23.10.20

Web of Infamy| Smirnoff

This is no fairytale. It’s the true story of how Smirnoff became the world’s number one vodka. It exposed all 155 years of deception, revolution, exile, bankruptcy, and resurrection with an evidence wall on Instagram. 
A peek inside the brand’s illustrious past, littered with secrets hidden within videos, images, carousels, and gifs waiting to be uncovered. Things no brand would ever admit to.

Agency:  72andSunny New York

Client: Diageo

Country: United States



22.10.20

Amazon DSP or Sponsored Display? by: Perpetua

 Every Amazon advertiser is now familiar with both Sponsored Display ads (SD) and Amazon DSP (DSP). Whether you should advertise with either is no longer a question: you should. The ultimate question has become, how should SD and DSP be employed as part of your wider advertising strategy?

At Perpetua, we're following Amazon's lead in making big bets by building products and services to support each of the two. In doing so, we believe we've developed a sound perspective in answering the following questions:

  • Is DSP is right for you?

  • Is SD is right for you?

  • Should SD or DSP be employed in tandem? If so, how?

While we may have strong convictions in answering these questions at the moment, we feel most confident stating that these views will become dated very quickly. Both the SD and DSP products and their available ad inventory will evolve dramatically over the coming months. It is vital that every advertiser monitor that evolution and adjust advertising strategy accordingly.

Is Amazon DSP right for you?

Your monthly spend on Sponsored ads provides a great benchmark for whether or not you should be advertising with Amazon DSP. Generally speaking, we recommend that advertisers who spend at least $10,000 each month on Sponsored ads consider matching that spend with DSP (for a minimum starting budget of $10,000).

This naturally leads into a discussion on media planning across Sponsored ads and DSP. For the sake of brevity, we believe that advertisers should feel comfortable matching ad spend across each. Some of our advertisers spend more on Sponsored ads, and some spend more on DSP. Depending on both performance or advertising strategy, a 1:1 ratio is a simple way to think about media planning.

If you don't spend more than $10,000 on Sponsored ads per month, DSP probably isn't a great fit for you - at the moment. If you do, you should be leveraging DSP to grow your business on Amazon. Here's everything you need to know about Amazon DSP advertising, and an insightful video on best practices.

Is Sponsored Display right for you?

This is a simple answer: Yes.

If you spend less than $10,000 on Sponsored ads, you should be advertising with Sponsored Display. If you spend more than $10,000 on Sponsored ads and are not on DSP - the answer is yes. And, if you spend more than $10,000 on Sponsored ads and are on DSP - the answer remains yes (more on this below).

At the moment (and we're quite sure this will quickly evolve), Sponsored Display (via the advertising API) has two primary advertising strategies: 1) Retargeting, 2) Product Targeting. Each of these tactics should be used by advertisers whether you're using SD or DSP.

Sponsored Display Retargeting

Retargeting works. There's a reason why Amazon introduced retargeting as one of the first strategies for Sponsored Display - they knew it would drive good results for advertisers and could serve as a gateway drug for display advertising.

Whether or not a smaller advertiser should activate retargeting, depends on a number of factors:

  • Budget

  • Product price and consideration period

If an advertiser is working with very tight budgets and is looking to squeeze as much value as possible with a limited budget, we generally recommend focusing on SP, SB, SBV, and SD product targeting ads. If an advertiser has a more flexible budget, they should absolutely activate SD retargeting. Again, retargeting works - and the results will likely be solid.

Advertisers that should consider retargeting, regardless of budget, are those that have high price point products with long consideration periods. Amazon will be the first to tell you that a customer must see an ad for your product multiple times before purchasing. If a product is >$50, and an advertiser has benchmarks of consideration period data from their ecommerce website, retargeting will be invaluable in following the customer along the purchasing journey.

If an advertiser is unsure if it's right for them, we recommend trying it out. There's no better way to discover its effect on your business than testing. Like all ad units on Amazon, we encourage you not to look at ACOS alone. Monitor the total sales of the products with retargeting turned on and measure total sales growth, with a keen eye in flagging if retargeting is capturing otherwise organic purchasers.

Sponsored Display Product Targeting:

Product Targeting for Sponsored Display really works, and every advertiser should leverage Sponsored Display for this advertising inventory.

We actually recommend that advertisers try not to even consider these as display ads. Sponsored Display product targeting are native ads on the Amazon marketplace, located on invaluable above-the-fold inventory on the product detail page. Similar to search ads, these ads feel less invasive and more organic, and that is why they're effective.

Given their location, an advertiser must now think of defending their product pages the same way they defend branded search. You have to bid on your own ASINs, otherwise your competitors will. A worst-case scenario for any advertiser is bringing a customer to their product page via a search ad, and then having a competitor steal that customer with a SD product targeting ad. Conversely, due to the nascency of these ads, unsavvy advertisers not advertising with SD product targeting leave themselves susceptible to conquesting opportunities - and we've seen a lower ACOS on these ad units than competitor terms on search.

Sponsored Display product targeting is now table stakes on Amazon advertising. Yes, this is yet another move by Amazon to extract more ad spend from its advertisers. But, you have to do it - otherwise your competitors will.

Should SD or DSP be employed in tandem?

Here's where things get interesting.

Amazon is notorious for pitting two teams against each other and seeing who wins. This is exactly what's occurring with the advertising inventory on SD vs. DSP. For advertisers who have activated DSP, this makes determining how, and if, you should leverage both, or either, a difficult question. Hopefully we can provide some clarity.

Retargeting:

We recommend using DSP only for retargeting.

The primary reason we recommend DSP only is that SD retargeting serves ads to your products and products that are similar to yours. Advertisers do not have any control what those other products are, and thus lead to poorer results. With DSP, an advertiser can be very specific serving ads on the exact product the customer initially viewed.

Inventory and placements are also key. DSP ad inventory is both on and off Amazon whereas SD is only off Amazon. We generally see significantly better results on retargeting campaigns when the ad inventory is on Amazon. With DSP, advertisers can also determine whether the retargeting ads appears above and below the fold.

We also feel DSP retargeting gives us controls that mitigate the risk of cannibalizing organic sales. We've seen that without restrictions on serving ads after a consumer views a product page, retargeting metrics may look strong, but organic sales may remain static or in some instances decline. To ensure retargeting focuses on incremental sales, we typically exclude serving ads if a customer viewed the product with in the last 3-5 days without purchasing the product. This can only be done with DSP. Further, audience insights (exclusive to DSP advertisers) provides data on the consideration window of purchasers of that advertiser. We use this data as a guide on when to show the initial retargeting ad, and the frequency with which to do so (another lever unavailable with SD).

Product Targeting:

We thought we'd have the same perspective on product targeting.

First let's clear the air: Sponsored Display product targeting and the contextual targeting line items in the DSP serve ads to the exact same inventory. (see inventory in the image below)

sponsored display product targeting

This advertising inventory is incredibly valuable. Prior to this inventory being available for Sponsored Display, roughly a third of all of our advertisers' Sponsored Ad spend and conversions (DSP excluded) occurred on product pages. The ad inventory that drove that amount of spend and conversions had been limited to the Sponsored Product product targeting carousel; and most recently Sponsored Brand product targeting carousels. In both instances, the inventory had been hidden below the fold.

Given our knowledge of the spend and conversion metrics on product pages, when Amazon unlocked above-the-fold inventory for both SD and DSP, we got excited.

Initially, we thought DSP would offer similar advanced controls and thereby better results than SD. We were wrong. In almost all of our initial tests, Sponsored Display product targeting outperformed DSP contextual targeting.

SD outperformed DSP for the very reason that DSP outperforms SD on retargeting: Control. SD product targeting allows you to target specific ASINs (DSP does not). We've also discovered that SD is "retail aware", meaning the ad will automatically stop showing if the product is out of inventory or loses the buy box, whereas DSP is not.

For this reason, we feel confident in stating the following:

  • Sponsored Display product targeting is the most assured way to win above-the-fold placements on a product page.

  • Every single advertiser should be activating Sponsored Display product targeting.

We still remain bullish on Amazon DSP advertising. DSP betas for inventory on the product page continue to pop up. But for now, we recommend Sponsored Display product targeting.

To reiterate our earlier stance, the only thing that's certain is that our perspective will change as SD and DSP continue to evolve. We're especially intrigued by the potential for new ad inventory on product pages (perhaps exclusive to DSP), and the ability to create custom audiences for SD. This is Amazon of course. Every advertiser must be comfortable with experimentation, and uncertainty. Display advertising with Amazon is the embodiment of both.

17.10.20

History Blocks| Africa




Agency: Africa

Client: Unesco

Country: Brazil

One of UNESCO’s tasks is to protect the cultural heritage of all people around the world. Sadly, that is not always possible. Because of wars and armed conflicts, hundreds of monuments are being destroyed. Whether as collateral damage or as direct targets of cultural cleansing, they are being reduced to rubble – and so is our heritage. 

These historic places are now in danger of being left out of history. Some might never be reconstructed, and we may never be able to set foot in them again. With this in mind, we set out to keep the legacies of these endangered and destroyed heritage sites alive by rebuilding them in Minecraft.



It's Between You| WhatsApp


Agency: AlmapBBDO

Client: Facebook

Country: Brazil


This film had a great responsibility as the first WhatsApp film in the world. Facebook and AlmapBBDO decided to tell a real story focused on Brazilian carnival, showing a relationship between carnival rivals and a great fire that changes this relationship through the app. 

To bring more reality to the story, they filmed in real samba communities in Rio, with real fire and with actors who are actually residents of these communities.

JFK Moonshot| JFK Presidential Library and Museum

 

To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Apollo 11 Mission, the JFK Presidential Library and Museum wanted to introduce today’s generation to President Kennedy’s bold vision for the space programme and this pivotal moment in history. 


JFK Moonshot was a fully synchronised augmented reality recreation of Apollo 11 where every moment, manoeuvre, and milestone unfolded in real time, second-by-second, precisely 50 years later.


Agency: Digitas Boston / Digitas
Client: JFK Presidential Library and Museum
Country: United States






MacBook Pro 16-inch|Apple




Agency: Apple

Client: Apple

Country: United States

The new 16-inch MacBook Pro was going to be the most powerful notebook Apple had ever made. But it knew there would be skepticism about its capabilities from top-tier professionals, who had been disappointed in the past. So Apple wanted to make sure these pros understood that this machine had all the capabilities they needed. 
To do this, it created a site designed around the stories and processes of four world-class pros. Rich reveals, zooms, and cinematic visuals seamlessly executed through WebGL ensured a smooth experience – no matter the platform or device.



The 9'58 Biography|PUMA Brazil




Agency: BETC São Paulo

Client: PUMA Brazil

Country: Brazil


In 2009, Usain Bolt broke the 100m world record and made history. But behind this incredible mark, there is a lot of sweat, training and effort. In 2019, ten years later, PUMA Brazil wanted to tell this story, showing an angle that few people know, creating a tribute as outstanding as the world's fastest man. 
BETC São Paulo created a biography that shows all the training and effort behind that mark. But Bolt's biography could not be an ordinary book. It had to be as fast as him. So, the biography is also a flipbook, showing an animation that lasts 9.58s, and recreating the iconic race.


The Small Escape| BMW

 


Agency: Jung von Matt

Client: BMW

Country: Germany

Jung Von Matt condensed a large story and heavy subject matter down into a highly watchable format for BMW’s The Small Escape - which tells the story of a driver trying to smuggle someone over the Bornholmer Strasse border crossing in a BMW Isetta. 
It became apparent early on that cutting the film in a linear way would be boring to watch, so Jung Von Matt opted instead for a non-linear spot, in the style of a heist movie.


1964. Berlin is a divided city. Flight from the German Democratic Republic is punished with an order to fire. Still, many people desperately try to cross the border. For all backgrounds to the true history of the spectacular escape, read the article here: https://b.mw/isetta_escape_story People forge identity papers, dig tunnels, climb into hot-air balloons and hide in cars going to the West - towards freedom. But as large vehicles are getting controlled more frequently and thoroughly, a West Berliner has a seemingly impossible but ingenious idea: the smallest and most inconspicuous car available at the time, the BMW Isetta, should help him smuggle a man across the border into the West.

Mori Building Brand Movie DESIGNING TOKYO




Agency: Dentsu Inc. / Dentsu Creative X

Client: Mori Building Co. / Mori Building

Country: Japan

For the past 60 years, Japanese developer Mori Building has looked at the bigger picture when creating the city of Tokyo. The Mori Building, unlike its rival companies, has a unique vision of urban development, which is to create a city, not just a building. 
The film reflects on the evolution of Tokyo and tells the story of its future through vivid depictions of Tokyo’s cityscape – which the Mori Building built and helped flourish – to the culture that was born from the town, and iconic celebrities from past eras exactly as they were back then.


Wind Tunnel| Apple

 


Agency: Apple

Client: Apple

Country: United States

The iPhone 11 Pro is rigorously tested to ensure it’s more durable than ever, because you never know what life might throw at it. 
To prove this beyond doubt, Apple built a 30-foot wind tunnel and, using musically timed practical effects, literally threw life at it. Kids’ toys, food, drinks, everything you might find in a handbag, a wedding cake, and a barrage of rubber ducks.



Hope is Power| The Guardian

 


Agency: Uncommon Creative Studio

Client: The Guardian

Country: United Kingdom

Hope is Power is the Guardian’s first brand campaign in seven years, and aims to restate the Guardian’s purpose and inspire readers around the world to support its journalism. 
The campaign’s central message is inspired by Guardian editor-in-chief Katharine Viner’s essay ‘A mission for journalism in a time of crisis’. The campaign seeks to build on the trust and affinity readers have with the Guardian and its role in giving people the facts to challenge the status quo, publish fresh ideas and opinions, and hold power to account.















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