Tweet for charity

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns,twitter | Wednesday, 19 December 2007

In Christmas time, charity kicks in.
In Belgium, one of the major Radio Stations, Studio Brussel, organizes an event, second year in a row, where they lock 3 presenters in a glass house without food (only protein drinks). The event is called "Music for Life", a nice theme on their normal slogan "life is music".
This year the project is about drinking water and profit goes to the red cross.

The fun thing about M4L is all kind of actions arise from the listeners, really the community :)
You’re supposed to buy records and that way they collect money.
But other ways of contributing are possible as well.

Like Bart, pretty famous in the blogosphere here. He decided to auction his 3000th tweet, aka twitter message. He asked me if I could contact our customers, but it seemed something I wanted for ourselves, These Days. And so Erwin (our boss) started bidding, and he won. He bought this message for € 400.

twitter

It means as much as: "This is the most expensive tweet ever. We don’t have any money left to pay you loads, but can offer you nice colleagues, great projects and lot of drinking water: thesedays.jobs".

Talking about win-win: we gave to charity, got a platform where we could promote our jobs at the same time and Bart saw his twitter followers grow from 250 to 273!
Nice action, nice coop.

Would you still dance with me ..

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns | Monday, 12 November 2007

If I was HIV positive?

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That’s what the copy states in the image above.
The Girl on the image above is the host of the Flemisch version of Dancing with stars (or at least she’s involved).

What you see is a visual of the new Sensoa campaign.
Other visuals on flickr.

Brand ambassadors …

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns | Friday, 28 September 2007

I think Nintendo should respond .. in person.

Protecting the future, today.

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns | Saturday, 08 September 2007

Bullet proof baby ..

Smart campaign to promote the movie Shoot ‘Em Up.

Bullet Proof Baby

Found @ Adrants

Brands .. in desperate search for new values

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns | Saturday, 25 August 2007

In an era of abundance, self-awareness kicks in. People become sensitive for non-elementary values. Even more: they start living by it. These values become elementary, at least that’s what people think.
I’m talking about health, about environment, about spirituality. For the record, I’m not saying these values aren’t important, but I know you only care about them if you have food on your plate and don’t see your siblings get killed in some dirt war.

Anyway, we start mattering about stuff (mainly ourselves), and this is reflected in our consumption pattern. We pay more because the package states Aloe Vera or Omega 3, we prefer green things and even fair trade becomes an option.

Clever brands noticed this and started offering products that respond to this new demands. They boomed! A billion dollar market! Abundance rocks!
And again, I’m not blaming these brands. And I’m not blaming the consumers either (I’m one of them). Buying these things just makes you feel better. Cheaper than a shrink.

But I’m astonished if a see these new values become absolute and bluntly translated to any brands. Watch this (Belgian) Cola commercial.

It’s about a new product: Coca Cola Light plus. It’s Diet coke with added vitamins and magnesium. I have 2 problems with this approach:
1/ drinking coke isn’t about health. I perfectly understand de light/diet movement: it’s about enjoying good live without damaging yourself (well ..). But the plus movement is telling your consumers: “you know, it’s not only ‘not bad’ for you .. it’s GOOD for you”. As a consumer, I don’t buy this. Drinking coke isn’t about wellness. The message isn’t authentic.
2/ the commercial .. it doesn’t understand the movement. Taking care of yourself is an active decision (passively supported by the adapted products). But if you choose to go to a wellness center for example, you don’t do it because you HAVE to. You do it because you WANT to. Because it makes you feel good. In the spot these values are wiped of the table. Coke light plus .. the lazy way to wellness. Wait, it even is the payoff of the spot: “An easy way to goodness”.

In my mind coke messed up big time. I’m probably proved wrong because I’m sure the product will sell, but they’ll pay in authenticity.

An other local example: McDonalds is sponsoring a Basketball camp. I don’t understand why the organiser of the camp (Pieter Loridon & C°) is accepting the sponsorship, it’s simply the wrong message. McDonals isn’t healthy food, don’t fake it is. Again, not authentic. Not authentic for Micky-D, but most important not authentic for the basket camp.

Pieter Loridon Basket Camp

Writing these things, I feel nagging and getting old :)
To be honest, I don’t care about the ethics. But I do care about the marketing. And in my mind these examples are bad marketing. And I don’t like bad marketing, I like to do things proper and effective, and now it just feels like wasting money.

Now please bring me a beer with added calcium, I need it! :-)

The Yes Men!

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns,Random Thoughts | Saturday, 18 August 2007

How do you fight an organisation like the WTO? By pretending you’re them.
That’s exactly the way the yes men figured out.

What’s it about? Some time ago I accidentally bumped on a documentary aired on the Dutch television called The Yes Men. These guys are hosting a website called gatt.org which is more or less a copy of the WTO website. Sometimes (and that’s what they hope for) people mistake them for the real WTO and invite them as speakers and so on.
The yes men jump on these opportunities, call themselves WTO executives, but bring what’s in their mind the real thoughts of the WTO.

Example: the WTO is supposed to be a supporter of 3th world countries, global trade and economics .. but it seems they only care about the Western/rich countries. So in stead of helping people who really need it, they kind of make things worse for them.

The Yes Men is a kind of positive protest to this. A clever form of protest, and a more subtle one. But one that might really change peoples minds and hearts.

I’m not going to describe the actions they did, would lead us too for. In stead I would like to invite you to see the docu yourself. It’s on Google video! (turn of the Spanish subtitles if you wish)

Basically, what the yes men are doing is marketing. If you want to beat your opponents (which is a strong sentence in this context, but after all it’s about winning/selling/gaining .. whether it’s products or minds) there are 2 way: or you position yourself over your opponent, or you position your opponent below you.
The yes men are doing exactly this, except they do it on what one might call ethical grounds. They also do it by not presenting their opponent as inferior, they do it by expressing their opponent’s true thought. Let common sense decide!
But then again, it’s quite scary to see how people living in “the system” swallow almost everything, no questions asked.

BTW: The Yes Men is about much more then the WTO, but the documentary is centered around this topic

Holiday read

On holiday, I read. At least, when i’m abroad (like last week). At home (this week) I only managed to read a few pages :(

But last week I read some interesting books.

(more…)

Case added to jealouscomputers.com ..

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns | Monday, 30 July 2007

I’m back from holiday. I tried to grow my beard, but as soon as I was home and I powerd up my computer things went terribly wrong .. see for jourself.

Case added to jealouscomputers.com

Unfortunately Placed Ads

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns | Thursday, 19 July 2007

do you? :-)
See more :-)

thx Denny

A warning to N-series users!

Steven | marketing, advertising & campaigns | Wednesday, 18 July 2007

Serious business as you can see!
Check out more at the Jealous Computers website for more information and shocking footage, and warn your families, friends and co-workers (unless .. :-) )

Thank you Peter for not giving me a N95!
It seems my N80 is causing some friction, but luckily the aggression stays away (for now).

UPDATE: join the “I was attacked by a computer” facebook group