Posts Tagged ‘msi’

Adventures in Parenting

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

So, my first blog entry as a mixed nut…seems like such a daunting task! I have been neglecting my old blog lately so this will give me an opportunity to find an outlet. Let’s see, where should I start? Lately my life has been consumed by my child, to be quite honest. I imagine that I will be using this space to write about her, our life as a family, and how marketing plays a part in my child’s life, etc. (Hey, I gotta incorporate some work into this thing, right?!)

Right now we’re just starting to be mobile at home. Baby has decided that she can no longer be bothered to stay put, we must crawl, crawl crawl…to the dog’s toys, the I-Phone cord, the laptop, you name it. Basically anything but the soft, cuddly baby toys we’ve placed on the floor for her enjoyment.

Life with an 8-month-old baby has been pretty interesting and amazing. I can’t imagine how things will be when she is walking, playing dress-up, having OPINIONS and TALKING BACK. Those days seem so far away right now, but really, they are closer than I think.

Watching a person grow up before your very eyes, it’s all quite surreal. It’s so over my head. I don’t know what I am in for, I swear I don’t even remember babysitting all that much. To be honest, from what I do remember, I was not really that good at it. I remember my brother and I used to pretend kidnap our baby sister and make ransom notes for our parents using old magazine and catalogue clippings to make the words for the note. Yeah. Someone decided I should be entrusted with parenting.

Anyway, all kidding aside, I do think it’s quite amazing, this parenting thing. This miracle entered my life one day and completely changed it. For 32 years, I did exactly what I wanted, when I wanted. Now I’m on another person’s terms, and I’m quite okay with it. It’s a struggle to achieve balance sometimes in the working mother environment, and I have to admit there are times I wonder, can I do it all? But I think confidence and positive thinking are the key.  

Stay tuned for more from my exciting adventures in parenting!

Stock + Photo + Search = Adventure!

Friday, January 28th, 2011

I buy stock photos. A lot of stock photos. Which means I’ve learned the way to navigate a stock website pretty well. But there is no perfect path to that one photo out of millions that says just what you need it to say.

A lot of the products that our agency works with are in the business of making the consumers home life more pleasant. That should be a fairly easy visual goal to achieve, but you’d be surprised.

Here is a current search for just such a product…

Keyword Search: home + people + happy + indoors (pretty straight forward, right?)

Well, that could mean…

A couple of young ladies cleaning up.

Grandma enjoying a little late night reading.

Or, whatever the hell this is???

Here’s another…
Keyword Search: home + family + bedroom + happySometimes you get lucky…

Sometimes you get…

There must have been a sale on robes.

A Teddy Bear Picnic gone horribly wrong.

Or, whatever the hell this is???

A little advice, if your search involves looking for a man hugging a pillow, rethink the whole concept. These photos are ALL creepy.

 
If you like this kind of thing, there is a bit of fun on the internet called This Week in Ridiculous Stock Photography.
Enjoy such galleries as…

Business People Doing Yoga

People Looking Shocked in Front of Computers

And, my favorite…

Men Laughing Alone With Fruit Salad

A Proposed 2011 Resolution for Marketers: Just (gasp) Sell the Product, Please

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011

 

Maybe I’m just seeing the world through a darker set of glasses this morning given my beloved Bears lost to the Packers and it’s freezing and gloomy outside (A-GAIN!), but I’m actually backtracking a bit on my typical Brand Guy stance and beginning to believe that not all products have deep ‘emotional’ dimensions worth leveraging in marketing communications.

Or, to paraphrase Sigmund Freud: that, yes folks, sometimes a bar of soap is just a bar of soap.

So, in lieu of some sort of useful info or insight I usually try to provide here, today’s post is mostly just me being cranky: about a certain type of really bad advertising that seems to abound these days; the kind that reeks of straight-from-focus group-to-execution banality; that screams ‘frustrated, high maintenance CD in a boring category’.

More specifically, looking at the current lot out there, a genre of overwrought, hackneyed attempts at approximating ‘grass roots’, ‘ social media’ and ‘consumer generated content’ in broad mass media like TV that can be reduced to three basic themes of:

 

1.     ‘It’s not a product, it’s a community of similarly minded folks all in love with it’.

In these increasingly hackneyed little train wrecks, agencies typically try to approximate the hip and intimate dimensions of social media simply by showing lots of people—thereby connoting a bottom-up consumer-driven tsunami of love around, say, Advil pain tablets. 

 

2.     ‘[We’re so wacky, we’re] takin’ it to the streets!’

We’ve all seen these, right? TV spots replete with tricked out parade floats resembling some sort of mundane consumer product, or vans emblazoned with brand logos dispensing kooky kids and spokespeople in public areas trying to approximate a ‘toilet paper flash-mob’ or something I suppose. To painful, clumsy effect usually.

 

3.     ‘It’s more than just a floor cleaner/widget, it’s a cultural/emotional touchstone/icon.’

Lastly, and more generally, any execution for a primarily ‘functional’ purchase that takes pains to avoid actually talking about old-fashioned niceties like benefits or efficacy. Pick one these days, but Allstate’s ridiculous efforts to create some sort of ‘Mayhem’ Spuds McKenzie youth-oriented mascot are among the most egregious. Honestly, do you need to go to that much effort and expense to explain that ‘stuff happens, people get hurt and things get broken’? Good grief, like insurance is that complicated a sell.

 

Alas, it’s my hope that agencies and clients alike resolve to less of this artifice and obfuscation and more clarity and logic in 2011. Especially considering a still-challenging economic environment out there and marketing’s ultimate job of driving good old-fashioned sales within it.

 

Okay, again: I admit this may all just be influenced some by other external personal factors…I mean, I did mention it’s really, really dark and cold outside, right? And wait: and I’m now being told that apparently Lovie Smith is getting a contract extension?!!

 

Ugh. God help us all….Hmm: can that Mayhem guy be sent up to Lake Forest any time soon?

Wednesday, January 5th, 2011

All of us at MSI hope you had a wonderful holiday season!  Here’s a quick glimpse at how we spent ours…

Cheers to a great 2011!

Blago Pistachio?

Friday, December 17th, 2010

Since this blog is called Mixed Nuts and since MSI is an ad agency, it only seems appropriate to mention the recent ad for pistachios…featuring Rod Blagojevich!?  

I just caught it for the first time the other day (thank you DVR), and even though I’m a big fan of pistachios, I am not a fan of this ad for the ‘Get Crackin’ campaign…Call me crazy but paying Blago, the ridiculous, criminal-turned-wannabe-celebrity, to try to sell anything - especially something as lovable as a pistachio – just seems nuts to me.   

The Power of Celebrity Tweets?

Friday, December 3rd, 2010

In honor of World AIDS Day, which was Wednesday, Dec. 1st, a group of tweet-tastic celebrities vowed to stay silent on their social networks until a total of a million dollars was raised for their charity. 

How’d that work out, you ask?  Well, the day came and went and apparently they’re much closer to $100,000 than $1,000,000 so far, prompting quite a backlash in the blogosphere.  With posts titled “People Hate Kim Kardashian’s Tweets More Than AIDS” and readers commenting about how they would donate more money if it meant keeping these celebrities silent forever, I’m guessing Kim Kardashian, Lady Gaga, Usher and some of the other participating celebs may be regretting their decision to join the “cause.”

Don’t get me wrong – raising money to help people affected by AIDS is GREAT.  And we all know that once they just can’t handle dealing with their “digital deaths” any longer, any one of these multi-millionaires can donate the ransom money themselves to be able to type their every thought once again.  They just might actually realize that some people don’t care…

In Other News

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

We are excited to share that MSI’s client Niagara Conservation was featured in the Money section of yesterday’s USA Today, check out the article here.  Not only did they mention Niagara’s Stealth toilet as a hot new product, but they also included an image of the toilet (It’s not every day you see a toilet image in USA Today)!

 

Seeing Green?

Seeing Green?

Google Goggles Hits the iPhone

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

Exciting news for iPhone users – Google Goggles, the search engine’s mobile app that allows users to search by taking a picture, is now available for download. 

Originally launched for the Android, the photo search functionality eliminates the need to type or say anything  – just open the app, take a picture and Google returns the search results by processing the picture and recognizing the text within it.

Of course, it’s still new and doesn’t work with everything – but I definitely see it coming in handy from time to time.

 

Introducing Facebook Places

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Yesterday, Facebook introduced its latest feature – Places.  Similar to Foursquare, Places is all about location; it allows users to share where they are with their friends, see who is near them and find new places around them. 

Unlike Foursquare though, Places is less about gaming (e.g. getting points for checking in at various venues, becoming mayor of a location, etc.) and it brings a new level of engagement to Facebook’s 500 million users vs. the fraction of that number who use Foursquare.  For now, though, this first version of Places is only being rolled out in the U.S., and Foursquare updates (as well as a few other services) will be integrated into Facebook Places.

Places can be accessed through Facebook’s most recent iPhone app or via touch.facebook.com on a smart phone.  Users can add places or check into places that already exist, check in by themselves or as a group by tagging friends, see which of their friends are in the same area and discover what places are around them.

Facebook posted this beautiful video to show how Places can improve our lives -

For marketers of companies with physical locations, it definitely presents a new engagement opportunity, allowing for targeted interaction with consumers right outside – or inside – their door.  For example, companies can send coupons and special offers to consumers who check in at or around a store, restaurant or theater, enticing them to make an immediate purchase.  Once a location has been added to Places, the business owner can claim its location’s page.

From a user standpoint, it will be interesting to see how people – including myself – feel about these added updates that will pop up on the Facebook newsfeed (the check-ins will also show up on the user’s profile and the location’s page).  If you already don’t care about half of what is posted on your newsfeed, you may not be interested in the fact that your friend Joe just checked in at Starbucks in Kansas City.  On the flip side, you may find out that your friend Mary, whom you haven’t seen since college, is at a store right down the street from you – prompting a spontaneously delightful reunion.

As always, it will be interesting to see where this latest social networking tool takes us…

MSI Named in Crain’s List of Largest Chicago Ad Agencies

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

Crain’s Chicago Business recently published a list of the 25 largest advertising agencies in the Chicago area, ranked by the number of local employees.

MSI is pleased to have been named #15 on the list.  You can view the complete list here.