For about the past 15 years, new-age, digital bloviators and theorists have been bludgeoning us with the "democratizing" power of technology.
They've asserted (while flying in the face of reality) and with no evidence whatsoever, that "the consumer is in control." You need only to be awake and aware for about two-microseconds to realize how specious and stupid such blathering is.
Virtually every aspect of our lives is controlled by either a monopoly or an oligarchy. And the plutocratic concentration of wealth in our country is such that it makes the original Gilded Age, which lasted from about 1880-1929, look like a mere bubblegum pop overture to today's Wagnerian opera.
Putting that somewhat aside for a second, almost nothing in our world gets me more roiled than flying for business. (Our industry is run by an oligarchy of course. Something like 80% of the jobs are under the crushing thumb of just five publicly-traded companies.)
Though you're ostensibly a valued "member of the team"--agency propaganda insists on telling you that you matter, and we do get free ice-cream on Tuesdays--you are crammed into an oligarchy-controlled "carrier." Virtually every bit of airline-employed humanoid biomass is so angry and unhappy in their jobs that they either don't answer you with any courtesy or they flat out bark at you.
What's more, as aisles on planes have gotten narrower, my personal observation says that the hind-quarters of various flight attendants have become steadily more considerable. You are, therefore, "rumped," about forty times a flight.
We are now one-hour and 23 minutes into my scheduled six-hour flight, already my back hurts, I am engaged in arm-rest warfare and my deep-vein-thrombosis is thinking "class-action suit."
Amid all this, what gets me most irked however, is the language inflation that every one of the aforementioned assails you with.
"Sit back, relax, and enjoy your flight," hasn't a shred of truth in it. You cannot really sit back (my seat doesn't recline), the constant rumping precludes relaxation and enjoyment is out of the question and certainly has no place on my spiritual timesheet.
Just now breakfast options were barked at me in a manner that would make a drill sergeant at Parris Island proud.
"EGGS, CHEESE AND FRUIT. GRANOLA AND YOGURT. WAFFLES WITH APPLE BITES," she yelled at my row.
"Are you speaking to me?" I plaintived.
"EGGS, CHEESE AND FRUIT. GRANOLA AND YOGURT. WAFFLES WITH APPLE BITES," she re-barked.
"I'll have the eggs," I said.
I was handed a two-inch by nine-inch plastic container that will wind up in the ocean or in a landfill one day. Or a whale's intestines. Inside there was one hard-boiled egg, cut in half, presumably by a rusty blade.
"You said eggs," I said to the tiptoeing maiden. "There is only one egg."
She gave me a look that could help re-constitute our melting ice-caps.
"You shouldn't say eggs, when you're offering just egg," I Kafka-ed.
"DO YOU WANT IT OR NOT," she said with the maternal kindness of Lizzie Borden.
I demurred. And tried to open the plasticine. The sticker that sealed the contraption shut had, of course, an ad on it. Today, everything has an ad on it.
The label said, "Savor the moment." By my approximation roughly 97% of all language is now devoid of meaning. Instead, it's dripping with deception.
I read somewhere that the average Yelp! review is 4.3 star out of 5. A B+. At five of the top universities in the US, Brown, Stanford, Harvard, Yale, Columbia and Cal, the average grade is 3.61 out of 4. A solid A.
So, Dean's List, Honors, A's themselves are without meaning or distinction or, even value.
Why is everything rated so great when everything is really so lousy? Why am I asked to savor plastic food encased in plastic packaging? Savor?
It's not hard for me to see a simple prevailing reality. As everything in our world disappoints, distresses or discomforts, we nonetheless rate it highly.
As for that label, I wonder if the people having breakfast backhanded onto their "tray-tables" would at least have a small smile if the copy said something slight more honest.
"Sorry about this. Corporate's mandated that breakfast cost no more that 79-cents."
If that were the case, I might still hate my egg, but at least I'd admire the airline's candor.
George Tannenbaum on the future of advertising, the decline of the English Language and other frivolities. 100% jargon free. A Business Insider "Most Influential" blog.
Friday, June 28, 2019
Thursday, June 27, 2019
The Killer's Kiss.
I bumped into an excellent bit of
sarcasm yesterday written by someone I didn’t know. I tracked him down and
asked him if I could re-print it. To my eyes, it was that good. He said “yes.”
So here it is.
But first, an “About the Author.”
Joe Coleman is a freelance copywriter based
in Manchester, England. But he works everywhere. He's won numerous major awards and
was on this year’s writing for design jury at the D&AD awards.
You can see his work and get in
touch at here or
follow him @JOETHECOLEMAN on twitter.
10 Ways to Stop
Decent Work Ever Making it out of your Agency
Are different, memorable ads still sneaking
out of your agency’s door? Then put a stop to it with these 10 foolproof
techniques. From brief writing to post-campaign assessment, they'll help you
keep your work bland, generic and forgettable.
1. Avoid making your proposition
single-minded.
Good ads come from distinctive
single-minded propositions. So make your proposition broad and vague instead. Get
this right and you can nip creativity in the bud, avoiding the awkwardness of
having to kill off good ideas later down the line.
HANDY HINT - Use the construction “The
smarter way to… [insert product function here]” in
your proposition. This makes it sound like it’s single-minded, but actually
means more or less nothing. It’s a really effective way to make sure creative
thinking stays generic.
e.g. "Heinz Baked Beans. The smarter
way to eat lunch." "Waterstones.com The smarter way to buy
books." "Toyota Auris. The smarter way to drive."
ANOTHER HANDY HINT - Make your
proposition confusingly multi-pronged, so it’s impossible to communicate
simply. e.g. “It’s the combination of product, service and heritage that
makes [company name here] so special.” Then watch your
creative teams flounder as they try to come up with even one functioning
ad.
2. Make your campaign talk to
everyone.
Identifying a tight target audience helps
creative people picture who they’re talking to and talk in their language. So
write “the human race” or “everyone really” in the target audience section of
your brief.
HANDY HINT - You can also eliminate all
nuances of language and culture by insisting your campaign “has to work
globally”, even if it’s an Easter holiday promo for a car dealership in Filey.
3. Judge the work by tick list.
Rather than deciding which executions are
different, going to stand out and likely to stick in people’s minds, take a
tick list approach and forensically analyse every ad to see which achieves the
most of your objectives.
HANDY HINT - Actually create a tick list
and send it to lots of “key stakeholders” to get their feedback. This way you
can scientifically prove that the campaign that made everyone laugh isn’t the
one you should go with.
4. Create ads for
clients not customers.
It’s always best to completely ignore
your end customers. They’re cynical, hard to impress and aren’t paying your
monthly fee. Instead, build your thinking entirely around what you think your client
will buy.
HANDY HINT - Take the “nuclear option”
and refuse to present a campaign unless it’s what you think your client is
expecting. "I already know they won't buy it."
5. Try the “It’s a
bit like…” test.
Is the campaign a bit like that reference
film the client said they liked? Is it a bit like that John Lewis campaign
everyone loves? Is it a bit like that campaign their rivals ran last year? If
the answer’s “yes” you can be sure no new ground is being broken. It’s good to
go!
6. Outnumber the Creative Director.
A good failsafe is to make sure a planner
and senior suit are in every catch-up, so they outnumber the Creative Director
2:1. That way you can vote down anything unexpected and stop any maverick
routes slipping through the net. Hell, bring an Account Manager and an Account
Exec along too! A 4:1 ratio is even better.
7. Chip away at the idea.
Getting closer and closer to the
presentation date and the work is still distinctive and interesting? Then it’s
time to start chipping. Gradually grind the creative teams down by getting them
to stay until 10pm at night and keep making small amends that seem like nothing
in themselves, but which gradually add up to a full scale castration of the
core idea. Keep at it and you’ll soon have a bland, broken shell of the
campaign everyone liked when it was a set of marker visuals.
8. Treat research like it’s the
word of God.
Hauled 5 people in off the street to look
at some campaigns for £50 each and free sandwiches? Then obviously, you need to
hang on their every word. One of the group doesn’t get a punchline? Kill the
idea immediately. One of them has never heard of Star Wars? Then delete that
reference from the script. One of them says “It’s alright I suppose” through a
mouthful of crisps? Then it’s a winner! Tell your client, “We asked the public
what they thought and this one really resonated with them.”
9. Have loads of layers of
sign-off.
Build in multiple layers of approval,
with one boss after another stepping in to make comments and amends. Make it a
bit like playing an X-Box game. So, when the creative team have seen off one
impossibly large, fearsome baddie on one level, they move to the next level and
another baddie that’s twice as large rumbles in from the shadows.
10. Judge your success by how pleased the
client is.
Sales figures flat? Target audience
shrugging their shoulders? Social media interaction limited to the client’s
marketing team? Never mind, Ken and the team think it’s “really moved the
needle in the market”. Put a glowing client testimonial on your website and the
job’s a good ‘un!
Conclusion
There’s no silver bullet for killing
great creative ideas. You need to be on your toes at all times. Creative people
are inventive by nature and are always finding new ways to sneak interesting,
distinctive things out of the door. But apply these techniques from briefing to
post-campaign assessment and you’ll know you’ve done all you can to fight the
corner for bland, generic and forgettable work. Good luck!
Wednesday, June 26, 2019
This is a test.
More years ago than I care to remember, I devised a test to help me discern if a person was cut out to be an advertising creative.
It was a simple test,
and I’ve found through the years that it’s a pretty good barometer. I ask
people if when they go to a grocery store, particularly a high-end grocery
store, if they’re interested in the products that are being sold.
When they see the 117
varieties of mustards, are they interested in the stories behind those condiments?
Do they care about how things are packaged? Even the language on the jar.
It doesn’t have to be
mustard, of course. It could be olive oils, steel-wool pads, 91 different types
of hammers. Are you curious about them? Do you want to know more and tell their
stories?
Today, with the world’s
and our industry’s ongoing assault upon our language, I am developing another
test. It is a test of clarity. It is a test of simplicity. It is a test that separates
‘complicators’ from ‘simplifiers.’ And it spots blowhards like you’d spot an incipient forehead-pimple on prom night.
In the words of Robert
Caro, one of the world’s greatest living writers, good writers should: “Find
out how things work and explain them to people.” That definition
works for pretty much all writing, whether it’s a planning deck, a brief, a tweet,
a commercial, or instructions on how to set up a new printer.
So next time you read something at work—no matter what it is,
ask yourself, does it do the above, does it explain things? Or does it spray out buzzwords like a
Gatling gun?
Basically, it makes sense to look at most writing (and speaking) you'll encounter within an agency with this simple chart in mind. My guess is it's right 99% of the time.
If people can't make things simple or refuse to, they either don't understand it themselves and haven't the bravery to own up to that, they're purposefully being deceptive, or they're simply full of crap. In some circumstances, they're probably all three.
Occasionally people have
the misfortune to arrange an interview with me. If that unhappy event should
ever happen to you, watch your mouth.
I’m testing you.