Entries from May 2010 ↓

Spike Jonze Makes A "Love Story" And Absolut Lovers Drink It Up

I’m Here, a 30-minute film by Spike Jonze, that was financed by Absolut Vodka debuted at Sundance in January. According to Hollywood Insider, it feels like a modern-day retelling of Shel Silverstein’s The Giving Tree.

Post Advertising explains how the brand helped create buzz for the short online by limiting access to the work.

Screenings were limited to every two hours (it started as four-hour intervals, but ramped up due to demand), with only a fixed number of “seats” available each day. Incredibly, excess visitors started lining up eagerly for the next show. As Adverblog reported, 230,000 views were logged during the short’s premiere weekend. And like that, craving is born.

Working with popular artists is nothing new for Absolut. The brand has previously collaborated with Andy Warhol, Keith Haring and Helmut Newton. Anna Malmhake, Vice President Global Marketing at Absolut said, “Spike Jonze is one of the most important influencers of modern popular culture, and this 30-minute film subtly and artfully expresses our enduring commitment to collaborations and creativity.”

Absolut gave Jonze creative control of the project as well. “They just wanted me to make something that was important to me, and let my imagination take me wherever I wanted,” Jonze said. “And it wasn’t like working with some huge corporation where I had to meet with committees of people. It was just a small group, and it seemed like creativity and making something that affected them emotionally was the only thing that really mattered to them.”

More and more brands are looking to expand their role from product pushers to publishers and curators. When the content they manage is engaging and on-brand it’s a win for everyone involved.


JPL’s Targeted Classified On Facebook Hits Home

I don’t know much about ad agency JPL in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. But they’re looking for a copywriter–and they’re using Facebook to get the word out via targeted ads.

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Now, I had my work information on FB previously, but during the recent switch to link everything to a special “page,” I didn’t want to link my personal information to corresponding pages. So that information is not visible on my profile right now. But apparently, the information is still usable for targeting by marketers.

I suppose any information I entered on Facebook can be used to create ads to target me. It’s both really savvy and a bit creepy at the same time, and something I’ve been thinking a lot about these days.


Today In Twitterverse: It’s Not All About You

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Umair Haque is Director of the Havas Media Lab. His writings are featured on Harvard Business Review’s site.

I’d love to hear your take on Haque’s tweet. Does your organization put customer’s concerns ahead of everything else? Or is stuck in the what-we-want-to-say-not-what-they-want-to-hear mentality?