Author Archive

Saatchi.org: Angelight Films

Thursday, November 17th, 2011

Saatchi.org is a monthly feature where the SaatchiNY team shares the charities and non-profit organizations that really hit them on a gut level. We’ve asked the entire agency to tell us about where they volunteer, why it’s such a worthwhile cause and how you can get involved to help out. This week’s .org, Angelight Films, comes to us from SaatchiNY Communications Director Lynne Collins.  

Angelight Films gives children with brain and spinal cord tumors the opportunity to express themselves by creating and even starring in their own short film.  Each production is guided by a core team of talented, professional filmmakers, beginning with the Director/Producer who works closely with the child to transform his or her ideas into a filmable format.  The child can choose what type of short film they would like to make, such as, a narrative, a documentary, a comedy or a music video.

They’re currently in the running for a 50k Pepsi Refresh Grant.  It’s a great cause, so I’d love for folks at SaatchiNY to take a minute out of your day and vote for them here. You can vote once a day, every day, now through November 30th.

You can also text vote from your mobile 109735 to Pepsi 73774.

Please spread the word and voting information via email, twitter and Facebook!

EVERY VOTE COUNTS!

Category: saatchi.org

JCPenney to Sponsor National Student Advertising Competition

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

The 2009 NSAC winning team from Syracuse University.

SaatchiNY is always excited when clients get involved with cool events, and this is a perfect example. JCPenney announced last week that they’ll be the official sponsor of the 2011 American Advertising Federation (AAF) National Student Advertising Competition (NSAC). Almost 150,000 students have launched their careers in advertising throughout the competition’s 38 years. The competition is designed to provide college students the hands-on, practical experience necessary to be competitive within the industry.

The Break Down

In the annual competition, college chapters representing regions from across the country go head to head in developing an end-to-end marketing plan. Each chapter develops a 32-page marketing campaign and a 20 minute presentation that pertains to a case study co-authored by the sponsor of the event (this year – JCPenney) and AAF Academic Committee. To get to the finals, teams must first win a district level competition to earn the right to represent their region.

This year, student teams will pitch their campaign to a judging panel selected by the JCPenney during the National Conference held in San Diego, June 2-4, 2011. The quality of work that these teams turn out each year is remarkable. So much so, that sponsors often implement ideas that were churned out by the students.

The Student Perspective

After competing in the NSAC competition for four consecutive years, I can honestly say that it was the single-most beneficial activity I have ever taken part in during my entire educational career. NSAC is more than merely an advertising competition. It offers us a way to practically and organically learn methods of collaboration, management, problem solving, and critical thinking. It streamlines our creative process. It develops us into leaders.  Learning in the classroom is, obviously, a necessity, but it is the conjunction of an extracurricular medium that allows us to gain an experiential knowledge of what we are learning and to begin to understand exactly how powerful implementing these tools can be.

–  Andreas Robichaux, Chapman University NSAC team member, 2010 National Champion.

Above image of 2009 winners from the AAF website. Front Page Image of 2010 winners from Chapman University from tom.arthur.

Category: Awards, Clients, Creative

Adam Werbach Wins Hall of Achievement Award

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

(Part 1 of Adam Werbach’s “Birth of Blue” Speech)

Chief Sustainability Officer of Saatchi & Saatchi and Chairman of Saatchi S Adam Werbach just received word he has been selected for induction into the Advertising Association Federation’s(AAF) Advertising Hall of Achievement. This is a HUGE honor and true testament to Adam’s track record at making the world a better place.

As you likely know, Adam has covered a lot of ground in his career – at 23 he became the youngest ever president of the Sierra Club. In the above (now famous) speech he gave at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco some years later, he declared “environmentalism dead” because of his feeling that the movement had not achieved a critical mass of participation or action. He changed direction and controversially founded Act Now Productions to undertake a plethora of ambitious sustainability projects for Fortune-500 retailers and marketers. Act Now merged to form Saatchi S and build a global strategic and operational capability within Saatchi & Saatchi and for a range of clients. Adam’s critically acclaimed recent book (Strategy for Sustainability) was named one of the top business books of 2009 by Fast Company.  In addition to his work with us, he is a frequent commentator on sustainable business for CNN, NPR, BBC, Charlie Rose and yes, even The O’Reilly Factor.

This year’s induction ceremonies are to be held at Cipriani 42nd Street here in New York. The six other inductees below:

  • Andrew Benett, Global CEO, Arnold Worldwide; Global Strategy Officer, Havas Worldwide
  • Bant Breen, President, Worldwide Digital Communications, Initiative
  • Jeff Levick, President, Global Advertising and Strategy, AOL
  • Rob Master, North American Media Director, Unilever
  • Erin Nelson, SVP & Chief Marketing Officer, Dell Inc.
  • Tiffany R. Warren, SVP, Chief Diversity Officer, Omnicom Group

Congratulations to Adam.

You can watch the rest of Adam’s “Birth of Blue” speech on the Saatchi S YouTube Page. For more information on SaatchiNY True Blue Initiatives, check out Adam’s Recent True Blue Update, our Roof Garden, and our Gold LEED Certification.

TwentyTenTweets

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Saatchi & Saatchi New York have partnered up with WorldSoccerShop.com – the world’s largest online soccer retailer – to sell official World Cup merchandise through the web. The one-stop shop for soccer fans from around the world is called TwentyTenTweets, and it allows users to purchase a home or away team shirt and follow what people are tweeting about their national team at the same time. 

TwentyTenTweets allows soccer fans to view the jerseys of all 32 teams participating in the South African finals in all of their glory. They can even “try them on” by uploading their picture to the site or snapping a quick image on their webcams. Once they’ve had a look at themselves wearing the shirt, visitors have the option to then buy the shirts through WorldSoccerShop.com.

In addition to the interactive shopping, the site aggregates all World Cup tweets using the WC2010 hashtag (#wc2010). Every single tweet related to the Cup will be displayed in an easy-to-navigate way, organized in relation to each national team or location. When browsing by location, the tweets are shown over an image of the official 2010 World Cup Ball – the Adidas Jabulani. Handily, The Jubalani is also available for purchase with just one click.

The site is already live, and the user experience will get better and better as the World Cup (June 11th – July 11th) heats up. One of the coolest features will show visitors not just who fans are tweeting about, but actually show the location where people are tweeting from during the games. This should come in handy if you’re looking for a posse of US fans watching a match in a bar on Broadway or how big the Brazilian contingent is partying in Little Brazil.

Special bonus for Saatchi & Saatchi New York team members, the twitter icon at the top of the page directs you to a Twitter feed James Cooper will be updating from South Africa!

Credits

Creative Director / Copywriter : James Cooper
Creative Director / Art Director: Jason Musante
Programmer: Paula Wagner
Producer: John Swartz

Cue Brand Love for Miller

Monday, April 5th, 2010

UK publication Contagious is a lightning rod for innovation and emerging trends in non-traditional marketing. Back in 2006, Lovemarks was profiled in its pages through an exclusive extract from The Lovemarks Effect and showcased as a Big Transforming Idea. With just four issues per annum, it’s great to see another example of our work featured in its 22nd issue.

Lucy Aitken’s piece ‘Leaning out of the frame’ looks at brands which are “shrinking away from the limelight, preferring to make other people the subject of their marketing activity”, and highlights Miller High Life’s recent Super Bowl beer ad as an early adopter of this approach. Created by Saatchi & Saatchi New York, the ads used the company’s Super Bowl time to promote four small retail businesses.

“A bespoke website, dedicated to the ‘little guys, big game’ strategy, offered more detail about the store-owners and how Miller’s attention assisted them in a tough climate. Tim Herron, of Tim’s Baseball Card Shop in Chicago, despite having a somewhat deadpan role in the ad itself, described it as ‘a life changing experience’, while Loretta Harrison of Loretta’s Authentic Pralines in New Orleans commented: ‘This is like a Cinderella story for small businesses.’ “

A teaser spot showed Miller High Life’s spokesperson, the down-to-earth delivery man, and paid tribute to ‘the little guy’, the hardworking Americans who often get sidelined. It proved a winning formula, as supporting the underdog has always been popular with sports fans. As the Contagious article explores, when a brand takes on this role of an ‘enabler’ it has the potential to build long-term brand loyalty and create opportunities for great stories and excellent PR.

“Miller High Life is an unpretentious beer. We are teaching the other Super Bowl advertisers how to not be so full of themselves,” says Gerry Graf, Saatchi & Saatchi New York’s chief creative officer. “Cue brand love for Miller,” added Aitken.

OceanKing97 Stops Cyberbullies

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

An ingenuous distortion of the YouTube experience is at the heart of a viral campaign aimed squarely at cyberspace bullies. A creative team at Saatchi & Saatchi New York originated the idea as part of their work with the National Crime Prevention Council (NCPC). The NCPC, home of McGruff the Crime Dog, has identified cyberbullying as a serious and escalating problem among children and teenagers.

“Millions of young Americans are tormented every day on social networking sites like Facebook and MySpace, as well as by text and instant messages,” says Saatchi & Saatchi NY’s chief creative officer, Gerry Graf. “In many ways, it’s worse than the schoolyard variety because it can spread like wildfire and bullies are anonymous while victims have nowhere to hide.”

The creative team – Ethan Schmidt, Kevin Li and James Cooper – understood that well-meaning public service messages and finger-wagging would fall flat.

“Teens have a thousand voices clamoring for their attention, and most of them are telling them what not to do,” says art director Kevin Li. “We needed to reach them right where they are, but we also realized that we couldn’t eradicate the behavior or eliminate the impulse. We thought our focus should be urging them to think twice, pause and reflect a little,” Li said.

From that observation, the Saatchi team settled on a compelling and subversive idea. “We wanted to recreate the bullying experience in a way that draws in the viewer, even makes them complicit,” Interactive Director James Cooper said.

They built a YouTube page in exact replica, and shot video of a tween actor who recited poetry in aid of his beloved dolphins. Beneath the video, they added vicious, bullying comments.

“Just as the viewers’ eyes wander to the comments section, perhaps as they begin to find it amusing, the spell is broken,” explains copywriter Ethan Schmidt.

Shockingly, OceanKing97 stops reading his ode to dolphins and reaches through the YouTube screen and rips a comment from screen. He then reminds his audience that online behavior has real-world consequences.

“The effect is jarring. As if having been caught in the act, it discomfits the viewer and commands their attention,” Schmidt says.

“Cyberbullies never witness the suffering they cause — and we wanted to change that. By turning the tables on his tormentors – and the viewers themselves – OceanKing97 spoke for victims everywhere: “we are real people, and the harm you cause is also real”. It was a message delivered one-on-one, intimate, right between the eyes,” says Schmidt.

Viewers reacted via Twitter, describing the effect as “trippy”, “weird/cool” and “out of the box”. The initiative is an emerging viral sensation, with thousands of views in the first week.

This video was launched as a part of the NCPC’s new initiative, Circle of Respect, which will inspire young people to live in ways that embody respect where they live, learn, work, and play.

For more information about Circle of Respect and how to get involved, go to www.circleofrespect.org.

www.youtube.com/OceanKing97

Miller High Life Hons the Little Guy

Thursday, February 4th, 2010

Miller High Life: Going Big for the Little Guys | Viral/Other | SPIKE.com

Lewis Lazare of the Chicago Sun Times reports on the Miller High Life Super Bowl campaign, Jan 25:

“Chicago-based MillerCoors is back to poking fun at its archrival Anheuser-Busch in a new spot set to air in 37 markets during the Super Bowl on Feb. 7. The Super Bowl spot is being heralded in a new teaser ad that features the popular, down-to-earth Miller High Life delivery man, who is attacking the big muckety-muck companies that roll out those Super Bowl spots — referred to as “30 seconds of nonsense.”

The Miller High Life delivery man and a co-worker decide Miller High Life should run a spot during the Super Bowl that pays tribute to the little guy. So that is what viewers will see in select major markets during the upcoming Super Bowl. Among the little guys being honored in the Miller High Life spot is Chicago’s Tim Herron, who opened Tim’s Baseball Card Shop in 2004 in the Lincoln Square neighborhood.

Saatchi & Saatchi/New York created both the teaser and the Super Bowl spot. MillerCoors cannot air its little guy spot nationally because A-B has exclusive national rights in the beer category for the Super Bowl telecast.”

TIDE Style

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

First breaking campaign of the new decade. Created in 1943, “Tide was disruptive technology at its best, positioning Procter & Gamble for decades of growth.” #1 in Clean for six decades, now Dressed for Success. Saatchi & Saatchi New York lead agency. Article by Stuart Elliott, The New York Times. See also an excerpt from Rising Tide, a history of Procter & Gamble from Harvard Business School Press.

Category: Clients, Print & Direct