18.10.09

D&AD Awards Black and Yellow Pencils for 2009


The D&AD Awards were presented in a ceremony last night in London. The Black and Yellow Pencils, highly regarded in the advertising and design industries, are presented for work in thirty disciplines of design, advertising and creative communication. The solid beech awards are filled, sealed, masked, sanded, primed, painted, sprayed, printed, glossed and packed for a limited number of creatives from around the world.
D&AD Black and Yellow Pencils

D&AD President Garrick Hamm said, “The breadth of creative work that’s been awarded this year is exceptional. We’re in the midst of a challenging time, and this work shows what the industry is capable of. The four Black Pencil winners demonstrate the power and all-encompassing nature of creativity – in education, politics and even in the change in our pockets. These winners are more than just great pieces of communication, they change our behaviour and touch our lives.”

Black Pencils

The Black Pencil is the creative industry’s most elusive prize, only awarded for truly groundbreaking work. This year four Black Pencils were awarded, two of them to Droga5.


Yellow Pencils

54 Yellow Pencils were also awarded in recognition of work that sets new benchmarks in creative excellence.

  • Chrysler Korea Jeep In Two Worlds, by BBDO Proximity Malaysia, for Art Direction in Poster Advertising
  • Alka Seltzer For Whatever campaign, by CLM BBDO, France, (2) for Art Direction in Press Advertising, and Newspaper Press Advertising Colour in Press Advertising.
  • Tooheys Extra Dry TED696 Project, by BMF Australia, for Branding in Printed Material.
  • Velocity Films Researchers Wanted, by JWT South Africa, for Broadcast Innovations.
  • BMW Kinetic Sculpture, by Art+Com, Germany, for Digital Installations.
  • British Airways Cloud, by Troika Design, UK, for Digital Installations.
  • Flash Bistrotheque, by David Kohn Architects, UK, for Leisure Tourism in Environmental Design.
  • Architectural Association [C]Space DRL10 Pavilion, by Nex Architecture, UK, for Public Space & Community in Environmental Design.
  • White Road Mediterranean Sculptor’s Symposium, Bijela Cesta ‘U isceKivanju Kise’, by Studio Rasic, Croatia, for Public Space & Community in Environmental Design, .
  • Casa Panama, by Studio mk27, Brazil, for Environmental Design, Residential.
  • Kiddi Corporation Ply Exhibition, by Dentsu Inc. Tokyo, Japan, for Environmental Design, Temporary Exhibitions.
  • Travel Oregon The Book of Oregon, Wieden+Kennedy, USA, for Graphic Design in Catalogues & Brochures.
  • WERK Magazine, WERK No. 16, Joe Magee Special, by Work Advertising Pte Ltd, Singapore, (2) for Catalogues & Brochures in Graphic Design, and for Illustration in Magazine & Newspaper Design.
  • IKEA Germany Bigger Storage Ideas, by Ogilvy Frankfurt, Germany, for Environmental Graphics in Graphic Design.
  • Coca Cola Identity/Classic Can/Ident, by Turner Duckworth, London & San Francisco, UK, for Integrated Graphics in Graphic Design.
  • Flora S.A Meet Wally’s Heart, Lowe Bull, South Africa, for Integrated.
  • Publico, Portugal, for Entire Newspapers in Magazine & Newspaper Design.
  • New York Magazine, by Brain, New York, USA, for Magazine Front Covers in Magazine & Newspaper Design.
  • UN Voices Project, Saatchi & Saatchi, Australia, for Mobile Marketing.
  • Honda Ke-tai Traveler K-TRA, by Dentsu Inc. Japan, for Mobile Marketing.
  • Sydney Dogs & Cats Home Throw Us A Bone, M&C Saatchi/Mark, Australia, for Mobile Marketing.
  • Gnarls Barkley Who’s Gonna Save My Soul, by Radical Media, USA, for Animation in Music Videos.
  • Bjork, Wanderlust, by Ghost Robot, USA, (3) for Music Videos, Art Direction in Music Videos, and Special Effects in Music Videos.
  • Will Young, Changes, Academy Films, UK, for Cinematography in Music Videos.
  • Radiohead, House of Cards, Zoo Film Production, USA, for Music Videos.
  • Sagami Original 0.02 Condom, Love Distance, GT Inc, Japan, for Digital Advertising Campaigns in Online Advertising.
  • Burger King Whopper Sacrifice, by Crispin Porter + Bogusky, USA, for Digital Innovations in Online Advertising.
  • Barnardo’s, Break the Cycle, by BBH, UK, for Online Advertising.
  • Ichida Garden, Newspaper to Newspaper, by Dentsu Inc. Tokyo, Japan, for Packaging Design.
  • Wptt Contraceptive Trouble Maker Campaign, by HanTang Communications Group, China, for Packaging Design.
  • Das Commitee, Faces of Evil, Germany, for Photography in Book Design.
  • Harvey Nichols Bristol Store Wallace & Gromit campaign, by DDB London, UK, (2) for Poster Advertising Campaigns and Newspaper Press Advertising Colour in Press Advertising.
  • Nova Radio, Vinyl Campaign, by Y&R France, for Poster Advertising Campaigns.
  • Quantum Saddle, by Seymourpowell, UK, for Leisure in Product Design.
  • Apple MacBook Air, by Apple, USA, for Product Design.
  • MARS Skittles Pinata, by TBWA\Chiat\Day, USA, for TV Commercials 41-60 seconds in TV & Cinema Advertising.
  • More4 Stanley Kubrick Season, by Channel 4, UK, for TV Promotions, Stings & Programmer Junctions, TV & Cinema Communications.
  • Coca Cola It’s Mine, by MJZ, USA, for Special Effects in TV & Cinema Crafts.
  • Radiohead in WOWOW campaign, by Bascule Inc, Japan, for Interface & Navigation in Websites.
  • Frito-Lay Doritos Hotel 626, by Goodby Silverstein & Partners, USA, for Microsites in Websites.
  • Frito-Lay Tostitos NOLAF, by Mekanism, USA, for Microsites in Websites.
  • Comcast Rabbit, by Goodby Silverstein & Partners, USA, for Writing for Advertising in TV & Cinema Advertising.
  • Orange Goldspots campaign by Mother London, UK, for Writing for Advertising, TV & Cinema Advertising.
  • Asbury & Asbury, Corpoetics, UK, for Writing for Design in Graphic Design.
  • Christopher Doyle, You, me and everyone I know, Australia, for Writing for Design in Graphic Design.

All of the winning work can be viewed at: awards.dandad.org/2009.

Golden Drum Awards 2009




Golden Drum Brainstorming advertisement


The Golden Drum awards, held in Portoroz, Slovenia, between 4 and 9 October, culminated in a grand ceremony revealing a range of Drums, Winged Nikes and Golden Drum Grand Prix awards. The Golden Rose, presented to the best new European agency of the year, went to Leo Burnett Beirut, who had also won the Golden Net award. The Awards week was promoted this year with the theme of brainstorming, highlighted in a set of three posters and print advertisements.





Film


  • Stiegl – Escalator (Silver & Golden Drums), Demner, Merlicek & Bergmann, Austria
  • Helsinki Missio – A Soldier’s Last Wish (Silver Drum), TBWA\PHS Helsinki, Finland
  • Children Under Protection Agreement – Vase (Silver Drum), McCann Erickson Poland
  • Pert Plus – Stop the Suffering (Silver Drum), Leo Burnett Beirut, Lebanon
  • Budejoviky Budvar Pardal – Real Beer for Real Guys (Silver Drum), Kaspen Prague, Czech Republic
  • Elais/Unilever Altis Olive Oil – Goodness (Silver Drum), McCann Erickson, Athens, Greece
  • Mars – Squirrels, BBDO, Russian Federation
  • Ilta-Sanomat Newspaper – The Way It Was Meant To Be (Golden Drum), Hasan&Partners, Finland
  • Interior Club Furniture Salon – Transformations (Golden Drum), mfive creative group, Moscow
  • National Museum – Munich (Grand Prix), Euro RSCG, Czech Republic


Press


Toy Museum – Actionman (Silver Drum), Leo Burnett Istanbul
LTD Headhunter – Manager (Silver Drum) TWIGA, Moscow, Russian Federation
Greenpeace Construction Loan – Birds (Silver Drum), BBDO Moscow, Russian Federation
Finansbank – Accident (Silver Drum), DDB&Co Istanbul, Turkey
Commercial Film Producers of Europe and Shots Young Director Award – Affair (Silver Drum), TBWA\PHS Helsinki, Finland
Beta Playboy (Golden Drum), Leo Burnett Beirut, Lebanon
CNN Weather Report – Lightning (Golden Drum), DDB & Co Istanbul, Turkey
Gursory Resim Kursu Art Course – The Fastest Course (Golden Drum), DDB & Co Istanbul, Turkey
Max Factor – Eyes 1 (Golden Drum), Leo Burnett, Warsaw, Poland
Sinai Kimya Esemmat – Mosquito (Golden Drum), TBWA\Istanbul, Turkey


Outdoor


WWF – Garden Furniture Set (Silver Drum), Change Integrated, Poland
Dank Second Hand Furniture – Table (Silver Drum), DDB & Co, Istanbul, Turkey
Toyota Auto Lovše, Greeting Card (Silver Drum), Saatchi & Saatchi, Slovenia
Bayer, Asprin – Headache 1 (Golden Drum), Graffiti BBDO, Romania
T-Mobile Outdoor Messages (Golden Drum), MUW Saatchi & Saatchi, Bratislava, Czech Republic
Hariri Foundation – Khede Kasra (Grand Prix), Leo Burnett Beirut, Lebanon

Radio


Copycenter Tailan – Both Sides (Silver Drum), TBWA\Central Asia, Kazakhstan
Ace Bleach and Detergent – Burger Town (Silver Drum), Grey Istanbul, Turkey
Newpan – Heats up in 3 Seconds!!! (Golden Drum), Baumann Ber Rivnay Saatchi & Saatchi, Israel

Design and Art Direction


  • PKP Proximity Vienna – Enough Practice! (Silver Drum), Austria
  • Greenpeace – Thermo Mug (Silver Drum), NEXT Advertising, Romania
  • Ekka/Mercedes Benz – The Right Move (Golden Drum), Day6 Athens, Greece
  • Diageo Johnnie Walker Blue Label- Details (Silver Drum) Leo Burnett Moscow, Russian Federation
  • Amnesty International – Reprieve (Silver Drum) Draft FCB, Austria
  • Intersport Saemann, Flash Billboard (Silver Drum), Butter, Berlin/Duesseldorf, Germany
  • Aids Africa Solidarity Fund (Fonds Solidarité Sida Afrique) – Clocks (Golden Drum), BETC Euro RSCG, Paris, France
  • Jugend am Werk, Mitten ins Herz (Silver Drum), Fashingbauer & Schaar, Austria
  • Draft Black – Cup & Kettle (Silver Drum), Leo Burnett, Moscow, Russian Federation
  • Skoda Auto, Owl (Golden Drum), Leagas Delaney Praha, Czech Republic
  • Fazer Leipomot Vilpuri Packaging Design (Silver Drum), Hasan & Partners, Finland
  • Wrigley Orbit – Can’t Touch This (Silver Drum), Mark BBDO, Prague, Czech Republic
  • Weingut Andreas Tscheppe – Wines (Golden Drum), Demmer, Merlicek & Bergmann, Austria
  • In The Palace, Balchik, Svnth Shrt Flm Fstvl (Silver Drum), New Moment New Ideas Y&R, Sofia, Bulgaria
  • Portuguese Red Cross, Store+ The store that Sells Hope (Silver Drum), Leo Burnett Lisboa, Portugal
  • Just Move Ltd Brand Identity (Golden Drum), Transformer Studio, Moscow, Russian Federation
  • Voskhod, Yekaterinburg – Failsafe Calendar (Silver Drum), Russian Federation
  • Rahofer, Palfinger Annual Report 2008, Times Are Tough (Silver), Austria
  • Buick Style Guide (Golden Drum), Leo Burnett Chicago, USA

Media


  • Showtime – Nurse Jackie on Kindle (Silver Drum), OMD, USA
  • Neuroth – The World´s First In-Ear Commercial (Silver Drum), Jung von Matt/Dunau, Austria
  • T-Mobile Slovensko – Messages, (Golden Drum), MUW Saatchi & Saatchi, Slovakia
  • Yes Satellite TV – Deus (Golden Drum), McCann Digital Israel, Lebanon
  • Hariri Foundation – Khede Kasra (Grand Prix), Leo Burnett Beirut, Lebanon
  • T-Mobile Cinema Messages (Silver Drum), MUW Saatchi & Saatchi, Bratislava/Med, Czech Republic
  • Proteatr, International Festival of Theaters for Disabled – You’ve never seen such actors (Silver Drum), Leo Burnett, Moscow, Russian Federation
  • Rustholi Renovations, The container that became a home (Golden Drum), Hasan & Partners, Finland
  • WWF – Vote Earth Monuments (Golden Drum), Leo Burnett Sydney, Australia
  • Nissan Center Europe – Ceiling Cinema (Silver Drum), TBWA\Germany, Duesseldorf, Germany
  • Bucharest Police – Accidents can happen to anyone! (Golden Drum), Arsenoaiei & Matasel Bucharest, Romania

Best Act Award



16.10.09

Social media, brand route to connect with and built trust ... best practice


How organizations have embraced social media to connect with and built trust and affection among customers?
Some great examples of simple, effective social media strategies that have humanized organizations and allowed them to build better relationships with customers. 

1. They can’t talk about anything broader than their own products

Chris Brogan shared how Citrix Online created the Workshifting community to address the rise of telecommuting and remote work. Sure, it ties in with Citrix’s GoToMeeting/Webinar/PC product line, but the blog isn’t a commercial for its products. The same holds true for Kodak’s photography blog that Chief Blogger Jenny Cisney talked about. It’s about photography and creativity in general, not about Kodak cameras. Greg Matthews shared how Humana developed the Freewheelin bicycle sharing communities with plenty of online and “real life” components to the program. Bicycles don’t have much to do with health insurance specifically, but they are about being healthy. If a company is only talking online about its specific products and not looking for ways to connect to the bigger picture, it’s pretty difficult for people to be engaged.

2. They listen to customers but don’t take any action

If you’re going to listen to your customers, you’d better be ready to do something about what you hear. Valeria Maltoni noted that if a company creates an online presence that’s open and allows customer feedback, it creates the expectation that the company is going to do something with that feedback. Worse than not being heard is being heard and then ignored. Paula Berg from Southwest Airlines shared how a simple blog post stating the airline was considering assigned seating amassed tons of customer comments showing a lack of support for the idea. This feedback changed the direction of their internal debate and led to a new boarding procedure that maintained the open seating arrangement.

3. They aren’t calibrated internally with the technology

Jason Falls chastised corporate Web sites for being little more than online brochures. Customers expect interaction. Content creation is key to social media success, and every company should have a Web site with a content management system that allows for quick, easy content creation without the IT department needing to recode a Web site. Anyone in the organization should be able to publish via a CMS. And companies can’t expect to have a strong social media presence when social sites are blocked internally to employees.

4. They’re not framing risk accurately

Dharmesh Shah reminded us all that a corporate blog has never been fatal to an organization. NBC cameraman Jim Long said the often a company’s entry into social media is a clumsy, shotgun blast and that there’s an equal chance of looking foolish by having a ham-fisted marketing department launch a social media presence as there is if a rogue employee “goes off” on Twitter. The risk of social media is not abated by not participating. And really, while there have certainly been some hiccups and miscues along the way, social media has yet to be the undoing of any company.

5. Their internal culture isn’t aligned for social media success

The customer should be at the core of the brand. When policies, procedures, products and processes become more important than the customer, there’s no way social media efforts can be effective. When your employees are more concerned with what’s in or out of their job description than doing the right thing to help the customer, that’s not a culture that’s likely to build trust and advocacy for your brand. Yes, Zappos was cited time and again as a case study, but largely because it has a culture that makes social media work. All of its employees are focused on customer service at the core. The same holds true for Southwest Airlines.

15.10.09

Crowdsourced branding, a disaster for Kraft?



Vegemite

When Kraft launched a spin-off of their uniquely Australian Vegemite spread, they turned to consumers for a name… and it was dropped four days later. Last week another name was announced, can Kraft make it right this time?

The year was 1923 when chemist Cyril Callister took out a newspaper ad announcing his new food invention, a salty yeast extract spread made from the by-products of beer manufacturing, and a £50 award for the best name. Similar to the British Marmite, the sticky brown paste has become a staple in the country, selling more than 22 million jars per year. Over 85 years later, Kraft Foods followed Callister’s plan to name a new milder variation—a Vegemite and cream cheese blend—with much less fanfare.

“Now all it needs is a name,” Kraft launched the new product with a TV commercial by JWT Australia.

iSnack 2.0

Kraft Foods launched an Australia-wide contest in June 2009, putting the product on grocery shelves with special “Name Me” packaging. Over 48,000 entries came in across the country during the three-month contest, (somehow) resulting in the name ‘iSnack 2.0.’
Announced September 26th during the 2009 Australian Football League Grand Final, the name was chosen by a panel of marketing and communication experts in an effort to market the longtime staple to the younger ‘iPod’ generation. Replacing the temporary packaging, the new labels were printed with the tagline: “iSnack 2.0, because it's the next generation Vegemite.”
The name was coined by Dean Robbins, a 27-year-old web designer:
It was all a bit tongue-in-cheek really, the ‘i’ phenomenon and Web 2.0 have been recent revolutions, and I thought the new Vegemite name could do the same.
Image
Left: Original Vegemite spread (Photo: StephenMitchell, Flickr); Right: Packaging for iSnack 2.0 and the “Name Me” contest (Photo: avlxyz, Flickr)

Cheesybite, Vegefail

Within days, criticism was heard all over Australia, especially among the product’s tech-savvy target market who took to YouTube and Twitter (making #Vegefail a trending topic). “The new name has simply not resonated with Australians. Particularly the modern technical aspects associated with it,” Kraft said in a statement on September 30th. The controversial name was discontinued only four days after its launch.
Our Kraft Foods storeroom currently has thousands of jars of the iSnack 2.0 named Vegemite. This product will be distributed around Australia, and will continue to be sold in supermarkets for months to come – until Australia decides upon a new name.
Nameless once again, Kraft scrambled to short-list another six names and let the public decide. Polling more than 30,000 people, Kraft announced the product’s newest name on October 7th: ‘Vegemite Cheesybite,’ which captured 36% of the votes (although many chose ‘none of the above’ and were not included in the vote).
Image
Left: Vegemite Cheesybite, Kraft’s third and (hopefully) last packaging for the new product; Right: Results from Kraft’s survey
The name ‘Cheesymite’ was never considered, due to its popular use for another cheesy Vegemite-based snack in Australia and New Zealand. However it has been reported the name Cheesybite might come with its own legalcan of worms (just what they need).
The new Cheesybite jars will replace the iSnack variation in the coming months.

What does this say about the brand?

Kraft assures us this is not a publicity stunt, “We are proud custodians of Vegemite and have always been aware that it is the people's brand and a national icon.” Regardless, the publicity has the remaining iSnack-branded jars flying off grocery shelves and making their way onto eBay as “rare collector’s items.”
Some have said this incident has damaged the Vegemite brand in Australia. No one can deny iSnack 2.0 was a terrible choice—it says nothing about the product, and even the thought of it makes anyone who’s ever used an iPod roll their eyes (who were these marketing “experts” that handpicked the name from over 48,000 entries, anyway?).
But after all this, one thing is very clear: Australians are passionate about the Vegemite brand (and that’s what every brand wants)

Scam Ad Crackdown: Are the Awards Shows Wussing Out?





Award shows are getting tough on scam ads, but is it tough enough? Especially if two recent scam ad policies mean different shows have very different rules for scammers

The DDB Brasil WWF ad that provoked new ad show policies.
The DDB Brasil WWF ad that provoked new ad show policies.


The Cannes Lions Advertising Festival and the Art Directors Club today released policies to deal with scam ads—work submitted to the shows without client approval or that only ran once in little-seen paid media outlets. Outlining how it will handle offenders, Cannes stated it will only ban the individual creatives responsible for the faked work from entering work in the future, not their agencies.
"We believe that banning agencies from entering on a wholesale basis is unfair on blameless individuals," the Cannes statement said. "There are many people who work in agencies who may not be involved with an erroneous entry and therefore should not be penalized." From there, the length of the ban will be determined on a case by case basis. Emails to determine just exactly how this statement differs from Cannes' previous submission policy were not returned.
The Cannes policy takes a decidedly softer position than that of One Show, which implemented new rules in September after DDB Brazil's incendiary depictions of the 9/11 attacks in its "Tsunami" ads caused public backlash. The print ad has received a One Show merit award that has seen been rescinded. (It's important to note that One Show and the British awards show D&AD are non-profit operations, while Cannes is not.)
One Show's harsher stance means a five year ban for agencies submitting ads made for fake clients, without client approval or ads that have only run once or during late-night TV. And for all instances of fakery, the responsible creative will be banned for five years, too.





The Art Directors Club scam ad policy does not include bans at all; it will only trumpet fake work to the other top shows, especially since its awards come early in the season. With entries often submitted to multiple show, the ADC will simply let the Andy, Cannes, Clio, D&AD, One Show and Webby awards know when it's found a fake.
"The decision was that we will disqualify the work," said ADC chief executive Ami Brophy, adding the show hasn't made a statement of this type before, but thought one necessary after recent controversies sparked by the likes "Tsunami." "With regards to banning, our decision is rather to promote the behavior we'd like to see. Our approach is to stand together with the other shows and we will do our best to search scam ads out." The ADC's statement also pointed to its "Playground" category, launched four years ago as the place for non client-approved ads. Ms. Brophy also notes that the ADC rules resemble D&AD's "name and shame" policy.
DDB is hoping to root out scams even before they get to the awards juries. DDB Worldwide chairman Bob Scarpelli re-circulated the network's ethics code and outlined that the multi-office creative council will redouble its scrutiny of awards submissions, according to people familiar with the matter. The review process will include more thorough and brand new screening methods for entries.
With renewed attention to scam ads and these new guidelines running the gamut of accountability, do creatives think that these new guidelines will actually work? Or that they go far enough?



BBDO's David Lubars
BBDO's David Lubars

David Lubars, BBDO North America chief creative and chair of the Cannes press and film juries, thinks even the strictest new rules are necessary. "It's the right thing to do," he said. "I think it'll be a successful deterrent. A lot of times scam ads are obvious, but for when it's not clear, these are good guidelines for jury members."

Conversely, Lars Bastholm, Ogilvy's chief digital officer and the 2009 cyber jury chair at Cannes, finds One Show's penalties too steep. "Five years banned for the ECD in question?" he said. "That could be the end of a career. You'd have a hard time getting an agency to hire you after that." Though, he does think the next scammer caught under these new guidelines will send a message to the creative community. "If someone somewhere submits a fake ad and it gets out, the repercussions will become clear," he said. "That's when people will get it."
Since careers can be made and now potentially lost as a result of awards, Rob Reilly, partner and ECD at Crispin, Porter + Bogusky and ADC's hybrid award chair for 2010, finds the shows' definition of "scam ad" too loose. "We need one sharply defined way to categorize fake work across all shows," he said.



Crispin's Rob Reilly
Crispin's Rob Reilly

"There isn't enough we can do to stop scam ads," Reilly said. "But what needs to happen is to determine what qualifies as a scam ad." Reilly points specifically to ads that only run once, which is an often used tactic for making ads created specifically for awards consideration eligible for entry. While the One Show has identified a scam as an "ad that has run once, on late-night TV, or only because the agency produced a single ad and paid to run it itself," other scam ad policies have not been as clear. Cannes, on the other hand, acknowledges in its statement that "there are many definitions of 'scam,' and the issue is rarely black and white." It simply specifies clients must pay for media for ads to be eligible.
"But what about virals, ads that you put up on YouTube to see if they generate interest?" Reilly adds.
Last month, during the Spikes Asia Festival in Singapore, Cannes Lions Chairman Terry Savage could not conceal his concern about the decision by One Show, and was openly seeking input from the top regional and global creative execs about where the Cannes Lions should draw the line for its three festivals--Cannes Lions, Spikes Asia and the Dubai Lynx award for the Middle East.
While Mr. Savage is opposed to scam ads, he also said he was wary of banning whole agencies from entering awards because of the misdeeds of a few bad apples. "There are a lot of good people out there who shouldn't suffer because of someone else's mistake."
Ironically, Singapore, the setting for the Spikes event, of which Cannes became a co-organizer this year, has had one of the world's worst reputations for producing scam work for over a decade — a sad fact that has helped build the reputation of some of the world's top creatives today.
The Dubai Lynx also suffered a major scandal this year when the Agency of the Year had to return its awards after bloggers uncovered that most of them had been won for scam ads.



----------------------
We in the middle east have our own share of scam ads and ghost ads.. and it's been kind of a trend or basic practice by highly awarded creative networks. some samples for your reference: 

  • -http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/08/mbc-is-busted-ripping-off-tv-ads-ideas.html 
  • -http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/06/more-crapwe-had-to-tear-down-to-re.html 
  • -http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/09/good-bad-and-ugly-in-financial-ads.html 
  • -http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/08/tattoo-yourselflebanon-impact-bbdo-is.html 
  • -http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/08/tattoo-yourselflebanon-impact-bbdo-is.html 
  • -http://advertiser-in-arabia.blogspot.com/2009/08/new-dimension-of-advertising-is-simply.html

Discount Bank turns on its green credentials by turning off.



Discount Bank - Israel - Dim Thinking
Discount Bank in Israel declared itself a ‘Green Bank’ but rather than have this as a meaningless soundbite it sought a practical, long-term way to make a difference to global warming. Its solution was to create stickers reminding people to switch lights off and save energy.
Empty skyscrapers with their lights left on at night, consuming vast amounts of unnecessary electricity, are an all too common sight. Discount Bank knew that by taking simple steps it could make a big difference to the environment. It was also aware, however, that many campaigns of this type are over and forgotten almost as quickly as they are implemented, so it wanted to leave a permanent reminder for its staff to think ‘green’.
A sticker was placed over every light-switch in the Discount Bank tower – and in a financial skyscraper, that’s a lot of light-switches. At the top of the sticker was written ON, at the bottom OFF and in the middle, GLOBAL WARMING. The message being that when you switch on the light, you switch on global warming; when you switch off the light, you switch off global warming.

In just one day, the Discount Bank tower became a green tower. Every single employee is now exposed daily to the strong connection between electricity consumption and global warming, and can, using one small finger contribute to the effort to alleviate global warming.


BRAND: Discount Bank

BRAND OWNER: Discount Bank

CATEGORY: Financial

REGION: Israel

DATE: Sep 2009

MEDIA AGENCY: TBWA Chiat Day



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