Have you tried Twitter yet? I have. Some say micro-blogging , others say permission-based stalking. Share your thoughts if you’ve tried it.
(In the spirit of Twitter, no comments over 140 characters please!)
4 CommentsHave you tried Twitter yet? I have. Some say micro-blogging , others say permission-based stalking. Share your thoughts if you’ve tried it.
(In the spirit of Twitter, no comments over 140 characters please!)
4 Comments
Tony Chapman is the CEO of Capital C, the first non mass agency to win Marketing Magazine’s coveted Agency of the Year. Capital C is involved in new product development, ideation, and the amplification of their ideas across every consumer touch point. Their strategies and creative executions have been acknowledged with over 50 International or National Gold Awards, in the past four years. Tony is a recognized speaker, and his opinions appears regularly in the mainstream broadcast and print press. He writes a blog with his Creative Partner Bennett Klein and it can be found at www.capitalc.net (To see the video head to the bottom of the post.)
One Degree: What was the genesis of “Bride Wigs Out”?
Sunsilk Canada has a successful launch last year, but its tough to maintain the consumers attention, when the shelves are crowded with options, and the consumer is being bombarded with 6,500 messages a day. The USA team had come up with the ‘Wigout’ insight that our consumer target can have an emotional reaction to bad hair.
One Degree: How does the video sell more Sunsilk?
We felt that Wigout wasn’t ready for Prime Time. We needed to seed Wigout into Pop Culture and our targets vernacular – to set up the problem, so that our Prime Time Campaign, Stop the Wigouts will be more effective.
One Degree: It’s interesting how mainstream media got involved in this as the story started to evolve around the origin of the video, its subsequent removal from YouTube and then the public “outing” of the actors involved. How much of this was planned from the outset and how much was just going with the flow?
I can’t comment on an onging campaign other than to say we are thrilled with how the viral campaign crossed over to mainstream media, and in turn the fame that was showered on our Toronto Actors and Director.
Comments closedAlmost a year ago Ken interviewed Al Cabino about his crusade to get Nike to release the shoes inspired by the movie Back to the Future Part II on his feet (as well as other peoples’ feet). Al described his crusade earlier by describing how “everyone dreams of walking in a movie star’s shoes.” In the case of the shoes, they “were created just for the film, never worn beyond the silver screen.”
Al’s fascination with the shoes has taken a social media twist, by giving Robert Ranning (of the popular The Shining remix trailer and other projects with Director Spike Lee) carte blanche to create a trailer for the shoes. With almost 150,000 views on YouTube, Cabino hopes his crusade will take a viral twist, and wants the video will make front page on YouTube, gain national exposure, and reaching a modest viewing goal of one million. You can help out! For your viewing pleasure, hit play on the commercial featured below, and if you want a pair of these funky kicks, sign the petition.
Comments closed