IT’S THE REAL THING.

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The Story:  If the consumer’s brain can be compared to a whiteboard, then back in the 70′s, advertisers had relatively clean ones to doodle on, which  can only have improved the impact of marketing campaigns. The Coca-Cola Hilltop campaign was produced at a time when it was still possible to lend very noble qualities to a mass consumer product without running the risk of seeming pedantic or worse, insincere. Not because people lived in a ‘rosier’ world; Vietnam was the first mediatized war and the US saw inflation rise 10% between ’72 and ’74. There was however a definite purity in the flow of communication from seller to buyer simply because, there were fewer messages, less recuperation, and buzz was just a noise that bees made.

The Idea:  Rehabilitating utopic imagery.

Today, the ‘average’ consumer possesses a much deeper knowledge of marketing. The consumer knows that he is being manipulated, and often knows how. Even so, some ad campaigns still have a huge impact. This suggests that a) when the product is desirable, the ad has little effect, the consumer will buy it anyway, but also b) the consumer is sometimes willing to suspend disbelief when faced with a particularly attractive idea.

So why not strive to model society by altering the mirror in which it sees its reflexion?

Audiovisual media function as proactive mirrors of society. And like real mirrors, they are never completely objective. Advertising can choose to be positively subjective or negatively subjective. I believe that they have, to a certain extent, a responsibility to inspire, and that the positive subjectivity of advertising should be inversely proportional to the negativity of the media that vehicles it.

A lot of communicators today would have qualms about using an idea like the Hilltop, but if the media world refuses to use utopia as a creative reference from time to time, then we run the risk of falling into a quagmire of self-referring, second-degree irony.

Of course, it’s easier said than done as proved by Coca-Cola themselves when they tried to recreate the Hilltop success to boost sales of Diet-Coke with a remake that didn’t fly…

Which adds weight to my favourite quote of the moment, by the artist Mondrian:

“One mustn’t adapt, one must create.”

To read about the history of the Hilltop ad: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ccmphtml/colaadv.html

Happy Imagination 2011

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The Story: Every year we start afresh, reboot our intentions and wish happiness, success and good health to those around us. The positive things that can happen to us are however often things of chance, that enter our lives arbitrarily – Deus ex machina – unless we are able to provoke them in some way.

The Idea: Imagining the best of our future.

“It is a poor memory that only works backwards.” Lewis Carroll

The beauty of imagination is that it’s a powerful tool. The more we imagine and visualize what we desire, the more our actions lead us there…

Imagine delivering an eloquent keynote.

Imagine leaving someone who hurts you.

Imagine getting a job.

Imagine kissing for ten minutes non-stop.

Imagine going back to college.

Imagine dancing all night long.

Imagine swimming with dolphins.

Imagine making your children laugh like drains.

Imagine growing old gracefully.

Imagine winning.

Imagine whatever makes you happy, and never stop imagining it.

So for 2011, I can think of nothing better to wish you than a wonderfully fertile imagination…

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