&vertising blogger
what is andvertising? andvertising is advertising and public relations.
Monday, February 10, 2014
Thursday, February 6, 2014
Required reading for everyone in the C-suite
WANT TO RISE ABOVE THE CACOPHONY THAT’S TODAY’S MARKETPLACE? Start by skim reading this new book. Then consider sharing with C-suite peers like the Chief Financial Officer, the Chief Technology Officer, the Chief Information Officer, the Chief Marketing Officer, the Chief Sales Officer, the Chief Legal Officer and the Chief Human Resource Officer so everybody’s on the same page.
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Timely andvertising advice from some dead guys
L-R: Bill Bernbach, David Ogilvy, Winston Churchill |
Call me old school but I believe what Bill Bernbach preached: “Persuasion in communication is largely an art. It’s wrong to conduct it as a science. When you do, you base everything on research—and you simply can’t research ingenuity, taste and judgement.”
True, quality content is essential. But quality content doesn’t make people feel anything. It’s how you express the quality content that makes the difference.
In 1960, Bill Bernbach could have used an “-st” word to make a positive statement such as: “Volkswagen has the greatest inspection system in the world.” Instead, he dramatized the negative side of the story and chose a five-letter word that sends a shiver down the spine of a new car buyer: “Lemon.” In one brilliant stroke he captured the fact that Volkswagen had a rather remarkable quality control system.
In 1958, David Ogilvy could have picked a nice “-st” word and said, “Rolls Royce is the quietest car in the world.” Instead, he picked a different “-st” word and wrote, “At 60 miles an hour the loudest noise in this new Rolls-Royce comes from the electric clock.”
And in 1940, Winston Churchill could have said, “We owe a lot to the RAF.” Instead he expressed it this way: “Never was so much owed by so many to so few.”
Nothing succeeds like a great idea memorably executed.
Tuesday, February 4, 2014
Content Marketing in 2014
“The content tsunami continues to overwhelm human bandwidth,” writes George Couris, President at Pepper Group.
See his how-to-get-noticed solution here: Going to Market: The Death of Content Marketing?
See his how-to-get-noticed solution here: Going to Market: The Death of Content Marketing?