August 30th, 2010

JJTV #111 – When it comes to Digital, No Cannes Do

Maybe it's just me, but this year's crop of Cyber Lions winners at Cannes don't exactly make me feel too optimistic about Digital creativity and the progress (or lack thereof) we've made.

I don't think the winners were digital at all - at least not by standards of thinking about the Online, Interactive or Web standards.

Judge for yourself:

At best we were talking about Out of Home enhanced by Digital - as opposed to the other way around.

In a nutshell, a giant step backwards imo. and not a great proxy for the future of digital creative.

Do you agree or disagree with me?

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August 30th, 2010

Jaffe Juice #142 – Joel and Jaffe Part 8 – The death of conversation

My friend, colleague, peer and fellow thought leader, Mitch Joel, the man behind Twist Image, Six Pixels of Separation (book, blog) and I have decided to hold monthly conversations, debates and back-and-forths that will dive a little deeper into the Digital Marketing and Social Media landscape. This is our eight conversation and this one focuses on the if we're really having any semblance of a conversation at all in Social Media, or if Marketers have done a great job of selling the invisible (once again).

A little more context (follow the links) can be found here

Enjoy the conversation... 

Listen to it LIVE or download it here

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August 23rd, 2010

JJTV #110 – iPhone Trust Fail

The whole iPhone 4 launch has been a fascinating chapter in an otherwise unblemished success story.

Paying a premium to be "first" works only as long as the customer experience lives up to the high expectations associated with the brand promise.

Antennagate has changed all of this.

Apple has lost a lot of trust and I think we'll see more and more people waiting on the sidelines with future launches.

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August 17th, 2010

Do you like me? Do you really like me? Prove it at next year’s SxSW

Sxswlogo SxSW is - without question - the single biggest gathering of not just all things interactive, music and film in Austin, it's probably the pivot for all of social media and that includes mobile, mobile social (MoSoSo), innovation (augmented reality, chat roulette) and more.

It takes place every March in Austin (Interactive will be March 11-15, 2011) and in true - walk your talk and eat your dog food - style, the agenda is both somewhat crowdsourced and vetted or voted by the attendees (aspiring and actual) using the well known Panel Picker Process (just asked Peter Piper).  PanelPicker_pie_white2 Well, actually 30% is and that's probably exactly the right split with the Advisory Board (40%) and Staff (30%)

This year, besides being roasted by Comedian and TV personality, Brian Posehn, I got off easy by sticking to heavy networking, vegetarian meals at Salt Lick and somewhat consistent consumption of beer (well perhaps my liver and gut would beg to differ). Beercut

In all seriousness, that's unacceptable for me. I want to do more and next year (with your help) I will contribute and participate. Truthfully I was a a rookie in 2010, but in 2011, I have 3 sessions for you to consider:

  1. Flip the Funnel: How to use existing customers to gain new ones. First and most notably, I'm giving my "Flip the Funnel" keynote speech and if you're there and interested, you'll get to attend for free (space permitting), provided you rock the vote and help spread the news. VOTE HERE. Via a little birdie, I also heard that there may be signed copies of the book for attendees. You can also read a little more about the session HERE and watch a small teaser of the book HERE.
  2. Videoblogging: Go from Amateur to Outstanding. I've always been a big believer of walking my talk (SxSW style) and this panel is all learning from some people that have made it - or are building something substantial - using the power of online/Web AND social video. This isn't a 101 panel, but instead one that's designed to address critical/key issues surrounding an explosive category. VOTE HERE.
  3. Is the marketing microsite dead? Um yes. Still need convincing? Then join organizer, Adam Keats from Weber Shandwick, Pepsi's Bonin Bough (who has invested in a few micro or minisites in his time) and myself as we debate, discuss and absolutely disagree. VOTE HERE.

Here's my Powered colleague, Aaron Strout's write up of the Powered-related and relevant panels for your reviewing pleasure and voting preference. It includes the likes of Jen van der Meer, Valeria Maltoni, Mr Strout, Natanya Anderson, Melissa Pierce (in a Powered client, VeriSign-sponsored session) and last but definitely not least, Mr microMARKETING himself, Greg Verdino, who will be doing his book-related razzle-dazzle.

So hopefully you'll be there in 2011 and either way, your support, sharing, posting, e-mailing, statusing, tweets and retweets will go a long way towards making sure I'm Interrupting like only a Chief Interruptor can.

August 16th, 2010

JJTV #109 – Old Spice in 3 minutes or less

Ladies look at your mouse. Now look at me. Now look at your mouse. Now here's a 3 minute succinct precise on the recent Old Spice 30-second conversation starter and social media activation.

All in all. Spicy. Very Spicy.

Key takeaway: We've become really good as social media as a campaign. Jury's still out at our ability to deliver social media as a commitment.

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August 1st, 2010

Sugar, Old Spice…and all things Jaffe Juice

I'm on an Internet. And I don't smell as bad anymore. But am I wearing Old Spice? I debate. You decide.

Exhibit A: I've just written an article on the "Old Spice Guy" campaign. You can check it out on Adweek here. The full text of the Adweek article is below.

Exhibit B: On Friday did my quasi-monthly "debate" with Mitch Joel, where we discussed the campaign, it's social media side, lovers v haters and of course, the "did it work?" component.

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Here's what I learned from the process:

  1. Beware the false prophet.
  2. People want this to succeed for so many reasons. All of them wrong ones.
  3. Mitch Joel is in love with Isaiah Mustapha.
  4. Subverient Chicken called; they want their BMW Films back.
  5. P&G and Wieden may very well be laughing all the way to the bank. Good for them. They deserve it. I'm a fan but not a fan boy.

It's 2010 and apparently what's new is a 73-year-old deodorant.

Fresh off its Grand Prix award at the 2010 Cannes International Advertising Festival, Old Spice is now the talk of the social media town based on its "damn, I wish I'd thought of that" two-day social media blitz, where pitchman Isaiah Mustafa personally responded (scantily clad in nothing but his signature towel) to over 180 contacts who engaged "him" and/or the brand via Twitter, YouTube and Facebook comments.

His correspondents included key "influencers" ranging from Perez Hilton and George Stephanopoulos to Digg's Kevin Rose and Ashton Kutcher. The social media elite (although the list sounds a lot more like traditional celebrities) was swept up in a wave of narcissistic delight, which in turn reflected itself in a mega-amplification of earned media -- the likes of which have probably never been seen so rapidly and explosively. (See also: "Spice It Up - Did the Old Spice Campaign Work?")

To be sure, the commercial itself is good. Not great, but good. OK, maybe great insofar as it is highly creative, engaging, well executed and amidst a sea of clutter, sameness and mediocrity is about as TiVo-proof as the dying seconds of a tied Super Bowl game. But was it worthy of the crème de la crème of the global advertising film elite? Personally I think the beleaguered 30-second spot took another giant step back this year, especially after the BMW Films, "Campaign for Real Beauty," chocolate loving gorillas and Honda "Cog" of yesteryear. This was a great CPG commercial, which you just get the feeling has been done before, only you just can't quite place it. But that's irrelevant, really.

What is relevant is that television advertising will likely never be the same after this particular approach. With a whiff, spray or spritz of 73-year old scent, the 30-second spot became a conversation starter; a means to an end; the first piece of an ever-expanding puzzle.

Gone are the days of the new media zealots begging to be sent to the shoot so they can think about how best to version, adapt and extend the original assets to the fullest extent of online's potential. Gone are the days of lobbying for the social media navel gazers to be FedExed to the set, armed to the hilt with their HD Flip cameras, M-Audio mixers, Verizon MiFi access points and Twitter apps. Gone are the days of simply plonking a commercial on YouTube for bonus "hits."

This is a game changer. Or at least it will be until sales go south, the CMO moves on and the agency realizes it should have locked in Isaiah Mustafa to a long-term contract and now his residual rights alone rival only LeBron James' appearance fees.

But was this ever about sales? If it was, the results from the overarching campaign would seem to indicate a decent amount of groundswell: Although according to SymphonyIRI, in the 52 weeks ending June 13, sales of the featured product, Red Zone After Hours Body Wash, dropped 7 percent, according to Nielsen, over the past three months, sales jumped 55 percent and in the past month, they rose 107 percent. It's hard to determine how much of this was due to an aggressive couponing campaign which was in market simultaneously, but directionally, there does appear to be a correlation between creative resonance, social momentum and sales. (See also: "Old Spice Campaign Smells Like a Sales Success, Too.")

On the flip side, there's the branding argument. Again -- on the surface -- the jury is out on that. The creative brief seems to have been transplanted into the messaging loud and clear: somewhere down the discovery path, an eager account planner noted an insight that Old Spice was over indexing against female millennials (read: Hello ladies. Look at your man . . . now back to me).

I like to use a simple benchmark or litmus test against differentiation: if there had been no reference to a brand in this commercial, would you have known it was for Old Spice? Or if a different brand (competitive such as Axe or otherwise, like Listerine) had replaced Old Spice, would you have been any the wiser? On both counts, I'd say ownership or association is tenuous at best.

And then there's the prime directive for Old Spice (a brand that is otherwise in perceptual purgatory insofar that it is "still" associated with my Grandfather, may he rest in peace): Old Spice: The mark of a man. It's about as persistent and permanent in my impressionable mind as "Just do it."

Hell, just type "Old Spice" into Google and you'll see both the paid and organic results for the brand proudly bragging about a 73-year heritage that might resonate with a 73-year-old man, but surely not on a female millennial.

But again, perhaps none of this is relevant. After all, the campaign is the earned media belle of the ball in 2010. It's the endless BP gushing well (but in a good way). It's a gift to the marketing community presented on a silver platter in terms of how -- finally -- a campaign should be launched and ultimately sustained. It is as close to integrated as we'll ever see.

It isn't exactly what I'd call a "commitment," but I'd like to give both Procter & Gamble and its agency, Wieden + Kennedy, the benefit of the doubt on this one. I actually think Wieden has shown arguably the best understanding and interpretation of social media and advertising integration than any of its competitors -- most notably, Crispin, Porter + Bogusky, which don't seem to move beyond the wham, bam, thank you ma'am of viral fad of the month.

This isn't a perfect program, but it's without question head and shoulders (wait, is that a competitor?) above anything else the tired and lethargic me-too industry has to offer. I won't be buying Old Spice anytime soon, though, unless I receive my gift pack and personalized YouTube response from Isaiah, but both of those are stories for another day.

July 19th, 2010

JJTV #107 – Hubris & Humility in 140 characters or less

Twitter's iPhone App sucks. Yes, they purchased Tweetie and are attempting to go it alone so to speak....but why?

Twitter is going the same way that every other company that came before it went. It's forgetting it's roots, equity and heritage i.e. its community that ultimately crowdsourced Twitter to its perceived supremacy.

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July 16th, 2010

JJTV #106 – The Juice on the iPad

I love to love Apple. I love to hate Apple. I hate to hate Apple. And of course I hate to love Apple as well.

I do love my iPhone though. And I love it enough to wait for the second generation of the iPad before I need to purchase one.

I don't need an overgrown iPhone without the iPhone. At least not yet...

And the same applies to the flawed 4G.

That said...don't ever EVER write off Steve Jobs or Apple!

The iPad is a Jack of all trades and master of some - most notably a video-centric multimedia device. That's probably enough for it to continue to enjoy superior sales, engagement, satisfaction and demand.

Additional link: My blog post on the iPad

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July 6th, 2010

JJTV #105 – The single greatest branding exercise in our time

Google built a mega-global brand with barely a penny spent on marketing and advertising as we know it.

What's the only example of any kind of visual or graphic on their homepage? Their own logo! And who foots the bill for their free impressions and exposure? You (the marketer) and I (the consumer).

Quite brilliant.

In a world where marketers are so fixated on esoteric and meaningless brand minutia like brand guidelines, Google - once again - swims against against the grain and shows that's not just ok, it's pretty damn awesome to mess with the logo.

In this case, it's to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Pac-man (boy do I feel old!)

Bottom line: Google teaches us that even within the lowly keyword text search buy, creativity is as creativity does. It does not discriminate. It has no favorite form. It's all about the idea, it's originality, it's relevance and it's execution.

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June 28th, 2010

Jaffe Juice #139 – Jaffe and Joel Part 6 on Life after the 30-second spot

Can you believe it's Mitch Joel who brings up the "Life after the 30-second spot" topic? It's a subject which is near and dear to my heart, but it's also one that I have some very informed and strong feelings about.

It's a fascinating conversation, which touches on the evoution and future of TV, the very definition of what is TV versus video for example and the critical distinction between content and commercials. There's also an interesting exchange at the end where I talk about Bud United/Bud House, where - even though Mitch says I'm shilling for one of my clients - I ask whether this is digital, social, video or TV advertising. Or not even advertising at all...

If you like these "debates" between Mitch and myself, look out for our tweets about upcoming shows or get alerts via my page on Talkshoe. What's great about listening live is that you can also call in live and we want to encourage more listeners to be active participants.

 Audio comments to +1 206 203-3255. Follow us on Twitter: @jaffejuice and @mitchjoel

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