, at least until it turns out to be remarkably flawed.
And therein, lies the rub. The hard part, of course, is coming up with unique strategy that’s got a snowball’s chance in hell of actually succeeding in a brutally competitive global market.
I can go on and on. In fact, I think I will, but enough with this theory stuff. Here are 10 Strategies That Kill Companies – and Careers, including plenty of real-world examples:
1. The “hope” strategy. There’s a veritable plethora of “hope” strategies: Hope the competition screws up, hope customers decide to buy an inferior product, hope you wake up tomorrow in a bizarro world where everything’s turned around and incompetent management is revered, hope the boss doesn’t find out you screwed up, and so on.
2.Strategy du jour. If you’ve ever worked for a dysfunctional company, then you’re probably familiar with this problem where executives consistently overreact to a single data point or hallway meeting and take the entire organization in a new direction. It’s also common among startups and small businesses where inexperienced leaders don’t know any better.
3.The “peanut butter” strategy. Who can forget Yahoo senior VP Brad Garlinghouse’s now famous Peanut Butter Manifesto, a scorching indictment of a company lacking cohesive focus and spreading itself too thin across too many opportunities? Who knew it would be so predictive of the company’s strategy, or lack thereof, through two completely unique CEO regimes, Jerry Yang and Carol Bartz?
4.Dumb and dumber. I hate to keep picking on Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie, Research In Motion’s co-CEOs, but there’s something comical, reminiscent of Abott and Costello, about two executives who haven’t a clue trying to compete against the likes of Apple and Google. Maybe they should call their strategy “More Blackberrys,” like the “More Cowbell” SNL skit with Will Farrell.
5.Grandiose vision. Far too many CEOs think a grandiose vision is a strategy. It’s not. It’s also usually far riskier than it’s made out to be, since companies with a grand vision tend to get attacked from all sides by more focused and nimble competitors. When Nobuyuki Idei, Howard Stringer’s predecessor as CEO of Sony, decided to turn Sony into a global entertainment company, I bet there was no mention of compromising its leadership in consumer electronics.
6.The “pasta” strategy. Similar to the peanut butter strategy but not exactly, this is where companies throw money and resources at all sorts of ideas to see what sticks. It’s like Google’s diversification strategy of chasing Apple in mobile, Facebook in social media, Microsoft in web browsing and operating systems, Amazon in retail, and pretty much everyone in the cloud.
7.If we build it, they will come. Common in Silicon Valley where engineers and technologists in love with their inventions and widgets, but have no understanding of marketing strategy or competitive positioning whatsoever, become entrepreneurs and run companies.
8.The “stay the course” strategy. One of the most common corporate failure modes, it occurs when a CEO or business leader sticks with a vision long after any reasonably intelligent and objective person would have given up. Also known as Staythecourseitis, leaders thusly afflicted are usually surrounded by yes-men who sugarcoat the truth and tell them, with a straight face, that everything’s fine.
9.Seeking strategic alternatives. I don’t know exactly when this started, but the whole idea of publicly hiring an investment bank to help you figure out what to do next – whether that’s shopping a distressed company to nobody who wants it or pitching private equity firms on how to carve it up into easily digestible bite-sized chunks – is the best way to destroy whatever shareholder value is left at the company.
10.Good idea, bad execution. Rarely, in the real world, does strategy alone win the day. If indeed HP’s former CEO Leo Apotheker actually had the right idea to unload the company’s $41 billion personal systems group – a decision that’s since been reversed by new CEO Meg Whitman – telegraphing his intent a year or more before even finding a buyer and rendering the group a lame duck in the market was idiotic.
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INTO THE FRAY is a self-initiated project “to visualise the power and strength of rugby players, and freeze-frame it” say the agency. To this end, they built a giant glass tank and packed in as many rugby boys as the space would allow | Creative Review
Creative agency Rosie Lee and photographer John Ross take a close-up look at the sport.
High-end art direction and creative marketing executions around sport have featured in many Rosie Lee projects over the years. So to coincide with and celebrate the 2011 Rugby World Cup we embarked upon a creative exploration of rugby from an up-close and personal, players point of view.
Our concept came from wanting to visualise the power and strength of rugby players, and freeze-frame it. In the past we’ve produced many shots of athletes moving at full speed, but we hadn’t before captured a sense of power or intensity over a prolonged period of time.
To harness and convey this idea we built a giant, reinforced glass tank, which we crammed rugby players into. We went to great effort to get every corner and every bit of space filled with their muscle and sinew. We then art directed photographer John Ross to capture a series of stylized images with different executions for single and multiple players.
To extend the concept into moving image, we filmed the shoot and used the footage to produce a short video file with atmospheric soundtrack by musical artist Scanner.
Photography by John Ross
Creative agency Rosie Lee

Ross then photographed the results


Video Editing by Dom Lueng at Trim
Cinematography by Nick Wood at STK Films -
Fool the devil with – brake assistant BAS + Mercedes-Benz E-Class W212
Agency: Jung von Matt/Neckar, Stuttgart, Germany
Executive Creative Director: Michael Ohanian
Copywriter: Robert Herter
Agency Producer: Vanessa Fischbeck
Producer / Production Company: Bernd T. Hoefflin / Element E, Germany
Director: Alex Feil
D.O.P/Lighting/Kamera: Marc Achenbach
Editor/Editing Company: Timo Fritsche / firsteight
Music: Artist/Title: Maximilian Olowinsky, Felix Müller, Florian -
Directed by Arev Manoukian and inspired by his short film Nuit Blanche, ‘”Sony Two Worlds” is a video short showcasing cinematic art with the power of 3D. The short features Sony artist Leonard Cohen, an original soundtrack by composer Clint Mansell and was produced by Grey London.
Sony challenged advertising agency, GREY London, to show off the power of their range of 3D goodies – something spectacular that could compete with the best from Hollywood. Not too much pressure then?
The piece uses the power of romance and outstanding 3D cinematography to evoke a profound emotional reaction from viewers. “Sony Two Worlds is about the irresistible urge to get closer to the things that you love, to get nearer to make them more real,” says Nils Leonard, Executive Creative Officer at GREY London.
Making of Sony Two Worlds…
To watch the HD version of “Sony Two Worlds” visit: http://bit.ly/mSZkNz
Agency: GREY, London, UK
Executive Creative Director: Nils Leonard
Creative Director: Dave Monk and Matt Waller
Agency Producer: Jacqueline Dobrin
Production Company: Spy Films
Producer: Marcus Trulli
Director: Arev Manoukian
Editing Company: Digital Domain
To watch the making of”Sony Two Worlds” visit: http://bit.ly/mPtFjs -
When a logo is seen often enough, it can be simplified yet still identify its own | LogoDesignLove
When a logo is seen often enough, it can be simplified yet still identify its owner.
The following are from a TVN Channel advertising campaign to run alongside the tagline, “Shorter commercial breaks.”



“Shorter commercial breaks. TVN Channel.”
Advertising Agency: Lowe Porta, Santiago, Chile
Executive Creative Director: Kiko Carcavilla
Creative Directors: Cristian Kemp, Sebastián Collantes
Copywriter: Sebastián Collantes, Kiko Carcavilla
Art Director: Cristian Kemp
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Blackly comic campaign | Switzerland
Imagine that you’re stuck in hospital next to a fellow patient who just wont let you forget that you paid more for the same health insurance than he did. You call the nurse to complain but she’s just as unconcerned as the guy in the next bed.
Advertising Agency: Walker, Zurich, Switzerland
Executive Creative Director: Pius Walker
Art director: Golf Nuntawat Chaipornkaew
Copywriters: Roger Beckett, Golf Nuntawat Chaipornkaew
Account Directors: Lisa Binkert, Cornelia Nunlist
Graphic Designer: Philipp Dornbierer
Production House: Knucklehead
Director: Ben Gregor
DOP: Douglas Koch
Producer: Jane Tredget
Editor: Mark Burnett ` Speade
Published: October 2011



