Tag Archives: web writing

Web of Influence

It’s summer in SoCal, which means it’s sweeps time if you’re a spider. This translates to knowing that, no matter how careful you are, or what time of day, you’re bound to walk into a web somewhere.

spideryThis lil bugger was in the tree right outside our patio. I’ve seen others who have been a little more advanced in their web placement. The smarter ones are more like today’s super sophisticated, data driven banner ads. They’re building their webs above a light. They know that their target is attracted to the light, hence, putting them in a better position to punch their meal ticket.

The challenge, just like the spider who sets up shop in the place he/she thinks is best, is that no matter how much research or data, the attention of the intended target isn’t always guaranteed of being caught.

Old school advertising had a much easier time. Fewer choices meant a greater chance of hitting the right demographic. It was more like the spider who weaves its web high up in the tree where it has a chance to build a big target that most likely would be ignored, or knocked down by an unsuspecting person like…well….me.

Reaching the target today can be a challenge. Mostly because, as consumers, we have way too many choices. (Not to mention a shorter attention span. What is the latest data? If you don’t capture someone’s attention on a Web page within 15 seconds, click…they’re gone.)

We also don’t always follow the expected path. Look at Facebook. Created for college students by a college student. Because of that, makes sense to link advertising targeting the 18-24 year olds. Wrong! The largest demographic group setting up personal pages on Facebook is now the over 40 crowd. And especially women.

But it’s not just happening on the Web. it’s happening in stores. Or, in my case, an auto dealership. I went in the other day to look at a particular luxury brand’s offerings. And when I asked my old school car salesman Walter about one of their newer, smaller (and perhaps seen as more youthful and hip) vehicles, he quickly quashed my desire to look at it because I was “much too old” to be considering that vehicle.

Uh, really?

Consumers will continue to behave in ways that aren’t always expected. Which just means that advertisers will have to do like the spiders in our neighborhood. Increase the numbers. Spread out wherever they can. And if they get knocked down, rebuild as quickly as possible. (That scenario alone is what makes the Web so powerful. Immediate results show marketers what’s working, and what isn’t. And making small changes is a lot quicker than editing a print or TV ad.)

Eventually, the marketer will capture the attention of some poor, unsuspecting fly.

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swimming in the creative pool

there are days when diving into the creative process is as shocking as the water temperature here off the coast of southern california. not that i really know. i’ll admit that in the 15 years i’ve called SoCal home, i’ve been in the water twice. no deeper than my knees. as shocking as that sounds, it’s no more shocking than my own response to hearing people say, “no, the water’s warm! it’s like 68 degrees today.”

uh, thanks, but give me the warm waters of maui any day.

but i digress. my initial thought for this post came from finding myself at times in the creative zone for small pockets of time, and then wham! it’s gone.

for some odd reason, it reminded me of when i was a kid, and we spent many a summer vacation at “the lake.” by the lake, i mean lake brownwood. it was where the family had a home that was home to my maternal grandfather for years.

AB06523i spent a lot of time swimming, fishing, and basically overall relaxing in that lake. but one of the things i remembered the other day was how, out of nowhere, you’d find yourself either in a warm or cold spot depending on the overall temperature of the water. i remember wanting to stay in that zone because of the momentary relief it provided.

but just like some creative zones, it can all change in a matter of seconds. one minute you’re basking in the brilliance that is streaming from your head to your fingers and onto the page. the next…your a cold fish gasping for, well, water.

i’ve learned the trick is to swim as fast as you can when in the zone. and when not? keep tredding. something will break free.

or, if you’re lucky, you’ll find yourself in another lil pocket of creative warmth.

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Marketing to a more sophisticated palette

There’s no question that today’s consumers are a much more sophisticated lot. It seems everywhere you turn, men and women are constantly clutching their latest digital toy in one hand, and either a gourmet coffee drink or a $4 bottle of tap water in the other.

I find myself falling victim to these choice choices. And not just when it comes to dressing and feeding myself. (All said as I’m sipping my Starbucks coffee with my new Palm Pre sitting on the desk.) Like every parent who insists on dressing their little ones only in Baby Gap, I find myself spoiling my “children.” alliecody

Sure, it’s easy to justify the drawer full of dog toys. And the 4 different collars/harnesses with matching leads hanging by the back door. (I’ll even reluctantly admit to having tons more toys and accessories bagged and on the shelf in the garage.)

But our biggest indulgence of late is what we choose to put in their bowls.

Take a walk through any pet store or look on any grocery pet food aisle and you’ll be inundated with variety. But, just like those parents who believe only Baby Gap will do for their child, we spoil our girls.

Why, just this morning, breakfast consisted of Stella & Chewy’s organic (and certified safe) freeze-dried goose and duck liver that I lovingly revived with some hot water, and then mixed into the California Natural dry kibble (sweet potato and herring). But, oh no, it didn’t just stop there. I also pumped one good pump of wild caught salmon oil, because nothing says I care about my girls like an added dose of Omega 3 fatty acids.

As the gal who owns our local pet supply store stated, these girls should have one helluva coat. Well, of course, that’s our intent. And we’ll see how it all works once they’ve been on the new diet for a bit.

This is definitely not the food I recall from my childhood, when the most exotic things I remember were the Gaines burgers that I think I was fonder of than the dogs. (Yes, I am told that, apparently when I was but a wee toddler, I was known to get to the dog’s food bowl before they did. I’m just saying…..)

But the marketers of these newfangled pet foods know when they are going in a good direction. Even mainstays like Purina and Pedigree are getting into the mix with their own offerings of “premium” or “all natural” choices.

But every time I open a can of Merrick’s “Grammy’s Pot Pie” or “Cowboy Cookout,” I have to wonder who I’m dishing this up for? Is it really for my girls? Or is it for me?

At least I can admit that it looks a hell of a lot more appetizing than those pathetic Gaines burgers that used to catch my toddler eye.

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seeing the world in perpetual pink tones

Perhaps I’m disillusioned? Or maybe I just don’t realize I’m wearing rose-colored glasses? But there is a big part of me that does find the “c’mon, let’s all band together and make the world a better place” trend in quite a few of the new TV spots on the air to be….hopeful. I’ll admit some have even made me a wee bit misty.

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Even this morning, I was caught by the behemoth bank’s spot about how they’re all for helping people achieve their dreams. Especially in these “rough economic times.”

But how many people truly buy into that? I know from my jaded seat in sunny SoCal that most people would sooner step over your dying body to get to their next social engagement/double no foam latte/print out on the company Xerox than look down to help a brother or sister who is finding themselves down.

Because aren’t some of these people that run the companies or produce the spots the same ones that won’t even return a smile or get off their cell phone long enough to acknowledge the person taking their coffee order?

Regardless, I will continue to hope that good will win out. That people are intrinsically wired to be neighborly. And friendly.

Then again, I continue to believe that talent is more important than who you know or how you dress.  And it’s certainly more important than how many friends you have on Facebook, or the fact that you tweet on a regular basis.

Or maybe that’s just my rose-colored view of the world.

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when creative inspiration takes flight

It always comes back to the same necessity: go deep enough and there is a bedrock of truth, however hard. (May Sarton)

Finding the right inspiration for projects can come from some unexpected places. The brochure project I just completed for a large computer company located in the Pacific Northwest had some unique challenges. How I found the creative solution was rather surprising.

The issue was a gaming device. I am not a gamer. Unless you consider old school Cribbage, or an occasional game of Mahjong on the computer. I grew up playing Asteroids and Pac-Man. I think about the “coolest” I ever got was playing games like Tetris and Galaga. None of this comes even remotely close to anything MMORPG that seems to be all the rage.

After a length of time writing and deleting a bunch of different approaches, I felt the need to step away from the computer. A quick trip into the kitchen to grab a fresh glass of water was the goal. What I got out of it was so much more.

Standing at the counter, I looked out the window when a flash caught my eye. Seems one of the neighborhood hummingbirds was taking a sip at the feeder outside our kitchen window.

Mesmerized, I watched as her wings flew in a blur, when suddenly she abruptly stopped and perched on the feeder. Guess this wasn’t a drive-by, but more like some leisurely sipping.

And, with a flash, she was gone.

But that flash of inspiration sparked something. I had a thought that quickly translated into what I was looking for to capture the spirit of gaming (at least in my old-school brain). And within a matter of minutes, I had something down that I was quite proud of. The best part—the idea was approved for print with only some minor modifications. Which of course made me as giddy as I am every time a client “sees” my way of thinking. Or every time I see one of the dozens of hummingbirds that come to feed.

As an ad writer, I’ve had to dive in to a lot of different areas in order to learn to speak the language of the target demographic. From the off-roading/extreme sports mindset to knowing more about incontinence that I’d ever really care to admit, I feel it’s important to relate to the subject/issue I’m tasked to market. To know just know it, but to breathe it.

I’ll admit diving into some subject matters has been more fun to swim around in. Others, perhaps, not as easy.  More like swimming upstream in mud.

I guess the most important lesson for me, is to keep my eyes—and mind—open to what surrounds me. To jump in head first, and just be in the moment. Because I never know where the inspiration is going to come from.

What I do know, is that if I don’t capture it, sometimes, in a flash, it can be gone.

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i’ll see your reel, and raise you a URL

urlvsreelIn today’s competitive marketplace, is it more advantageous to have web or tv experience? Sure, the best scenario is to have samples of both in your portfolio.

But if you have to choose just one, which is going to move your career ahead more?

I interviewed with a large agency in Texas last October. Going into the opportunity, all parties knew my TV experience was light to negligible. But I brought strong direct and interactive experience, which was also part of the job description. We had a great chat (at least from my side of the table, I thought so). But when it came down to making the cut, my lack of TV production experience was enough to throw me off the job offer island.

Which brings up a whole other discussion. How does someone who has spent more than a decade working in the “ad biz,” but mostly in print and web, find opportunities to gain TV experience? I thought I had resolved the issue when I spent nearly 2 months storyboarding out an entire section of an auto manufacturer’s web site that was going to use live-action video and CGI to tell their truck’s story. Think a bunch of 30 and 60-second spots that, when strung together, told a compelling and engaging story.

Not only had we received client (and legal) approval for the boards, I had already hired the director and production team, and we started scouting sites. But then the bean counters came in and pulled the plug.  So all I have from that effort are some great storyboards and awesome shooters that I now consider friends.

Do you ever give up hope of getting the chance to do something new? Or do you go with what you know from experience, and keep milking that for what it’s worth?

I’m holding on to the hope that some day I’ll have the chance to finally shoot a broadcast TV spot. But in the meantime, I’ll continue utilizing my web experience. And continue to add to that skill set (with things like SEO) to help fortify my arsenal of offerings to present and future employers/clients.

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