Headed to Advertising Week New York with Kenvue: Q+A on Data-Driven Creative
As we ramp up for Advertising Week New York, we sat down with our two fireside chat speakers, esteemed client, Ander Lopez Ochoa, EMEA Head of...
3 min read
Will Post : Jun 23, 2023 1:21:00 PM
I’m wrapping up the week at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. This week was a wonderful clash of things that are parts of this industry every day: Creativity and technology, art and science, inspiration and exhaustion. Sweat. It’s a week that feels very long and yet not long enough. Based on how much the topic of AI dominated this year’s discussion, artificial intelligence and human experience is yet another clash to be added to the list.
As the Head of VidMob’s Client Organization, I spent my time at the Festival with many of our clients who attended, listening to them about their business and where they are putting creativity to work right now. Here’s what I heard:
I spent the early part of one morning in the lower level of the Palais, walking the aisles of case study after case study from the work being recognized this year. I was a student of the work, reminded of what I learned in my first days in advertising: when a truth about people and a truth about a brand find the right tension, and the story of it is told beautifully, it will move us to think, feel and act.
I saw moving, award winning work that inspired action like Dove’s #TurnYourBack. Coca-Cola’s “Create Real Magic” was built by humans around the world, equipped with generative AI and the brand’s own distinct assets to inspire new artists who earned over 300 million impressions for the brand.
Much of the work I’m still thinking about as I leave was often the simplest:
Those are insights put into action that drive results, which is what every marketer I speak with is looking for creativity to do right now.
One brand, whose story I took in while there, will be on massive display later this summer. I heard Mattel President & COO Richard Dickson review the 64 year history of Barbie. To hear him tell it, the brand has never been stronger than it is today, and its latest success in the past several years has come from these same lessons from the work on display. Tapping into truths about people, embracing self awareness as a brand and putting insights into action, that’s how Barbie managed to double its share in 5 years. There was only one build I have to offer on what I heard from Mr. Dickson.
He proposed a definition of Creativity; “the ability to imagine better.” The teams behind brands like his haven’t just imagined better, their ability doesn’t stop with imagination. The creativity on display this week is the ability to imagine better and then deliver it.
As we ramp up for Advertising Week New York, we sat down with our two fireside chat speakers, esteemed client, Ander Lopez Ochoa, EMEA Head of...
We’ve spent our whole lives with Moore’s Law as the guiding force behind technological progress. If you had a computer, a phone, an iPod, or anything...
The mind-boggling rate of progress in AI – 10X the rate of Moore’s Law – is difficult to wrap my head around as a human and parent, let alone as a...