Monday 27 August 2012

Be simple, be direct!

Marketing is marketing. Art is art. Complicity in marketing doesn’t help to see the point as clear as it is. Creativity in marketing is not being performed for art. Jack Trout’s book, In Search of the Obvious -The Antidote for Today’s Marketing Mess-, tells us clearly and briefly that marketers need to be simple about their objectives. Being simple is not easy, even it is sometimes more difficult. To differentiate, we do not need to loose our way. Ignore ego, avoid from complicated projects. Prefer clarity instead of confusion.

Even Yuce Zerey, interactive marketing manager of Coca Cola Turkey, is underlin

ing the simplicity during his workshops too. Can we say that successfull marketing guys prefer simplicity and responding basic needs in a simple way?

There is no need for mess. Yes/No questions should be answered by Yes or No,

aren’t they? Starting the answer with ‘Because, if, etc.’ shows you that you will walk away from the simplicity at the beginning. If you see it, stop and take a breath. As a marketer, it will help you.

Now, try this one!


One time hype or sustainability?



You can enter a market with a big Show, demand creating slogans , promising claims but by the end of the day what does it have to do with your permanent success?
Success and sustainable development comes with working for your goal, trying to keep your promise and showing effort to reach your target every single day.
If you do not turn your “must do” list into a routine, if you do not wake up every morning remembering your promise either to yourself or to your clients or to your work sno single chance will stand for you to stand!

Here is what the marketing guru Seth Godin wrote about this basing this idea onto a very common subject of our lives: DIETS. Are you one of those who believes in bikini diets to make you look like Adriana Lima or Brad Pitt in 1 month? I guess not us


http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2012/08/crash-diets-and-good-habits.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+typepad%2Fsethsmainblog+%28Seth%27s+Blog%29&utm_content=FaceBook

Thursday 23 August 2012

DNA Project

DNA Project is a non-profit organization which fights against the disturbances of crime scenes. The DNA left in crime scenes has an extreme importance while recognizing the murderers however disturbances in crime scenes have been defined to be at very high rates South Africa.This is why this amazingly clever Project has been brought to life by DNA Project ZA.

The video has been shot in an ordinary day; with the attendance of ordinary citizens at Cape Town train station. Here we see what has happened…


http://dnaproject.co.za/dna-video

Sunday 12 August 2012

BOOK versus TV!




Television, still the most popular entertainment and communication medium all over the world. It is obvious that will not loose it’s royalty for a long long time. It was invented in England- Hastings (1923) by a Scotish inventor John Logie Baird. Did he
know this talking and glowing box will become the power of world? Not sure.
Books, old friend of ours… Do you know that the oldest library known is Nineveh (700 BC) constructed by the order of a Neo-Assyrian Emperor Asurbanipal. More than 2.500 years before the invention of TV.. but still they need to work harder than TV to keep going, rite? When did you last read a book page? And when did you last watch TV?
How ironic, this very small town of England – where the TV was invented – ha
s started the war of books against TV with the smallest – recycled library of the world! Very famous Red Box is now serving as public library for everyone to show TV is not the only choice of 21st century!
Inventor of this fantastic box, called TV, England, is now taking the first step to overturn the royalty of it!

Wednesday 8 August 2012

McDonald’s Tries to Make a Happy Meal of the 2012 Olympics


When you think about the Golden Arches, the first thing that leaps to mind may not be zero-fat bodies launching themselves at athletic glory. But McDonald’s is shooting for a spot among the content strategy winners at this summer’s Olympic games.

Case in point: the company’s video short “Rivals” — For the Olympic Spirit in Us All.

http://contently.com/blog/mcdonalds-tries-to-make-a-happy-meal-of-the-2012-olympics-video/

“Para los McNuggets?” says one child to another, pointing at a tree in the distant yellow grass, to which they then run. Presumably the winner gets all the chicken.

“Happy Meal?” asks another little girl of her soon-to-be competitor friend, the sun flushing the sky behind a pair of palm trees on an idyllic sandy beach. They too set off in a neck-and-neck break, all to win a boxed-up supper prize.

At the short’s end, U.S. and German Olympic basketball players stride past the five colored rings, and, yes, they make a french-fry winner’s wager from the bench. Just beyond the lockers, a roaring London crowd awaits them.

“It’s a tough stretch, at best,” says Peter Shankman, chief executive of The Geek Factory, a Manhattan-based social media and marketing strategy firm. He’s not optimistic about McDonald’s effort to link fast food with global champions of sport.

“It’s just not going to work,” he said. “People know what McDonald’s is, and it is what it is.”

You can’t seem to tell McDonald’s that, however. The fast food empire seems intent on altering some of the possible perceptions about its brand.

In an announcement at the start of the Games, company executives said the restaurant chain was making a push not only to celebrate the idea of serving its foods to athletes, but also to promote new menu selections that align the brand with better health.

To help sell that idea, they’re taking the message to social media.

In another YouTube video, McDonald’s Executive Chef Dan Coudreaut is picking out fresh vegetables at a market. He chooses an eggplant — an item that may or may not, one can’t help but think, ever appear on a McDonald’s menu — and then he introduces a cooking segment.


The recipe, created by a young winner of a challenge to incorporate “fun” fruits and veggies ideas into meals, is called ”Champion Chicken Sticks with Olympic Spirit Sauce and Salad.”

Essentially, it’s skewered chicken with a salad on the side, and a soy-and-marmalade dressing. A crowd of children look on as the duo cooks this. “That is awesome,” Coudreaut tells the younger chef.

Other content that McDonald’s is creating for its online marketing of the Olympic sponsorship is at once more conventional and sometime just a bit oblique.

In a film series titled The Best of Our Best, its employees walk about London and do things somewhat connected to themes such as engagement and friendship. There’s nothing to do with food, really.


On Flickr, as posted by McDonaldsCorp, a series of photos shows a Mayor McCheese figurine in front of Olympic events and city landmarks. He’s kind of cute. But he’s not cooking healthy grub.

All of this comes in the context of International Olympics President Jacques Rogge publicly questioning whether McDonald’s, and other products that dwell in the same basic neck of the woods, such as Coca-Cola, can actually synch up with the Olympics as sponsors and prove a good fit, saying there was a “question mark” about the prospect.

Later, however, he told the London papers: the Olympics needs the money. And Rogge subsequently backed down about any questions, citing Coke and McDonald’s as bringing “forward the spirit of the Olympic Games through creative and engaging global programs that promote physical activity and the values that the Olympic Games are all about.”

And that’s the way McDonald’s sees it, as the company told the Guardian in July: “Sponsorship is essential to the successful staging of the Olympic and Paralympic Games and we’re proud of our involvement with London 2012″.

Or, as Chef Coudreaut says, in the company’s content, in connection with his work at the Olympics Park kitchen: “As a food company passionate about innovative tastes and balanced eating, we are doing more to cultivate kids’ and parents’ understanding of food preparation and quality ingredients.”

By James O'Brien, under Case Studies, Trends. James O'Brien writes about content strategy, technology, business, and travel. He is a correspondent for Boston University's Research Magazine.