Thursday, November 1, 2012
Monday, July 2, 2012
THE MOST SURPRISING AD I'VE SEEN IN A VERY LONG TIME: Scythes, Blimps and Vacuum Tubes: What's old is new again; so what's new?
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They say what goes around comes around. (Or is it the other way?) You get the idea.
About a month ago I was flipping through a physical copy of Popular
Science, May, 2012, and stumbled on a full page ad from Samsung, the S. Korean
company that makes flat screen TVs.
The scene is a collage of contemporary life-style photos with hero shot
of a piece of simple but high-end audio gear: The Samsung DA-E750 Audio Dock. A small headline reads “create wonder.”
But what surprised me, was the all caps, first line of copy: “WITH SAMSUNG VACUUM TUBE TECHNOLOGY,
GREAT SOUND COMES NATURALLY. “
Vacuum tubes?!
This is 2012! The
transistor was invented 50 years ago!?
The copy continues: “Bring audio to life with the Samsung
Audio Dock system featuring vacuum tube technology. Enjoy music the way it was
meant to be heard as the natural warmth of the analog tubes deliver a truer,
richer, more immersive sound.
Experience the future of home audio at Samsung.com/HomeTheater.” I’m not kidding but maybe I’m getting
spoofed.
Of course there are those who still prefer vinyl to CDs. And other old ideas are coming back –
like blimps according to a Wall Street Journal article headlined “Army Preps
Spy Blimp.”
In that same WSJ issue, a feature on scythes that some are choosing to use instead of motorized
weed wackers – 10,000, $200 scythe kits sold just last year and sales are in
the upswing.
So what other changes may surprise us 5 years from now? (A re-reboot of Spiderman, maybe?) My feeling is that the Facebook
pendulum may be swinging back to real friends in real time. After all, the most, basic fundamental, social medium is...sitting down face to face with someone for coffee or throwing a party.
So Onward, Forward to the Past.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Memo to Team Obama: Barack is President. Content is King.
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In 2008 and after the election, the campaign of President
Barack Obama was widely hailed for its mastery of social media and its
sophistication in the digital space.
This year, once
again, Team Obama is falling back on the excellent digital and social media
capabilities it demonstrated back in 2008…and it’s not working.
The primary reason Obama won in 2008 was not the campaign’s
mastery of digital media and
technology. It was the
message. Hopeful, optimistic,
bipartisan. Four years later it’s
hopeless, pessimistic and extremely partisan.
There is no way out for Team Obama now. Soon the mainstream media will start to
recognize the foolish and outrageous dishonesty of the Obama administration,
just so they can’t be accused of being the last to know.
Nobody wants to be CNN now.
So unless Axelrod and Plouffe are really magicians (you can
only use misdirection so much), the Obama campaign message will increasingly
seem removed from reality and relevance.
Sooner or later mainstream media will have to recognize the
writing on the wall.
Or they—and their content—will continue to be increasingly
ignored.
By the end of Campaign 2012, President Barack Obama will be fully
revealed for what he is.
King trumps President.
Saturday, February 11, 2012
EXTREME TARGET MARKETING: What if you focused on one name alone? What would happen?
Guess I'm going to find out. In my first 2012 promotion for Mosquito Comm, I'm only contacting individuals with the names David or Dave Ullman.
It so happens that there are more than 19 David or Dave Ullmans on LinkedIn. And it's easy enough to find their email, work address etc. So I'm sending letters (followed up by emails) like the one to the right.
So far I've sent letters (with 2 business cards) to four guys working in computer software, marketing/advertising, accounting and anesthesiology. A lieutenant in the Swedish Royal Navy, a provost at a college, an artist and a musician are next.
No pressure. Just a low key introductory letter tailored to what they do for a living. I'll keep you posted on what follows.
Not to dwell too long on "Dave"... but you no doubt have watched this Staples commercial? If not, you'll see it's a multiplicity of Daves and quite true to life:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXO46Jbtzuk
It so happens that there are more than 19 David or Dave Ullmans on LinkedIn. And it's easy enough to find their email, work address etc. So I'm sending letters (followed up by emails) like the one to the right.
So far I've sent letters (with 2 business cards) to four guys working in computer software, marketing/advertising, accounting and anesthesiology. A lieutenant in the Swedish Royal Navy, a provost at a college, an artist and a musician are next.
No pressure. Just a low key introductory letter tailored to what they do for a living. I'll keep you posted on what follows.
Not to dwell too long on "Dave"... but you no doubt have watched this Staples commercial? If not, you'll see it's a multiplicity of Daves and quite true to life:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MXO46Jbtzuk
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