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April 08, 2008

New York Report

The thing that I noticed the most about New York is its clean air. Most New Yorkers actually complain about the air quality. They have houses in Connecticut and upstate NY where they retreat to on the weekends to go snowboarding or mountain biking or fishing. Its an hour drive and you are one with nature. You can always bring your iPhone though so you are connected and this is the second thing I noticed in New York. IPhones everywhere. So much that it was sold out and I couldn't join the movement. I have to buy one on taobao.com I guess.

The two weeks were very impressive. The main reason to come to New York of course was the Oneshow judging, which consumed basically one entire week. The 25 other judges and myself all together went through 3125 entries to find the few Golds and several Silvers, Bronzes and Finalists. The voting process is secret and you dont know what the other judges are thinking about a particular project until it actually makes it to the final round. So it was fascinating to go through all the entries and then o the last two days see what made it and what hadn't.

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The work I saw was of very high quality. Almost everything that made it to the second round was worth to be put into the book. A strong upper middle class I would say. Many pieces in there very inspiring and a privilege for me to see all the submissions with all the strategic background that went into those campaigns. Here are a few of the pieces that I really liked:


1) Music in a bottle
Many of the campaigns now actually require physical user participation. I think this is great, making use of your webcam or microphone can really engage with the brand. And if the product come into play as well, then you have a digital brand experience that goes beyond just clicking with your mouse. This campaign for Bitburger beer makes clever use of the webcam, however I think they could have thought for a better pay-off.
http://www.jvm.de/oneshow/interactive/music-in-a-bottle/

2) Blog runner
This one comes from Japan and what I like about digital campaigns from Japan is their constant push for innovation. They really figured out how to take available technology and make use of it in a totally fresh way. This campaign for example is build around the story of a runner. The story unfolds in video, and is spread across many participating blogs. Its a kind of widget, but its not really a widget either. Its just .... well, Japanese. Take a look
http://joga.nike.jp/boy1/


3) Arcade Fire
This one caused some discussion during the judging. While it is not necessarily commercial driven advertising, it really pushed the idea of having an emotional experience on the web. 95% of all digital experiences are still so rational, even if they are funny they tend to be quite cold and distant. Neon Bible from Arcade Fire managed to re-frame what emotional experience means online.
http://www.beonlineb.com/click_around.html


4) Water bead battle
I dont know why but I really like Japanese thinking. This one made me smile.
http://ibc-award.preview.i-studio.co.jp/2006/04/index.html


5) Brailleliga
This is an idea more apt for a titanium lion. Brilliant: How many times have you by accident dialed the first number of your mobile phone book? Now you can replace it with a different number, and all call's fees will proceed to a foundation supporting the blind!
http://www.ablindcall.be/


Of course there is a ton more of great work. Have a look through my bookmarks and let me know which one you like!

March 23, 2008

Judging the Oneshow from behind the Great Firewall of China

Hundred seventy five and a quarter of a day to the Olympics and I am on a plane heading for New York. I haven’t left the country for over a month now and especially the past two weeks were quite tense. Intense. Also today we had the worst weather and pollution in Beijing since the winter started five months ago. Pollution covered in dust, as a friend pointed it out in his MSN nickname.

One fact in particular kept coming up over and over again, in media abroad, in comments made by friends and also by really getting the firsthand feel of it: the Great Firewall of China. While it has always been quite tiresome to live without access to blogs hosted on blogspot, pictures on Flickr, Google at occasions and never Wikipedia, this time the censors went as far as a total access restriction to Youtube.

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The reason is Tibet and the way the government is controlling the public’s access to 3rd party information. BBC, CNN, news.google.com – sometimes they work, sometimes not. There must have been some serious movies on youtube, I might have to catch up on that while I am my New Yorker Hotel room.

The real annoyance though was me judging the Oneshow Interactive. This is the second time I have the honor to do so, and it is a heavy task indeed. Both, in responsibility, as it is arguably one of the two most serious and prestigious award show for the digital creative industry, and also by the sheer amount of work you have to consume, watch, read and understand in order to make your informed judgment. This year the organizers gave the judges 9 days to complete the first round. I just finished it, 503 entries in over two dozen categories. I counted every one of them from my ADSL connection behind the Great Firewall, I counted them and the hours that it took me to go through all of them: 52.

The judging is always the biggest eye opener of the year, it is the moment when you see your own work rubbing shoulders with the campaigns of some of the smartest brains in the industry. I get a constant rush of inspiration from dozens of amazing ideas that I can simply click through. But I also feel ashamed and stupid that some of the ideas I might have thought of before but never put them into reality. Out of laziness, probably, and if indeed I would have executed them, would they have been as brilliant as the ones before me?

Here are a few initial learnings after my first glance through the 503 campaigns

  1. Video. Basically all major brand websites make heavy use of video. Hereby it is not just enough to use video, but to actually do so professionally. Actors, directors, producers, script writers. The internet turns into one big soap opera. Some of it done brilliantly, as smart as some of the best TV spots. Others not as good, amateurish, a bit foolish. The trick is, no matter the execution, still the idea shines through. Just now the ideas have to be executed brilliantly. Take a look at the Axe site "let the game continue".

  2. Brands do use facebook. At least according to the submissions at the Oneshow. There must have been almost a dozen or so facebook applications to judge. Some of them as part of a bigger campaign, some of them as stand alone. None of them was particularly impressive though I thought and I doubt that the fact of simply creating a facebook app will win you an award. We shall see.

  3. Web 2.0 is at another level. There have been a few sites that really impressed me with their smart use of web 2.0 features. Tagging, commenting, community, blogging etc all at a new level. The good ones really master to make the complex simple. They act as a tool, as a very smart, likable and powerful facilitator of communication and interaction between brand and consumer. Check out the Scientific American. Some of those sites were even done in flash.

  4. Entertainment and branded content are huge. The branded content category was one of the largest in fact and it looks like the lines of media, content and advertising are really beginning to blur here. That is probably where we have to start the discussion whether or not the big advertising idea is still relevant in the online world. Ideas here are not as simple as in a banner or on a brand site. They come in the shape of entertainment, video, games, sequels, quests and competitions that span multiple channels and platforms. Check this out
    .

Second round judging will start on Tuesday and I am very excited to meet all the other judges. The next few days will really unveil what trends emerged in the digital space over the past 12 months. Posting more shortly.


December 21, 2007

Old year, new job

So this is my sixth week into the new job. It's been great to see a few of the 14 offices in Asia (so far I've been to Shanghai, Hong Kong and Kuala Lumpur) and meet all the new people. Everyone is very excited! The offices are all very young and so are the creative teams. But what they lack in size they make up in passion. I haven't experienced so much positive thinking and excitement for the work in a long time. I don't think it will be that difficult to create a few campaigns that get talked about. And that's really the thing with DDB, they call it talkvalue. I think it makes total sense, the idea is not to spend all the money on media but rather create something that is culturally relevant that the community is so interested in that they start to spread it on. Tribal DDB in the US and especially also in Germany is doing some great stuff in that direction. A good example is the now quite old Philips Bodygroom site which basically everyone in the industry knows of.

But even more remarkable was the Horst Schlaemmer campaign in Germany, where Tribal signed Hape Kerkeling, one of Germany's most famous comedians, to play Horst Schlaemmer, a small town journalist on his quest to get a driving license. Basically the whole nation logged on to his blog (now hosted on MSN's comedy channel) and fevered with him to pass his test. Once he got his license, Volkswagen made him an official present with a brand new VW Golf and it turned out the the brand was all along behind the campaign.

It might be a bit too German for any non German to get this, but if you want then check his youtube hits here, some of them have well over a million views.

August 05, 2007

Tiger Translate in Beijing

Tiger Translate is a branded platform for young and emerging artists from east and west to get together, create and showcase their work. My good old friend Steve Lawler is organizing their events over the past year or so and this time he brought the brand and the artists to Beijing. The event was held at space gallery in 798, which is normally about the hottest place in Beijing during summer time. No wonder they gave out free cold Tiger beers to around a thousand sweaty guests.

It was great to see so many people turn up to an event like this. About two years ago it would not even been half the people present at the Get It Louder, which shows that visual design culture came a long way since. The best part though was that it was almost a hundred percent un-pretentious, something very Beijing!

July 14, 2007

simply QR

Stan and Alexis are two bright young Germans who lived and worked in New York and seek mobile opportunities now in China. They brought my attention to their pet project semapedia, where they provide a means to link any kind of thing that sourrounds you to wikipedia via a DIY QR code creator. The concept is simple yet ever so powerful. Once you print out a QR code for "chair" and stick it to a chair near you, the next person in deed has access to the entire history of this object via his mobile phone.

I wanted to have my own QR code on my name cards linked to Wikipedia. However I am not listed in Wikipedia and I checked, its not possible to list myself. So what to do? I looked on and found that Semacodes are really easy to create yourself with any work or link you fancy. You can create your tag here and download the acclaimed leader in QR software to your phone here.

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September 12, 2006

the first entry

Hey, this will be my first entry into my first blog. I am psyched!

Continue reading "the first entry" »