Marketing,
Creativity What services do I offer?
As you can see from the galleries in "My Work," I have a variety of work experiences and talents. Working with a designer who can translate your company or organization "look and feel" across a variety of mediums had it's advantages. You save time, money and your collateral material ends up having a nice cohesive appeal.
Who do I work with?
I have worked with a number of people, from small one person businesses, to those with hundreds of employees. But I most enjoy people who work hard and are motivated to get things done, and yet enjoy having a little fun from time to time as well.
How do you get started?
You can simply e-mail, call, IM or txt me. I am a one person shop, I write the proposal, I do the work, I do the followup, I am "my people" and will never hand you off to a flunkie mid-project. You hire me, you get me.
Tuesday, May 13, 2008 at 10:19AM I was walking the other day with my two daughters 9 and 11 (those are their ages, not their names, however, that could launch a whole new version of "Who's on first" but I digress...) and as we were walking we saw an owl that appeared to have a wounded wing. And while we walked I ask my girls if they knew a commercial that had an owl in it. Immediately, my 9 year-old pipes up that it was the tootsie pop commercial, which of course was the one I had been thinking of and remember so fondly from my days as a child sitting in front of the TV. At that time...(warning: here is one of those "when I was a kid we had to walk to school uphill both ways kind of story") we only had 4 channels and the amount of air time devoted to children's programming on the three major networks was about as rare as actually licking to the center of the tootsie pop, save Saturday morning. So, commercials, those entertaining and bit sized little bunches of creativity sprinkled like chocolate chips in my cookie dough, were enough to keep me glued to the TV.
So, how is it, I ask that my 9 year-old and I have the same frame of reference. Thanks to cable TV and networks like Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon. They randomly play old TV commercials in their programming, and take me right back to when I was a kid. But, are the commercials still relevant to the audience of today? For this and many others, the answer is yes. Timeless appeal.
While creating the next ad, commercial, website, etc. Think about it. In 30+ years, will it still have that same emotional appeal to your audience as it does today? Even if the product has changed?
Here is the commercial that started this all, do you have a old-time favorite?
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