Thursday, September 23, 2010

EOC Week 11: Class Eval

All in all it was a very good classroom experience. Despite the fact that I did miss two consecutive classes early in quarter due to illness, I worked hard and made an excellent comeback and was truly able to learn what I needed to from this class. First and foremost, the book presented in class was excellent. It was organized and methodical, and easy to read and understand bringing all the necessary concepts together. Lectures and presentations in class (movies) were interesting and relevant to the topics that were covered. One of the major elements which I found to be important was the merging of art and advertising, in a way, once and for all debunking the idea that art has to be separate from capitalism and any form of money making industry all together lest it be considered un-pure by the artistic community. That is simply not the case, and this class did a good job of making that simple fact understood, and the industry itself more appreciated from an artistic perspective. The lectures were concise and to the point given the chapter under study, although I would have liked to see some examples from the professor which lined up more with what the students at this school will understand and are able to reasonably replicate. It is up to us as students to experience it at an appropriate level so that we can grow with the ideas and expand in our own ways. That being said, the class accomplished what it set out to which is give a fundamental understand of the power and scope of the advertising industry. And despite a couple of speed bumps along the way, I believe I did an excellent job of both keeping up with the class, and learning what I needed to. And that being case, I believe I deserve and A.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

EOC Week 10: Art Serving Capitalism

Is it possible for advertising to be art? Or is the traditional idea of art, that horribly off-kilter idea of expressionism that ends up as nose piercing or a poorly designed tattoo? It has always been my impression that art for art’s sake is a waste of time. At least from my own personal perspective. Depending on how you look at it, yes, the two coincide, and in fact work quite well together. I don’t subscribe to the idea that art serving capitalism is not art. Ads, marketing, all of these tools that end up on billboards or on Tv, no matter if their drive is to sell a product, the end result, the culmination of the work from various people doing research and trying new and inventive ideas to come up with the final product is in fact art. Because it must be art to tug at the heart strings. It must be art to inspire and pull you in through sheer visual beauty. It must be art to capture your imagination and compel you to action of any kind. It doesn’t matter if that action is buying Kleenex from Wal-mart, or shoes from Nike. The simple fact of the matter is that you took action because you responded emotionally, intellectually, and then physically to something that you saw. In many cases it may not have been pretty. It may have been heart wrenching, or it may have been stupid beyond all recognition. But you acted. And unless the advertisers lied, you were probably happy about it. And the simple fact that you were indeed compelled to act isn’t manipulation, it is an artistic expression that has simply been fine tuned to a very focused frequency, so much so that you didn’t even realize that you needed that new car. But what the heck, you bought it anyway.

So to truly answer the question, do art and capitalism work together? Without a doubt, happily, and forever after…or until trends move us to new and uncharted waters.

iPad 02: Competitive Analysis

The iPad was the first, but it is far from the only tablet/touch screen on the market. Numerous other competitors exist such as the Slate from HP, the Adam from Notion Ink, the JooJoo from Fushion Garage, and the Home from Archos, to name a few of the early competitors. Fortunately, Apple’s move onto the market as well as their solid customer base (not to mention the high quality of design and function) propelled the iPad to the head of the game in the touchpad/tablet marketplace. That current status aside serious competition is on its way, namely in the form of Android (Google) based products featuring the Android operating system as opposed to Apple’s IOS. That leaves advertising alone to either widen or lessen the gap between apple and the rest. “Most people think of advertising as all forms of paid promotional communication conveyed by a mass medium, such as television, radio, the internet, or print.” (Landa, p. 34) The gap is already there, now it’s time to widen it.
As seen in the cell phone market, Google (Android) is currently the main competition for Apple. But in terms of simplicity and usability Apple stands far ahead, but Google is beginning to catch up. One of the reasons for the closing of the competitive gap is the fact that Apple’s previous ad campaigns have catered more towards their existing customer base, relying on style and innovation to keep them ingrained in the hearts of their current customers. : “Providing a rationale for a functional benefit can turn consumers into believers.” (Landa, p. 75) And it has worked. But now that competition has become more fierce it is time to expand that advertising reach to new customers who don’t buy into Apple’s slick marketing, who need that small nudge of information and reason mixed with emotional content to truly understand and embrace Apple as a real part of their lives.

As for the direct competition that is immediately affecting Apple…well, there is none. At least no yet. Most high end (big name) brands with iPad competition have forced themselves to push the release dates of their products back until the fall. : “…in today’s competitive marketplace, where most advertisers believe that visual style and spirit sell a parity product, in’s an underlying creative idea that can make an ad touting a benefit stand out…” (Landa, p. 101) And though the real competition will be coming out very soon and the state of the market is going to change, it gives Apple plenty of time to solidify their place in the market, and to firm up their plans for the future of gaining even more market share.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

EOC Week 9: Triplets



In this clever advertisement for Bolibomba Gum, a Venezuelan brand of bubble gum, the ad campaign theme is exercised in these two side by side pictures. Although the subject of each ad changes, as does the background color, the theme remains clear. In each picture you have a young adult (one male, one female), fit, healthy, and wearing nice clothing. The theme as illustrated by the ad is that no matter who you are (or what you look like) you’re never too old to enjoy bubble gum. And the simple pleasure that bubble gum provides may just be enough to bring out the kid in you. Obviously it is a product for the young at heart, as further illustrated by the humorous child-like faces showing through the enormous globes of bubble gum being blown from the mouths of each person. A very simple and clever ad that speaks well to those who do not take themselves too seriously, and provides an easily repeatable theme to spread out over additional ads (in triplet).

iPad 06: Analysis in the real world

A very practical and to the point ad. The Re-learn everything ad hits the heart of everything that it needs to in order to capture greater market share amongst the emergence of new (and in some ways compelling) competition. “When an ad looks like a million other ads we’ve all seen, it’s a sure bet fewer people will care to pay attention to it.” (Landa, p. 143) This ad aims to separate itself from its would-be competitors by engaging the viewers on an emotional level that will likely not be pursued by the emerging competition, as their ads will focus on showing “attributes” and technical reasons from choosing their product over the iPad.

I will be honest and relate that at the time this ad was created Apple did in fact generate their own campaign much along a similar theme. However, this only means that the “re-learn everything” ad holds true in its idea of educating the public on the highlights of the many magnificent features of the iPad, without over explaining, or over selling. “Many clients and creatives believe that repetition is crucial and so tend to prefer “triplet” campaigns, whether in print, on TV, or digital; triplets make sure that the viewer immediately recognizes the brand message.” (Landa, p. 170) This ad is meant for repetition over different media and can be changed and adjusted to be used as a “triplet” campaign.

All in all this will be a successful campaign based on the facts that it will be providing the new customers with what they need to make an informed decision about purchasing a product such as an iPad. “It’s not that what you write has to be absolutely new---it just has to sound fresh, not predictable. It also has to sound as though you’re engaging in a natural conversation with the reader.” (Landa, p. 194) This campaign resonates with a freshness and message that will appeal to a large number of people and work well with the provided visuals and verbals to both educate and stimulate viewers into performing the primary purpose of advertising: selling the product.

iPad 05: Creative Content



As stated before, the creative content for this ad is a design created for either (or both) internet ads or magazine placement. It maintains a simple visual and verbal appeal, aiming to capture the attention of the potential customers with clean, easy to understand at a glance visuals, and slightly vague yet comprehendible wording. It goes from left to right, immediately drawing the viewers eye to the far left to the image of the iPad, then to the bold lettering to the right, and then down to the bottom to finish off the viewing. “The way you create, select, and arrange everything---the type, visuals, and graphic elements---in an ad or graphic design piece is design.” (Landa, p. 125) All of these elements come together to most effectively lead the customer to the desired conclusion—buying the iPad.

Visually the ad is clean and precise. The main visual element of the iPad with a shilouetted image of a rock singer emphasizes the point of “change rocks,” sitting atop a black fading to white and back again gradient as the background. The word elements are sparse and well balanced, lead by the large white lettering of “change rocks.” “There must be a central thought, an underlying idea or related ideas, or a theme carried throughout the campaign. That central thought is communicated visually through the design of the campaign.” (Landa, p. 168) The only color in the ad is the image that appears on the iPad which creates strong visual contrast without being a cluttered and too complicated to look at.

Verbally it is succinct and easy to follow, yet also interesting and abstract enough to avoid making its intention of selling too obvious. The verbal message is intriguing, letting the viewer know that change is not the monster many people believe that it is, and it is in fact fun, useful, and if you will, hip. “When copy sounds conversational, then the reader feels you’re strking up a conversation, rather than pounding her over the head with a sales pitch.” (Landa, p. 151) Re-learn everything tells the viewer to embrace that change and relearn how they live certain aspects of their lives such as music, movies, tv, entertainment, and nearly anything else you can imagine.

iPad 04: Promotion

Promotion for this product on this particular campaign is based off of both internet ads and magazine ads. The provided ad is designed and suited to work best with those two media types. Designed to take up half a page of a magazine, or a single page internet ad. The specific target for this campaign stretches past the already well established set of loyal Apple users and attempts to capture the hearts and minds of those potential consumers who need a little more convincing apart from the standard, somewhat abstract Apple marketing of the past. “A target audience is a specific group of people or consumers targeted for an advertising or public service message or campaign.” (Landa) Now, with the increase in competition from the likes of Dell, Samsung, HP, and the like closing in on the market opening the advertising for Apple iPad becomes more important than ever.

Emotion, as always, is a key component of any worthwhile ad campaign. The emotion of the “relearn everything” ad comes mainly from the main tag-line, “Change rocks.” This relays to the customer that, change is ok. In fact, change is more than ok, it’s something to be sought after and pursued and integrated into your life. And what better way to do that than the Apple iPad? In my opinion, the choice is clear. “It [Advertising] has to be likeable. It has to inform and inspire. It has to have some emotional hook to it that makes consumers interact with it.” (Landa, p. 121) A further point is showing that the product has more uses than simply the single one shown in the ad, thus it becomes necessary to display (even somewhat obscurely) some of the many other uses one might have for such a great product.

Part of an ad’s job is to stay away from a theme or ideal that tries too hard to sell the product. Once a customer recognizes that he or she is being sold something, and if the ad does not overcome that stigma then you have just lost the customer. However, the juxtaposition that must be attained is avoiding that over-sale, while still asking the customer for the sale itself. This is where emotion makes its triumphant return into advertising. “…in today’s competitive marketplace, where most advertisers believe that visual style and spirit sell a parity product, in’s an underlying creative idea that can make an ad touting a benefit stand out…” (Landa, p. 101) This ad sells, but it doesn’t overdo it. Change rocks. So why not re-learn everything with Apple iPad? “In both unconventional and conventional approaches, the key is that visual and words together communicate a whole message that is greater than the sum of the parts…” (Landa, p. 187)

iPad 03: The Big Idea

The big idea for this campaign is about changing the way that people look at personal computing. It’s not about Lap tops or desktops or even tablets. It’s about experiencing the things that you love, the parts of your life in this new age of technology and innovation in a way that not only makes things easier for you, but allows you to experience them better. “The idea distinguishes a brand, endears it to the consumer, and motivates the consumer to run out and buy the brand or act on behalf of a social cause.” (Landa, p. 67) The idea is life, and all the ways that the elements of life people enjoy in a certain way can be changed to enjoy even better, and make their lives even better as well.

Change rocks. This implies a number of things relevant to the consumer. One, the idea of learning something new is not scary as most people consider it to be, especially when it comes to computer products and emerging technologies. Two, not only is change not scary, but it’s fun, interesting, and life altering in the best possible way. And three, the additional line “re-learn…everything” suggests a positive attitude towards having to relearn how you live certain parts of your life. “If you think of yourself as a general in the armed forces, then the strategy is your tactical scheme, your overarching approach to advertising a brand or social cause. It’s your plan for action.” (Landa, p. 58) This is the overall theme or strategy of this campaign. Connecting with our customers based on the understanding of change, and using it in the most effective and enjoyable way possible to make your life better.

The statement of this ad has already been addressed: Change rocks.“When something is emphatically stated, we tend to believe it.” (Landa, p. 93) This ad is further directed at the consumer in order to make them believe and connect with the product, to give them emotional investment in it, even before they buy. The iPad touches upon what a large portion of the U.S. consider to be important in the living of their personal lives. “Our tendency to form mental connections between brands and memories is what this category of ads [Association] can bank on, encouraging emotional bonds between the consumer and the brand.” (Landa, p. 119) This ad allows our consumers, and the consumers of the future, to form that personal bond with the product and begin that ever-important association between many of the things that are important in their lives and bring them joy and with life itself. “From every ad, a reader tries to glean information. If an ad does not have a visual hierarchy, then the reader will have a very difficult time getting information, and will probably give up trying.” (Landa, p. 130)

iPad 01: Slogan - Re-Learn…Everything.

Apple iPad. Change rocks. Re-Learn…Everything.

This is the basis for this ad campaign. A purposefully simple and direct statement designed to highlight not the usefulness, not the technology, not the style, and certainly not the price, but it highlights the revolutionary aspect that the Apple iPad brings to the computer industry, and to life in general. The statement implies that the iPad changes things. And it does. Not just technologically, as with its touch screen computing technology, but in other industries as well. “As with television and radio, new technologies such as the internet would again bring new media to the advertising industry, introducing such formats as promotional web sites, web banners, and internet films.” (Landa, p. 13). Entertainment, book reading, internet surfing, application design, even email and social networking are all affected and essentially changed by the large-scale distribution of a technology different from the standard mouse, point, and click interface. That is the beauty of iPad, and it is worth re-learning.

Change is an essential part of life and human survival, so it is a wonder why so many people are resistant to it, in sometimes violent ways. In fact, change, especially in this case (as in the emerging technology of the iPad) is fun and exciting. And while it may take a slight amount of effort, relearning what you think you know about computers, entertainment, and the computing life in general, is well worth the effort.

This slogan is meant to go hand in hand with a strong visual message that compliments the “re-learning” element being emphasized. Apple advertising through the years has maintained a strong and consistent visual appeal, and this ad will be no different. It will implement strong visual stimuli accompanied with concise, relevant copy that will go a long way to both emotionally connect with the intended audience as well as educate them on the finer, more technical points of owning and enjoying an iPad. “Just like a synergistic reaction between two drugs, where the effect is more than additive, advertising depends upon a synergy of the visual and verbal to communicate with the most power.” (Landa, p. 52) By understanding the simplicity involved in the relearning process as well as all the options for life and entertainment that will be available by purchasing an iPad, this ad campaign will drive sales to new heights and open up new audiences and markets unreachable through the previous campaign.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

EOC Week 8: Chapter 8 Example



This ad for Rodney Strong Vineyards Merlot does a number of things well when it comes to selling its product to consumers. The first is to make their copy into a sales pitch, without making it too wordy or blocky, and in other words, throwing up a red flag for the reader. It starts out using a light, funny, conversational tone that goes a long way towards making the reader comfortable and engaged. The beginning line “You can take the Merlot out of Sonoma county---in fact it’s highly recommended,” makes the reader feel amused and warm, and doesn’t over sell its product.
“When copy sounds conversational, then the reader feels you’re striking up a conversation, rather than pounding her over the head with a sales pitch.” (Landa, p. 151) It’s followed up by the line “Place Matters. Try ours.” A gentle nudge in the right direction.

The second element is the use of place. This ad tends to strike a pretty good balance between being visually and copy driven. There is a fair amount of copy at the top, but the main focus of the ad is drawn downward towards the beautiful black and white scene of the idyllic Sonoma county (an obviously perfect place to make great wine), accented by the colored bottle of Rodney Strong Wine in the foreground. “An ad that relies on the visual to communicate most of the ad message is visually driven.” (Landa, p. 159). This ad falls into both categories by relying on a specific verbal message, but then shifting the focus downward and allowing the strong visuals of the landscape and the wine bottle to tell the rest of the story/advertisement. The reader is left with a single thing to consider after seeing this message and visuals, “Place Matters. Try Ours.” Well, maybe they should.

EOC Week 8: Authority

“Use the various weights and styles of a font for variation, rather than choosing combinations of two or three fonts. Too many fonts may make a piece look like it was designed by an inexperienced designer.” (Denise M. Anders, DMA, New Jersey)

Maintaining faith amongst a group of consumers is very important, and that begins with how an ad makes people feel about that product. Some products have a great deal of brand loyalty from their customers, largely due to the tone and appropriate feelings that the advertising has conveyed to those customers. Should a particular product suddenly present itself completely differently from how it has in the past, it runs the risk of alienating and losing much of its support base. This can be avoided by unity of design and use of appropriate fonts to make the consumer feel comfortable, and that this is still the same solid product they have come to love. That is what I plan to do with the advertising for iPad.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

EOC Final Project: First Thoughts

First thoughts: iPad: relearn your world (relearn…everything. Simplicity, control, life. At your fingertips…literally.)

This particular ad would be designed to highlight the “life-altering” qualities that can be contained within the iPad. Specifically geared towards the elements of everyday life that people see in one dimension such as how they read books, how they watch TV, how they receive digital entertainment in general, and the fact that it can now be brought with you everywhere and is available at the tip of your finger. It’s the first step in a larger technological evolution that will change your life, and it’s worth the tiny bit of effort needed to learn it.

Week 7 EOC: Exciting Ad



In this ad for the new Lion Camp at the San Diego Zoo’s Wild Animal Park, the creators accomplish several elements all at once. The first and most striking is the simple fact that it’s funny. It presents a very human emotion being displayed by an animal (Zebra), doing something that is almost entirely impossible, cringing in fear and desperation to get as high and far away from something as it possibly can by climbing up the back and neck of a Giraffe. Immediately we identify with emotion the animal feels, as we have all felt something similar at times. Then our eyes pan downward and we see why such a ridiculous thing might happen. The Lions have arrived. And suddenly the emotion connected to the add becomes clear. We are both afraid, and excited at the possibility all at once. Bringing us directly into the ad’s design principles:

Composition: This particular ad holds a tall frame, likely useable inside a magazine spread. It makes good use of space with a large amount reserved for an understandable and amusing image, with a small amount of text at the bottom. It is easy to understand and uses its space to communicate both fear and excitement, and the subtle need to experience both.

Negative shapes: The reason this image stands out and is easily recognizable is the simplicity and strong use of negative space around the animals. The animals are beautifully framed on either side by light blue sky allowing the viewer to see the animals and the emotion they evoke.

Visual Hierarchy: The ad begins by leading our eye top and center to the very clear image of the Giraffe supporting the weight of the very frightened Zebra. Our eyes take a moment to register what we are seeing, deciphering the emotion, and then the image leads us down into the header (explaining the emotion we are seeing), the content text, and then where we can go to experience this excitement/emotion for ourselves, the San Diego Zoo.

Illusion: The illusion of this ad helps to promote the emotional effect of the ad, something that we know and immediately recognize to be impossible, but funny and understandable all at once. The Photoshop artist did a beautiful job making the illusion believable, which in turn opens the door for us to look to the bottom of the ad and see exactly why the Zebra (and ourselves) feel the knee-jerk fear and excitement at the coming of the lions.

Week 6 EOC: Make 'em laugh



This very popular commercial first aired at this last year’s Super Bowl. A commercial for Doritos corn chips, it went on to become one of the most talked about commercials of the entire Super Bowl spectacle, which for many years now, has nearly become more of a forum for funny and impressive commercials to entertain the massive TV audience, then it is about the actual football game. Sad? That part’s up to you.

In any case, this commercial worked. I personally heard about this ad from many different sources as part of Doritos ad campaign to have independent film makers come up with the best ideas to sell Doritos.

The humor of this ad comes mostly from the juvenile appeal of physical comedy favored by many American’s. In this ad a selfish jerk of a man is enjoying a bag of tasty Doritos, meanwhile taunting a nearby dog by not giving him any. But hold on, justice/vengeance/retribution is all served as the dog (in a very amusingly human gesture) takes off its anti-bark collar and puts it on the annoying man who refuses to share his chips. The revenge fully unfolds when the dog barks, sending the man into a convulsing set of electric shocks (normally meant to keep the dog from barking).

The humor of this ad comes from several angles. The jerk, clearly deserving of some form of punishment for taunting a poor animal is given his just desserts, at the hands of the very “stupid/helpless” animal he was torturing, no less. Secondly, the humor appeals to anyone who has ever seen an animal abused or mistreated and wished the vengeful wrath of God (or your chosen deity) down upon the abuser. In many ways it is the humor of role reversal. And though the particular topic of animal cruelty is not an amusing one, the thought of someone who deserves the role reversal is. Another element of the humor also comes from the comical element of seeing a dog perform actions (or obviously thinking things through) in a distinctly human manor. It’s an old sympathetic fallacy, but it’s still funny, even today.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

EOC Week 6: Jerry Metellus



Take all your experience with you:
Everything that you’ve done with your life before this moment in your career or what have you has a use. You can use all that experience to further what it is that you do, or will do. It’s all useful and relevant. Take the opportunity to learn all you can and use it to you advantage and you’ll be surprise how far you can get.

There’s always someone better or more creative…so arrogance is a waste of time:
It truly doesn’t matter how great or wonderful or creative you think you are. The fact of life is that thousands of people emerge into the same position as you every minute, and there’s always going to be someone who’s as good or better than you are. This is a simple fact and it means that any attachment you might have to your pride or the fact that you might be good at something, drop it. There’s always someone better so the best possible thing you can do for yourself is understand that and work hard to make yourself better, always staying at the top of your game. Arrogance gets knocked off the pedestal, skill and hard work gets supported.

Know your stuff…even if the industry is always changing:
The digital media industry, even fashion and all other facets of design are always changing. In photography you used to have to know your trade well, and whatever you could not accomplish through sheer skill could be done in post production. Now, a photographer doesn’t need photo skills as much as Photoshop skills in order to create good photos. But the fact still remains that good skills and truly knowing your industry is what is going to make you great at what you do. Take your time and really learn what you’re doing, whether that’s photography, design, web design or what have you. You will always be better when you work to learn those fundamentals.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Week 5 EOC: Ad Categories


Endorsements: “Got Milk” Ad campaign. A brilliant and widespread, yet very simple message features a whole slew of celebrities from all different walks of life inspired several generations of children and adults alike to reintroduce themselves to the benefits of drinking milk. The celebrity element of this ad extends itself far beyond the typical celebrity appearances, using references from movies and fictional characters alike, appealing to a hugely diverse target audience who were given the opportunity to understand that they too needed milk.



Demonstrations: “P90X Home workout system.” This program is several years old, I myself used it at one point, but through relentless infomercial based advertising and demonstrations combined with countless positive testimonials and undeniable results, this has become a home fitness juggernaut, and it doesn’t seem to be slowing down in the least. Even amongst the professional sports communities and everyday joe’s alike, this exercise program promised a lot and delivered for a marginal payment (compared to your monthly gym membership) and only asked for a little dedication in return.



Recognition: “Verizon’s ‘Can you hear me now?’ spokesman.” Due to the use of a single well placed phrase in a very specific and understandable context, Verizon wireless created an instant pop-culture craze with the be-spectacled Verizon everyman, tirelessly trotting the globe to make sure your mobile phone service works almost everywhere. Never mind the near infinite number of comical references made to this pop-culture figure, the statement made its mark, and you would be hard pressed to find someone who owns a mobile phone that doesn’t know the reference.

Thursday, July 22, 2010

EOC Week 2: Ethics in Commercials

GoDaddy.com ads have always had a particular “what the hell?” effect for me whenever I’ve seen them. GoDaddy.com is in fact a large, well known internet website hosting service. I have seen their service in use, and being a web design major, all I can really say about the speed and quality of their service is, well, I’m not impressed. But despite what I consider to be a number of shortcomings to their service, speed being the first, ease of use and simplicity of design being two other equally important problems the website provider suffers from, they have managed to overcome this with a very specific advertising campaign.

This campaign, as you may well know, centers around sexually racy depictions of women. That’s it. Upon seeing the commercials you are not endowed with a supreme understanding and appreciation of what the service is, or what you can do there, nor are you any more intelligent or complete as a human being (as I believe should be required by modern day commercials). In fact all you see is the logo of the company displayed in various ways on scantily clad, unrealistically endowed women with a promise to “see what happens next” at godaddy.com. I already knew that sex sells, but I didn’t know that that’s all you need to sell anything at all.

The question of course is not whether these ads are effective (as they obviously are), but whether they are ethically questionable. And I say yes. Of course it is every woman’s right to project her own image however she sees fit within the parameters of what the law allows. What is ethically questionable in my opinion is the portrayal of women as mere objects of physical perfection to be objectified in a society (the USA) that already places far too much importance on physical appearance as a means of social placement. I seriously doubt that young girls growing up want or need the added pressure of growing up with negative self images, but further objectifying these girls once they get there surely isn’t helping. As nice as some of these girls are to look at given the situation, I think we can do without the GoDaddy.com ads, but that’s just me.

My Voice

For the past seven years following my graduation from Seattle University with a degree in English, Creative Writing, I diverged from the path of writing and worked as a graphic designer. After years in the industry I have a desire to move onward and upward in my own experience. Now as a Web Designer I am working towards bridging the growing gap between graphic art and communication over the World Wide Web. I am also working towards finishing writing my first science fiction novel which will be completed soon.

My goal in this industry has been to use design to effectively display the true nature of the company in a clean and clear way that optimally represents to mission and personality of the company. During this pursuit I have worked as the creative director for both a nationwide hospitality and room service company, as well as a regional holistic healthcare center.

As a writer, I have been working towards completing and publishing science fiction and fantasy novels for the past ten years. Until recently have I given up my pursuits before the job was finished. But now I have found drive and work ethic, combined with a great story that is pushing me through to the end.

Thursday, July 15, 2010

EOC Week 1: Volkswagen Lemon Ad

Few advertising campaigns were able to make such a mark on the history of the industry like the one made by Volkswagen in the 1960’s. Not only were the German auto manufacturer’s tasked with the challenge of surmounting strong odds against them, but they were able to do so with style and a lasting impact that changed the face of advertising for decades to come. “How could Volkswagen sell Hitler’s favorite car to the American people only a decade and a half after World War II? This was the question asked of the advertising agency Doyle Dane Bernbach in 1960. In order for them to solve this problem, they would have to find a new way to advertise their products.” (http://www.writingfordesigners.com/?p=1731)

In order to get past the problems, not only with advertising to a world that still remembered the horrors of World War II, but to break past cultural stereotypes and other barriers, Volkswagen utilized this ad agency to its greatest affect, endearing itself to consumers worldwide in ways that would almost never be repeated. “The large copy printed at the bottom of the ad says “LEMON” which caused the viewer to question his intuitive knowledge about Volkswagen’s high standards. The ad agency successfully caught the viewer’s attention by using self-effacing humor. With any luck, these ads drew you into the joke, and you would read the rest of the copy looking for the punch line.” (http://designhistorylab.com/?p=1755)

Humor, as shown by this legendary ad campaign, would later grow to become the backbone to successful advertising, especially when it came to winning over American consumers, was built upon. Not only that, but the ad itself effectively set itself apart in terms of quality and high standards in ways that American cars could not hope to match. “America loved 1960s Volkswagen Beetle advertising, and with good reason. In an age of blustery pitches glorifying size, power, and prestige, 1960s Volkswagen Beetle advertising was the calm voice for a different set of values. Plus, it made you smile.” (http://www.howstuffworks.com/1960-1969-volkswagen-beetle4.htm) Now we not only see humor (or at least a vigorous attempt at it) in nearly every ad on TV, but we are forced to realize that nowadays the only ads that are truly successful in the modern advertising environment are the ones that truly connect their humor with that of the worldwide market. Humor, plus established and reliable quality, equals a recipe for successful advertising.