Campaign UK

BRAND FILM FESTIVAL LONDON

WE REVEAL THE WINNERS,

-

“We’ve forgotten to do the one thing advertisin­g’s really good at: move people”

Paolo Nutini fucked it all up. For a while now, a few of us have been racing to use a speech from Charlie Chaplin’s mainly unheard-of spoken film The Great Dictator. Then some tool whacks the Inception soundtrack behind it on Youtube, a few more people watch it and the next thing you know it graces the breakdown section of the charttoppi­ng Iron Sky by the Lilliputia­n lothario of soul pop, our mate Paolo. All this, of course, meaning that none of us ad slags could possibly use this powerful sermon for our own, or our clients’, gains any more.

The best bit is a part where, midrant, Chaplin, in full flow as a tender, subversive Hitler, breathes with full lips: “We think too much and we feel too little.” It’s electric and has always set the hairs at north on my arms.

In our game, it could be said that we’ve all been guilty of thinking too much. But thinking about what? Working out how to remove ourselves from the equation? Working out how to sap the production process of any magic? Working out how to continue advertisin­g’s much-hated role as interrupti­ve force in people’s lives with precision annoyance? The truth is we’ve forgotten to do the one thing that advertisin­g is really good at: move people. And I’m not just talking about moving consumers. I’m talking about us.

While the rise of data, programmat­ic and artificial intelligen­ce cannot be ignored, who wakes up, stretches and says: “Fuck me I feel good. I’m going to smash some properly segmented Facebook copy today?” No-one. We have forgotten to inspire ourselves. To push ourselves forward. We have forgotten the cardinal rule: that we are our most important client.

While it may sometimes feel like a race to the most targeted and efficient form of the industry as it is, having recently run an agency of 500 or so brilliant people I can tell you it couldn’t be further from what we all actually need. We need to find the fire again.

So to all the talented agency folk doing the dance, persuading and pleading with their clients to be braver, to be more creative, to try the new way, I give you the magic bullet. To all the CMOS, CEOS and business leaders convincing their organisati­ons that the time for change is now, and that how they organise themselves publicly, the cultures they foster and the messages they place in the world must adapt or die, do I have the opening slide for you.

The skip ad button.

Nothing convinces like the truth, and the truth is that the real world hates advertisin­g.

This small button at the start of everything we really want to watch is no small thing.

Is it skip ad or skip ad industry?

TGI has been asking people the same question since 1990 – a great question: “Do you look forward to the ads on TV as much as the programmes?” From around 1991 to 1998, we loved the ads as much as the shows, and Guinness “Surfer” ticked and tocked just before Robot Wars to the smiling faces of millions of viewers. Fast forward to 2017 and we are in negative equity. Wake up. People are paying money to avoid what we make.

But this is a good-news story. The need for change is no longer just a raspy beg lost in the big meeting room with the weird-coloured chairs or eulogised by a creative director in the Campaign Year Ahead article – it is necessary. The fear of failure that held us back from creating new shapes of idea is overshadow­ed now by something far worse – the fear of being irrelevant. The healthy fear of becoming more noise, not new noise. So the gloves are off. We can, and should, make anything as long as it isn’t ads. Of course, the best ads have never felt like ads.

Branded content is the worst term in the world for a brilliant new type of creative idea.

What is it? No idea, but I can tell you what it isn’t. It’s not normal, expected, boring or what your mum would call an advert. It’s not industry-pleasing, invisible-in-the-real-world creative circle jerking, either. It’s new. It has scale. It probably appears on channels real people enjoy or in your Facebook feed posted by mates and makes you wince with envy.

It mirrors legitimate entertainm­ent by being sought out, not serving itself on a programmat­ic missile into your social life. And, most of all, it is effective like no ad could be, achieving a reach and depth of message a 30-second spot on Dave could only dream of.

On our journey to the Brand Film Festival, there have been some branded-content blockbuste­rs. The feature film Somers Town for Eurostar was huge and Mother at its fearless best. Sainsbury’s switched up the festive season with the incredible Christmas in a Day from Ridley Scott, Kevin Macdonald and crew (I challenge anyone to watch that soldier come home and not lose their shit) and we all refer to the excellent BMW Films as a best-in-class example of online branded content despite its age.

One award I was chuffed to win is the British Comedy Award at Grey London for a show called The Angina Monologues. A non-advertisin­g award for a stage and TV show that we managed to air on Christmas Day. It wasn’t perfect but it was an hour of heart-disease education seven million people were happy to watch fronted by the late and more than great Victoria Wood.

The best new ideas create new awards because we don’t have categories for the properly original. It has taken a while but, 15 years

after BMW Films, we have branded content categories in all of the major shows. Seven years after The Angina Monologues, enter the Brand Film Festival.

The Brand Film Festival will do good things here in the UK and there is some good work in it this year. The smart partnershi­ps with The Lad Bible and Vice will reach new audiences and the 50 Cent hostel smash has enough restraint to work, but the truth is that the very best examples of branded content today aren’t taking home the trophies in the Brand Film Festival.

The best example of branded film today is the Lego Movie franchise. They didn’t enter.

This asks some questions of all of us. Why didn’t they enter? Don’t they care about this show?

Why didn’t they enter? Do they care about any show?

The truth is that Lego didn’t look at branded content as a creative platform for marketing. It looked at branded content as an opportunit­y for its entire business. Never mind it being a two- hour ad for a physical toy, The Lego Batman Movie made $55m in a weekend.

One day, a kid is going to say “Mummy, Mummy, Lego makes actual physical toys!” and we all have to promise to not hold our head in our hands.

It takes trusting and powerful relationsh­ips to make great work. But even more so in this space. Never mind the thinking, do you have the relationsh­ips to create something properly special?

Asking the right questions of our brand partners might hurt.

Are we really going to make great branded content with you, or are you going to do it yourselves?

Are we going to be scrabbling around with what’s left of a marketing budget to make something better than a 30-second ad while someone else in the mix is developing the next weekend’s blockbuste­r?

But asking the right questions, no matter how tough, could be the answer.

Are we giving this brilliant, business changing

idea to the right people? Will they make it happen?

Could we do this ourselves?

And then the question the most talented people in your agency want an answer to:

Are we dependent on people less ambitious than us to make our dreams come true?

That’s not a question for branded content.

It’s a question for agencies that care about their future.

 ??  ?? Somers Town: the film, funded by Eurostar, was conceived by Mother and directed by Shane Meadows
Somers Town: the film, funded by Eurostar, was conceived by Mother and directed by Shane Meadows
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? BMW Films: Clive Owen starred in series 15 years ago
BMW Films: Clive Owen starred in series 15 years ago
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The Lego Batman Movie: made $55m in a weekend
The Lego Batman Movie: made $55m in a weekend

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom