The results are in…

the 2006 ADDY awards garnered one bronze for the Guerrilla marketing campaign at the guerrilla marketing seminar which was placed in the Agency Self Promotion category. The ADDY awards don’t have a category for Gurrilla campaigns- so it got lumped into the high dollar “look at what I can do with an unlimited budget for myself category.”

And we won silver for the Zen Windows “Never spend more than 5 minutes with a window salesman” in the highly competitive direct mail category - where we were also competing with super high dollar direct marketing pieces for Teradata, Lexis Nexis, Reynolds and Reynolds etc. Again- when you consider this ad was placed in JB Dollar Stretcher (a regional monthly coupon book) and not a big budget targeted direct mail piece- it became a bit unfair. If it had been competing in the consumer magazine category- (which the client couldn’t afford) it would have won. We’re advancing it to the regionals in the hopes that other judges will see it for what it is- exceptional advertising in a typically mundane category.

The Dayton Daily News had no mention of the ADDY’s or coverage- but did have a column by the editor about how we should support local businesses like Malone Camera or Dingleberry’s (both family owned businesses that are closing a location). The Dayton Ad Club has posted the list of winners.
Merc BannersI was really happy to see The Agency Group win for their banners on “The Merc” - showcasing how great promotion can add value to Real Estate development- and that Wilson Advertising Group won the “Best ads that didn’t make it” category this year- since 2 years ago they won a bunch of awards that had to be stripped away for submitting work that wasn’t placed.

$200 mistakes on 2.5 million dollar Superbowl ads

The 2006 Superbowl wasn’t a very exciting game- and from an advertising standpoint- well, the game did make a bunch of mediocre spots more interesting.
I’m not going to review the spots- you can read someone like Ad Age’s Bob Garfield for his commentary (may require subscription) http://adage.com/news.cms?newsId=47764
I’ll stick to maximizing your ad budget effectiveness- if you’re going to spend 2.5 million dollars to run a spot- shouldn’t you do your best to turn it into a viral marketing effort?
Viral marketing is what gave us www.subservientchicken.com for Burger King. A low budget effort to launch BK’s tendercrisp chicken sandwich- that you can have your way. So, to have your way with the chicken on the site- you tell it what to do- ala web porn (the chicken is wearing stockings and a garter belt). For less than $30 thousand dollars, BK was reeling in millions of viewers, all telling the chicken to do the macerena.
Back to the Superbowl spots- we’ve said over and over- post all your ads on your site, be they print, radio, outdoor or especially TV. If you give the ads to your customers, they may distribute them for you. Nike and Apple get this- as apparently does Budweiser this year- with a complete page of ads for you to view- and even download into your iPod. (more…)

If you are searching for an ad agency and end up here-

Maybe you should reconsider using them. After all, if they are in charge of your marketing- and people searching for your business end up at your competitor’s site, they aren’t doing a very good job for you, are they?
Every month, our web stats show the same thing- lots of people looking for our competition and ending up here. There is a reason for that- yes, we’re smart.
We understand that people searching for answers on the web don’t always know what they are looking for- at least until they’ve found it. Sometimes they just can’t get the right terms in the search box- or know what will get them the right answer.
That’s why content always beats pretty pictures.
It’s probably what got you here reading this.
So, if you were searching for Graphica in Dayton OH, or Buchanan and Associates in Columbus, or Sunrise Advertising in Cincinnati, the question is are you still sure they were who you were searching for?
Here are 134 agency search phrases that brought people here in Jan 2006 instead of to the agency they thought they wanted:

1-earth
1-earth dayton
ad ventures
ad ventures dayton
associates buchanan ohio
axis media and marketing dayton ohio
axis media dayton ohio
axis tricom miami
b/r/c marketing in dayton ohio
bagby & company
bagby branding
barefoot advertising
barefoot advertising cincinnati
barefoot advertising inc. cincinnati
barefoot design in cincinnati ohio
bingdesign
bluedog advertising dayton ohio
buchanan & associates advertising
buchanan & associates advertising and marketing
buchanan & associates and advertising
buchanan & associates and ohio
buchanan & associates columbus ohio
buchanan & associates dublin oh
buchanan & associates ohio
buchanan and associates
buchanan and associates advertising
buchanan and associates columbus
buchanan and associates design
buchanan and associates dublin oh
buchanan and associates dublin ohio
buchanan and associates ohio
buchanan associates
buchanan associates columbus advertising
buchanan associates columbus ohio public relations
buchanan associates columbus public relations
buchanan associates google
catalyst creative group dayton oh
centerville ohio eastpoint
cloonan and associates
cloonan associates
cloonan dayton ohio
conrad phillips vutech
conrad phillips vutech in columbus ohio
creative department sycamore street design cincinnati
crispin porter columbus oh
frank phillips advertising agency ohio toledo
gee jeffrey & partners. cincinnati
gee jeffrey and partners ad agency
gjp ad agency
gjp advertising agency
graphic impact
graphic impact dayton
graphic impact kettering ohio
graphica dayton
graphica dayton oh
graphica dayton ohio
graphica design dayton ohio
graphica miamisburg ohio
graphica ohio
hafenbrack dayton ohio
krienik & assoc
libby perszyk kathman - lpk inc. cincinnati oh 45202
lightborne inc. cincinnati ohio\
lpk cincinnati
lpk design cincinnati
lunne marketing
lunne marketing dayton oh
lunne marketing group
market 2 performance dayton
mcdougall marketing communications
mcdougall marketing service
mckinney silver viral
merkley and partners bad
method columbus ohio advertising firms
neo communications
northlich
novinity
novinity columbus ohio
novinity inc
pelican advertising cincinnati
penny ohlman
powers agency in cincinnati ohio
real art design
real art design dayton
real art design group
real art design group dayton ohio
resource interactive
sabatino ad agency dayton ohio
sabatino and day
sabatino day
salon tv spots
selke & associates
selke and associates
stephens advertising
stephens advertising dayton
stephens advertising inc kettering ohio
stephens advertising kettering ohio
sunrise advertising
sunrise advertising cincinnati
tdh mktg. & communications dayton
ten united 375 north front st
ten united advertising ohio
tenunited columbus
the concept company
the creative department ad agency cincinnati sycamore street
the rivets advertising
turner marketing 137 n. main street dayton oh
turner marketing and ohio
turner marketing dayton
turner marketing dayton ohio
turner marketing inc. dayton ohio
visual marketing associates
vutech and associates columbus ohio
wch marketing communications dayton oh
weber geiger & kalat
weber geiger kalat dayton
website for wch marketing communications dayton oh
willow creative group
willow creative group cincinnati
willow creative group in cincinnati
wilson advertising dayton ohio
wilson advertising ohio
wilson advertising ohio blog
wilson advertising ohio dayton
wilson agency advertising miamisburg ohio
wilsonadv
www.behrdesign
www.tdh marketing & communications inc.com
yeck yes t-shirt
young isaac advertising columbus ohio
ze design
ze design dayton ohio
zero base advertising columbus ohio
If you still feel you need to work with any of the above- the contact information you are seeking is here:
Agencies that aren’t The Next Wave.

Place a bet- we can help you build a better site than they can.
What do you think?

For a free consultation on how to cruise to the top of search- call us, 937.228.4433
We’re called The Next Wave for a reason.

ADDY/ Hermes 2005

We won’t know if we’ve won silver or gold (the infamous head) until Feb 11 2006, but we’ve at least won bronze for 2 of the 3 entries we submitted this year.
We still haven’t hung the awards from 2003 or 2004 since we’ve run out of wall space in the bathroom, so we’ve cut down on entries this year.
Typically about 90% of what we enter gets in- and most of it wins silver (the gold is a best of category).
This year the Zen Windows direct mail ad is in the running- as is our guerrilla campaign at the ad club “guerrilla marketing” seminar.
You can see the work by following these two links:
Zen Windows: http://thenextwave.biz/zenwin-ad.html
Guerrilla: http://thenextwave.biz/tnw/index.php?s=guerrilla+seminar

what do you think?

Blog your way past 9200 other results.

Mid-summer we got a call from a young, bright, PhD candidate who was looking for how to differentiate himself from his classmates when he graduates.
While most ad agencies would send most students on their way- we appreciated his gumption- and sat down to plan a strategy.
In our first bit of research we did a simple google of his name: 9800 results- all for a movie actor from the 50’s. Our first suggestion was to change your name and the second was to start a blog using WordPress- and build a site with his thoughts and ideas- to build a body of work for prospective employers to read and become acquainted with this ambitious young man. See awilum.com.
Just 4 months later, Charles Halton, biblical scholar and PhD candidate is now in the top five of the search results on google. This showcases how search engines value fresh content over static unchanging content. If your website has no active or freshly generated content, it doesn’t matter how many keywords you have, you can slip to the more agile upstart who has adopted the new force on the web.
Congratulation Charles Halton.
If you are interested in how to build your online presence, consider taking one of our blogosopher.com sessions to learn how to do the same for your business.

What do you think?

Do you have the right ad agency?

Of late there has been a lot of major account changes noted in the advertising press. Every move by Crispin Porter + Bogusky in Miami is documented in the same style as paparazzi chasing movie stars. What was once a relatively small agency, with small clients, who got bought by a small “network” is now becoming a BIG AGENCY with BIG CLIENTS still owned by a small network. How well agencies scale should not be measured by CP+B because it is an anomaly: it’s reputation is so huge, they are able to get the pick of talent, steam roll over clients (since they have been crowned by the media as having the Midas touch) and have adopted a “media agnostic” throw as many ideas on the wall and see what sticks approach.
In case you aren’t aware of their storied life in the fast lane, they made their first appearance on the hot shop radar with their “Truth” campaign for Florida’s anti-smoking campaign. They won a Cannes Gold Lion for their spot for IKEA where a desk lamp gets kicked to the curb- but IKEA seems to be unable to stick with an agency having parted ways with the successor agency as well (IKEA should call us), then came the dream account (only because the car is so damn cute and already branded) the new BMW Mini account. Here CP+P showed off how to get the maximum muscle out of the minimal moola to an exponential effect. Putting Mini’s on top of Ford Expeditions, putting the whole car on a billboard in a Slingshot, even the tagline “Let’s Motor” was so fitting, you couldn’t help but be enchanted with the idea of “driving satisfaction” without having it screamed at you. It was the ultimate in talking with the customer- not at the customer- and it worked. BMW sold cars, CP+B made their client manager look so good, she got hired away from BMW to fix VW- that’s making your client more money than they pay you if I ever saw it. Her reward to her friends who got her there- the VW account, a prize beyond their wildest dreams when they were working on bike helmet campaigns and local business.
So impressive was the mini campaign that success breeds success and on comes Burger King- a traditionally “difficult” client who had been through agencies and “campaigns” faster than they sell whoppers. Along came CP+B throwing new stuff at the masses faster than they could say “Yes” to the “would you like fries with that” question. The first execution was a takeoff on the British TV show “The Office” and the return of the “have it your way tag line.”
For such creative geniuses to settle on someone else’s tagline is typically unheard of- typically agencies want to make their own mark- but that takes time. CP+B was smart enough to realize that a brand in trouble needs help now, not when their creativity kicks in. The campaign was outside the norm for the industry- with double-entendre’s and un-pretty people. But, it was easier to fly the old tagline back through the barriers of corporate CYA and it bought them time- time for an agency to find a brand voice. Great campaigns don’t happen overnight. “Think Small” wasn’t the first thing Bernbach did for VW, nor was “Just do it” the first shot by Wieden + Kennedy for Nike.
Next came Dr. Angus and his big burger diet, and my personal favorite- Ugoff- the fashion designer creating a “pouch” for hot chicken and shrimp” for BK’s new salads. All of these had Internet components- something many “big” agencies still do as an afterthought. Then came the viral “Subservient Chicken” which every fast feeder now wants to copy and then the King mask- of which I won’t comment. But, this huge out burst of creative work has all been in a span of less than 2 years- totally unheard of in the ad world- and…
This is NOT how most clients get the most out of their marketing budget.
Most clients don’t have 300 million to spend. They depend on consistency of message on target. This is why an Apple ad today for the most part looks like an Apple ad of yesterday (please don’t remind me that they only have 2% of the PC market- and that if it wasn’t for the iPod the stock would still be hurting) or that Wal-Mart ads look like Wal-Mart ads. The idea is that if you can’t get enough frequency at least get repetition working for you. With small budgets like BMW motorcycles, the idea of staying on brand message is considered key. If you only have so much money, keep it consistent. This is why brands are so careful about staying in voice, on target with the right trade dress (look and feel). It is also why when you have a great tagline like “have it your way” or “the ultimate driving machine” or “just do it” it never goes out of style.
So- the question we posed at the beginning is do you have the right agency? No matter what you spend, your agency will tell you it’s not enough (except our agency) because their compensation is probably tied back to media billings – the stupidest way to pay an agency ever devised. The second question is, does your brand voice do what it’s supposed to (differentiate you from your competition and connect you like no other to your market)? Lastly, is your agency looking at every avenue they can to make you highly visible to your target market through every channel possible- including the Internet, guerrilla advertising, PR and your trade dress down to the way your stores look, your salespeople communicate and your company ethics? If not, you aren’t using the right agency- or getting the right return on your dollar. There is more to this- but it could be a whole book. You can call us to discuss how you can build your business using these ideas. One of the first things we’ll do is ask to look at your website statistics- and analyze where your customers are coming from. When was the last time your agency did that?

What do you think?