James Bond Marketing

October 13, 2008 by Rachel  
Filed under Entertainment Marketing

The new James Bond film comes out at the end of this month (in the UK and 14th Nov in US) so the marketing effort is moving into high gear. I thought I’d keep a record of all the marketing that I see for the film and would love to hear from you other campaigns in your country.

1. Australia - the Quantum Code.

The Quantum Code is an ARG, from Sony Australia; they also seem to be heavily involving key site readers, such as from Gizmodo. It’s primarily a mobile campaign, using QR codes, with a series of clues and challenges. If you can’t be in Australia, unfiction has a thread following all the action

2. US - Mission for a Million

I wrote about this earlier. and didn’t think much of it given the heavy handed branding. Again, it’s a challenge/puzzle based so I’m wondering if this was the overall brief from the brand to their various country agencies.

3. UK - Coke Zero Zero

There’s more in the UK, but here’s one I ran into this evening. Coke Zero and Ocado (online supermarket shopping) have a joint promotion as part of the bigger Coke Zero Zero push. Buy over 90 pounds of shopping which includes a Coke Zero product and they’ll enter you in a draw to win a break in Siena, Tuscany, a location used in the film.

Sony and Currys Battle of the Bands

Have you played Guitar Hero or Rockband? If so, you’ll probably be a lot better at this game than me, Battle of the Bands from Sony and Currys. Just choose your level of difficulty and play the game using your keyboard.

Battle of the Bands

Screenshot from site

I’t actually sure why they are running this, which has to indicate a fail. I think it’s just music appliances in general available from the store, but I’m not 100% sure. Whatever, it’s fun

Sony Tumble and HDNA

April 22, 2008 by Rachel  
Filed under Advertisements, Video Content

Whilst Sony Foam City has been getting a lot of press, there’s another Sony campaign that is being used in the US for some of the same products - the HD versions of Cybershot and Handycam plus the alpha DSLR. It’s called Tumble (I’d show the ad if the embed code worked - on Firefox it demands a plugin and on safari it embeds the whole page. Something tells me this is not quite right yet!)

Update: They put the video on YouTube, along with a behind the scenes video. (but site embed still not working)

Apart from the initial gasp as the big camera split up and reformed to all the little ones, it did not do that much for me - no idea from that film what the Smile Shutter Technology actually is. I found the behind the scenes film a lot more fun, showing how big a task the filming actually was. I’m guessing that this is the first of a few in the series, as a lot of the shots shown in the .making of’ film were not in the final 30′ ad.

Other great things about the site are the fact that you can share the videos and LOTS of images. Digging around the site provides you a lot of information - including what Smile Shutter is - and yea, the flash site has deep linking so I can show you as well! There’s a lot of really good information on there, but the overall impression is a bit cluttered; it’s the ecommerce site as well and two needs - sell product and provide information about products in an engaging way - rub up against each other at times. It’s a difficult balancing act, as a flash product site with no real information looks good with a campaign, but does not help the people who want to buy. This site does not quite have a total success on this, but is pretty close. (Oh, I do love the HDNA logo and the graphics around that)

One further thing to comment on is about the reach out. With all other dealings with Sony it’s been via a UK PR company, Immediate Future, and they’ve been doing a great job. This link came direct from an Internet Communications Specialist at Sony Corp Comms; a short, impersonal link and a request to tell them what I think. Well, the ads OK, the content around it is great but the connection was poor. What do you think?

Update: A few emails later and I’m feeling a lot more personable to Sony again. It was interesting about how the first email made be go ‘urgghh’ thinking about how the previous stuff was good and this contact not so much. But there was a real person behind it and knowing that makes it so much better.

Sony Foam City Ad

Update - it’s now live and embeddable at Sony.co.uk/images. Well, there’s embeddable code, but can’t get it to work here - they’re working on it!

It’s here finally. And if you’re interested in the music, it’s specially composed for the ad by Warren Ellis, of Nick Cave and Bad Seeds. He also did the music for the film The Assassination of Jesse James.

I got a sneak preview of the Sony Foam City Ad from Fallon, which gets released tomorrow. But I can’t show it you yet - I’ve had to promise not to release it until it goes live on the Sony site later. More on that later, but first let’s talk about the ad. You’ve seen the images, it’s all foam and bubbles and people playing in towers of fluff.

It opens on a pile of foam, constrained behind a material wall, which lets go and a tidal wave of white stuff engulfs you.

Foam Pile

People play in the foam as it sweeps down a street, falls off a spiral car park ramp, they hide in a shop as the street gets overwhelmed. The foam gets picked up by the wind, blown into the sky. A child flinches as a mass hits him on the head, you see tops of heads in the sea of bubbles.

Heads in the Foam

People run as another foam producer starts up, pores off the top of buildings. People play like and jump. Everyone is taking photos, stills and video. Those are the product shots, people using Sony Image equipment in the midst of the bubbles.

A Foam Monster

Finally, a last shot in the setting Miami sun, streets full of foam, the sky full of bubbles. Images Like No Other.

Images Like No Other

I liked the ad; there’s a sweetness and a joy that comes through - these people are really enjoying the opportunity to play in the world’s largest bubble bath. You can a lot of the images taken on the day over at Flickr, taken with the Sony cameras they are promoting. You can see that a lot more happened than made it into the 60 seconds of this film, that the foam got everywhere!

On this shoot, Sony have been working hard on outreach and getting people involved - look at the large number of people in the foam. They’ve still not got it right though, with some mistakes been made; offers of trips being withdrawn, I got offered an exclusive interview which never arrived. Putting an embargo on releasing the ad (which I wonder if it will hold?). Far better than they’ve done in the past but still only 75% I think. I’m looking forward to what they try next, because I think it can only get better.

Update - I got a post-post email about who has had early copies of the ad, which was 5 bloggers who could not make the shoot and an acknowledgement that they know embargoes rarely work. In this case, I think it will, as it’s with bloggers with whom they have a relationship. I’ll say it again, I think Sony have been making great strides in this area and they’ll get better.

Sony Foam City Pictures

I received some great pictures from the Sony PR agency today from the shoot by Fallon in Miami earlier this month for their Digital Imaging group. They really makes me regret not being able to go - the shoot looked a lot of fun. Haven’t we all wanted to just fill a street with foam?

Sony Foam City Street

Here’s a couple of people playing in the foam, having a ball by the look of it. You can see that many of them have cameras in the middle of the foam, the ad is planning on having footage from these cameras.

Sony Foam City Bubbles

Sony Foam City Playtime

And finally, the foam has taken over a spiral car ramp, with the brilliant colours on the building that you only tend to see in hot climes.

Sony Foam City Spiral

Sony Digital Imaging

March 14, 2008 by Rachel  
Filed under Advertisements, Advertising Agencies

I should have been in Miami today. A few weeks ago, I got approached by (one of?) the Sony PR agency, from whom I’d got stuff before, about a trip to Miami to watch Fallon shooting of the new Sony ad Foam City, for the Digital Imaging range and also get a chance to play with some new cameras they are introducing from the Alpha, Cybershot and Handycam ranges.

But things did not run entirely smoothly. First up, I was at SXSW until Tuesday, so they were going to have to fly me from Austin to Miami and then onto London which required discussion. Then they cut the numbers, then at the last minute they changed the dates to those of SXSW. The last change meant I could not go at all, missing my favourite conference, where i was speaking was not an option. I have mixed reactions about all of this, so here they are:

  • Being asked to go in the first place was a wonderful boost. I’ve written about some of the Sony stuff a lot in the past, but not all of it complimentary. It would have been great to get the real behind the scenes story of putting the ad together. Sony reaching out to bloggers, something they have been doing more and more over the last year,(see Ewan talking about a game campaign) is indicative of a change of attitude from previous attempts to do it all themselves.
  • The change of numbers and delays in response were annoying - ask Andy. If you are going to ask someone to go on a trip to blog about you, then be sure you can do what you are asking. Budget changes after the invites have gone out are bad form. My contact at the PR agency did a grand job of keeping me up to date, but having been on the other side of the story, it must have been really frustrating to have to change things.
  • The final change of dates was due to changes beyond the brand or agency control, apparently filling streets with foam means the police get to change dates ;)
  • I’m reading reports now and it looks like they had a successful event during the shooting. Photography Bay has a great report, detailing the fact they had over 200 locals with cameras taking shots during the foaming as well, and there are others here, here and here.

They also twittered the event:

Am looking down a street completely full of foam. Nuts! 02:36 PM March 09, 2008 from txt
We’re making 2.5 million litres of foam a minute 02:39 PM March 09, 2008 from txt
Italian journalist on his knees hunting for his glasses in a metre of foam shouldn’t be funny (but really is) 04:20 PM March 09, 2008 from txt
the ad is going to look truly breathtaking. Yes, I do work for sony, granted. But seeing fifteen journalists and bloggers playing in it 06:52 PM March 09, 2008 from web
with the biggest smiles, was just so cool! i want to go back! 06:52 PM March 09,
the clean up operation takes a bit of time! All the foam is totally biodegradable and non toxic, so people can play as much as they want 05:29 PM March 10, 2008

Although they did fail in one of the key benefits of Twitter which would have been to follow people and find out what they wanted to know during the shoot, which would have increased engagement.

Now I’m expecting some pictures to come through at some point, behind the scenes at the shoot. Meanwhile, I’ll keep my fingers crossed that I get asked again sometime.

Sony Walkman Project Posters

November 27, 2007 by Rachel  
Filed under Advertisements

Whilst in London last week I got to see more of the Sony Walkman Project material dotted around the place. I saw the ad itself on TV, pretty impressive on a bigger screen. I caught OOH stuff on buses and on the Tube. Most importantly, I heard it been talked about a lot. The campaign is definitely making an impression.

Big ad on the Tube:

Sony in the Tube

Lots of side of bus posters as well:

Sony on the bus

Interestingly the posters use the slogan Music Like No Other without the periods between the words, which you see if you go take a look a the website or read the press releases. Not sure why they are different there.

The Gunn Report Winning Adverts

November 5, 2007 by Rachel  
Filed under Advertisements, Video Content

Craig Davis posts on his blog about the top 10 winning ads this year, as recorded in the Gunn Report. One interesting juxtaposition, look at the Axe/Lynx ad and then the Dove Evolution ad (along with the more recent Dove video). These were done by the same company, Unilever, one using women and sex to sell a brand the other decrying the use of ‘fantasy’ women to sell brands.

One of my favourites - Sony Bravia Paint

Sony Bravia Pyramid

October 14, 2007 by Rachel  
Filed under Advertisements

Via Adverblog, we are led to a YouTube video with another interpretation of the Sony Bravia Colour ads, this one with multi-coloured threads falling down one of the great pyramids. (Hi Res version here) I can’t see them really doing this? Did they???? the last shot looks like CGI stuff and you never really see the bobbins come down the pyramid, so I’m guessing put together in post.

Making of Sony PlayDoh

October 11, 2007 by Rachel  
Filed under Advertisements, Advertising Agencies, Video Content

Looks like Sony are listening a little, they’ve released embeddable versions of a behind the scenes video that contains “interviews with Creative Producer, Juan Cabral from Fallon, Animation Director Darren Walsh from Passion Pictures and Director Frank Budgen from Gorgeous and gives you a behind-the-scenes peak into the incredibly painstaking production process!” It’ll be on the site later today.

Warning, Hi Res version. Also, it’s autoplay :( Edit - hopefully this is a better video player. The code they seemed to screw with the layout. They also sent the wrong URL orginally as well. oh well, they try.

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