Wednesday, November 5, 2008

What marketers can learn from Obama's campaign

When I was watching the elections last night, I was thinking to my self that if Obama happens to lose this election, I would not only put into garbage all the my knowledge and experience I gained over the years about branding, marketing and advertising, but also I would lose my confidence and belief in American people's common sense, wisdom and judgement. Thank god, I was not wrong. Obama won and won big time by showing a great expample of how a brand can be built effectively from scratch by creating a momentum of change, hope, peace and unity. For me, it was the most exiciting branding campaigns ever, both from the positioning and messaging stand point and its connection planning and media applications. (he even placed ads in Sony Playstation to reach out to young voters or grown up kids I woud say:) Today, I was surfing on the net and I came across an excellent article written by one of my marketing heros of all time, Al Ries, who happened to coin the term "positioning" in the marketing literature and I just wanted to share with those of you who is into ideas, innovation, marketing, branding and strategic thinking...Hope you enjoy it.

What Marketers Can Learn From Obama's Campaign

Nov. 4, 2008, will go down in history as the biggest day ever in the history of marketing.

Take a relatively unknown man. Younger than all of his opponents. Black. With a bad-sounding name. Consider his first opponent: the best-known woman in America, connected to one of the most successful politicians in history. Then consider his second opponent: a well-known war hero with a long, distinguished record as a U.S. senator.

It didn't matter. Barack Obama had a better marketing strategy than either of them. "Change."

Nazi propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels was the master of the "big lie." According to Goebbels, "If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it."

The opposite of that strategy is the "big truth." If you tell the truth often enough and keep repeating it, the truth gets bigger and bigger, creating an aura of legitimacy and authenticity.

Clinton's 'solutions' fizzle

What word did Hillary Clinton own? First she tried "experience." When she saw the progress Mr. Obama was making, she shifted to "Countdown to change." Then when the critics pointed out her me-too approach, she shifted to "Solutions for America."

What word is associated with Ms. Clinton today? I don't know, do you?

Then there's John McCain. An Oct. 26 cover story in The New York Times Magazine was titled "The Making (and Remaking and Remaking) of the Candidate."

The visual listed some of the labels the candidate was associated with: "Conservative. Maverick. Hero. Straight talker. Commander. Bipartisan conciliator. Experienced leader. Patriot." Subhead: "When a Campaign Can't Settle on a Central Narrative, Does It Imperil Its Protagonist?"

Actually, Mr. McCain did settle on a slogan, "Country first," but it was way too late in the campaign and it was a slogan that had little relevance to the average voter.

Tactically, both Ms. Clinton and Mr. McCain focused their messages on "I can do change better than my opponent can do change."

"Better" never works in marketing. The only thing that works in marketing is "different." When you're different, you can pre-empt the concept in consumers' minds so your competitors can never take it away from you.

The ultimate slogan

Look at what "driving" has done for BMW. Are there vehicles that are more fun to drive than BMWs? Probably, but it doesn't matter. BMW has pre-empted the "driving" position in the mind.

The sad fact is that there are only a few dozen brands that own a word in the mind and most of them don't even use their words as slogans. Mercedes-Benz owns "prestige," but doesn't use the word as a slogan. Toyota owns "reliability," but doesn't use the word as a slogan. Coca-Cola owns "the real thing," but doesn't use the words as a slogan. Pepsi-Cola owns "Pepsi generation," but doesn't use the words as a slogan.

As a matter of fact, most brands follow the Pepsi pattern. Every time they get a new CMO or a new advertising agency, they change the slogan. Since 1975, BMW has used one slogan: "The ultimate driving machine." Since 1975, Pepsi-Cola has used these advertising slogans:
1975: "For those who think young."
1978: "Have a Pepsi day."
1980: "Catch that Pepsi spirit."
1982: "Pepsi's got your taste for life."
1983: "Pepsi now."
1984: "The choice of a new generation."
1989: "A generation ahead."
1990: "Pepsi: The choice of a new generation."
1992: "Gotta have it."
1993: "Be young. Have fun. Drink Pepsi."
1995: "Nothing else is a Pepsi."
2002: "Generation next."
2003: "Think young. Drink young."
2004: "It's the cola."

Thirty-three years ago when the "Ultimate driving machine" campaign started, BMW was the 11th-largest-selling European imported vehicle in the U.S. market. Today it's No. 1.

Thirty-three years ago, Pepsi-Cola was the No. 2-selling cola in the U.S. market. Today, many advertising slogans later, it's still No. 2. The average Pepsi-Cola advertising slogan lasts just two years and two months.

The average chief marketing officer lasts just two years and two months. The average corporate advertising campaign in BusinessWeek lasts just two years and six months.

The Obama campaign has a lot to teach the advertising community.

1. Simplicity.
About 70% of the population thinks the country is going in the wrong direction, hence Obama's focus on the word "change." Why didn't talented politicians like Ms. Clinton and John Edwards consider using this concept? Based on my experience, in the boardrooms of corporate America "change" is an idea that is too simple to sell. Corporate executives are looking for advertising concepts that are "clever." For all the money being spent, corporate executives want something they couldn't have thought of themselves. Hopefully, something exceedingly clever. Here is a sampling of slogans from a recent issue of BusinessWeek:
Chicago Graduate School of Business: "Triumph in your moment of truth."
Darden School of Business: "High touch. High tone. High energy."
Salesforce.com: "Your future is looking up."
Zurich: "Because change happenz."
CDW: "The right technology. Right away."
Hitachi: "Inspire the next."
NEC: "Empowered by innovation."
Deutsche Bank: "A passion to perform."
SKF: "The power of knowledge engineering."

Some of these slogans might be clever, some might be inspiring and some might be descriptive of the company's product line, but none will ever drive the company's business in the way that "change" drove the Obama campaign. They're not simple enough.

2. Consistency.
What's wrong with 90% of all advertising? Companies try to "communicate" when they should be trying to "position."

Mr. Obama's objective was not to communicate the fact that he was an agent of change. In today's environment, every politician running for the country's highest office was presenting him or herself as an agent of change. What Mr. Obama actually did was to repeat the "change" message over and over again, so that potential voters identified Mr. Obama with the concept. In other words, he owns the "change" idea in voters' minds.

In today's overcommunicated society, it takes endless repetition to achieve this effect. For a typical consumer brand, that might mean years and years of advertising and hundreds of millions of dollars.

Most companies don't have the money, don't have the patience and don't have the vision to achieve what Mr. Obama did. They jerk from one message to another, hoping for a magic bullet that will energize their brands. That doesn't work today. That is especially ineffective for a politician because it creates an aura of vacillation and indecisiveness, fatal qualities for someone looking to move up the political ladder.

The only thing that works today is the BMW approach. Consistency, consistency, consistency -- over decades, if not longer.

But not with a dull slogan. Hitachi has been "inspiring the next" for as long as I can remember, but with little success.

Effective slogans needs to be simple and grounded in reality. What next has Hitachi ever inspired? Red ink, maybe. In the past 10 years, Hitachi has had sales of $786.9 billion and managed to lose $5.1 billion. When you put your corporate name on everything, as Hitachi does, it's difficult to make money because it's difficult to make the brand stand for anything.

3. Relevance.
"If you're losing the battle, shift the battlefield" is an old military axiom that applies equally as well to marketing. By his relentless focus on change, Mr. Obama shifted the political battlefield. He forced his opponents to devote much of their campaign time discussing changes they proposed for the country. And how their changes would differ from the changes that he proposed.

All the talk about "change" distracted both Ms. Clinton and Mr. McCain from talking about their strengths: their track records, their experience and their relationships with world leaders.

As you probably know, Mr. Obama was selected as Advertising Age's Marketer of the Year by the executives attending the Association of National Advertisers' annual conference in Orlando last month. But one wonders if these CMOs are getting the message.

As one marketing executive said: "I look at it as something that we can all learn from as marketers. To see what he's done, to be able to create a social network and do it in a way where it's created the tools to let people get engaged very easily. It's very easy for people to participate." Whatever happened to "change"?

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Stuart Weitzman: Celebrity Shoe Auction in support for Ovarian Cancer Research

Last week, we have produced a DVD slide show presentation to be screened during the Seventh Annual Celebrity Show Auction at the Stuart Weitzman's flaship store on Madison Avenue.

Stuart Weitzman has designed custom-made shoes for a selected group of celebrities and these shoes were put on auction through a bidding process on the internet in order to raise funds in support for the Ovarian Cancer Research.

Until October 4, you can start bidding online for Stuart Weitzman celeb-designed and signed pumps. Proceeds from the online auction will go to research the fifth leading cause of death among woman: ovarian cancer. For the cause, celebrities such as Courtney Cox, Oprah Winfrey, Marcia Cross, Hayden Panettiere, Kelly Ripa, Mario Lopez, Nicolette Sheridan, Sharon Stone, Charlize Theron, Debrah Messing, Jennifer Love-Hewitt, Queen Latifah, Glenn Close, Vanessa Williams and Kyle MacLachlan teamed up with Weitzman to design their own shoes.

All bids start at $200 and some have already reached a high of $675 (Vanessa Williams pumps).

Wanna bid? Check out their website: http://www.stuartweitzmancelebrityauction.com/

Roots In The Garden

Recently, we have helped one of our clients to convert this short documentary into a DVD for the submission to film festivals. The documentary is about an area in Brooklyn where mostly old-school italians, old-timers if you will, reside and proudly resist to change. I was so surprised only to know that this neighborhood is actually Carroll Gardens. First I had thought it was the italian neighborhood in the Bronx. People remind me of the cast from Good Fellas or any other movie of Scorcese for that matter...

After having seen this short, I can't wait to go there and have a pizza before too late...

Bene..Tutto bene..:)

Credits:Roots In The Garden (trt 8:53)
A MediaStorm Project
Photography, Audio, & Video: Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times
Editor: Pia Sawhney
Producer: Chad A. Stevens
Field Producer: Eric Maierson
Graphics: Tim Klimowicz
Workshop Director: Jessica Stuart
Intern: Tim Mclaughlin
Executive Producer: Brian Storm

Please check their website tio view this beautiful short:
http://mediastorm.org/workshops_0002.htm

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Stephanie McKay Concert in Central Park - June 13 2008

Photography: Deniz Asutay & Yalcin Bilguvar

Video: Guniz Engur

Stephanie McKay, a NY-based soul singer, is one of our recent branding projects. Currently, we are in the midst of creating branding ideas and creative executions. She just came back from the European tour promoting her fantastic new album "Tell It Like It Is" with a lot of terrific reviews...

The pictures you'll see on the above video were captured from her concert at the opening day of 2008 Central Park Summer Stage. She also shared the stage with legendary soul/gospel singer Mavis Staples. If you want to more about her, please check out her sites at http://www.myspace.com/stephaniemckay , http://www.stephaniemckay.com/ and http://www.facebook.com/pages/Stephanie-McKay/12131588877?ref=ts

Friday, August 1, 2008

Short-film project: "Hands" the movie...


It's been quite a while since the last time we have uploaded some news to our blog...so here you go: some brief information and snippets from the recent short film project in which I took part as Production Manager (as well as managing the whole Casting process)... This short fim called "Hands" was sponsored by Sony (Play-Station). However, story wise, it was nothing to do with Sony PlayStation. It was totally an original concept, an off-beat romantic comedy.


(Me...in front of my favorite store (seriously))...This project also comprised of a handful of young European directors, each of whom will contribute by writing and directing a 5-7 minute original short movies of their own. All of these movies will be screened at various film festivals throughout Europe such as San Sebastian , Venice, among others as well as via Internet late August, 2008.


Besides, these movies will be downloadable through Sony Play Station...This project was a collaboration between Sony and Shorts International which is the largest short fil distributors in Europe.

As part of this project, a camera team came from London and captured some behind the scene footage in addition to conducting some interviews...




Ta...taaa... happy hand!!!!

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

This instrument is untouchable:)))

We were in Dumbo, Brooklyn on Wednesday, July 30 to see Dorit Chrysler's concert of Theremin Society...It was such an interesting event...For those of us left out in the dark, myself included, the Theremin is one of the earliest electronic musical instrument and is played without being touched. The Theremin Society was founded in December 2005 by ISSUE Project Room's Artistic Director Suzanne Fiol and thereminist Dorit Chrysler. The project focuses on the contribution of the Theremin to 21st century musical culture and to the musicians who have devoted their careers to this instrument. It is sure to be a night of abstract artists experimenting with a wide range of musical language. Hear their music and more at: http://www.doritchrysler.com/ThereminSociety.html

Here are the snippets that I documented before and during the concert...

My friend Kenji's beautiful daugher Emily is dancing and guess what, she's already in the book:)

Friday, April 11, 2008

Peace and Harmony...

A wonderful event was held at the Church of St. Peter, New York's oldest Catholic Church on February 21st, 2008. This event was timely and meaningful not only as a service for the World Peace and Harmony, but also it was a meeting of Faiths in celebration of Buddist Art and Culture. With the attendance of Shinso-Ito, the spiritual head of Shinnyo-en Buddist Teaching, it was also the first Shinnyo-en Buddist ceremony to be held in a Roman Catholic Church. We are priviliged to design the DVD cover of this special event.

Happy Valentine's...


We designed this Valentine's Day card for our exisiting clients as well as our new clients on the way...so those who also agree with our thinking that we can be a perfect match in creating great communications that speak to hearts and minds, you're very welcome to join the club...

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Coming sooon.!!!

Due to popular demand for our newyear card, we decided to design another card for Valentine's Day. Just so you know, our exisiting clients as well as the upcoming ones will be receiving a Valentine's Day card from us soon...

With love,

Guniz & Deniz

Infinite thanks....

Thank you... thank you...thank you...thank you sooooo much!!!...
We just want to thank many of you who liked our new year card and said many beautiful words about the concept. So those of you who wanted to purchase the card, please note that, next time, we'll let you know way before we start thinking about the design idea...One again, have an infinitely happy new year!!!