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Tracy Tuten

Zooppa.com - FRiDAY'S Call for Concepts - 1 views

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    Students, this is an online call for marketing concepts. It'd be great experience for you to participate!
Tracy Tuten

Brandacity: Know My Brands, Know ME - 1 views

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    This is my brand timeline! At least the one I did when I first created this assignment. It's only been tweaked a bit since the original. 
Tracy Tuten

Advertising - Campaign Turns Vanguard Brand Into a Verb - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    An ad campaign will turn the Vanguard brand name into a verb, the better to help potential customers remember the company's investment products.
Tracy Tuten

Piers Fawkes: Should You Hire Staff Based On Their Klout Score? - PSFK - 1 views

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    Understanding Klout and the creativity of ad agencies
Tracy Tuten

6 display ads people loved - 1 views

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    Review of 6 truly engaging and creative display ads
Tracy Tuten

Communication Arts - Annuals - 0 views

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    View archives of the Communication Arts Annuals of the best in advertising. 
Tracy Tuten

Doug Prey's Documentary on '70s Admen, Surfers, Not Smokers - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Mr. Pray celebrates a later generation of mavericks who changed the business in the ’70s. His heroes are titans like Lee Clow, Dan Wieden, Hal Riney and George Lois
  • The film consists mostly of these men (and a few women, including the formidable Mary Wells) talking about how they work
Tracy Tuten

Propagation Planning - 0 views

  • The Head of Strategy position at any ad agency is a very demanding job. So demanding that they sometimes (not all the time) need recruiters or head hunters to help them find the best talent when they have open positions.  This is a list of account planning recruiters that I compiled over the last nine years or so. I know this does not represent all the recruiters out there but it should give people a start if you don't know any and are looking for new career opportunities. By making this information open and transparent I hope it will help match good strategic planners with good agencies. Bad agencies shouldn't have good talent.
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    List of Account Planning Recruiters
Tracy Tuten

The Martin Agency 2012 Student Workshop | Dr. Theresa B. Clarke - 0 views

  • Students should email me for more information and the application — Allison Mays at allison.mays@martinagency.com or check out our Facebook page – martin agency student workshop.
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    Email Allison Mays for an application allison.mays@martinagency.com
Tracy Tuten

brand timelines- planners love great visuals | Influxinsights - 0 views

  • Noah Brier just gave us a new world of Brand Tags and now Dear Jane Sample has come up with something many of us have always wanted to do, but could never get quite right, the simple art of the Brand Timeline. It’s a way to visualize the brands we interact with over the course of the day. It’s really Brands in Your Day. Planners love this stuff because it’s a nice way to bring thinking to life and it’s great to be able to see the time when brands are being used this could even have media implications for example. Perhaps there’s another version of this which examines the depth and scale of relationships individuals have with brands something relating to distance.
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    Brand Timeline plus explanation
Tracy Tuten

Branded | news | Torontoist - 0 views

  • t turns out that “portrait” is a surprisingly accurate description of what she ended up with. From Jane’s Brand Timeline Portrait, we discover that Jane is a woman who flosses, who has a cat, who turns on her TV before she leaves for work in the morning. Jane is a woman who lives in Toronto and takes public transit to work, who drinks beer on a Friday night before going home, smoking up and getting down. There’s been some debate in the comments thread of her post over whether the LG logo followed by several Durexes indicates that she used her phone to make a booty call soon after 10 p.m. Fortunately, the BTP still leaves some details to the imagination.
  • Brand Timeline Portrait has spread all over the internet.
  • As an advertising account executive, Jane was perhaps predictably untroubled by the implications of her day in brands. “As a marketer, it just shows that these brands have done a good job of marketing themselves.”
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  • n this way, the Brand Timeline Portrait is a kind of confessional. You can pretend that you’re beyond the pull of advertising, but there it is in full colour: every big corporation you’ve allowed into your life and your daily routines. And it’s hard to resist the appeal to put it all out in the open.
  • If, like us, you’re going to run off and assemble your Brand Timeline Portrait right this instant, here are Jane’s simple instructions: 1. Go to Google Image; 2. Type in brandname+logo; 3. Capture, resize (if you don’t have any imaging software, you can use this site instead), and save.
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    Brand Timeline with explanation
Tracy Tuten

CBC.ca | The Age of Persuasion | Recommended Readings - 0 views

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    Recommended reading in advertising
Tracy Tuten

How to become an advertising copywriter: career advice from John Kuraoka, freelance adv... - 0 views

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    Career advice on getting started and developing a career in advertising
Tracy Tuten

Advertising Week - About - 0 views

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    All you ever need to know about Advertising Week
Tracy Tuten

http://www.adforum.com/award/showcase/schedule/ - 0 views

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    Links to the Awards Shows in Advertising with dates. 
Tracy Tuten

Data Points: Ad Scorecard | Adweek - 0 views

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    Ad Scorecard from Adweek - Super Bowl 2012
Tracy Tuten

How USA Today's Ad Meter Broke Super Bowl Advertising | Special: Super Bowl - Advertisi... - 0 views

  • The commercial also ushered in an era in Super Bowl advertising that we still inhabit: the ad as entertainment.
  • That we expect ads during the Super Bowl to be as entertaining as the game itself can largely be traced back to "1984."
  • In 1989, just a few years after "1984," the national newspaper introduced a revolutionary concept -- and a marketing masterstroke. Take a small panel of people, isolate them in a room with a meter and tell them to constantly turn a dial rating what they're seeing on a scale from one to 10.
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  • With so much at stake, to please the clients and bolster their own resumes, directors started creating ads for the panel -- the media equivalent of teaching for the test. How do you get people to have an immediate, positive reaction to something they're seeing? Certainly don't show them a narrative. Make them laugh.
  • "It better be something that rings some bells or gets measured on the USA Today Richter Scale," said TBWA/MediaArts Chairman Lee Clow. But the creator of "1984" also believes it means fewer ads like that one have been made. "It's a big challenge to spend $3 million on the time and then a million on the spot. It's kinda difficult to then come in 19th on the USA Today 'How'd you like our spot?' scale."
  • Even so, the poll's influence is waning. Today, most marketers combine immediate feedback with sophisticated research from Nielsen, GFK, Zeta Interactive, Kantar or Ace Metrix to understand the long-term impact of spots. Now that the real-time web has gone mass in the form of Facebook and Twitter, marketers and agencies have dozens of new services and dashboards to monitor, as well as the means to influence the discussion as it happens, not to mention giving the commentariat something else to write about.
  • Second, YouTube views and blog posts allow an ad to succeed or fail outside traditional media structures. VW's "The Force" has been viewed more than 90 million times since Super Bowl 2011.
  • "If you go back 10 years, it was the only thing," said CMO Scott Keogh. "You didn't have social, YouTube views, you didn't have the blogs and all the running commentary. Basically, the press would report on the Ad Meter.
  • Even USA Today has lost faith in the ability of the panel alone to pick a winner. This year, in addition to selecting two panels of 150 in cities that USA Today won't reveal, the paper is opening up the voting to the public on Facebook. As a result, for the first time since 1989, USA Today won't declare a "winner" in Monday morning's paper. The true winner won't be declared until after the polls close Wednesday.
  • Why not dump the panel entirely? In social media, consumers will rate only the ads they love and hate, a spokesperson said. The panel is the only way USA Today sees to be sure every ad gets a vote.
  • "I'll have four screens going during the game in front of me, showing me charts and graphs," Mr. Ewanick said. "We have five or six other groups monitoring, then we'll have next-day research, copy testing, focus groups. There's a lot of money involved here. You have to really understand your ROI to make sure you learn from this, so you can apply that the next year."
  • When will we once again get more Super Bowl ads like "1984"? When creatives stop making spots to incite an instant reaction, sort of like Chrysler's two-minute "Imported From Detroit," a high-concept, big-idea spot that put Detroit before the car and even before the celebrity (Eminem). It was great creative, by most measures, and probably the closest thing to "1984" in its ambition since, well, "1984."
  • Predictably, "Imported From Detroit" bombed on the Ad Meter, coming in at No. 43.
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    Social media are changing the way we will measure the success of Super Bowl advertising!
Tracy Tuten

M&M's to Unveil a New Speaking Role at Super Bowl - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Ms. Brown is the second female in the M&M’s cast, after Ms. Green, and like her colorful counterparts she will be imbued with a distinct personality. Ms. Brown is an intelligent woman with a sharp wit who finally decided to reveal herself after working for decades behind the scenes as “chief chocolate officer.”
  • Their devotion to the Super Bowl comes at no small cost. NBC is charging an average of $3.5 million for each 30 seconds of commercial time in the game, compared with an average of $3 million for each 30-second spot in Super Bowl XLV on Fox in February 2011. Even at that price, commercial time for Super Bowl XLVI has been sold out since Thanksgiving, NBC recently disclosed.
  • One way to ensure that a Super Bowl commercial is “not a splash, a flash in the pan,” Ms. Sandler said, is to make it the centerpiece of an elaborate campaign that takes place before, during and after the game. In fact, the spot will serve to “kick off a year of activity” to introduce Ms. Brown, she added.
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  • In a teaser effort that begins this week, Ms. Brown will arrive in social media, taking over the M&M’s fan page on Facebook, at facebook.com/mms, and sending messages on Twitter, where the character will have her own account with the handle @mmsbrown.
  • There will also be print, online and mobile ads as well as a deal to incorporate Ms. Brown into the radio program “Elvis Duran and the Morning Show,” syndicated by the Premiere Networks unit of Clear Channel Communications. Other elements include events in Los Angeles and New York, displays in stores, radio commercials and appearances for Ms. Brown during episodes of the new season of “The Celebrity Apprentice” on NBC, which begins on Feb. 12.
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    M&M's has new character in cast!
Tracy Tuten

Newsweek Reviving Its 1960s Design for 'Mad Men' Issue | MediaWorks - Advertising Age - 0 views

  • Ad pages at Newsweek dropped 16.8% in 2011, but its fortunes seemed to improve after Ms. Brown's March 14 redesign. Ad pages in the first quarter were down 30.8% from the year-earlier period, then dropped 24.5% in the second quarter, 10% in the third and 3.6% in the fourth, according to the Publishers Information Bureau. Newsweek said its December ad pages were up 15% from December 2010.
  • The "Mad Men"-themed issue, which will be dated March 19, will include a cover story on the series and a feature on the role of advertising in U.S. culture.
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    Newsweek is planning an issue marking the return of "Mad Men" this March by adopting the magazine's 1960s design throughout -- all the way, it hopes, to the ads.
Tracy Tuten

Mad Men - Lipstick - YouTube - 0 views

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    Mad Men lipstick research  focus group
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