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You may remember that we're suckers here for Unilever's "Dirt Is
Good" campaign. Like the company's Axe/Lynx and Dove series, it has
shown an impressive degree of creative consistency and imagination despite
the fact that the ads are being generated all over the world by different
agencies. This new spot, Roboboy, is by BBH. Call us sentimental, but we
think it's great. The ad originally launched in France for Skip, Unilever's local
detergent brand, and is now being rolled out elsewhere for Persil and other
local brand equivalents.
Ford has raised its creative game with this new ad by Ogilvy
& Mather for the new - and rather good-looking, it must be said -
Ford Focus. Client and agency are keen to assure us that all the music in
the ad was created on the instruments shown, which were themselves created
entirely from car parts.
For Honda, Wieden & Kennedy London have returned to the
fruitful territory first explored in the celebrated Cog ad, with another
constructivist epic. The jigsaw car and building block house are both
great but we were especially impressed by the method for adding sugar to
coffee...
Finally, to round off this week's rather mechanical selection, an
entertaining ad for Renault by Publicis Germany. I'm
guessing that these badly behaved petrol pumps are what Persil's Roboboy
would have grown up to be, if he hadn't gone out in the garden.
All links below refer to pages on
Adbrands.net
In the news this past week: Advertisers
Wal-Mart is getting into the healthcare business. For the last two years, the
retail behemoth has been testing walk-in health clinics at several of its larger US
stores. Now it has announced a dramatic scale-up of the service,
with plans for as many as 300 such clinics across the nation. Branded as The
Clinic at Wal-Mart, these units are staffed by qualified nurses who can
deal with a wide variety of minor procedures. The facilities are owned and
run by regional healthcare groups or hospitals, but they share an
administrative system, including standardised electronic medical records,
which has been developed by Wal-Mart. The biggest benefit to patients (and
health insurers) is that the cost of a visit to a Wal-Mart clinic is considerably
cheaper than for a regular doctor or hospital appointment. Rival retailer Target
is also testing the in-store clinic idea, and pharmacy groups CVS and
Walgreens have each acquired their own independent clinic networks.
Universal Music Group was reported to be canvassing the other "Big Four" music groups about a jointly
owned music download service which might provide them with a more
lucrative and flexible alternative to iTunes and other third-party operations. With a
working name of Total Music, the proposed service would involve production
of a dedicated music player similar to the iPod. Under one possible
working model, purchase of the device would give users unlimited access to
the entire Universal Music catalogue, as well as that of any other music
groups who signed up to the service. (Amazon
explored a similar idea in 2006, but eventually scrapped it in favour of
its current rights-free offering).
Despite the lavish ad campaign which launched at the end
of last year (and which was featured as one of our Ads of the Week in
January), UK credit card Goldfish has changed hands yet again, and the
latest deal could ultimately lead to the termination of the brand. The card has been
through a string of different owners over the past decade. It was
originally launched in 1996 as a partnership between British Gas and HFC
Bank. The gas company's parent group Centrica
took full control of Goldfish in 2001, and recruited Lloyds
TSB as a new partner a year later. Llloyds bought the business
outright in 2003, but sold it on again in 2005 to Discover, the consumer finance
unit of Morgan
Stanley, which was itself spun off as an independent company in 2007. Now
Discover wants to pull out of the UK, and has agreed to sell its
entire credit card division, which also includes the Morgan Stanley Card
brand, to Barclays. The 1.7m
credit card accounts, worth around £2bn in transaction volumes, will now be merged into Barclaycard. Apparently, no
firm decision has yet been made as to whether or not to maintain Goldfish
as a separate brand.
Hot on the heels of the news that Motorola is considering a spin-off of its troubled mobile handsets business, WSJ reported this week
that the US group is also in talks to combine its network infrastructure
operations into a joint venture with Nortel Networks. This unit supplies
the equipment and software used by wireless operators to manage their
networks, and is currently part of Motorola's Home & Mobility
division, which also makes set-top boxes for cable companies. According
to the WSJ, Nortel could end up with the controlling stake in any resulting
combination, leaving a much smaller Motorola to focus on set-top boxes,
two-way radios and handheld scanners.
In
the news this past week: Agencies
Publicis added a new unit to its French network this week with the
acquisition of La Vie Est Belle, a Parisian creative boutique run by Eric
Salomon and Mylene Berrebi. Rather than continue under its own name,
however, the new shop has been merged with an existing group subsidiary,
Paname. The enlarged unit is being relaunched under the new name of Publicis Full
Player, with Salomon and Berrebi as chairman and CEO respectively. The
move solves the question of what to do with Paname, which has floated
around a little uncomfortably within the group for several years. It was
previously linked to Publicis Constellation, the group's regional French
network. In 2006,
Publicis announced with great fanfare that it, and German counterpart BMZ,
were being assigned as European liaison shops to work with Dentsu, the
Japanese advertising giant and a large shareholder in Publicis. But there was little
subsequent visible evidence of any such liaison, and Paname has tend to drift since
then. The new merger creates a much stronger agency, which will still
concentrate on local and regional clients rather than multinationals.
Meanwhile, in the US, the group has created a new
unit designed to encourage closer cooperation between creative executives
at Publicis USA and sister media shop
Optimedia. (In the US, Zenith and
Optimedia still operate as separate brands because of client conflicts).
The new unit, Optimedia Inside, is designed to help advertising creatives
better understand the way consumers react to advertising and relate to
different media. It marks a further step back to the good old days,
pre-2000, when media planning and creative departments co-existed within
advertising agencies, instead of being unbundled as separate businesses
with their own profit and loss accounts. As
Publicis USA CEO Susan Gianinno told the WSJ, "It's a way for us to
give clients bigger ideas and to bring everything together, as opposed to
having the marketing disciplines siloed like they are now. Right now, the
interactive people do their own take on the consumer, the ad-agency people
do their own take on the consumer, and the shopper-marketing people do
their take on the consumer. Everyone creates their separate briefs."
Interpublic agreed to provide financial backing for new
multicultural agency Translation Advertising, which will be jointly run
by industry veteran Steve Stoute and hip hop impresario Shawn
"Jay-Z" Carter. That arrangement adds yet another arrow to
Jay-Z's quiver. Like his counterpart Sean "P Diddy" Combs, he
has traded up from a music background into a variety of other business
ventures including clothing, nightclubs, even hotels and sports
management. Interpublic acquired Stoute's previous business,
African-American marketing consultancy Translation Consulting, at the end of last year, and
will take a 49% holding in the new shop.
Engine Group, the corporate parent of UK advertising agency WCRS,
announced the acquisition of well-respected direct marketing agency
Partners Andrews Aldridge in a deal thought to be worth around £18m.
Andrews Aldridge will absorb Engine's existing direct marketing subsidiary
Personal. Engine has built up quite a substantial portfolio of satellite
companies since it cut loose from Havas in 2005. Other businesses
operating within the structure now include brand consultancy Dave, digital
agency Meme and sponsorship company Karen Earl among others.
It was a quiet week for account assignments. IAC's
financial services subsidiary
LendingTree.com moved its creative account from Mullen to
Euro RSCG.
Billings are estimated at around $250m, mostly online. Mullen will retain
media. PepsiCo moved its Propel vitamin water from
Element 79 to Omnicom
stablemate Goodby Silverstein, presumably
to mount a stronger defence against Coke's newly acquired and fast-growing Glaceau brand. Australia's
tourism authority called a review of its global advertising and media
business, currently held by M&C Saatchi and
Carat. The ads have
stirred up some controversy because of their "Where the bloody hell
are you?" tagline, now officially terminated. M&C are defending the account. Also in
Australia, George Patterson Y&R lost another brace of accounts in what
has become a slightly worrying losing streak. Panasonic transferred to
The Campaign Palace; James Boag's beers to Publicis Mojo. For all
other appointments, subscribers can access the full Adbrands Account
Assignments database here.
In the news this past week:
Media
As predicted, Yahoo formally rejected
Microsoft's takeover
bid, claiming that it "massively undervalued" the company.
However Yahoo's alternative options are beginning to look slim. Some media
outlets reported that, after initially offering to lend its support to
Yahoo, Google has now distanced itself from any alliance. The
search giant has already voiced a public complaint over a Microsoft-Yahoo
combination on the grounds that it would "dominate" web mail
and messaging. Yet the group already has plenty of antitrust issues of its own to
worry about - its Doubleclick acquisition has yet to be cleared in Europe
- so is probably wary of stirring up any more trouble with regulators.
Latest reports suggest that News Corporation
is considering some form
of alliance with Yahoo, although this would stop well short of a full
takeover bid, which was explicitly ruled out by Rupert Murdoch last week.
If these talks progress, they could involve the merger into Yahoo of News
Corp's Fox Interactive Media division, which houses a variety of online
properties including MySpace, IGN and Photobucket. News Corp would end up
with a large minority shareholding in the combined business. Another possible escape
route could be a renewal of merger talks with AOL, although that would be
a longshot.
At this point, though, the most likely scenario is that Yahoo's board (if not
perhaps its CEO Jerry Yang) will merely settle
for a better offer from Microsoft. The software giant's opening bid
offered $31 per share for Yahoo. As a result of the decline in Microsoft's
share price since then, it is now worth around $29 per share. That,
however, is well below the $43 per share Microsoft is said to have
offered when the two companies first discussed a merger in early 2007. Yahoo's
board is thought to
be holding out for at least $40 per share. That would raise the overall cost
of the deal for Microsoft to around $66bn, a big increase, but well within
the software giant's means. Yahoo's second
largest institutional shareholder, Legg Mason, which holds a 9% stake, has
already indicated that it would back a deal at that price.
It was - finally! - business as usual once again in the US entertainment
industry following a vote by writers to end their 100-day strike. The
action was sparked off by a refusal by the major studios to
accept new conditions proposed by the Writers Guild of America labour
union to cover film and TV material streamed over the internet or resold
for download through iTunes or similar services. Under existing terms,
writers were due only minimal residual payments for these transactions, despite the
fact that they are fast becoming
a substantial revenue stream for the studios. When the existing contract
expired without resolution
last November, the WGA called a strike which threw the industry into turmoil, halting production of numerous TV shows and
movies, and even for a while chat shows such as Jay Leno and Conan
O'Brien. (Attempts to carry on without writers proved disastrous because
the hosts were unable to come up with funny enough material on their own). In January, the Golden Globes
awards ceremony
was cancelled because actors threatened to boycott the event rather than
cross picket lines. The
knock-on effect from the three-month strike on service industries catering to
showbiz clients - limos, restaurants, florists and the like - was also
huge,
estimated as high as $2bn in lost earnings. The new deal comes just in time
to allow the
highlight of the awards season, the Oscars, to go ahead as planned next
week.
As always, if you haven't already done so, please confirm your subscription
to the free Adbrands Weekly Update by
clicking here or on the link at the foot of this email. Thank you for your
assistance!
Simon Tesler Publisher, Adbrands
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