Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Five Cent Direct Mailing


I received this direct mail piece this morning and saw a nickel inside the window. The envelope that the charity annual fund came in, stated:
The enclosed nickel can help save a child's life.

Exactly how many nickels did they send out in this promotional event? If it's guilt they are trying to bestow, this direct mail FAILED! I'm a little more upset that for an annual donator to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society it feels like a bribe after reading this.

But in the letter itself, it contradicts the previous statement:
You and I both know that a single nickel won't go far in the fight againt blood cancers.

I'm now a little upset and confused. If that's true, I'd like to know who managed to sell the idea of passing out nickels?

A little math for you. I gave fifty dollars the previous annul fund. 1 dollar = 20 nickels, so 50 dollars = 1000 nickels.

A direct response mailing can get somewhere between .50-1.00% response. This direct piece was probably more targeted to those who have donated in the past, I would assume 1.00-5.00%. If assuming 5% return rate you'll get 50 nickels (responses) back or $2.50. Although that 5% you'll probably get a variety of enclosed amounts on average, let's say $15.00. For a grand total of $752.50! (Of course the more mailed out the more responses.)

So a campaign that would yield little over $750.00 probably cost at least $1000 to propose.

I guess I can use the nickel towards a postage stamp, along with my donation.

My math maybe wrong on this. I kinda just went on a rant, but I'm just saying, hypothetically!

The One-Second Ad

MillerCoors flagship (my personal favorite at least) Miller High Life will have a one-second ad premier during the Super Bowl on February 1. The ad created by Saatchi & Saatchi of New York City, use the current campaign that features our favorite delivery truck driver who reinfoces the brands image as "good, honest beer at a tasty price.

Super Bowl ads are selling for $3 million for a 30-second spot.

Miller High Life has launched 1SecondAd, which features several of the one-second ads that didn’t make the cut, as well as a 30-second teaser below. Now that's what I call "the Champagne of Beers".

Saturday, January 17, 2009

It's a Mad World

It's been awhile since I did a music video post. My roommate Greg has been playing the piano exquisitely lately and he played a song that I haven't heard in ages and I remembered how beautifully crafted the video was done. Gary Jules and Michael Andrews display a simply heartbreaking music video back in 2004. On top of a school building in Brooklyn. The camera scans down on to a score of children choreographing simple, child-like pictures on the sidewalk below: a car, a house, a boat, occassionally panning back up to Gary and a back drop of New York. The song was featured in the movie Donnie Darko (Highly suggest watching this flick.) and directed by one of my favorite, Michel Gondry.

Enjoy Mad World.



In 2006, Mad World made a strong connection to some folks over at the French insurance company MACIF. A campaign was directed by Raphaƫl Frydman for Partizan.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Every. Man's. Dream.

You definitely know it's Super Bowl time. Agencies are beginning to roll out the big ideas, and the majority tend to be quite entertaining. for the most part, I look forward to this around of super bowl ads that go on through out the course of the night. Of course, Budweiser and Miller Lite seeming always compete for the best ad of the night. But we can't forget about our imports now!

Heineken released this spot that plays on how women who LOVE to throw a house warming party and of course to showcase the new pad to all her friends. You take them to the one place your girlfriends are dying to see... the walk-in closet. Well guys have a similar agenda too.



That's right... Every. Man's. Dream.

Monday, January 5, 2009

What's G?

I couldn't figure out just what is so 'G' about this commercial. (I'll get to that in the moment.)



With the economy slowing, now is an opportune time for generating awareness on your brand. Pepsi who owns the majority of Gatorade is aiming to promote a new style for its flagship. With the help of TBWA/Chiat/Day, the drink will remain the same, but it has a new finesse, it is putting an attitude behind it, stepping up on the competition as the brand to drink.

The bottles will support a new label to the packaging. Representing the Large copy 'G' and the brands you know them have taken to new names to the likes of "Bring It" and "Be Tough".

The commercial gets your interest, but falls flat because we're left not knowing what the heck it is! the g in the commercial should stand for geez!!

I see that they want you to ask the question....What is G? But they did not execute the viral ability of the campagin. I found a YouTube channel, but nothing more of this besides an AdWeek article.

Update: Fellow Binger Laura, fellow blogger at BINGenuity sent me this Wall Street Journal article

Consumers are feeling the same way:
"The commercial is great, but it is frustrating when you don't know what they are trying to advertise."