TRANSPORT FOR LONDON AD CAMPAIGN SPOOFED

Posted: Friday, 19 November 2010 by Waqy Matloob in
0

Transport for London's "Together for London" poster campaign has been ambushed by pranksters who have manipulated the official cartoons to show new messages.
Spoof campaign manipulates Transport for London's
The advertising campaign, which features rounded cartoon characters promising, among other things, not to play loud music or eat smelly food, graces London’s tubes and buses.
The real adverts appeal to people to respect their fellow commuters, with the slogan: "What will you do? A little thought from each of us. A big difference for everyone".
While it is not the first time the "little thoughts" have been manipulated, a fresh batch of post-coalition slogans has begun to appear across the capital.
These spoof characters (pictured) were spotted on the Number 73 bus route and had been pasted into the bus's advertising slot so professionally it was thought they could be the latest official posters. They read: "I won't confront the state", "And I won't dissent".
Spoof ad campaign running of Transport for London's
The guerrilla campaign comes in spite of the well-positioned CCTV cameras that are fitted in all London buses.
A spokesman for TfL said: "We are aware of some instances of offensive stickers being placed on posters on a few of London's Buses.  The posters will be removed as soon as they are reported and TfL is investigating."
The original campaign was launched by then-London mayor Ken Livingstone in 2008, alongside a mini-film created by Leaving Las Vegas director Mike Figgis.
The three-minute film was screened in around 800 London cinemas, while the poster campaign was developed by M&C Saatchi.
The advertising group is also responsible for the TFL 'tube or false' campaign currently featured on tube lines that asks historical questions about the London underground.
The questions include: "One night during WWII 177,500 Londoners slept in tube stations - true or false?".
It is true; during the war the London Underground installed 22,000 bunk beds, washroom facilities and ran trains that supplied seven tonnes of food and 2,400 gallons of tea and cocoa every night.
According to TFL's website there were even special stations with libraries, evening classes, films and musical events.

Together for London” campaign
Together for London

Digital technology and social networking breathe new life into advertising

Posted: Monday, 15 November 2010 by Waqy Matloob in
0

Agencies seek to engage potential customers with interactivity and dialogue

A scene from the advert for the Toyota Auris.

Under a railway arch in Shoreditch, east London, on a dark September evening, a crowd gathered to watch an advertising shoot for the new Toyota Auris Hybrid. The commercial – which involved a crew of 45 and seven projectors – used a complex technique known as projection mapping to throw a mix of "keyframe, 2D, 3D, algorithmic and dynamic animation" on to an Auris, bringing the car to life in a blaze of pulsing ice blue lights.
Made by the digital agency glue Isobar, "Get Your Energy Back" set out to dramatise the technology within the car, which recycles energy as it drives. Glitzy and costly TV car ads are nothing new, of course, but what sets the Auris campaign apart is that it wasn't conceived as a 30-second TV spot. Rather the Shoreditch event itself, along with its digital afterlife, was the advert.
The event was repeated on a loop that night and watched by handpicked influencers, including key bloggers, plus passers-by who were encouraged to film it on their phones and share pictures and footage on social networking sites. "Some of those videos were getting 6,000-7,000 views, so [the event] created its own buzz," says Andy Kinsella, glue's innovation director. "We could track the reaction online and store it all on a campaign hub. It wasn't your typical Toyota brand communication where it's 'Sell the car, sell the car!'. Nowadays great advertising builds communities and inspires participation. It gives people a reason to interact with a brand."
From branded events and art installations to social network-based innovations such as peer-to-peer recommendations and "real time" geo-location promotions, the advertising industry is being rebooted. Traditional agencies are scrambling to reinvent themselves, as brands seek to open digital "conversations" with their customers. "The industry has gone through a massive flux and the pace isn't easing up at all," says Kinsella.
In the process, modes of advertising such as digital and "experiential", once viewed as experimental add-ons, have become mainstream – and even, as with the Auris shoot, the entire campaign. It is a seismic shift, says Fernanda Romano, the global creative director of digital and experiential advertising at Euro RSCG, that is long overdue. "In Brazil we have a saying that if the water hits your ass then you'd better start swimming. The tipping point was last year when the massive advertisers – Unilever, Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola, Sony and PepsiCo – really got scared about the internet and started to put a load of money into digital.
"Finally, the brand owners – the CEOs and CMOs [marketing heads] - and the mainstream agencies understood that digital is not an afterthought, it has to be at the core of advertising, because that's where many people are living today."
Last month, the adam & eve agency and the digital specialists upsetmedia broke new ground by covering the full spectrum from branded art installation to commercial microsite in a campaign for John Lewis. Johnlewisharmony.com was launched as a live interactive display on London's South Bank, with a 3D house filled with rooms lit by the department store's lighting products.
The Guillemots' Fyfe Dangerfield performed, with a synchronised lighting display. Over the ensuing 18 hours, passers-by queued at a touchscreen to choose from 10m songs, with their choices then lighting up the house like an audiovisual jukebox – in effect, writing with light. The online campaign allowed visitors to click through to the products.
"This was about putting advertising in an art space," says Matt Cook, upsetmedia's co-founder. "The South Bank get a lot of requests to do branded promotions, but they turn most of them down for being too corporate and they have an arts-based remit. We were able to put our installation in there because it was primarily an experiential public event."
The event generated social media traffic, with visitors posting pictures and sharing songs. Cook says the venture offered the client benefits unobtainable in traditional advertising: "They can get very specific information about their customers from the website – such as which products they're going to, in what sort of numbers." He adds: "We always try to have a Facebook component to what we do. One of the first things clients say to us now is 'how will this help us populate our social media platforms?'"
Populating social media platforms is a specialty of Stockholm- and Amsterdam-based Perfect Fools, a digital shop that produces quirky, disruptive content. In October, its Skittles campaign "Dazzle the Rainbow", created with TBWA London and Academy Films, featured the stunt artist David Phoenix challenging the Facebook community to submerge him in the sweets over 24 hours in a central London shop-front. Every visitor who clicked through to the live event via the Skittles Facebook page (which has 1.65m "Likes"), added Skittles that were then showered on Phoenix every 15 minutes. "It ended up taking about 10 hours to completely cover him," says Patrick Gardner, Perfect Fools' chief executive. "The job was done with 1.8m Skittles."
"The shift to social is about growing and deepening a conversation with a group of people who are interested in your brand," he explains. "Instead of just running campaigns which say 'Buy our product' and 'Here's our latest message', it's about maintaining a long-term discussion, fuelling it with entertaining things to talk about. The smartest brands today are developing robust Facebook groups with up to millions of active users."
But Facebook groups with content-filled branded pages just "scratch the surface of possibilities with social media", says Euro RSCG's Romano. In particular, she predicts peer-to-peer recommendation – especially the Facebook "Like" button – will be one of two new frontiers for the industry, with social platforms using Facebook friends to recommend brands.
"Facebook knows a lot about me, and the more details I put on my profile, the more it knows," she says. "So if I 'like' a new soft drink, then they'll go to friends with the same likes and interests as me and market the product using my endorsement. This is potentially an incredible 'machine', where brands are not doing the advertising, but your friends are."
Similarly, GPS-enabled smartphones mean that when people check in on Facebook Places or Foursquare, virtual lives and real lives converge, she says. "Until now, what was missing was being able to connect where we are physically to where we are online, in real time. That allows for so many things to happen. For instance, when I arrive in Heathrow and you check in on Foursquare, shops – knowing my likes – could contact me with special offers."
It may all sound a little too close to the movie Minority Report, in which personalised ads holler at Tom Cruise from billboards. But this isn't sci-fi any more. In many ways, a rebooted ad industry is already there.

M&S Christmas campaign 2010

Posted: Friday, 5 November 2010 by Waqy Matloob in
0


Dannii, Twiggy, Lisa Snowdon, VV Brown, a Victoria's Secret model and Peter Kay... time for another M&S Christmas campaign

By MAYSA RAWI
Last updated at 9:54 AM on 2nd November 2010

The usual M&S suspects have rounded up again for a glamorous new Christmas campaign.
The feel-good advert, starring the retail chain's models Dannii Minogue, Twiggy, Lisa Snowdon, Ana Beatriz Barros, VV Brown also includes Jamie Redknapp - and Peter Kay.
The 90-second ad sees the celebrity cast dancing to a Bee Gees track You Should Be Dancing, but the comedian was reportedly kept in the dark about his dance routine until he arrived on set.
Girls on film: Lisa Snowdon, left, Dannii Minogue and VV Brown star in the new M&S Christmas campaign
Girls on film: Lisa Snowdon, left, Dannii Minogue and pop singer VV Brown star in the new M&S Christmas campaign
star cast: Jamie Redknapp, left, VV Brown, Danni, Twiggy, Peter Kay, Ana Beatrix Barros and Lisa Snowdon
All star cast: Jamie Redknapp, pop singer VV Brown, Dannii, Twiggy, Peter Kay, Ana Beatriz Barros and Lisa Snowdon
Peter, who displayed his impressive dancing skills with two other models, said: 'Has anyone noticed that I'm the odd one out here?'
Despite his insecurities, he gained Twiggy as a fan, who claimed she couldn't keep a straight face during her scenes with the Phoenix Nights actor.
Ex footballer Jamie was let off the hook, opting to 'play the DJ' rather than have to put his lack of rhythm to the test.



Retro chic: Dannii, left, Lisa and Twiggy strike a pose in the new fashion collection
Party time: Some of the dancing sequence takes place in the disco to BeeGees track Feel Like Dancing
Party time: Some of the dancing sequence takes place in the disco to Bee Gees track You Should Be Dancing 
The dynamic sequence kicks off with the girls in a dance studio, choreographed by Peter Kay in a Fame-style scene.
The lively montage also sees X Factor judge Dannii and presenter Lisa in 1920s style flapper dresses, dancing the Charleston, and Victoria's Secret model Ana Beatriz strutting her stuff in sexy lingerie in a similar sequence to Beyonce's Single Ladies.
The lingerie bit: Victoria's Secret model Ana Beatriz shows off her model behaviour
The lingerie bit: Victoria's Secret model Ana Beatriz shows off her model behaviour
Dannii, Lisa and VV are seen in their pyjamas, singing into their hairbrushes, while Twiggy and Peter Kay tussle for the limelight dressed in slick tuxedos, reminiscent of Madonna's music video Vogue.
Jamie stars as a DJ, with Dannii, Ana Beatriz, Lisa, VV and Twiggy in glamorous party wear, shimmying in a Seventies style dance-off as they show off the new collection.
The final scene sees the entire cast united together and surrounded by more than 50 dancing Santas, as the scene cuts to the line, 'Don’t put a foot wrong this Christmas.'
The extravaganza was directed by Vaughan Arnell, famous for his collaborations with Robbie Williams, having directed Rock DJ, Angels, Let Me Entertain You and Supreme.
The new ad comes as M&S launches a dedicated Christmas microsite to help guide customers organise their Christmas celebrations.
Presenter Myleene Klass fronts the store’s dedicated Christmas videos.  
Steve Sharp, Marks & Spencer’s Executive Director for Marketing, said: 'This is one of the best Christmas campaigns we’ve ever put together. 
'It is very glamorous and lots of fun, truly capturing the spirit of the Christmas party season.  
'This is also the most integrated campaign we’ve ever put together. 
'There’s a seamless transition from TV to online and we have a strong presence across all media, from mainstream TV right through to social media.' 
Visit www.marksandspencer.com for more information


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1325657/M-S-Christmas-campaign-Dannii-Minogue-Twiggy-Lisa-Snowdon-Peter-Kay.html#ixzz14PaeEZ00