How To Friday: ROI of Social Media

One of the things I help do at Ogilvy is to bring in external great inspirational guys and girls to help educate our staff more on the digital marketing world. The above clip is from the ever helpful Justin Hartman, co-founder of Social Code, who kindly popped by to give us a talk on the ROI of Social Media. If you want to learn something on the new media landscape its a great way to spend 25mins of your time. Enjoy

How To Friday: Paul Galatis

Above is a fabulous talk from Pauls Galatis, one of the heads of South Africa’s best ecommerce websites yuppiechef. Paul does a brilliant talk on ORM and “How Customer Service Can change the world”.
The talk is part of Ogilvy Cape Town’s How To Friday events and are an ODMA initiative and available for anyone to view, Enjoy.

Click on the links for previous talks: Tim Bishop, Nic Haralambous, Fred Roed, Rich Mulholland, and Vanessa Raphaely

How To Friday: Tim Bishop

Recently I had the pleasure of having the wonderful Tim Bishop over to our Ogilvy Cape Town offices to do a talk on the growth of the Mobile Web, why its so important, and how to use it in properly in brand building.

Tim heads up Prezence Digital, a company specialising in Mobile Marketing and innovation.

These are part of a series for the Ogilvy Cape Town ODMA How To Friday sessions. Click here to see past talks from the likes of Vanessa Raphaely, Rich Mulholland, Nic Haralambous, and Fred Roed.

How To Friday: Vanessa Raphaely

A couple of weeks ago the legend that is Vanessa Raphaely (AKA @hurricanevaness) very kindly agreed to pop by to Ogilvy Cape Town and speak to some of her fans on her journey to becoming one of South Africa’s most influential magazine editors (for Cosmopolitan ), the magazine industry in general, and a little about her stunning blog http://hurricanevanessa.com/.

Because we love nothing more than to share, here is her talk in full uncut for your enjoyment.

These are part of a series for the Ogilvy Cape Town ODMA How To Friday sessions. Click here to see past talks from the likes of Rich Mulholland, Nic Haralambous, and Fred Roed.

Ogilvy How To Friday: Fred Roed on online communities

A little while ago we at Ogilvy Cape Town had the pleasure getting a presentation from my good friend Fred Roed for our Ogilvy How To Friday sessions. The Friday talks were created to help educate people in the agency on online / mobile marketing, and help introduce them to great people from outside the agency.

Fred is a very tall chap, legend, and the founder of digital agency World Wide Creative and Heavy Chefs. He has been perfecting the skills of  how to build successful opt-in online social communities, see the video above for the how to guide as well as learning a little something about bears and how not to hurt kittens.

Ogilvy How To Fridays: Rich Mulholland

Ogilvy How To Friday: Rich Mulholland from Ogilvy Cape Town on Vimeo.

This week will mark my first month at Ogilvy Cape Town, so far so great. One of the initiatives I have started is Called How To Fridays.

How To Fridays are an Ogilvy Digital Marketing Academy (ODMA) initiative that aims to help inspire people around online and mobile marketing.
This week my good friend and generally tattooed legend Rich Mulholland popped by to share with us insights on his companies Missing Link and Thunk Lab, as well as why balancing horns can be a hindrance (watch the above video to find out about the horns). Rich is one speaker that always inspires me, if you have some spare time I would highly recommend watching the above talk.

I will update more video’s as we go forward and will sort out the video (This time I had to use my X10 phone as the normal video cameras were not around).

If you would like to come in and speak feel free to drop me a mail at chris.rawlinson@ogilvy.co.za.

Speakers so far have that have been kind enough to share there thoughts are:

Gordon Parkin: Founder of Brandscape, a mobile marketing activation/innovation company, and executive member of the South African Mobile Marketing Association.

Marc and Dave Perel: Founders of Obox Design. Marc and Dave are two of South Africa’s most successful digital entrepreneurs.

Jan Braai (Jan Scannell): World Record holder, and the man behind the Braai4Heritage initiative patroned by Archbishop Desmond Tutu. Braai4Heritage is affectionately known as Braai day and is now seen as South Africa’s answer to St Patricks Day. It celebrates South Africa’s rich culture, and  brings people of all race, colour, and creed together.

Mannes in Cannes: F-bombs and Redemption

 

Cannes header

Words by Monsieur Chris Gotz

It has not been a good week on earth for South Africa. Our cricketers played with all the resolve of wet biltong. Our Baby Boks, despite having a fullback who rivals the roadrunner for energy and pace, crashed out of the World Cup. Our football team, well they just played like our football team. Thanks heavens for our Ad people, who last night redeemed a miserable week for South Africa on the global stage by winning 19 Lions in Press, Design and Radio. The irrepressible Net#work BBDO traced a now familiar path onto stage to collect yet another 2 Gold’s for Mercedes Benz. And then Silvers and Bronzes, lots and lots of them. The downside was yet another loud starter pistol blank in Cyber, which had me sliding forlornly down my seat and left me feeling like Wayne Ferreira at Wimbledon. Or South Africa at a One Day cricket tournament. Or Bafana Bafana at … you get my drift.

John MaedaI was lucky enough to see John Maeda speak on Creative Leadership yesterday. John is one of those irritating and brilliant polymaths who excel at just about everything. He was recently voted one of the 75 most Influential people of the 21st Century. Creative Leadership, meaning both how to lead creatively and how creative people should lead, is one of the big issues in our industry. More often than not our creative people are appointed on the basis of work they have done, the Lions they have racked up, the Loeries in their cupboard, not leadership ability. Hence the “Mussolini meets Courtney Love they sleep together and have children” style of creative leaders some of us become. He gave me my favourite quote of the festival so far “The grass is always greener on the other side because from far away you can’t see the weeds.” I strongly recommend you get hold of his book “Redesigning leadership“. I found it incredible that a man who is at heart a graphic designer can have the most profound thoughts about redefining leadership. Respect, as they say on the twitter.

I spent much if yesterday afternoon looking at work. The basement hall of the Palais is filled with thousands of pieces of work on display boards, all the shortlisted work in every category. What astonished me was a lot of the work that didn’t win. This was partly because I have residual feelings about the quality of my own work that didn’t win. Nevertheless inspiration, and not winning, remains the true purpose and meaning of Cannes now. Although the organizers will have you think differently.

Last night’s ceremony was a mix of the sublime and the utterly ridiculous.

First up were the endlessly sublime Design Lions. Design is varied and pure and wonderful and just so bloody easy to love. The “Tree Concert” from BBDO Germany for Friends of the Earth will make you happy. The Nike “House of Innovation” window display at Selfridges from Staat Creative in the Netherlands is a beautiful example of what well-crafted digital display can do for retail. The design Lions had integrity and beauty and wonderfully pure craft simply oozing out of every fold and fissure.

The work for 9 Suns Winery made me say the F-bomb to myself slowly.the Grand Prix was an annual report “Self Scan Report” from the wonderful people at ServicePlan Munich. Who would have thought an annual report for a large supermarket chain could win a Grand Prix at Cannes. Not me, I’d try and chuck that brief at some low level junior design minion every time. Yet the Self Scan report is quite brilliant and hugely simple.

Then came the Press Lions. Sandwiched between Cyber and Design, Print is always on a hiding to nothing. Print is fighting for relevance. Print is fighting for its life to be honest. Print is the dinosaur that doesn’t know the goddamn asteroid is about to hit the earth and block out the sun. It seems like the Press Jury may have just decided to speed up the demise of the medium. They followed in a long tradition of utterly crap Grand Prix decisions with their choice of the iPad mini ad for Apple. The Chairman of the Press Jury Marcello Serpa said that the ad was “deceptively simple”. No, Mr Serpa, it was just deceptively shit. Good God. Amongst the Golds were some ads for The Times of India with a pun that wouldn’t get past my junior account man. There was some really great work too, work that was much more deserving of the Grand Prix. The Bayer campaign from AlmapBBDO was lovely and funny and deserved Gold. The campaign for Beijing Sport Radio was cool too. It’s worth looking at the work that that they skipped over in the Silvers and Bronzes (a lot if it admittedly South African), lots of potential Golds there too, perhaps even a likely Grand Prix, but what the heck do I know.

Radio was next. We are “traditionally strong” in radio. It is our security blanket. It disguises our inadequacies in digital and mobile and direct and promo and integrated and cyber. And yes, thankfully, we won Lions in radio. Some superb stuff once again for Mercedes by Net#work BBDO had SA picking up a couple of Golds, the only ones so far for South Africa. There were a few other Golds really worth listening to. First up the AutoTune spot for Dove out of Ogilvy London, the Press Jury should listen to that if they are interested in what deceptively simple really means. The New Zealanders from Draft FCB in Auckland pulled a genius fast one on a local radio station for Prime Television in a radio stunt called Call Girl. And, cue drum roll, brass section, high stepping can can girls, the Radio Grand Prix went to … Dumb Ways to Die. That’s 3 Grand Prix lions and counting for McCann Melbourne, I wouldn’t like to be the finance person that tries to go through their per diems.

Cyber was the last category if the evening. Gone were the websites and games and screen based tricks of the past. Cyber now is all about beautiful crafted and layered film experiences, massively immersive, hugely interactive, multi platformed, add appropriate buzzword here. We need to start looking at digital the same way we see TV : big budget productions with long timelines and massive amounts of effort and craft. If we don’t then Mr Warsop’s Champagne will sit on that creaky leather for a very long time. I felt a bit like the frisky guy in the 10 000 Meters at the Olympics who thinks he really has a good chance and then gets lapped by 12 Kenyans early on in the race. Amphibiox for Geox Shoes from SMFB Oslo was a great example of big budget film values being applied to digital. The Martin Agency produced Clouds over Cuba and showed everyone the future of the documentary – take a good look at this piece, it is truly remarkable and had us chatting about it for ages. For truly extraordinary visual acrobatics look at Golden Chains for ALB from CLM BBDO Boulogne-Billancourt.

The Cyber Grand Prix went to 2 pieces. The Oreo Daily Twist by Draftfcb New York showed us that the true home of tactical advertising is no longer newspapers but the web. The other Grand Prix went to The Beauty Inside from Pereira & O’Dell, San Francisco, for Intel and Toshiba.

A bit of a lull now until the film Shortlist comes out on Friday. It’s always my favourite day at Cannes, hiding away deep in the screening rooms of the Palais devouring the entire reel of film contenders. Rumours are already flying that “DWTD” has to get it. I would rather see Southern Comfort “Whatever’s Comfortable.” win it. So my money is on the big fat guy in a speedo walking down the beach in leather ankle boots. The team that got a client to buy that spot deserve all the Grand Prix that Cannes can possibly throw at them.

Sent from my iPad

WhateversComfortable

K-Swiss: Blades by Kenny Powers

Kenny Powers is back as the MF CEO of K-Swiss to introduce his magnum f***ing opus, the new K-Swiss new Blades trainers. The clip is almost 5 minutes long but its Friday so take the time to relax and revel in the fun from agency 72andsunny. (Beware strong language).

Watch Kenny’s previous launch for Tubes trainers here.

Cat’s Pride: Kitty’s Massage

Some Friday light entertainment to finish off the week with. The above ad for Cat’s Pride was created by Doner, Detroit. If only they really did give massages.