Do we ever pause to ponder before appropriating cultural icons for our own creative whims? 🤔 Not too long ago, a campaign surfaced, sparking elation among the advertising crowd. We chuckled at the spoof, but it begs the question: Have we lost all sense of what we are doing?! 😶 Check it out here: https://lnkd.in/grFnrbEy Using two legendary figures who endured hardship for their creative autonomy—Van Gogh and Frida Kahlo—to negotiate for more creative freedom while cashing checks from commercially driven clients seems, frankly, unjust and absurd. 😕 Advertising creative community doing a disservice to the real creative community- can't you see the injustice, the sheer irony in that?! 😳 There is a reason why they never worked or would work in an ad agency. Commissioned art yes, but only to fuel their real art! 😇 This ad likely wouldn't have passed the client's scrutiny. But this time, the creatives ARE the clients, and here we are🎨💼 Let's hope for a future where better judgment and cultural sensitivity prevail. Until then, we'll have to settle for memes and ponder our choices. 🙏✨ #strategy #mindset #culture #creativity #brandconsulting #future #marketing #branding #culturalsensitivity #advertising
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Your Monthly Creative Update 🤩 What’s trending in the creative world this month? Swipe through and share your thoughts on: → The BAGGI "Make Your Mark" Campaign → &Walsh’s Rebrand for The Coconut Cult → Jaguar’s Controversial Rebrand → The Sutton Trust Report on Working-Class Access in the Creative Industry Want more creative news delivered to your inbox every week? Subscribe to our newsletter by following the link in the comments 📌 #branding #brandidentity #creative #creativecareers
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Tom hits it on the head when he says that "creative work is usually not a Darwinian survival of the most interesting ideas; it's survival of the safest ideas. And safe ideas tend to be neutral." If you're not speaking to emotions and only using rationale logic in marketing, you have to work harder (a lot harder). And if you're speaking to emotions, you won't be able to appeal to everyone. #marketing #smallbusiness #entrepreneur
“Creative Review by Committee” - new cartoon and post https://lnkd.in/gu9MdEnC A few month ago, I heard Adam Morgan from eatbigfish and Jon Evans from System1 give a talk on the Extraordinary Cost of Being Dull at the Cannes advertising festival. Adam and Jon shared analysis from Peter Field who found that a “dull” advertising campaign has to spend £10m more a year in media on average to get the same results as a campaign that’s “not dull”. Yet the majority of ads are dull. System1 collects how people feel about more than 100,000 ads to predict their long- and short-term potential. When Jon sorted the System1 database of ads by emotion, the most common emotion in these ads wasn’t Happiness, Surprise, or Anger; it was Neutrality, the absence of an emotion. I thought about this in the context of how the creative sausage gets made — the internal process of making any sort of creative work. It’s frequently dull by design. Creative work is usually not a Darwinian survival of the most interesting ideas; it’s survival of the safest ideas. And safe ideas tend to be neutral. Some of this I think comes from the creative review by committee. Creative work is inherently subjective. If you try to appeal to everyone, you’ll appeal to no one. A creative review by committee leads to a peace treaty rather than interesting work. To carry over the emoji metaphor in this week’s cartoon, trying to make everyone happy can lead to everyone feeling neutral. I think we have to apply as much creative rigor to how we manage the creative review process as the creative itself. Creative projects require an editor — someone who can sort between frequently contradictory feedback, listening to some, ignoring others, and making the final call. A handy rule of thumb for creative reviews I heard early in my marketing career: “everyone should have a voice — not everyone should have a vote.” For related cartoons and all the links in this post, click here: https://lnkd.in/gu9MdEnC To sign up for my weekly marketoon email newsletter, click here: https://lnkd.in/gteDRRTd #marketing #cartoon #marketoon
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This ⬇️⬇️⬇️ I was taught long ago, ONE voice back to the agency, it not only saves time and money, but also everyone's sanity and patience. Simple recipe for success: - One genuinely empowered person on point - Who, for every round, gathers all feedback OFF-LINE - Aligns up the stack (air cover) and vs. Brief (and therefore vs. core insight) - And then, and only then do you reengage the agency. It may feel like a bottle-neck, and the agency may want answers quicker to hit (most likely) your timeline, but if you work in a corporate or in any climate with a lot of 'opinion leaders' trust this process - lower stress, potentially lower cost through fewer rounds of creative, and almost always, better work (that's actually on brief).
“Creative Review by Committee” - new cartoon and post https://lnkd.in/gfanQj2t A few month ago, I heard Adam Morgan from eatbigfish and Jon Evans from System1 give a talk on the Extraordinary Cost of Being Dull at the Cannes advertising festival. Adam and Jon shared analysis from Peter Field who found that a “dull” advertising campaign has to spend £10m more a year in media on average to get the same results as a campaign that’s “not dull”. Yet the majority of ads are dull. System1 collects how people feel about more than 100,000 ads to predict their long- and short-term potential. When Jon sorted the System1 database of ads by emotion, the most common emotion in these ads wasn’t Happiness, Surprise, or Anger; it was Neutrality, the absence of an emotion. I thought about this in the context of how the creative sausage gets made — the internal process of making any sort of creative work. It’s frequently dull by design. Creative work is usually not a Darwinian survival of the most interesting ideas; it’s survival of the safest ideas. And safe ideas tend to be neutral. Some of this I think comes from the creative review by committee. Creative work is inherently subjective. If you try to appeal to everyone, you’ll appeal to no one. A creative review by committee leads to a peace treaty rather than interesting work. To carry over the emoji metaphor in this week’s cartoon, trying to make everyone happy can lead to everyone feeling neutral. I think we have to apply as much creative rigor to how we manage the creative review process as the creative itself. Creative projects require an editor — someone who can sort between frequently contradictory feedback, listening to some, ignoring others, and making the final call. A handy rule of thumb for creative reviews I heard early in my marketing career: “everyone should have a voice — not everyone should have a vote.” For related cartoons and all the links in this post, click here: https://lnkd.in/gfanQj2t To sign up for my weekly marketoon email newsletter, click here: https://lnkd.in/gZsC7Nhz #marketing #cartoon #marketoon
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You can’t make everyone happy 100% of the time. The key is to create content that evokes an emotion with your audience to take action. How do you create content that is impactful and meaningful? ⬇ Leave me a note below and share your thoughts!
“Creative Review by Committee” - new cartoon and post https://lnkd.in/gfanQj2t A few month ago, I heard Adam Morgan from eatbigfish and Jon Evans from System1 give a talk on the Extraordinary Cost of Being Dull at the Cannes advertising festival. Adam and Jon shared analysis from Peter Field who found that a “dull” advertising campaign has to spend £10m more a year in media on average to get the same results as a campaign that’s “not dull”. Yet the majority of ads are dull. System1 collects how people feel about more than 100,000 ads to predict their long- and short-term potential. When Jon sorted the System1 database of ads by emotion, the most common emotion in these ads wasn’t Happiness, Surprise, or Anger; it was Neutrality, the absence of an emotion. I thought about this in the context of how the creative sausage gets made — the internal process of making any sort of creative work. It’s frequently dull by design. Creative work is usually not a Darwinian survival of the most interesting ideas; it’s survival of the safest ideas. And safe ideas tend to be neutral. Some of this I think comes from the creative review by committee. Creative work is inherently subjective. If you try to appeal to everyone, you’ll appeal to no one. A creative review by committee leads to a peace treaty rather than interesting work. To carry over the emoji metaphor in this week’s cartoon, trying to make everyone happy can lead to everyone feeling neutral. I think we have to apply as much creative rigor to how we manage the creative review process as the creative itself. Creative projects require an editor — someone who can sort between frequently contradictory feedback, listening to some, ignoring others, and making the final call. A handy rule of thumb for creative reviews I heard early in my marketing career: “everyone should have a voice — not everyone should have a vote.” For related cartoons and all the links in this post, click here: https://lnkd.in/gfanQj2t To sign up for my weekly marketoon email newsletter, click here: https://lnkd.in/gZsC7Nhz #marketing #cartoon #marketoon
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Don't try to make everyone happy 😄 Use #NeuronsAI to show your committee why a creative works or doesn’t, backed by neuroscientific insights!! Less effort, less time, fewer revisions. More conversion, agility, and effectiveness 😉🙌 More details? Please DM 📩
“Creative Review by Committee” - new cartoon and post https://lnkd.in/gu9MdEnC A few month ago, I heard Adam Morgan from eatbigfish and Jon Evans from System1 give a talk on the Extraordinary Cost of Being Dull at the Cannes advertising festival. Adam and Jon shared analysis from Peter Field who found that a “dull” advertising campaign has to spend £10m more a year in media on average to get the same results as a campaign that’s “not dull”. Yet the majority of ads are dull. System1 collects how people feel about more than 100,000 ads to predict their long- and short-term potential. When Jon sorted the System1 database of ads by emotion, the most common emotion in these ads wasn’t Happiness, Surprise, or Anger; it was Neutrality, the absence of an emotion. I thought about this in the context of how the creative sausage gets made — the internal process of making any sort of creative work. It’s frequently dull by design. Creative work is usually not a Darwinian survival of the most interesting ideas; it’s survival of the safest ideas. And safe ideas tend to be neutral. Some of this I think comes from the creative review by committee. Creative work is inherently subjective. If you try to appeal to everyone, you’ll appeal to no one. A creative review by committee leads to a peace treaty rather than interesting work. To carry over the emoji metaphor in this week’s cartoon, trying to make everyone happy can lead to everyone feeling neutral. I think we have to apply as much creative rigor to how we manage the creative review process as the creative itself. Creative projects require an editor — someone who can sort between frequently contradictory feedback, listening to some, ignoring others, and making the final call. A handy rule of thumb for creative reviews I heard early in my marketing career: “everyone should have a voice — not everyone should have a vote.” For related cartoons and all the links in this post, click here: https://lnkd.in/gu9MdEnC To sign up for my weekly marketoon email newsletter, click here: https://lnkd.in/gteDRRTd #marketing #cartoon #marketoon
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Different colours, different cultures. After going back in time through the centuries of #advertising to the modern moments of it, one thing might stay true: it's the culture we unfold before we deliver a service to a specific group. Just a bit of what I get to take home as a good thought for the day after an unpacking lecture session on advertising. ___________ #advertising #Mediapractices #Creative #storyteller Boston Media House #PhilsDrive #learningjourney
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Ordinary is saying 'NO' to celebs and 'YES' to science 👋 🧪 They're out here with a simple OOH campaign, showing off their ethos – high-end products, affordable prices. 🤝 What's genius about this ad? It screams Ordinary. 👀 That monochromatic color palette? So them. 🫧The clean aesthetic? Totally in sync with the less is more beauty trend. Subtle but leaves a mark. It's all about the words here. But we're not talking about lengthy copy. Just crisp, punchy lines that capture the brand's ethos.
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INSIGHTS: Britt Nolan, chief creative officer at Leo Burnett, explains how irony, personality flaws and a touch of darkness help make characters memorable in ads. https://ow.ly/e0HJ50R1ff2 #INSIGHTS #CAMagazine #AdvertisingInsights #LeoBurnett #CreativeAdvertising #CharacterDevelopment #AdvertisingTips #MarketingStrategy #BrandPersonality #CreativeProcess #AdvertisingIndustry #MemorableAds #CreativeDirector #BrandDevelopment #AdvertisingCreativity #MarketingInsights #AdCampaigns
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Dove "Real Beauty Sketches" Campaign 2013 Dove’s "Real Beauty Sketches" campaign exemplifies the power of authentic storytelling in marketing. The campaign connected emotionally with audiences by addressing low self-esteem and showing women how their self-image differs from others’ perceptions. Released on YouTube and social media, it hit over 114 million views monthly and boosted Dove’s sales by 20%, illustrating how genuine, culturally relevant messages resonate with consumers and drive real growth. For marketers, this underscores the impact of addressing unspoken consumer insecurities with relatability and sincerity—a strategy that builds brand loyalty and sales beyond traditional advertising focused only on product features. How can brands today create campaigns that feel truly authentic and make a lasting impact without resorting to standard advertising tactics? Sean Choi Dove https://lnkd.in/eQA_x5Aj
Dove 'Real Beauty Sketches' Ad
wsj.com
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The Guinness 'Surfer' Ad: A Masterclass in Advertising Excellence 🍺🐎🏄🏽 Just read an insightful article by Creative Salon on this iconic ad, celebrating its 25th anniversary and decoding what made it one of the all-time greatest. Here's my takeouts: ✅ Innovative Storytelling and Symbolism: Merges literary and artistic references with a powerful metaphor of anticipation. ✅ Exceptional Cinematic Quality: Directed by Jonathan Glazer, this ad set a new standard in advertisement production values. ✅ Emotional and Cultural Resonance: Strikes a universal chord with its theme of patience and reward. ✅ Technical Innovation and Craftsmanship: Overcomes the technological limitations of the time to deliver stunning visual effects. ✅ Bold Creative Risk-Taking: Defies conventional market research, proving the value of originality and intuition in creative endeavours. Creative Salon Worldwide full article: https://lnkd.in/gcTaVgvJ
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