That's something Monty said to me once. And I remembered his words on this sunrise shoot in the middle of the Nevada desert.Sure I'd gotten up at 4 a.m. and was freezing my butt off. But so what? Just look at that sky.
That's something Monty said to me once. And I remembered his words on this sunrise shoot in the middle of the Nevada desert.I'm always reading in AdWeek about clients who demand new ways to connect with consumers. But I haven't seen much of that here. Far more often, I see creatives intuitively going after business opportunities and being shut down by clients who want to know where their damn ad is. Maybe that's just a function of working in a mid-market city. I know we have problems preparing our clients for the idea that we might not come back with an ad.
I mean we can reinvent agencies all we want. Do away with traditional art director/copywriter creative departments as per Joe Jaffe’s recent suggestion. We just need to find someone who’s going to hire the resulting entity.
Because most clients aren’t set up that way. Bigger ones, anyway. They’re all about “hiring ‘best in class’ partners in every discipline.” Which may have worked 25 years ago, but now basically results in a bunch of overlapping vendors all stepping on each other’s toes and doing what they can to defend their own little piece of turf. So we can suggest changes in store design to our clients. But if they already have a store design agency, they’re not going to care what we think. Or want to pay us for it. (And if the idea does start to get traction, the store design agency sure isn’t going to be too happy about it and will do what it can to sabotage it.)
Head "everything creative except the music" for all Sony BMG labels... [Including] videos, viral, packaging, online, mobile, in-store, all advertising, some merchandise and media buying/planning.