Friday, 14 December 2012
Felix Jump
Naked Truth
Thursday, 13 December 2012
Consumer & The Digital Universe
Friday, 7 December 2012
Result Oriented ‘Motivation’ Campaign for Russian Politicians
Artichoke Breaker
Friday, 30 November 2012
The Power of Words
More than a Moneybox!
Sunday, 16 September 2012
Donuts explained in Social Media terms.
What is that?! Oh, it’s an outdoor ad.
Outdoor advertising is being forced to be more and more creative. It must take attentions by giving the right message. But how? In Istanbul, Turkey; an insurance company’s outdoor advertising is taking attentions by the ‘thief’ climbing the balcony! Insurance company is underlining the need of an insurance - because robbery is everywhere, even thieves can try to rob their own office-. ‘’Before thieves’ arrival to you, you come to us.’’is the copy of the ad. The ad is net, simple and quite remarkable.
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.
One time hype or sustainability?
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…
Thursday, 16 August 2012
Why YOUR COMPANY should be on Pinterest
Sunday, 12 August 2012
BOOK versus TV!
Wednesday, 8 August 2012
McDonald’s Tries to Make a Happy Meal of the 2012 Olympics
Monday, 6 August 2012
Wednesday, 1 August 2012
Gustavo Sousa uses the Olympic rings for infographics on the 5 continents. Very nice! #Olympics #ringabell
Tuesday, 29 May 2012
Blippar
Asos Magazine March edition utilised the blippar platform to add an interactive layer to their editorial pages allowing users to 'blipp' items of clothing and see them from all angles with a 'one-click' buy mechanic. Users were also given access to exclusive video content.
Blippar has helped Mercedes-Benz create the world’s first ever augmented reality advertising campaign in car showrooms as part of the ‘Escape The Map’ campaign. The TV ad for the campaign was launched during the weekend, following character Marie as she becomes trapped in her C63 AMG Coupé car in a version of Streetview.
Have a look at what is possible in this video.
NANHI KALI - A GIRL STORY
Monday, 14 May 2012
CC Skydive Team
Dale Ashwell, Mohammed Al Fahel, Claire Brimacombe, Raji Joy John, Mario Christopher, Jude Christopher |
The Skydive Dubai staff were very professional in getting us up to speed on the do's and don'ts of skydiving. Before too long we were almost super human. The experience was literally out of this world! Some of us will be doing it again for sure!!
Mario Christopher with Skydive Master Freddy doing a tandem dive with the Palm Jumeirah in the background. |
The view from up there is simply breath taking. The Palm Jumeirah, the Marina, JBR and all the supporting buildings seemed so irrelevant from 10,000 ft above. The sound that silence makes, or the lack of sound itself was another amazing experience!
Look & Feel
Sunday, 6 May 2012
Annual Investment Meeting (AIM 2012)
The three-day Annual Investment Meeting (AIM) brings together 45 ministers and deputy ministers from emerging market countries and frontier markets, along with project promotors from 60 countries, with the aim to increase bilateral trade and spur foreign direct investments.
In her opening speech of the forum, Sheikha Lubna Bint Khalid Al-Qassimi, Minister of Foreign Trade of the United Arab Emirates (UAE), quoted the International Monetary Fund's forecast that the world economy would grow by 3.5 percent in 2012 amid a "breadth of optimism." This year's AIM is held under the topic "Financing Possibilities in Frontier and Emerging Markets."
Sheikh Maktoum bin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Deputy Ruler of Dubai and President of the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) and over 100 UAE dignitaries, ambassadors and CEOs were present at the inaugural session.
http://www.aimcongress.com/index.php
Sunday, 15 April 2012
A commercial in fewer than 140 characters.
Wednesday, 4 April 2012
Can you read this?
Monday, 19 March 2012
Chaleo Yoovidhya, Red Bull Co-Founder and Thailand’s 3rd-Richest Man, Dies
Tuesday, 13 March 2012
Symantec - AMIT VP (CXO Event)
Monday, 12 March 2012
Budweiser @ The Underground Pub, Dubai.
Wednesday, 29 February 2012
Recreate your first car.
Tuesday, 14 February 2012
Tuesday, 7 February 2012
I am a Lousy Copywriter
British-born David Ogilvy was one of the original, and greatest, "ad men." In 1948, he started what would eventually be known as Ogilvy & Mather, the Manhattan-based advertising agency that has since been responsible for some of the world's most iconic ad campaigns, and in 1963 he even wrote Confessions of an Advertising Man, the best-selling book that is still to this day considered essential reading for all who enter the industry. Time magazine called him "the most sought-after wizard in today's advertising industry" in the early-'60s; his name, and that of his agency, have been mentioned more than once in Mad Men for good reason.
With all that in mind, being able to learn of his routine when producing the very ads that made his name is an invaluable opportunity. The fascinating letter below, written by Ogilvy in 1955 to a Mr. Ray Calt, offers exactly that.
April 19, 1955
Dear Mr. Calt:
On March 22nd you wrote to me asking for some notes on my work habits as a copywriter. They are appalling, as you are about to see:
1. I have never written an advertisement in the office. Too many interruptions. I do all my writing at home.
2. I spend a long time studying the precedents. I look at every advertisement which has appeared for competing products during the past 20 years.
3. I am helpless without research material—and the more "motivational" the better.
4. I write out a definition of the problem and a statement of the purpose which I wish the campaign to achieve. Then I go no further until the statement and its principles have been accepted by the client.
5. Before actually writing the copy, I write down every conceivable fact and selling idea. Then I get them organized and relate them to research and the copy platform.
6. Then I write the headline. As a matter of fact I try to write 20 alternative headlines for every advertisement. And I never select the final headline without asking the opinion of other people in the agency. In some cases I seek the help of the research department and get them to do a split-run on a battery of headlines.
7. At this point I can no longer postpone the actual copy. So I go home and sit down at my desk. I find myself entirely without ideas. I get bad-tempered. If my wife comes into the room I growl at her. (This has gotten worse since I gave up smoking.)
8. I am terrified of producing a lousy advertisement. This causes me to throw away the first 20 attempts.
9. If all else fails, I drink half a bottle of rum and play a Handel oratorio on the gramophone. This generally produces an uncontrollable gush of copy.
10. The next morning I get up early and edit the gush.
11. Then I take the train to New York and my secretary types a draft. (I cannot type, which is very inconvenient.)
12. I am a lousy copywriter, but I am a good editor. So I go to work editing my own draft. After four or five editing’s, it looks good enough to show to the client. If the client changes the copy, I get angry—because I took a lot of trouble writing it, and what I wrote I wrote on purpose.
Altogether it is a slow and laborious business. I understand that some copywriters have much greater facility.
Yours sincerely,
D.O.
Sunday, 5 February 2012
Mark Zuckerberg’s 6 Ingredients For Success
Leadership guru Warren Bennis asked whether leaders are born or made. When asked if Wall Street would accept a young Mark Zuckerbergin his early 20s as CEO, Facebook investor Peter Thiel said: “Well, we’ll wait until he’s over 25 to file”. Wise move, considering that Mark’s title on his business cards read “I’m CEO, bitch”.
This week Facebook filed its S-1 to go public. Mark is 27. How Mark managed to launch a social networking site after Friendster had crashed during MySpace’s zenith has been widely chronicled. What’s been less discussed is how Mark mastered the six requirements to succeed, namely Ambition, Vision, Determination, Execution, Luck and Timing.
Ambition
“The tallest blade of grass is the first to be cut by the scythe”, Russian Proverb
The foundation and building block of any successful person is Ambition, or the desire for personal achievement.
People are driven by success, recognition, respect, money, power or fame. If you believe everything in The Social Network, Mark launched Facebook to level the playing field at Harvard and to succeed at getting girls. Success is relative, subjective and fluid; over time Mark’s definition of success grew to match his brainchild’s imprint.
Wearing your ambition on your sleeve will get you cut off at the knees, but ambition is required to succeed; the challenge is channeling it properly and managing your emotions around it. When the Winklevoss twins first hired Mark to build their social networking site, Mark never revealed his ambitions to build his own site. It was only later – far too late for the Winklevoss – that Mark revealed his true ambition.
Vision
A design glitch allowed MySpace users to customize their profiles. But that mixed blessing created a cacophonous environment which made users welcome Facebook’s clean interface.
Facebook wasn’t visionary in any revolutionary sense of the word. Where Facebook deserves credit was that Mark et al. recognized the need for a real directory of people, not merely users. Before Facebook it was nearly impossible to actually find people, you could “google” them but finding the person you wanted within one search wasn’t a given. We now take it for granted, but that extension of people search and connecting them was certainly evolutionary, and it’s worth noting that most successes are not radically new but extensions and improvements of existing paradigms.
The critics may note that Mark sometimes lacked charisma. In this context, charisma is a subset of vision: it allows you to convince others to buy into your vision, but charisma in and of itself is not a requirement to succeed, it’s an accelerant or amplifier. In Mark’s case, he has had the good fortune to let Facebook’s massive growth rates do the talking for him.
Execution
“Stay Focused, Keep Shipping”, Mark Zuckerberg
When you look back to Facebook’s functionality when it launched, it was bare bones. Facebook has added features while scaling users, literally changing jet engines at 30,000 feet without missing a beat. It’s easy to laugh at missteps like Beacon or the privacy dossier and fail to appreciate the velocity at which Facebook has evolved and grown.
Determination
To quote President Calvin Coolidge:
“Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination are omnipotent. The slogan ‘press on’ has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race.”
Back in 1995, Steve Jobs added: “I’m convinced that about half of what separates the successful entrepreneurs from the non-successful ones is pure perseverance”.
Determination, drive, tenacity or persistence is the most important variable, demonstrated by Mark through his: relentless coding early on to launch Facebook to catch the Winklevoss brothers off guard; adding colleges; attacking MySpace; defending against the subsequent lawsuit from the twins; repeated encroaching into people’s privacy (which remains one of Mark’s Achilles heels). But, to his credit, he has repeatedly not cared or believed in himself enough to charge ahead no matter what. Mark is a constant reminder that it’s easier to ask for forgiveness than for permission.
So those were the first four traits: largely innate, can be learned, and things you can control. But without the next two, you won’t succeed.
Luck
“A great fortune depends on luck, a small one on diligence”, Chinese Proverb
In sports and in business, luck can be your best friend or your undoing.
Let’s face it: Mark’s had a horseshoe up his butt. Luck made him run into Sean Parker, who introduced him to Peter Thiel, without whom as an ally and first outside investor it’s unlikely he would have remained CEO to this day.
But you create your own luck, or when lady luck smiles down on you, you seize the opportunity.
Timing
Google wasn’t the first search engine, YouTube wasn’t the first video sharing site and Facebook certainly wasn’t the first social network. Geocities, Tripod, Friendster, Tribe Networks, MySpace are just some that come to mind.
Mark’s managed the clock all along: slowing down the Winklevoss brothers; launching Facebook on Harvard first to then expand to other colleges; relocating to California; refusing Viacom and Yahoo!’s offers; closing his deal with Microsoft.
While the comparisons to Google’s IPO are understandable, Google ushered a new Internet Bull run whereas Facebook’s is coming at the tail end of Zynga, Groupon, LinkedIn, Demand Media and Pandora’s – none of which have fared particularly well.
However, much like Google’s IPO made it the Internet stock bellwether, Facebook will become the de facto stock pick of individual and institutional investors, pushing demand to justify the lofty price-to-earnings and price-to-sales multiples.
There you have it: success = ambition + vision + execution + persistence + luck + timing; with the first four being things you can control and the last two being externalities that you cannot.
While I’ve praised and criticized him and Facebook, as a fellow entrepreneur, Mark is someone all builders look up to and admire despite his obvious mistakes – reminding me of the Michael Jordan quote: “I’ve failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed.”
Sunday, 29 January 2012
The Two Monks: A Lesson On The Power Of The Question!
Wednesday, 25 January 2012
Innovative wedding card
The card (www.cometokochi.in) titled 'Come to Kochi' is an elaborate website with entertaining images and witty text centered on the wedding. The site is adorned with photos of the couple and their respective families, and a rhyme that spells out the saga of how they met and fell in love. This gives the entire card a very personal touch.
The practical side of things has been taken care of with equal enthusiasm. The site has a side menu pertaining to aspects such as the venue, ways to get there, accommodation, and things guests can do after the celebrations. The main site is hyperlinked to websites such as Cleartrip.com, Redbus.in, and Google Maps, thus offering detailed travel aid to the guests, who can pick their desired mode of transport -- air, train, or road.
Highway training made mandatory for new drivers.
Dubai: Training to drive on the highway for a minimum of two hours has been made mandatory to obtain a driving licence in Dubai, officials announced yesterday.
"After passing the road test, drivers will now have to undergo driving lessons along the highway, with trainers beside them, before they are issued a driver's licence," said Ahmad Hashim Behroozian, CEO of the Roads and Transport Authority's (RTA) Licensing Agency.
"This will ascertain the drivers' ability to cope with the vehicle as well as other vehicles on the road."
He was speaking at the launch of the unified curriculum for all driving institutes in Dubai.
The unified curriculum for training and qualifying those wishing to obtain driving licences for light motor vehicles has been distributed to all institutes and has been put into effect since the start of this year, he said.
Training on the highway is just one of the changes the new curriculum will introduce. Other significant changes include mandatory night driving lessons and lessons on sudden braking in case of emergency situations.
"It is a complete training package, which takes the learner from attitude development and road safety awareness to vehicle familiarisation, from driving in simple to complex road networks to night driving until finally to freeway driving."
At present, every driving school has its own curriculum. "They all cover the major skills but by unifying we have put a structure around the training process and based on this the schools can come up with improvements," Behroozian said.
The new curriculum — delivered in Arabic, English and Urdu — has two components. The theoretical component comprises eight basic lectures and videos — including road rules, attitude and accident case studies — which are mandatory for trainees to attend as they cover safety standards and groom them to become able drivers, he said. The practical component comprises five basic stages including emergency braking, parking exercises, night driving and highway driving.
No additional costs
The number of mandatory lessons will still continue to be 40 lessons. This way the curriculum will not mean any additional costs for the trainees, Behroozian said, adding that the drivers will benefit from better training at the same cost.
The curriculum will follow a systematic progressive teaching method, whereby trainees will have to demonstrate their proficiency before being allowed to progress to the next step.
Three specific areas along the highway have been identified by RTA for training drivers, Hussain Al Saffar, Director of Drivers Training and Qualification department at the RTA, told Gulf News.
The road connecting the Business Bay crossing to Al Hadiqa Road, Emirates Road from near the Sharjah boundary up to Al Aweer Interchange and Al Aweer road leading towards Hatta are the areas identified.
"While driving along the highway, trainees will not be assessed because they would already have passed the road test. But the training is a means of managing risk on the highways," he said.
Asked if the new curriculum will make it easier or harder for aspiring drivers, Sultan Al Marzouqi, Director of the Drivers Licensing department, said that the RTA's focus is on allowing only safe drivers on the roads.
"The pass rate at driving tests has more than doubled recently, going from 17 per cent on average between 2008 and 2010 to 30 per cent in 2011. Accidents and deaths have also come down. This means drivers are being trained better," he said.