Tuesday
Nov172009

Advertising: Putting The "Dis" Into "Function"

Over the past 16+ years I've been in and out of more ad agencies than I would like to remember. I've been called a "job hopper, optimistic, Mr. BBD, he who lacks contentment, and asshole" all of which have been true, and all most of which are in the past. I'm sure there's plenty of people that still call me asshole however. I've been fired once, laid-off, let-go and gracefully released several times. I've freelanced, done project work, spec work, real work, spec work and actively consulted in this industry.

A few things happen when you've walked this path:

  • You grow tough skin, both from a internal and external perspective.
  • You don't get married to any ideas, concepts, campaigns, executions or technologies.
  • You learn that if you can charge for it – you should. Don't be afraid to get paid.
  • You don't burn bridges – neither with clients, vendors or agencies.
  • When you don't get paid you let it go. Bad debt is simply bad karma.
  • No job should be beneath you should someone want to pay you for what you do best.
  • You give back. You give back to charities, you give back to students and to your fellow man. Then give back some more.
  • You need to touch and try everything – technology, foods, colors, fonts, styles, techniques, gadgets and media.
  • Watch and listen to children, their voice is 10x more creative and not hindered by 'what ifs'.
  • Learn to listen to your staff, your clients and everyone around you.
  • Great ideas come from living life, not watching TV.


With that said here's a few things that for those of you who choose to be in the advertising, interactive and design space need to know. Why? Because you all do it and no one is getting it right.

Circle the wagons – Creatives, get everyone in the same room before you have to explain your ideas. Stop thinking that you're the only one's that can come up with a funny tag line, choose photography or think progressively. Get interactive, PR, Media and everyone else together (at least one representative) so you all can torture one another with your nonsense that you know you have no budget for.

Friendly fire – AE's stop killing great creative before the client gets a chance to tell you they don't have the budget for it. Funny things happens when clients love something, they find the money for it or at the very least think you're way smarter than they are. Also, just because 'that's the way we've always done it' doesn't make it a standard – that mentality in this economy is a death sentence. Clients want "smart."

Fly fishing for bids – Everyone in new business development stop quoting projects because you think the client [might] sign that day. You're going to be fat and bloated outside in six months after that 50k website you quoted runs you 150k. Don't fail because you never took the time to find out what it would really take to do. Good clients know it takes time and money, and more of one or the other usually offsets itself.

My Dad can beat up your Dad – There's no model. There's no formula. Just because it cost "X" last year doesn't make it and "cut and paste" RFP today (see above). Furthermore, as the project evolves be very mindful of scope creep. The client doesn't wake up every morning wondering what they can ask to get you to do for free, but they're not going to tell you to reassess the parameters of the project each week either. Campaigns change everyday, they are living and breathing, so pay attention to your new pet or it will run away long enough to come back with rabies and bite you.

They want it to walk like a duck – Clients always have ideas, and it's your creative duty to execute those ideas to their fullest potential. It's also your duty to tell the client why something will and will not work. And it's lastly your duty to show them what you think would be the best solution. Sometimes those ideas have a very happy middle ground. Oh and did I mention that your creative team will thank you by working tirelessly on something they want to do?

Tandem bicycles – This goes out to my interactive shops. The world is more than projects. This is where you can learn from traditional agencies. You need to create, develop and nurture long term relationships. You've spent years telling everyone why you should be in the room, now you're here, don't get scared and run out. Unlike your traditional counterparts you have the ability to control and optimize the success of the campaigns you sell. You have the power to prove you effectiveness and in that maintain that client loyalty based on those results. So assign goals and be aggressive. With that said adapt and learn about performance bonus criteria, retainer fees and AOR agreements. You're tomorrow's agency, someone is going to get it right and it might as well be you.

Stop being Kinkos – When things get tough every shop seems to do the same thing – become a production shop. Larger agencies typically withstanding but let's be realistic, when things get hard you toss your gravitas out the window and replace it with the "you betcha" smile and spine strength. Unless you want to do Yellow-page ads keep pushing as hard as you can to make great work.

Less Chiefs, more Indians – It seems in the past five years or so that most agencies that I've been associated with have become executively top-heavy. There's all these people sitting in their glass corner offices yelling about how things are not getting done while the few people actually doing the work are burning out rapidly. At the cost of my own job (though I actually open Photoshop and create everyday, unlike most, you know who you are prima donnas) you can get a lot more doers and get work out the door with more efficiency. Pay the right people to "do" the work.

Thursday
Nov122009

Spend Money On The Product, Not The "What Ifs"

It never fails. Great client, great ideas and a feeble budget meet. As much as any company doesn't want to work within the parameters of a small budget there are times when "the wants" kill the product. Where I always see money get torn apart in is up front, with rounds and rounds of revisions trying to make everyone in the corporation from the mail room up happy. Stop, making it your life's goal to have everyone approve every pixel. Second are endless rounds of revisions, but now it's after you've seen it for the first time. A peer of mine calls this period "post visualization" (BTW: this is where scope-creep runs ramped so AE's need to be very mindful here) and not matter how much you all thought you were on the same page that concept will never be exactly what you thought.

I once told columnist that "the day I complete a project that is the exact match to what I had originally envisioned, is the day I will quit this business."

Spend money on:

  • Great Concepts – (then let the ideas happen; if your agency is stellar they can explain why it's not what you had initially imagined)
  • Great Media – Vivid Photography, well composed, shot and edited video and don't forget the audio!
  • A Great Story – artfully crafted, the best messaging to marry the chosen visuals
  • Testing – Take time to make sure that once it's live, it's correct
  • Technology – Support your campaign with the right social media, mobile or alternate applications
  • Post-Launch Optimization (if online) – Look for ways to make what you put up better and more effective using analytics and measurement

This post was inspired by the following YouTube clip that shows just how little thought was put into the quality of voice-over talent for video games.

Addendum: After reading this post, I started to think that everyone in this industry will say "well it's easier said than done Justice." And while yes, it's easy for me to stand here and make it sound simple, it's your job as a great agency to get the client to understand these truths – and make them simple. Don't let great ideas get dumbed down to a shell of their once former self. And clients, trust your decisions and don't be lead by the "what ifs."

Tuesday
Nov102009

The Beginners Guide to Social Media Monitoring

I know that there are 10k lists of online applications that will help track your brand in the social spectrum. There are also myriad of pay-per-use and subscription based buzz metric application that are wonderful such as Radian 6 that will allow you to monitor your brand in just about every conceivable way.

But here's the deal, you just want to get started and you don't know how. First I'm going to outline some simple tools you should become accustom to using and then, the latter portion of this post will be a long list of tools for you to try over time to see if any of them fit your needs. OK? K.

Let's start here:

  1. Google Products – You don't need to know or use them all, but I want you to understand what they are and that they're free for you to use.
  2. GMail – There are plenty of reasons to use Gmail but first and foremost is that you want to keep your Social Media Monitoring contained well within the walls of it's own email account or you will go crazy. So start by walking through the process of creating an account.
  3. iGoogle – iGoogle allows you to create your google page into a robust social media dashboard. By going to sites, blogs, magazines, competitors and industry specific sites that effect you, start to collect their RSS feeds and add them to your iGoogle page. It's built so you can create tabs, organize, edit settings and move your feeds around for the perfect feel.
  4. Google Alerts – Once you have your Gmail and iGoogle setup, star by creating keyword alerts around your company, brand, competitors and industry.
  5. TweetDeck – TweetDeck is a great tool, not only to use for your personal and professional engagement on tweeting but it has robust searching and details on keywords, hash tags and tweeters. Oh, and it's free.
  6. Socialmention – Lastly, set up a list of alerts like googles at SocialMention and note your ongoing  ’social rank’ score across and array of media types.

That will get you started to scratch the surface. Now here are the list I spoke about earlier for you dabble in.

Brand Overview:

Blog Search:

  • Technorati – Technorati’s new search interface. Use it to find top blogs based upon inbound links only.
  • Technorati Advanced – Technorati’s advanced search page allows you to search for blogs (rather than posts) based on tags.
  • Google Blog Search – Google’s index of blog posts; best for date sensitive material
  • IceRocket – Blog search tool that also charts
  • BlogPulse – Search for blog posts by keyword

Trend & Buzz Tracking:

  • Google Trends – shows amount of searches and google news stories
  • Trendpedia – Create charts showing discussions around multiple topics
  • BlogPulse Trends – Site keywords and phrases in blogs
  • Omgili Charts – Create charts showing discussions around multiple topics

Message Board Search Tools:

  • BoardTracker – tracks words in forums
  • BoardReader – Search multiple message boards and forums.
  • Omgili – Omgili is relatively good aggregator of content. It searches everything from blogs and boards to comment fields
  • Google Groups – Searches Usenet groups.
  • Yahoo! Groups – Searches all Yahoo! Groups.

Twitter Search Tools:

  • Twitter Search – The original and most likely the best
  • Twitstat – Creates a tag cloud for last 500 Tweets
  • Twit(url)y – See what people are talking about on Twitter
  • Hashtags – Real-time tracking of Twitter #Hash tags
  • TweetBeep – Track mentions of your brand on Twitter in real time (like twitter alerts for your email)
  • Twitrratr – Rates mentions of your search term on Twitter as positive/neutral/negative
  • TweetMeme – View the most popular Twitter threads & trends
  • TwitScoop – Real-time tweet following with integrated iPhone application
  • Twilert – Receive regular email updates of tweets containing your brand, product, and or service

Website Ranking, Traffic & Analytics

  • Compete – Competitor site traffic reports. Estimates only of monthly visitor data. Best used on large high-traffic Web sites.
  • Quantcast – Use this on large high-traffic Websites. It allows you to compare multiple web sites in one handy chart. Estimates only of monthly visitor data.
  • Alexa – Comparative site traffic reports. Includes estimated reach, rank and page views.
  • BlogFlux Page Rank – Tells you Google Page Rank for a web page. Use this to compare different websites.

Search Data

Multimedia Search

Social Bookmarking

  • Digg – Social bookmarking for news, images and videos
  • StumbleUpon – Social bookmarking in the exploratory way the web use to be

Feed Aggregator

  • Yahoo Pipes – Feed aggregator and manipulator. Set up pipes for news alerts and overviews creating a matrix of feeds that interelate

Here's a densely conpiled list from my delicious bookmarks that might also be useful as you begin to tinker with alternate options and techniques (oh yes, there will be repetitous content ahead) –

Here's an awesome Slideshare.net presentation from Stephan Betzold at Pier314 that I found to be very thorough.

 

 

 

Thursday
Nov052009

Divorced Bands & Their Maddened Mistress

Unfortunately like any dysfunctional family, bands come and they go. I cannot actually imagine how four or five highly-creative people stay together for any length of time, but in that, I guess that's what's important – the magic made with the time we have. I'm sure we all have our list, so what's yours?

This list exponentially grows when you start adding the fallen to it – Jimi Hendrix, Kurt Cobain, Jon Bonham and Bon Scott. So much great music, such little time.

Sunday
Nov012009

Bravo! American Express! Bravo!

I've not really seen any ad that has taken my breath away this year. All that changed this morning as I made peanut butter toast for my daughter. The American Express's spot for their "take charge" messaging is expressed using artfully sought frowning and happy faces. I know what you're thinking "really Justice, that's all it takes to impress you?" Well not typically, but what I like is that they didn't just go after the typical car grill that always looks like a cartoon character of some sort. The spot left a great feeling on interest and positive reflection of the brand. I'm not sure what more you could want from your adveritising.

Wednesday
Oct282009

Does Building Airplanes In Flight While Sitting In Triage Sound Simple?

I know this is the second video that I've embedded from the 99% conference, and no I'm not getting paid to blog about it! Hell I didn't even go! With that said it's nice to listening to Scott Thomas Design Director for Obama's 2008 campaign, and relies that in the heat of the battle it's all about just getting it done and being "on it!" He covers a massive spectrum on day-to-day design and development issues that all the web industry faces. A fascinating look at what had to be a mother-load of a project. Enjoy!

"As the Design Director for Obama's 2008 campaign, Scott Thomas led a now-historic political campaign, in which branding, design, and the web played a truly pivotal role. Likening the experience to "building an airplane in flight," Scott talks about the creative's need for triage, the crucial role of incremental design improvements, and the importance of getting back to the hand and keeping things simple."

http://the99percent.com -

Great tips
to live and die by. And Lastly check out Seth Godin making a great case for getting things shipped, right, wrong or in the middle.

Addendum: Someone buy me this book!