People promulgate this dictum as if they themselves thought it up. As if it weren't always true. They look at something obvious as if it's a stroke of genius. Then, since advertising is seldom about original ideas, those words are repeated ad nauseam--or advertising nauseam.
The phrase story-telling went through the same faux discovery and wear-out cycle. Everyone discovered storytelling as if it hadn't been around for six-thousand or ten-thousand years. As if it were new. Ask Homer if it's new.
Oh, come on. As was writ in the Old Testament, in Ecclesiastes 1:4-11--"There is nothing new under the sun." Not to mention the daughter.
Oh, come on. As was writ in the Old Testament, in Ecclesiastes 1:4-11--"There is nothing new under the sun." Not to mention the daughter.
In any event, around the time I hit 58, I knew that I would soon
be fired from Ogilvy. It's not that I wasn't busy, or well-liked,
or an asset, it's just that I was 58. The agency itself was doing
or an asset, it's just that I was 58. The agency itself was doing
some showing not telling. There was no one about who was
within 10 years of my age.
I thought about showing versus telling when I realized I had a
target on my back. I leaped to a few conclusions that I'll share
here.
here.
1. While you need a good portfolio site, even the most up-to-the
minute portfolio site is work you've done in your past. And
there's a difference between what you've done and what you're
doing.
I decided it was much more important to make my work
real-time. I didn't want my employment to rest on things I had
real-time. I didn't want my employment to rest on things I had
done in the past. I wanted it to be more reliant on who I was in
the moment.
2. I also realized that in life--inside or outside of an agency--
showing your speed and showing a lot of ideas matters.
Againthat gave me something to think about. A portfolio site is
"finished." It's not alive and breathing. It’s work of your past.
My job, I realized was to show my present. Both my skill and
my ability to grind.
3. I also discovered something very sobering. Since there are
only about twelve agencies left in New York that will pay an
old-time salary, I had to come up with a "touch strategy,"
so without calling agency recruiters to the point of being a
pest(they usually have a low-tolerance threshold for phone
calls)I needed to let those recruiters know that I was alive.
so without calling agency recruiters to the point of being a
pest(they usually have a low-tolerance threshold for phone
calls)I needed to let those recruiters know that I was alive.
I took all that, and I worried the shit out of myself.
Then I realized something.
I had 15,000 LinkedIn followers. That's a media channel, I
figured. I could do for myself what I spent four decades
telling clients to do for themselves: Advertise.
telling clients to do for themselves: Advertise.
And I could do it in a way that answers my needs as
enumerated above, ie. I'd do them often. And I'd try to make
them stand out.
You know.
What we tell brands to do.
I can't find the first ad I did for me. But I've recreated it above.
I might be exaggerating like an old war-hero, but I think I got
50,000 views and a few calls about work.
In other words, it worked.
In other words, it worked.
So, again, I did what we tell our clients to do.
If something's working, if you're spending X and making
10X, why wouldn't you do more?
10X, why wouldn't you do more?
I don't need some asinine term like "borderless creativity"
to ill-define what I do. I guess if I were smarter or if I were
partnered with an MBA, I'd be out on the speaking circuit
wearing a black t-shirt and haranguing you daily about the virtues of Georgevertising.™
But that's not me. I'm painfully shy and prefer life behind the
keyboard, not up on a stage.
But that's not me. I'm painfully shy and prefer life behind the
keyboard, not up on a stage.
So, friends, consider yourself harangued. That's the worst
I can do.
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