Archive for the ‘Strategic Planning’ Category

Say Hello To Gareth Goodall

Monday, November 26th, 2012

We’re very happy to welcome you back from the Thanksgiving break by introducing a new face. Gareth Goodall starts his new gig today as Deputy Director of Strategic Planning, coming all the way from London to help manage day-to-day operations in the strategy department.

For those not familiar with his background, Gareth has a strong track record of award-winning work, including overseeing two Agency of the Year Awards and earning a place on Campaign’s Top 10 Planners in London list and The Independent’s 100 Most Influential People in British Creative Industries.

Needless to say we’re very excited to have him. There’s a handy photo of him above – when you see him around the office be sure to say hello!

10 Q’s w/ Claudine

Thursday, May 31st, 2012

Hot on the heels of yesterday’s post about SaatchiNY music producer Ryan Fitch, we’ve got more fun press coverage for you this morning. Claudine Cheever, our newly promoted (and it should be mentioned – awesome) Chief Transformation Officer/Chief Strategy Officer of the Americas, answered Tangerine’s 10 Questions Survey this weekend.

It’s pretty short, so we’ll send you over to the Tangerine site to read the entire thing, but we’ll close with our favorite of our answers –

 Where is your favorite place for a breakfast meeting?

Oh my god I really love breakfast meetings. Le pain quotidian on Hudson Street. It’s halfway between my daughters school and work, and the strangely laid back French vibe is a good excuse to eat bread stuffed with chocolate.

[Editor’s Note – totally agree. If you have a breakfast meeting, Le Pain is a great spot]

Get your Slide On

Wednesday, May 23rd, 2012

As an integrated planner, I spend a lot of time reading decks. Decks about social, decks about planning, decks about social planning . . . you get the picture. The H/H team thought it would be fun to start asking planners which decks they’d been getting the most out of recently, and I’m kickstarting said project here. Happy keynoting!

STOCK & FLOW

A content curation and creation deck, stock & flow explains the basic concept of social sharing and influencing. use it for personal brand use or client brand use – in the end, they’re pretty similar, right?

WHY PLANNERS & CREATIVES SHOULD BE BEST FRIENDS

This deck is chock full with the kind of thinking all agencies should take on – integrated planning. It explains why creatives and planners should work together from the start, why strategy shouldn’t be trying to justify creative in the aftermath, and why in reality, planners and creatives are very similar jobs (gasp!). P.S. follow @stefsel – he wrote it & is the Group Creative Director at Boondoggle

SOCIAL LISTENING

A deck by yours truly @cristina_simone and past Saatchi rockstar @rosiesiman, this  social listening tools deck will give you reviews of tools you can use for free. It also explains what social listening brings to the table, and just how important it is to actually take what consumers say online seriously. It’s an unbiased focus group people… get with it!

HOW TO TALK TO PEOPLE ABOUT ABSTRACT STUFF

Get off your ass and talk to people… that’s the gist of this awesome deck from Farrah Bostic. It doesn’t have to be 1,000 people. It can be 10 on the line of Shake Shack. Determine what nuggets of insight you acquired from those 10 3-minute conversations and run with it. And hey, maybe throw some social listening in there using the above deck as a guide. The possibilities are endless!

The Naked Truth: Part 2

Wednesday, February 8th, 2012

Take a second and answer the following question for our planners . . .

Category: Strategic Planning

The Naked Truth

Monday, November 14th, 2011

 

Winter is coming.

Time to cover up.

Let’s get naked instead.

Our first question for you:

Comment in the comment box below with intriguing stories on what made you choose men or women in our poll. We’d love to hear from you.

Local + Mobile

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Hyper-local is the next big thing

Following up on yesterday’s post from Cristina Pansolini, we’ve got some more great insights coming out of Digiday’s Local conference here in NYC last week. Today, Strategic Planner Charles Lodge offers his take on the synergy between local and mobile, and what it all means for the industry.

Local marketing has shifted from traditional channels into digital channels that offer powerful solutions for brands to reach local consumers.  Mobile, social and other local digital advertising technologies and platforms are quickly becoming a must, and  brands are seeking higher ROI and one-on-one connections with consumers.  As technology moves off your desk and into your pocket, social and local media are giving advertisers the opportunity to enhance a “clicks to bricks” model with localized calls to action.  By combining behavioral and geographic tracking, communication is becoming localized down to the city block, driving real foot traffic to real brick and mortar stores.  However, with this change in communication venues we’re also seeing a change in the rules of advertising; social and local media is about giving people knowledge, not a compelling argument.

LOCAL AND MOBILE GO HAND-IN-HAND
Local advertising, by definition, is opening a golf magazine and seeing ads for golf equipment. But these days we can deliver content relevant not just to a publication or network demo, but to location, activity, interests and even mindset.  This progression of media into local atmospheres is directly in line with the appearance of new mobile technology, and “local” and “mobile” absolutely go hand in hand.

In 2003 brands were asking their agencies to help them have a greater digital presence. In 2007 they were all trying to connect with consumers in various online social spaces. This year they’re striving to connect with their consumers on a local level.  In the recent past there were generally two ways to find your target consumer’s location — a computer’s IP address or a mobile device’s GPS locator. That’s not the case anymore.  The rise in mobile coordinate-based services, such as GoogleMaps, gives context to location-based searches, adding a third means of specializing your targeted content.

GOOGLE MAPS
GoogleMaps has become the pillar of Google’s local strategy; regular users use it an average of 25 times a month . . . literally telling advertisers where they are and where they’re going.  And now, pairing Google with a GPS device, allows users to search by a destination (IE: “Saatchi & Saatchi”) instead of an address (IE: “375 Hudson St”) which is both user-friendly and creates an opportunity for advertisers to know not just where their consumers are . . .  but what they’re doing while they’re there.  This flood of location data is a valuable tool for advertisers; while we have always known that our communication will reach someone, we have seldom had any guarantee that our ads will be relevant to the viewer.  With more surgical installations of communication we are expected to produce better returns on investment, and contextual targeting can ensure that the media space we buy will match up with the target demographic.

LOCAL CALLS TO ACTION
The recent growing demand for “deals near me” has gone hyper-local in the daily deal ecosystem (Groupon, LivingSocial, etc.). 51% of consumers say they are willing to share their location in order to be exposed to ads relevant to their position. The CTA surrounding all of local media placement is providing consumers with real-time information about deals in stores near their current location.

And we’re finding that if you can get location specific you get real results—deals near me offerings have better than a fifty percent buy rate. While the next step may be a digital overhaul of the Sunday circular, right now the best way to get a good ROI out of local media strategies is to connect consumers with local discounts that are actually local—not deals in their county, but on their street.

SHRINKING YOUR WAY TO GREATNESS: BIG RETAILERS ARE PLAYING SMALL BALL
Online video content is becoming a more reliable and effective way to communicate with your target consumers and a recent trend of localizing online content has proved efficient at generating specialized messages and increased returns.  Schwinn and Lowe’s have both learned how a national campaign can hit local parameters, embracing strategies aimed at giving extra incentive—depending on location—for consumer-action.

Schwinn has over 6000 different spots in rotation, and each gets neighborhood-specific, using various calls to action within their creative, such as referencing the particularly high gas prices of one town, or the bike-friendly nature of another town’s streets.  Lowe’s, on the other hand, uses local factors like the weather to determine what sort of spots to run in a location. If it is raining out, Lowe’s will play a spot about what great deals they have on interior home design materials. If it’s sunny, they’ll talk about deals on exterior paint and lawnmowers.  With the examples we saw at DigiDay, only the voiceover was specific to each spot, exemplifying the elasticity of a national message, portrayed on a very local scale.

Lastly, and this is probably the best part, part of the model of this form of advertising includes the ability to test the effectiveness—beyond click-through rate—of these personalized spots versus traditional TV buys.

AND IN CLOSING
We “check-in” or “allow” nearly every day of our lives—some more than once a day—and advertisers and marketers stand to gain both a huge return on their investments and great insight into the way consumers move, shop and communicate with brands and each other. While any business stands to increase profits by creating local buying-incentives, the learning we stand to acquire during this time creates huge potential for the streamlining of future brand strategy.

The “big idea” of localized media is to drive foot traffic into real stores, but we are responsible for the lifeblood of our brands and we have the creative license to designate what our brands do for consumers.  If we can take what we learn from contextual targeting and plant that within a national brand’s strategic direction, not only our media buys, but also the gravity of our communication will benefit greatly.

Lovemarks Campus

Tuesday, March 29th, 2011

Lovemarkscampus.com

At our year-end agency meeting in December, we talked about a lot of stuff planned for 2011 to accelerate the embrace of Lovemarks. It’s been a great tool for winning new business, creating memorable work and seeding amazing ideas. Now is the time to really focus on the tangible impact of Lovemarks on the consumer.

IT’S ON CAMPUS
Lovemarks has had significant traction among professors and students of advertising, marketing, sociology, even international relations, across American and across the globe. Following on the heels of World-wide CEO Kevin Robert’s February 14 Ad Age Opinion piece recapping the 10 year journey of Lovemarks to the heart of marketing, we introduce Lovemarks Campus - an international Facebook community, website & twitter feed dedicated to (the brainier side of) Lovemarks.

WHAT YOU’LL FIND
We’ve built teaching modules for college professors and students, created forums discussing the various tenants of Lovemarks-dom, and posted a wide array of studies and papers on emotional advertising. It’s a fantastic tool for students, teachers and advertising types. Already there are over 1,000 people enrolled. Do yourself a favor; go visit the page and give it a “Like.” Get involved in the discussions and share your thoughts. We promise it’s going to be fun.

Welcome Baumann Ber Rivnay | Saatchi & Saatchi

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

Today we have the privilege of hosting Yoram Levi (Vice President, Creative Director), Nadav Pressman (Creative Director), & Tal Perelmuter (Creative Director) from BBR Saatchi & Saatchi in Tel Aviv in a visit to our New York agency. You may remember us highlighting their work on The Impossible Brief way back in July. In recent years they’ve risen to the number 2 spot in the Israel Agency of the Year Awards, and we’re excited to sit down with them to share stories and creative insights. As a more recent point of reference, the above video is an insightful project they created for non-profit Bekol.

SAY HELLO
Yoram, Nadav, and Tal will be in the office all day, where our two agencies will be discussing everything from planning strategy and upcoming work to how we’ll be driving integrated SISOMO solution from our clients in 2011. They’ll also be taking an official tour of the SaatchiNY offices so if you see them passing by your desk, be sure to say hello and welcome them to Hudson/Houston.

Editors Note: Worldwide CEO of Saatchi & Saatchi Kevin Roberts recently visited BBR’s headquarters in Tel Aviv. For some information on his visit, be sure to check out his post on KR Connect.

Front Page Image Taken By Lilachd