Archive for the ‘T&T Ads’ Category

Top 10 ‘Shubh Divali’ Ads 2009

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Did you have a good Divali? Personally, I saw more deyas in the newspaper than I did in actual life.

Here’s a round up of the Top 10 Divali ads. It was more difficult choosing this list than the Eid list. I can’t decide if the difficulty stemmed from so many good ads or that so many of the ads featured deyas. My highly-opinionated, darling of a sister wanted to banish all ads featuring an actual deya. But as you’ll see, some deya ads were quite good.

10th Place:

10th Place: UTC

10th Place: UTC

A smidgen on the grandiose side.

We have a palace, a woman walking towards the light and a deya-lined hallway, I can almost hear a heavenly hum in the air.

The imagery combines the Hindu story of Lord Rama and Sita returning to the kingdom of Ayodhya, and the Christian tradition of God represented as eternal light.

This is miles better than their Eid ad.

9th Place:

9th Place: NP

9th Place: NP

Rather refreshing – a water lily.

Mother Lakshmi is closely identified with the lotus or water lily, she is usually depicted standing or sitting on one.

The subtlety of the ad is quite beautiful. It’s radical departure from the yellow, gold and dark tones we would normally associate with Divali.

Their Eid Mubarak ad, had almost made the Top 10 cut.

8th Place:

8th Place: Alutrint Ltd

8th Place: Alutrint Ltd

Damn you, Alutrint!

You’re trying to win us over with your thoughtful, heartfelt ads. Well it won’t work! Another strong showing by Alutrint, their Eid ad was also good.

I appreciate how hard it is to get a clear, high-resolution image of deyas set out in formation. Kudos to the designer.

The model herself is so animated, you can’t help but feel happy yourself.

7th Place:

7th Place: ANSA Bank, Sissons

7th Place: ANSA Bank, Sissons

I included this ad because it highlighted Sissons Paint in an unexpected manner.

If you look closely at the mehndi artwork on the palms, we see a spectrum of colours. A spectrum of colours is visual shorthand for any product that deals with colour – paint, crayons, pens, iPods.

To make sure we don’t miss the connection, the copy reads ‘Light… Release the spectrum within.’

The TT Government, also ran a strong ad that almost filled this 7th position.

6th Place:

6th Place: Eve

6th Place: Eve

Sweet! Sweets!

The product is completely integrated into the message – a  box of Divali sweets presumably made with Eve products.

5th Place:

5th Place: TSTT

5th Place: TSTT

A deya without a deya.

Pretty clever. Saying something without actually saying it. It’s hard work, but when you pull it off, there’s nothing like it.

Added bonus, the hand offering the petal echoes the ‘receive’ in the copy. And just so we make the connection, the copy is placed nearby and we have lots of motion directing the eye to the fingertips.

Not quite as visually spectacular as their award-winning Eid Mubarak ad but undeniably strong work.

4th Place:

4th Place: Dairy Dairy

4th Place: Dairy Dairy

What a charming image.

Barfi made from Dairy Dairy and two generations representing the ‘timeless tradition’ mentioned in the copy.

My only argument is that the child’s dress, while white and thus echoing the milk theme, is too Western. It contrasts too much with the mother’s authenticity.

3rd Place:

3rd Place: Maggi

3rd Place: Maggi

This is a surefire crowd-pleaser.

The execution is strong, the colours are vivid and eye-catching. Again, we get a deya without a deya. Nice work.

However, yes, there is a however, Maggi ran MUCH stronger press ads in the run-up to Divali, check back for another conversation on this.

2nd Place:

2nd Place: FireOne

2nd Place: FireOne

The Fire One team is extraordinarily media savvy.

In the run up to Divali, they ran a series of ads promoting their Divali night fireworks show. Each ad featured YouTube, Facebook and Twitter icons, touting their online offerings in an offline press ad. Each ad promised a ‘Facebook’ photographer would be on hand to photograph their fireworks show.

On Facebook itself, they promoted the fireworks show with targeted Ads. I imagine on Facebook right now, they have a photo album devoted to their Divali Nagar and Divali Night shows.

This ad, a hallmark of theirs, features dramatic use of black in an uncluttered space.

1st Place:

1st Place: Nescafé

1st Place: Nescafé

Another deya without a deya!

Complete with bamboo stands! The bamboo is a lovely touch and the shadow behind the mug of coffee underlines the message.

Nescafé also had a strong Eid showing, copping a 3rd place mention.

We look forward to another innovative ad for Christmas.

That’s the round up!

I should also mention the Divali artwork of The Beacon, and Eid winners NGC & FCB who maintained their visual style.

Join us for the Christmas edition, which will probably very competitive. Comments, observations and stock tips are welcome.

A Competitive Local Television Station?

Monday, October 12th, 2009

TTT - Trinidad & Tobago TelevisionThis is TTT, Channels 2 and 13…

As a child when we heard these words we knew it was time for TV.  And by TV I mean TTT, the one channel you could get when you turned on the television.  Not so now.  TTT (now called CNMG) has a lot of competition.  And not only from within.  Apart from several other local channels and cable and direct TV with a gazillion options; there are traffic jams, gym and spin classes, study programmes, the internet with facebook and it’s own TV station called You Tube and a whole range of regular and exotic hobbies to keep eyes away from the telly.

Costs of Advertising

What does this loss mean for local advertisers who once had a captive audience with the most powerful and emotional medium on the planet (that affords sight and sound to enter your living room)?  What does it mean for the medium?  Well to answer the last question first; the medium must do things to make itself more interesting than its alternatives.  And individual stations must differentiate themselves more effectively than competing stations.  The advertiser must stack TV up against alternatives in terms of cost and effectiveness of getting its message to potential buyers.  The picture is not looking very bright for TV.  Here’s the cost to reach 1000 persons in Trinidad and Tobago using the leading brand in each sector:

TV (30 seconds) – $15.72

Newspaper (25 by 5 b&w)  –$15.46 (color:$28.18)

Radio (30 seconds) – $2.83

And of course, there’s the cost of production of the ads which is highest for TV.

Local TV must Redefine Itself

To cut a long story short, TV needs to bring down its cost of operation while simultaneously improving its product.  This must lead to better pricing and programming.   Not easy and not impossible.   Wal-Mart does it through smart sourcing and getting more out of its real estate.  Have you been to a Wal-Mart recently?  You don’t need to go any where else to buy any thing unless you’re looking for lumber or eye surgery.

So local TV needs to do more with less if they are to survive.  And they need to break the mould where TV is meant to satisfy everyone.  They need to tap into TV junkies and tailor their programming to them, not to the guy in the gym.  What about those households who are not on cable, surely they must be an important grouping.

TV is a broadcast medium.  However, I think it needs some narrow casting.  It needs to find those persons whom they can reach more cost effectively than cable and with a competitive product.  Otherwise like TTT, they may all have to sign off. (dr)

Top Ten ‘Eid Mubarak’ Ads 2009 [Pt 2]

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Continuing where we left off in the Top Ten Eid Ads of 2009. Without further ado -

5th Place:

5th Place: First Citizens Bank

5th Place: First Citizens Bank

I really have to hand it to FCB. They actually contacted a customer, organised a photo shoot for him and his family of four, had them dress up, then drove to St Joseph and took a picture of the mosque there. A standing ovation. Authentic, authentic, authentic. Plus they used a page layout they always use.

Maybe this should have been no 1?

4th Place:

4th Place: EMBD

4th Place: Estate Management & Business Development

I will admit I don’t know who these people are. I don’t know what they do. Very cursory  research revealed almost nothing (minus points). Anyway, hopefully they invest in growing crops otherwise this ad would be a fail.

But I do like the sense of hope and growth this conveys. The rays falling from the moon onto the seedling… like God herself is blessing the earth. Coupled with a super simple greeting – ‘May the blessings of Allah be with you today and always.’

3rd Place:

3rd Place: Nescafe

3rd Place: Nescafé

Lovely. The execution of this is really strong. The copy really works – ‘Fresh Start’ – you can hardly get more brand-y. It was a toss up between this and the preceding EMBD ad for 3rd place. This won out because I heard Nescafe uses a similar effect in a tv ad. There’s nothing like consistency.

2nd Place:

2nd Place: Sagicor

2nd Place: Sagicor

Obviously, I’m biased towards Sagicor ads. I love their colours, I love their logo. I like how understated they are. This is no different. Here we have an image of an adorable boy. But he’s not busy being adorable, no big eyes wide with wonder, no goofy grin he’s not even busy being pious. He’s just being a boy, playing with his fingers.

So as not to distract us – we have a grayscale image and brand colours. And as we can see, in a previous post, Sagicor uses this technique consistently. Bravo!

And in First Place:

1st Place: TSTT

1st Place: TSTT

Absolutely stunning. I’m not even quite sure what it is. Something telecommunications-related, fibre optics? Pins? The light effects (reallly big in graphics now) are really interesting and abstract.

I’m not thrilled about the ‘Eid Mubarak’ type and colour. But based on looks alone this is a winner. I remember actually gasping when I turned the page.

So that’s it. None of the ads really did an out-and-out celebration theme – just the joyous aspect of the festival. I could compare it to Christmas with the level of excitement, the gift-giving, the alms-giving, the preparation of food and home that I’ve seen happening.

Hopefully there will be some dissenters and disagree-ers. Please leave comments below.

Top Ten ‘Eid Mubarak’ Ads 2009 [Pt 1]

Wednesday, October 7th, 2009

Since this is scanning week, I’ve used my secret time machine to bring you an the Top Ten Eid Ads of 2009.

Ads are judged on design & layout, copy and brand-iness. As I’m a designer, the design will be weighted more heavily than otherwise. Pepper ads are excluded from competing.

10th Place:

10th Place: Alutrint

10th Place: Alutrint Limited

Yeah sure, they’re trying to kill us, make our lives better by providing jobs. I liked this ad for its simplicity, for its use of brand colours and the use of real calligraphy you’d find in the Holy Qu’ran.

9th Place:

9th Place: NGC

9th Place: National Gas Company of T&T

Points for originality. Points for using an illustration, especially not a prettified cutsey illustration. The copy mentions community, and I do think the illustration supports it.

8th Place:

8th Place: Republic

8th Place: Republic Bank

Republic OWNS cyan, see my previous blog post, best use of spot colour. Points for fidelity to brand. The image, while not arresting, is authentic. The copy mentions ‘celebration,’ whereas I get more of a ‘meditation’ or ‘reflection’ feeling.

7th Place:

7th Place: FireOne

7th Place: FireOne Fireworks FX

Honestly I thought this was a radio station. Only in scanning it did I realise its a fireworks company! …A fireworks company…? Now I get it – the fireworks are outside! I think they did a good job of being respectful and sober while blending the excitement of fireworks. Fireworks!

6th Place:

6th Place: Maggi

6th Place: Maggi

Great idea. Again, I admire a graphic saying two things at the same time. The execution is a leeetle clunky. But the copy ‘Peel away the layers’ is almost inspired.

That concludes our results for today, stay tuned for the (gripping) conclusion to our competition. Tomorrow same bat time, same bat… you know the rest.

Best Use of Spot Colour

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
Republic: Plunge to a new low

Republic: Plunge to a new low

It’s scanning day! I vote this ad in for Best Use of Spot Colour! Collect your prize at the door.

Simple and effective, illustrates the ‘lowness’ of the interest rate using a sinking effect.

Ironically, I’ve used a similar water effect on the upcoming Blue Waters Website.

Sagicor’s Super-Effective Ads

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
Sagicor: Make the Most

Sagicor: Make the Most

Sagicor: Achieve anything

Sagicor: Achieve anything

Of course, I saw the full page version of this ad every DAY, but when I want to scan it I can’t find it.

I love this series. Inspirational & eye catching, a simple two colour deal. The full page version features VERY generous use of space. A client once wanted me to get rid of the ‘deadspace.’ The correct name for this is whitespace and it’s very much alive. As designers, we pay close attention to what isn’t there.

Seehowspacebecomesimportant?

My only quibble with these ads are that they aren’t local. I want to see that this is Memorial Park, or Cleaver Woods or the Aboutique arcade on Frederick Street.

Happy Belated Republic Day

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
BG Trinidad & Tobago

BG Trinidad & Tobago

OMG. Capturing this image took 5 times as long as my posting this item. First I keep the page for two weeks, then when I tried to scan it, I shorted out about half the computers at work. And yes, OK its not Monday, its an Ad Inspiration Tuesday.

Well anyway. I really like this ad. It’s deceptively simple – because I think it involved a lot of Photoshop work. I also admire when people can say two things at once – here we have pipelines & national colours. The copy supports the image with ‘…a partner in channelling…’ Cool.

5 rules of Billboarding or Bannering

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Tourism Park 2009

Say after me…”A billboard is not a larger version of your press ad.”

So here’s 5 rules for a good billboard or banner:

1. Communicate only one thing and I mean one thing
So if you are having a Fete include the name of the fete and date ONLY. Not where the fete is, and the 6 bands, dj’s and guest artistes. Nor should you give the price of admission and the fact that there will be security and that part proceeds are going to charity and what time it will start and stop and parking with security and of course the 15 sponsors’ logos.

2. Make sure it’s in sync with the rest of the campaign.
If the campaign makes a point through humour; then the billboard should make you laugh.

3. Forget small copy.
On a billboard it turns out to be fine print that cannot be read by anyone travelling at 50 mph or faster. Even if traffic slows to a snail pace; it’s hardly readable. Just leave it out.

4. Don’t leave up the billboard long after the campaign (event/sale/launch) is done.
Your brand looks sloppy.

5. Watch where your billboard is placed.
If it’s not in the line of sight for a large number of people, at best it’s peripheral awareness. At worse, it’s just a complete waste.