Last week I was wondering if invention, in marketing, is dead. Well, rest easy my friends; my faith has been restored.
I first saw this on Seth Godin’s site; it’s the eye-opening video that shows how the radiation from four cell phones can pop corn.
Speculation raged and over the course of roughly a month it was viewed by 4 million people. The marketing community started to debate what company was behind this obvious(?) viral campaign. Earlier this week we were answered:
Cardo Systems, a manufacturer of bluetooth headsets was behind the whole thing, raising awareness for how their headsets reduce 99% of power output.
This is a stellar campaign. I am green with envy that they came up with this and executed flawlessly. However, I will be interested to see if it impacts sales at all and I hope they close the loop and let us know.
Regardless, it is already successful. After all, did you know who Cardo Systems was before this?
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I started following the writing of Ariel Waldman a few weeks back. Her site, Shake Well Before Use, covers a lot of marketing ground. She is quickly becoming one of my favorite blogs to read (I just wish she’d post more!).
Anyway, she shared this Father’s Day ad that had me appreciating the art of the copywriter. (Although, if every kid is awesome as my daughter you can’t be too upset by the outcome…)
http://tastyburger.files.wordpress.com/2008/06/durex.jpg
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It was a pretty hectic week. I’m sure we all had one. A lot of ‘floods, broken levees, destroyed corn crops, raised gas prices, midwest damaged, Continental cutting, Tim Russert’s dead’ news. So I just wanted to go numb on the couch tonight with some Molson and mindless YouTube. And guess what I found, courtesy of bonniegrrl (via Twitter):
How have I not seen this? At least now I have. And you have too. Happy Friday. And happy Father’s Day!
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One of the best things about being a dad is sharing the joy of reading with your kids. I love reading with my daughter. I like to see the parts she laughs at, smiles at - and I like to see when she tries to read it back to me. She wants to tell me the story. She doesn’t have to read the story to tell it, she just ‘reads’ what she sees on the page.
That’s the beauty of storytelling - telling someone, in your own way, what you’re seeing. This makes me reflect, in sadness, on what the passing of Jim McKay means, especially to those who have a great respect for fantastic journalism.
I’m not going to write about McKay’s accomplishments; many people more qualified and more talented than me have written about that. But I am thinking of the art of storytelling that might have died with McKay.
I watched some of his old footage from Wide, Wide World of Sports and the Olympics. The way he described where he was visiting served as the only picture many people had seen of his location. For example, when he went to Moscow he painted such a picture for people that had never even glimpsed at the feared region. We may never experience that again. The Internet has eliminated that. We have seen all there is to see. And if there’s something we haven’t seen all we have to do is visit YouTube moments after it happens.
As marketers, we need to remember this. The bar has been raised in how we tell our story. We need to be so compelling in doing so that you put a picture in your audience’s mind they can’t shake. There’s more to doing that than putting a picture on a Web site and letting people draw their own conclusions.
Sometimes it pays to study the classics.
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