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Posts tagged with Blog
Friday, 17 June 2011
The Birds
Angry Birds are everywhere (and yes the irony of that statement is not lost on me). What was a humble game for a phone has almost reached saturation point.
At Toy World the other weekend (I was there with the family, not just hanging out), there was a whole aisle devoted to the plush toys. Watching 30-Rock, Tina Fey refers off-hand to a level she just can’t beat. While in Barcelona (or Bathelona if you prefer) T-Mobile have created a real life version of the game, complete with accompanying Mariachi Band.
I don’t really want to get into if it’s a great game (it is) or why it is (it just is). Just that it was the 52nd game Rovio had made.
Your first idea might not be the greatest. Nor even the second.
But let’s get started. Who knows where it might lead.
Wednesday, 15 June 2011
Giving the bird to digital
Penguins are an endangered species according to federal Minister for Small Business, Nick Sherry, who yesterday forecast that online shopping would wipe out general bookstores within years.
According to The Age, representatives from the bookseller industry were ‘gobsmacked’ at the Senator’s comments.
But I wonder why.
Were their heads stuck in a first edition War and Peace when news of Angus & Robertson and Borders broke?
Still, I don’t necessarily agree with Senator Sherry just as I don’t agree with the demise of direct many digital evangelists have predicted over the last decade.
In fact, in the ever-expanding online world, offline communications will become even more cherished and effective.
And for a simple, human reason – you can touch it.
Nothing compares to that feeling of buying a new book, pages unturned, spine unbroken and the anticipation of getting home to begin unravelling its secrets.
Navigating the newspaper on your iPad doesn’t bring the same joy as exploring a pristine copy of the Sunday paper over a coffee in your local cafe.
Equally, receiving a crafted piece of direct mail, produced with metered copy, paced art direction and perfectly weighted stock, cannot be rivalled by an eDM.
It’s the difference between high tech and high touch.
The difference between Corey Worthington and a Facebook party invitation, and Catherine Middleton and a Royal wedding invitation.
Digital is perfect for delivering information with high utility but may not be the best for conveying a message of high emotion.
So take a page out of THE DM GROUP book and consider the most appropriate medium for maximising the effectiveness of your marketing message.
It’s not always the newest.
Sometimes it’s a classic.
Stephen Flewell-Smith
Business & Creative Director
THE DM GROUP
Friday, 6 May 2011
Evidently, the bird is the word.

The shifting of sands in the digital world is nothing new, and rarely does an acquisition of one online powerhouse by another raise an eyebrow – but this one certainly has me befuddled.
News out of the US last night is that Twitter has acquired TweetDeck, the small yet very popular piece of software that makes it so much easier for you power tweeters out there to manage the torrents of tweets flying across your screens on a daily basis.
Ok, so there’s nothing new there right – one software maker buys another – easy. But here’s the rub. Twitter is a free service that’s not funded by advertising. TweekDeck is a free tool that runs on that free service – yet it’s valued at $50 million simply because of its staggering reach? Yikes. That’s a lotta cash for comment.
To my mind though, it’s clear that someone, somewhere is hatching a plan to monetise this thing in a very big way before all the venture capital runs out. One little birdy told me that Twitter might even start delivering the occasional contextual ad into their streams – which means big opportunities – and big questions for brands. Like…how the hell do I make sure my bird gets heard?
Ian Ross – Technical Director
Monday, 2 May 2011
From puffin muffins to destroying brands…
iSelect has changed its advertising with a campaign reaching both offline and online.
So whether you love her or hate her, as its seems so many people do, it’s ‘goodbye’ quirky, bubbly little blonde with the penchant for ‘puffin muffins’ …
… and ‘hello’ portly bald guy in a suit who gets the name of the large lady in his call centre wrong and doesn’t care.
As a brand specialist this ad sent a shiver down my spine. You’d have to be ‘burying heads’ to believe I’m going to be thinking nice things about iSelect after this misguided attempt at humour.
I agree that iSelect needed to do something new, but for me this misfires badly. I get the message that iSelect is not a health fund, I got that from the previous ads. Now I also get the message that iSelect has a culture that rides rough-shod over the feelings of individuals. Their names and feelings don’t matter.
For many people there are few bigger faux pas than getting someones name wrong.
Well actually there is a bigger one. Getting a name wrong, not giving a stuff and then insisting on using the wrong name over the protests of the victim of your poor manners.
At the DM group we work with many major brands to construct the framework of their brand strategy and bring their brand personality to life through considered and insightful creative executions on and offline. If you’d like to discuss how we might help you do just that for your brand why not give us a call.
Malcolm Harvey
Client Services Director
Thursday, 21 April 2011
Goodbye Bensons – HELLO ‘Ciggies’
The recent Federal Government announcements on plain cigarette packaging could mark the end of 40 year war against the tobacco industry. That industry is up in arms and threatening multi-million dollar law suits. Perhaps evidence of how deeply this latest assault will impact the ‘brands’?
Over the years the tobacco industry has been quite remarkable in maintaining strong brands in the face of restrictions that would have sounded the death knell for other categories.
In the 1970s tobacco companies were banned from using overtly glamorous or ‘cool’ imagery, so they resorted to an increasingly surreal approach to selling their wares. The result was arguably some of the best press ads and posters of a generation with oblique images of gold pyramids and ripped silk. For a while it seemed that the tighter you squeezed the industry, the more creative it became.
But that’s all about to change, no more ads, no more seductive packaging, no more brands, no more cigarettes.
Result = true happiness? Well perhaps its not that simple.
The fact is that you can take away the brand identity but the need that created the category will remain?
All you are left with is a single, mass market of ‘ciggies’ with similar look, price and taste (just a different name to pay lip service to their origin). It might stop me posing with an expensive brand I think says something about me, but does it stop me smoking? I doubt it. For the vast majority of smokers this is about addiction first and fashion a far distant second.
At the DM group we work with clients to create brands that positively differentiate them from the competition, our successes with blue chip clients are testiment to our creativity. If you’d like to know more, why not give us a call.
Malcolm Harvey – Client Services Director
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