Category: Great Advertising
April 4th, 2007

Bleeding coasters save lives. But scare Mortar.

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Indians love their beer. They are also rather prone to mow down their fellow countrymen after a Kingfisher or two. To combat the problem, Mumbai ad agency Contract has produced beer coasters that appear to bleed when wet.

Um. And we thought that great creative would be immune to outsourcing? Visit the agency here. See the work here. To see a Google map of Mumbai click here (hey you’re not the only one who thought it was just outside Croydon). Thanks AdRants.

March 30th, 2007

Who Needs The Kwik-E-Mart?

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While we remain incredibly bitter about the replacement of San Francisco’s legendary 7-11 Club with an actual 7-11, we applaud the retailer’s sense of humor and market savvy for repackaging 12 of their stores as “Kwik-E-Marts” in anticipation of the release of The Simpsons Movie

According to MediaWeek, customers will also be able to purchase KrustyO’s cereal, Buzz Cola and Squishees, and customers will find messages like “Mmmm … sandwich" on food wrappers. 

As Chief Wiggum would say, "That’s some nice cross-promotion, there, Lou."

It’s enough to make us want to break into song
.

February 15th, 2007

Vanilla Ice Does TurboTax

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As reported on Church of the Customer Blog yesterday, Intuit’s TurboTax unit has teamed up with rapper Vanilla Ice to launch a citizen marketer-esque YouTube video contest. Contestants videotape themselves rapping about the tax software for a chance to win $25,000.

We are hoping our resident Account Executives, Suzanne and Molly will join in the fun; they have some incredible rhythm they share with us daily in the Mortar hallways.

Check out the contest here…

February 13th, 2007

What makes advertising successful?

CREATIVITY AND EMOTION ARE THE TWO KEY CHARACTERISTICS!!!!

What you say? Jam-packing an ad with product feature after product feature doesn’t work? That’s crazy talk!

Dr. Heath from the University of Bath has got the answer we have been searching for. Not only the answer, but proven scientific results.

"Dr Robert Heath, from the University of Bath’s
School of Management, found that advertisements with high levels of
emotional content enhanced how people felt about brands, even when
there was no real message.

However, advertisements which were low on
emotional content had no effect on how favorable the public were
towards brands, even if the ad was high in news and information.

Dr Heath, working with the research company
OTX, tested 23 TV ads that were on air at the time in the USA and 20
that were on air in the UK, for their levels of emotional and rational
content.

They then asked a second sample of 200 people
in each country how favorable they were towards the brands in the
advertisements. Those who had been exposed to ads with high emotional
content showed a marked positive shift in their favorability towards
the brand. But those who had seen ads with low emotional content showed
no real shift in favorability, even when they had a high level of news
and information."

Thus, the most effective advertising  to establish a preference among brands are ads with a large amount of emotional content and very little actual information.

"In advertising, it appears to be the case that it’s not what you say, but the way that you say it, that gets results."

Read the whole article  here

I couldn’t have said it better myself.

February 6th, 2007

XLI Candy: Three We Liked. Three We Hated. Three We Were Kinda “Meh” About.

Man, what a steaming pile that Super Bowl was. Eight turnovers!? Eight!? And would it be possible for someone at CBS to spend $0.99 on a frickin’ squeegee for the camera? (It’s called "rain" fellas. They have a lot of it in South Florida. You might have been better prepared.)
The ads? In keeping with the theme of this game, they were soggy, sloppy, and barely – just barely – capable of holding our interest.

But there is good news – only 10 days until pitchers and catchers report.

Three We Liked:

Career Builder: “Promotion”

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Sticky Note Guy? Dude With Notebook on Head? Fighting to the death in the Promotion Pit? Oh hells-to-the-yes. Let’s take a simple idea: “This site is where all the good jobs are,” and blow it out in a humorous, eye-catching manner. Their other spot, “Training Session,” was terrific, too, but the audio was a bit muddy. GRADE: A
P.S. Where was Monster.com this year?


E-Trade: “Bank Robbery”

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A very clever, well-cast, well-executed idea: Your bank is robbing you. We won’t. Dramatic and traffic-stopping. We expect no less from E-Trade.  GRADE: A-

NFL: “It’s Hard To Say Goodbye”

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A lot better than the game. Great soundtrack, funny visuals (We especially enjoyed the pressure washer being applied to the Body Paint Guy,) and huge extra points for the last-minute Brett Favre reference. Nice touch on the logo-as-heartbeat outro, too.  GRADE: A-

Honorable Mention: Bud Light “Guy With Ax.” GM: “Robot’s Dream,”  Garmin: “Mapzilla.”


Three We Hated:

Blockbuster: “Mouse

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Are you #^&*ing kidding us!? You guys spend $2.6 mil on the media alone, and the best idea that excretes from your boardroom is to dust off the guinea pig (who wasn’t funny the first time around,) and have him “click” a real mouse? (get it? “click?” “mouse?” ) You know, Blockbuster, you actually do have something to say: “You can walk into our stores, you can’t do that with Netflix,” and yet you ignore it for…this? Who’s in charge over there, Rex Grossman?  GRADE: D-

Coke: “Coke Side Of Life/Motorcycle”

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OK, new rule: Soda Companies Are Prohibited From Doing The “Hip-Old-People” Thing Ever Again. 
No more rappin’ grannies. No more skateboarding granddads. Just stop. This idea was hackneyed in the 1980’s – it’s just tragic now. Also, you didn’t fool anyone with the retread of the Grand Theft Auto spot. Not only is it no longer topical, the use of the retread tells your audience – “Welcome to the Coke Side Of Life, Where We’re Too Damn Lazy To Do A New Ad.”  GRADE: D

SalesGenie: “Doing Great”

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This ad is so bad, it’s good. We’re talking, Mentos-In-The-UnIronic-Years-Bad.
The “I’m Making Up For My Tiny Genitalia” car?
The blonde who says “how a bout a ride!” wink-wink-nudge-nudge?
The boss inviting him to dinner?
You have to be kidding. You guys are kidding, right? Wait. You’re not kidding? Well, we suppose if all you have to sell are “100 sales leads,” (and none of them are the Glengarry leads, we checked,) then you’ve got to work with what you have.

But the piece de resistance?

Motley, only fools work hard. I work smart.”

That’s the line your agency used, isn’t it.

GRADE: F. Or A. We’re not quite sure.

DISHONORABLE MENTION: All the Doritos stuff, particularly the Fat Obnoxious Cashier. Also, Chevrolet.


Three We’re Pretty Much “Meh” About:

Nationwide: “K-Fed.”

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Losing the element of surprise by leaking this early probably didn’t do this spot any favors. It ended up, like its star, overhyped. It was pretty decent, really – terrific production values, topical, and Mr. Federline clearly has a healthy sense of humor about himself. But we don’t think it’ll sell much insurance. Still, pretty good effort. We just weren’t bowled over. Meh.  GRADE: B+

SIERRA MIST: “Beard Comb-Over.”

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Great visual. And at least there weren’t any rappin’ grannies. But – Sierra Mist peeps? Here’s a free tip from the Mortar: Michael Ian Black = Kiss Of Death. He’s like the fat girl at the party who keeps getting drunker and sluttier in the vain hope she’ll become "fun." You just know she’s going to barf on something that you don’t want barf all over and in the end…everyone just wants the pain to stop. GRADE: B-   

BUDWEISER: “Dalmatian”

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Enough with the frickin’ Dalmatians, already.  Let’s agree on a ten-year moratorium on spotted dogs, ok? It was cute about five years ago. Now it’s just predictable and boring. And that "Crab" spot? Great print idea. Not thrilling on TV. Kind of like the game. GRADE: C-