Sometimes acerbic, often optimistic, always honest thoughts on music, marketing, advertising and life.
~ Friday, January 20 ~
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~ Sunday, January 1 ~
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~ Tuesday, November 22 ~
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Nice When the Media Recites Your Brand Strategy Without Prompting.

In another article on CIL’s “Paint Chip Names For Men,” The Winnipeg Free Press had this to say:

If you’ve ever hemmed and hawed for hours over a paint colour you know that finding the right colour is no small feat. When you factor in another person, the job becomes that more difficult. Being able to have one colour with is and hers’ names is a great idea. It might even save a few relationships!
Imagine the conversation at the paint store on a Saturday afternoon; “How about this colour called Fairytale Green?” asks the wife.
“No way I’m painting my games room Fairytale Green”, answers the husband. “How about this colour called Mo Money?”
It’s the same colour, so it’s win-win.
If you’ve ever battled with your kids or teens about paint colours for their rooms, perhaps giving your chosen colour a different name would clinch the deal. Instead of Fairytale Green, perhaps something like “Slime’ for the kids or Green hair for the teens, for example. Whatever gets the job done.
If nothing else, the new colour line for men will help us see things from another perspective, which is always a good thing. Who knows, we might even learn a thing or two about each other in the process.

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Tags: Paint Chip Names For Men CIL Facebook Reason Partners Social Media Winnipeg Free Press
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~ Sunday, November 13 ~
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Google Results for Advertising Awards Shows.

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Ego meet expense account, meet parasitical award show owner.

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Permalink Tags: Advertising Advertising Agency
~ Sunday, November 6 ~
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A Facinating Look at the Great Pyramid.

Even for those who have exhausted themselves in studying it.

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Tags: Egypt History Pyramid
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~ Wednesday, November 2 ~
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Social Media: Not Surprisingly, Just Another Tool in the Toolkit.

Rather than displacing television, the internet, including social media is doing an excellent job of building the medium.From an article titled, “7 Things You Need to Know About Social TV Right Now,’ the writer provides proof:

Back in the summer of 2009, we tracked everything from Sonia Sotomayor (then a nominee for the Supreme Court) to “Glee” to Major League Baseball to “True Blood.”
Over time, it dawned on us that more than anything else, TV was driving social. Sotomayor would trend on Twitter only when her confirmation hearings were being televised; a specific team would trend because it was doing great (or sucking) in the game being broadcast at that very moment on ESPN; during prime-time hours in the U.S. and the U.K., Twitter’s trending topics list would be all but taken over by TV-related chatter.

Why is this? In a word, behaviour.
Social TV is about watching TV with other people — think of “50s-era family and friends gathered around an old Magnavox console to catch “I Love Lucy.” Only now the living room has gone national.

In fact, it’s reversing problems such as time-shifting.

“We did a survey of our 10,000-person TV-fan panel last year,” said TVGuide.com’s Tanner, “and what we found is that 20% of them said they are watching more live TV specifically to avoid “social spoilers.’”

It’s not just TV that’s benefiting from social media, but brand campaigns running on TV as well, such as Old Spice. The brand was resurrected on television and only somewhat later extended to social media. However, had there not been a huge spend on TV, the social media effort wouldn’t have even been considered. Pepsi learned this lesson the hard way last year when they shifted much of their budget away from TV to social media. Pepsi is now in third place behind Diet Coke.

So, contrary to the current crop of vested interest ‘experts’ claiming that traditional media such as TV will give way to social media and that, once again, advertising as we know it is dead, the opposite is happening. Why is this? Why does TV continue to be so dominate? I think there are a couple of reasons. For one, it’s not about the conversation, it’s about what causes the conversation. And TV is really, really good at that.

For another reason, and not to belabour the point, it’s about behaviour.People understand the internet differently than other forms of media. For one thing other than your hookup, the content is largely free. For another it’s an information medium first, whether that’s checking up on friends or family, or finding out the latest info or price on something you’re interested in.

People fan brands online mainly to get deals. They don’t recommend brands because they like the brand so much as they like their friends and want them to benefit from what’s on offer.As a CEO of an online media company recently wrote about in Ad Age:

It’s time to face the reality that the Internet sucks as a branding medium. I know that statement will rile up a few people, but I am starting to believe that the Internet may not be the right medium for brand development, at least in its current form. Trust me, it doesn’t help my business if TV dollars don’t come online, but it appears that online advertising is destined to become the greatest direct response medium in history and the greatest branding disappointment ever. This shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone.

The thing is, as an advertising medium, the internet and social media have their own value proposition and purpose. It’s an arrow in the quiver, not the whole quiver. It’s up to smart marketers to integrate these tools in the most effective way possible, based on an idea that can be executed across platforms.

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Tags: Advertising Brands Creative Media Social Media Strategy TV
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~ Sunday, October 23 ~
Permalink Tags: Ephemera
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~ Saturday, October 22 ~
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Steampunk Iron Man.

‘This suit is a rebuild of a suit I built with and for Bill Splat Johnson for the Whitestone motion pictures film “Heartless: The Story of the Tin Man”. Bill Johnson designed the suit and he and I sculpted, molded cast and finished the original suit.’

Matt Silva

Thank you to Bit Rebels

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Tags: Ephemera
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