viral rock the world

Geschrieben am Oktober 31st, 2007 in Interessantes | von Sascha

If you missed some viral stuff that was going on lately. Just watch this fine compliation of all major virals. Quite entertaining.

via frogblog


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play for charity and please buy halo3

Geschrieben am Oktober 31st, 2007 in Online Marketing | von Sascha

Nice small game for lunchbrake.
::: check it out :::


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shop victoriously

Geschrieben am Oktober 30th, 2007 in Online Marketing, TV Werbung | von Sascha

Neue Ebay Kampagne im klassischen Ebay-Stil. Sehr schön und passend. Vor allem mit dem Claim “Shop Victoriously”.
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New classic style campaign for Ebay. With a very clever Claim “shop victoriously”

::: check website :::


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Putins Videogame Review

Geschrieben am Oktober 30th, 2007 in Online Marketing | von Sascha

A funny viral for a new upcoming video game. nice. . . Towaritsch!


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Honeyshed

Geschrieben am Oktober 29th, 2007 in Interessantes | von Sascha

Ein interessantes Konzept von DROGA5 (zusammen mit Smuggler und Publicis) startete kürzlich unter honeyshed.com
Dabei handelt es sich um eine Website die kurzweilige, leicht verrückte Unterhaltung anbietet, um “e-Verkaufsförderung” zu betreiben. Hierbei können sich Marken einfach mit Ihren Produkten beteiligen. Eine wie ich finde interessante Sache, die es zu beobachten gilt. Kommen hier endlich die neuen Vermarktungskonzepte für Werbeagenturen, bei der man endlich die alten Geschäftskonzepte hinter sich läßt? (Schliesslich haben Werbeagenturen auch die Soap Operas erfunden, wird Zeit das mal was neues kommt!)

::: check website :::

Für mehr Infos gibt es hier den englischen Presseartikel:
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english press release

Honeyshed set to launch
By “celebrating the sell,” new site seeks to sweeten the branded content pot.

Honeyshed, the much anticipated brand-driven shopping and entertainment hub from Droga5 is set to launch in beta today with, among other things, tips on bronzing, a cheeky pitch for Kiehl’s lip balm and a demonstration of the wonders of padded underwear.

The site, created through a partnership between David Droga and his agency Droga5 and production company Smuggler, with funding from Publicis, seeks to engage 18-35 year old consumers with entertaining video content that the site’s creators say “celebrates the sell.” While Honeyshed isn’t an e-commerce site, it seeks to promote and facilitate online shopping on behalf of multiple marketers by offering a “sexy, irreverent and fun,” curated hub of brand information and culture.

“Everyone is scrambling to do branded content but for the most part there is no real home for it,” says Droga. “Most of the time the strategy has been to create entertaining content and then seed it, put it on YouTube, or elsewhere. So content is king but the king didn’t really have throne. Our idea was wouldn’t it be brilliant to have a site where you could be overt about the brand. The site gets at the entertainment value and the sociability of shopping. ” On Honeyshed, says Milling Smith,”the star of branded content is the brand. People like to shop and when we started to talk about our demo and the types of products they’re into we realized we could talk about these products openly and it was, in a way, more engaging and honest than hiding the product in a comedy skit.”

At launch, the site will host about 30 shows (there are another 70 shows in the can) centered on product categories, like gadgets, beauty, denim and sneakers, that will be refreshed every few weeks. Visitors to the site will first be greeted with whatever video segment is streaming on the homepage at that time. Viewers can then choose to access specific videos in the site’s archive by brand, category or host, engage in live chat and “stash” items in a shopping cart-like section. Clicking on items in the Stash section takes you to the brand’s own shopping site where the transaction takes place. Users can also send videos to friends and embed them in their own sites and social network pages.

In its next phase, the site will host brand specific shows. HS’s architects say brands have been enthusiastic about the site’s model (and a few marketers have already signed on for their own content blocs) but many are waiting to get a sense of site traffic and demographic before making a full programming commitment. What does that commitment entail? A typical scenario would have the brand paying for production of an hour’s worth of content, which would appear in several three-four minute episodes that would screen for three months. Droga says the media model for the site is transparent—marketers pay for views and time spent and clicks through. “Our business model is engagement. Brands get to see who’s looking at a video for the first time, who’s a return viewer, what other brands people are navigating from and to—and the live chat. For better or worse it’s like real time focus groups.” All content is being produced out of HS’s own studio in L.A., which now has about 40-50 people working on content. Back end work on the site was from Entriq and Schematic.

The question looming in the lead up to the site’s launch has been what would compel a big enough audience of prospective shoppers to visit the site on a regular basis, and to stay on it. Droga calls it the “compound effect of brands coming together,” comparing the site to a shopping district where a visitor knows the tone and direction of most of the stores. Milling Smith also points to the curatorial role of the site in attracting its sought after demographic—the site will be defined as much by what products aren’t on it as those that are. “They’ll come for a tone,” he says, also pointing to the importance of the site’s hosts and efforts to cast “presenters that people will start having a relationship with.” At launch, among the most prominent hosts are a threesome of gorgeous young ladies not overburdened with clothing and some garden variety males (one of whom appears to be CAA’s Andrew Ault).

The initial phase one debut will be supported by a partnership with Facebook. There will be a bigger consumer launch in early December for which Droga5 is working on an integrated campaign. While further details about syndication and how specific content will be pushed to viewers will be forthcoming at official launch, Milling Smith says the founders also wanted “to build a site where everything is something you’re interested in. So people are not just sticking to things they’re already comfortable with. We do that by earning their trust by being a filter and serving things up in a way that’s exciting and palatable.”


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G I Jonny

Geschrieben am Oktober 29th, 2007 in Online Marketing | von Sascha

HIV is always a good playground for interesting campaigns. Enjoy.
::: check website :::


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Get the Gunn

Geschrieben am Oktober 26th, 2007 in TV Werbung | von Sascha

Anbei seht ihr drei der von mir noch nicht im ideenverteiler vorgestellten Spots, die beim Gunn Report unter die Top Ten gekommen sind. Die restlichen Spots findet ihr hier! Viel Spass.
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please find enclosed three spot from the Top Ten of the Annual Gunn Report that I havn´t featured in this blog. For the other ones click here!


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OVER THE TOP auf russisch

Geschrieben am Oktober 24th, 2007 in Online Marketing, TV Werbung | von Sascha

Ein Highlight russischer Werbekunst. Werbung kann so schön dämlich sein!
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A Highlight in russian advertising. Watch it!


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