Why creative people love problems

Problems, problems. We creatives love problems. We embrace them with open arms, eyes and minds. Problems are the things that get us up in the morning. You see, if everything was going swimmingly, no one would ever need us. We like to be needed and appreciated. The bigger the problem,…

Fear Mongering: The election explained by a creative director

If you ask the average person if they like negative ads or even think they work, they'd probably say "no they don't work and can they please just stop." But every campaign season there seems to be more and more negative ads. I'm predicting a record amount of negative advertising…

The issues don’t matter: The election explained by an advertising guy

In advertising we deal with competing brands all the time. Logically thinking, you might assume that one brand really is better than another. But if facts and logic where what consumers were in the market for each product category would have one dominate brand and everyone else would just get…

Everything is opaque in the age of transparency and authenticity

Today, every brand wants to have an ethos of authenticity and a transparent culture. They're all claiming to be responsible green and sustainable. Or maybe it's all well-crafted bullshit sentimentality. Afterall, how can you really know what a company's management really thinks? Newsweek lists the top 10 US Green Companies this…

An ad guy explains the election. Hillary: the packaged goods candidate

Hillary Clinton's campaign tactics, public statements and brand promise are all a lot more understandable than Donald Trump's, which I've previously written about. In fact, Hillary's campaign feel a lot like it could be for a packaged good's company than her competitor. After all, Proctor and Gamble's motto is "The…

Trump explained by an ad guy: Ad Hominem

Donald Trump is famous for using the Ad Hominem attacks like "Lyin' Ted", "Crooked Hillary" and "Little Marco" on his opponents rather than the logical take down. Why does he do it? Simple: people don't care about facts in marketing, advertising and politics (and really, in most things). For example:…

Trump explained by an advertising creative director

I've shied away from this topic during the primary season because it's a radioactive hot potato that could blow up in my face. But it's also very instructive to those who can see beyond their own biases. (Disclaimer: I'm a third party voter and will not be voting or supporting…

Hey, Creatives! Do you know what your job is?

A lot of ad creatives (and my students) think their job is to create the best damn creative humanly possible on every single assignment they get. That's awesome and I get it. It's also a good long-term career goal. You've got to always be selling improving your portfolio and track…

Writers: If you haven’t written it, you haven’t thought it.

Back in college, I was explaining to a professor, in great detail, how I was eventually going to write my term paper. I explained I had it all thought out and I just needed to sit down and write it. Easy. His response was, "If you haven't haven't written it,…

Video Content Marketing: Who is it for?

A lot of marketing professionals wonder if video content marketing is something they want to bother with. It can seem like a lot of money and work. I won't say that everyone has to do it, heck there are always exceptions to rules, but every marketer should at least thoughtfully…