Rob Schwartz talks 30 years of Cannes with Jean-Marie Dru

June 25, 2009

Last year Jean-Marie Dru, Chairman of TBWA\ Worldwide, has an intense connection with the Cannes Lions Advertising Festival. He had the honor to chair the jury twice and last year he gave a highly recognized speech “The Beauty of Big” as part of the festival program. This year he shares his personal insights about the festival with the readers of mad-blog.com. Enjoy the conversation.

Part one (10:00)

Part two (7:26)

If you have any comments please email Ulrich Proeschel.

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John Hunt: Your brain needs room to breathe

June 25, 2009

In a series of four short films, TBWA Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt answers questions about creativity, disruption and media arts. Prepare for inspiring thoughts about instinct, sharing, humour – and coat hangers.

4. Your brain needs room to breathe. In the last of four short films, Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt describes how a relaxed environment can lead to greater creativity.

Did you miss an episode? OneTwo. Three.
If you have any comments please email Ulrich Proeschel.
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John Hunt: It’s not my idea, it’s our idea

June 23, 2009

In a series of four short films, TBWA Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt answers questions about creativity, disruption and media arts. Prepare for inspiring thoughts about instinct, sharing, humour – and coat hangers.

3. It’s not my idea, it’s our idea – John Hunt explains how big egos suffocate creativity and why ideas benefit from being shared.

Did you miss episode one? Click here. What about episode two? Click here.
If you have any comments please email Ulrich Proeschel.
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John Hunt: Brands are defined not by ads, but by the ideas

June 23, 2009

In a series of four short films, TBWA Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt answers questions about creativity, disruption and media arts. Prepare for inspiring thoughts about instinct, sharing, humour – and coat hangers.

1. Brands are defined not by ads, but by the ideas behind them. In the first of four films, Worldwide Creative Director John Hunt shares his definition of the ‘coat hanger’ idea:

If you have any comments please email Ulrich Proeschel.

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John Hunt: Let’s do the things we think we cannot do

June 22, 2009

If TBWA wants to be one of the top 10 most creative companies in the world, it has to look at everything in a different way. John Hunt, Worldwide Creative Director, explains how.

John Hunt
John Hunt

We can’t define advertising in a narrow way. We have to learn from companies outside of ourselves – learn how they redefined the categories they played in. We have to look at our jobs, our clients, our audiences and certainly the media from a completely different angle. I’ve put a few practical thoughts together that may help us do this.

1. Change the way we brief.

Imagine if the brief was the first expression of Media Arts? Our briefs need to be more visual. They don’t always have to include lots of ticks in boxes. And they certainly don’t have to be done in the agency. Briefs, certainly on big campaigns, should be inspirational. For example, we recently did a briefing for a pasta client in an Italian restaurant, it’s amazing what Italian opera and arabiata can achieve.

2. Invite the client to the briefing as well as the presentation.

It sounds a little radical, but it really works. If it’s the client’s briefing, strangely enough, it also becomes their campaign. This way, you don’t meet each other for the first time at the presentation. Adopt this policy and I bet your first-time sell rate will double.

3. Think more about how you package your ideas.

So many great ideas don’t see the light of day because we package them badly. Unfortunately, both in awards shows and presentations to clients, your work is only as good as the way it’s packaged. In South Africa, they did a radio spot for Jungle Oats, a breakfast cereal that’s meant to make kids strong. They wanted it to sound like an old Zulu work song.  That’s quite difficult to sell – but not if you ask 100 children from Soweto’s Room 13 to sing it for you.

4. To get more beautiful answers ask more beautiful questions.

A great idea often comes from a perfectly asked question. So don’t just ask a client about the size of their budget – also ask about the real problems with their business. A client will let you do great work if they you really understand their business. That way, we’re not just the provider of their ads, but rather the architect of their brand.

5. Divide and Conquer has become Share and Conquer.

To become that architect, the agency now has to work as a team.  If there are walls between Client Management, Creative, Planning, Digital, Media and so on, they should become invisible. Different disciplines are not an excuse for working in sealed silos. Our clients, more and more, want an all-encompassing answer to their mounting problems. They don’t care where the answer comes from, as long as it comes.

6. Have an idea, not just an ad.

Our job is to effect audience behaviour, not just to fill in a media schedule. Don’t get me wrong – often a great idea will still find itself translated into mainstream media. And practising Media Arts is absolutely no excuse for lousy TV commercials or print ads. It’s just that in effecting audience behaviour, ‘classical’ advertising is no longer the only game in town. TBWA\Berlin could’ve done posters and double page spreads. They just thought the adidas ‘Huddle’ and ‘Ferris Wheel’ spectaculars during the UEFA EURO 2008 might have more impact. Read more…

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Cannes Lions 2009: Eight countries contribute to TBWA‘s shortlist in the Promo and Direct jury

June 21, 2009

The members to this years Promo and Direct jury at the 2009 Cannes Lions have assigend sixteen shortlist positions to TBWA agencies from around the world. Eight countries contribute to the list: Australia (2), Belgium (2), Germany (2), Japan (1), New Zealand (4), Turkey (3), Saudi Arabia (1) and South Africa (1). The most awarded TBWA client is adidas with four shortlist positions, three in the Promo category and one for Direct.

Shortlist Promo

Shortlist Direct

Final results for both categories will be published Monday night in Cannes.

If you have any comments please email Ulrich Proeschel.

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Categories : Great Stuff
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Lee Clow doesn’t call it advertising

June 19, 2009

Creativity online just tapped some of the industry’s respected leaders and asked them to open up about the most valuable lessons they’ve learned, their biggest successes and failures and the random quirks that even the most passionate creative stalker may not know about. One of them is Lee Clow, TBWA’s Global Director of Media Arts. Enjoy his thoughts and understand, why he doesn’t call the things we do advertising any more.

If you have any comments please email Ulrich Proeschel.

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Global versus local: the new paradox

June 19, 2009

Challenging economic times are changing the way global brands are managed and perceived. Insights from Jean-Marie Prenaud, Executive Vice President International Clients, Europe, TBWA.

Global versus local is a familiar debate, but the balance between the two changes according to circumstances. The current economic situation is having a paradoxical effect on communications strategies. Firstly, it has encouraged companies to centralise. Rather like a body being plunged into cold water, organisations are pulling energy away from the extremities to protect the heart. The time of relative local autonomy has passed – we’re moving towards a one world, one message approach.

There are several concrete examples of this. Michelin, for example, is placing emphasis on its global brand rather than on its local subsidiary brands, such as Kleber or Goodrich. And other big brands, which are historically highly decentralized, are discussing  how to manage their brand in a more global fashion.

But here is the paradox. At the very same moment that we’re seeing a trend towards central control, there is an opposing pull away from traditional communications models. The role of above and below is changing, boarders are vanishing, and supported by a more intimate, local approach, with a strong focus on digital media. That means more work for agencies that can adapt a strong central idea to multiple media platforms.

The result is that the agencies performing best in the downturn are global networks and the small, nimble specialists that help them bring their ideas closer to the consumer. One worries about what will happen to agencies stuck in the middle.

Read more…

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Categories : New Intelligence
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