Welcome to Optimism

consumer generated content

This link was circulated by Simon McCrudden, one of our planners. It’s an article from the New York Times about a Chevrolet campaign in the US that invites consumers to make their own ads by adding their own words and cutting together footage and music clips posted on the Chevy website, http://chevyapprentice.com/

(Yes, there seems to have been some sort of product placement association with the US version of The Apprentice. Clearly, Chevrolet feels that its potential customers have an affinity for the Gordon Gecko-style philosophy of personal advancement celebrated by that show’s revelling in backstabbing, gold taps and personal jets.)

The site invites you to choose from various bits and pieces of video that highlight product features of some new Chevy SUV monster and enter your customised ad for a competition. Clearly, in order to do this, you need to spend a fair bit of time learning about the car. And obviously Chevy was hoping that people would also e-mail their own videos around the Web and post them on things like You Tube. Which people certainly have done. But the videos that were circulated most widely were ones that slagged off the Chevy for its shitty gas mileage and accused the company of damaging the environment.

For example, one ad used a clip of the car driving through a desert. "Our planet’s oil is almost gone," it said. "You don’t need G.P.S. to see where this road leads."

Chevrolet is getting some criticism over this. Anti-4×4 campaigners are mocking them online. But it’s not as if Chevy wouldn’t have foreseen this response. It’s not new news that 4x4s are bad for the environment. Obviously Chevy felt that the positives would outweigh the negatives. Can a positive consumer-created ad ever be as widely circulated as one that takes the piss? People just love to see corporations being made to look foolish, particularly if they can turn the campany’s own marketing against them.

Having said that, there are one or two examples of widely-circulated consumer-created ads made by people who are genuine fans of the brand.

This one is an iPOd commercial created by US teacher and Apple fan George Masters.

It not only bigs up the iPod mini, it rehabilitates 80s indie popsters the Darling Buds. A remarkable achievement. Interestingly, the execution also works as an ad for what you can create on your Apple laptop.

Here’s another one, created by blogger and pundit Joseph Jaffe for one of our clients, Nike, utilising footage of an amazing cliffhanging Tiger Woods putt from the Masters.

In this case, the execution itself was very simple but the speed with which the opportunity had been spotted, the ad created and posted online (that same night) was the thing that gave it newsworthiness and momentum. An ‘official’ Nike agency like ourselves couldn’t possibly have done it this quickly because of the need to clear rights and permissions.

So, is this stuff the future? Are efforts like those of Chevy to incentivise people to create their own content doomed to fail? (Let’s hope not. Our client Nike has, with Google, created a football community website, joga.com, that aims to elicit content contributions from fans.) Is it only ‘cool’ brands like Nike and Apple who have enough fans to create and share positive examples of their own content? It’ll be interesting to see.

wk side update

Deskitems

This week has been all about turn around. We’ve been tying the finishing knots on a couple of projects whilst planning and organizing our next master plan. Our new brief has two parts; one theory and the other emotive, so we’re scheduling our tactics for the next few weeks. We got to make two short films that address cultural and technological changes in 2006, whilst impressing Russell Davies with things he didn’t know.

Apart from that; we’ve done a bit of tidying, been given a painting project, had a go at M­­ensa puzzles, tried to define the differences between S/M/L, named a building and discussed a window project.

Sophie_1

Following on from Sumiko’s fascinating presentation on Thursday evening we all swiftly came to the conclusion that the key to world domination is really rather quite simple. In fact it’s only one word with one syllable. If this was a game of charades I would go for the simple route of ‘sounds like a’ ….

                                            

Kite

                                     …. That’s right – HYPE.

If we are gonna make stuff people want, we’ll make 10 and only give them to cool people. You’ve all heard of ‘supply and demand’. Well, this is the total opposite. It’s called ‘Demand but we only have 3 left and they’re all on eBay’. You need this.

Shelf1

Topics this week:

Kuryu                                                              emo rock

medium is the best                                         myspace                                

myspace wierdos                                           maslow’s hierarchy of needs             

hot tip for National                                           pipe cleaners can be beautiful           

the Mighty Boosh                                            could you abort? 

let’s start a total brand like Bathing Ape          let’s move to

Japan

skinny vs. curvy                                              baby names

Ben’s moving house                                       Barb making video for Ish’s 90th 

is it a sore throat or flu?                                  chorizo+patatas bravas pie

Israel and Palestine                                        bird flu

it’s almost summer/no it’s not                         how to cook a dinner under 2 pounds cockroaches and their removal                       runner’s high

where we were during sept 11                       anxiety

ex’s                                                                  eating chocolate koalas

WKSIDE are yet to be christened                  the man who put his phone number in a catalogue and got invited by 10,000 people to dinner

Shelf2

We have a question for everyone with a pair of running shoes and the time to use them…

When you are running around

London

, listening to your iPods, looking at trees, dodging dog shit and avoiding schizophrenic people with sharp things under their jackets, does your imagination take over? Do you imagine you are running from the old bill? Leaping chasms or chasing mushrooms like Mario? Just what are the crazy thoughts that stream through your brains?

Please post on our comments.

Mario

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