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This is pretty cool, it’s part of the latest campaign for Tropicana Canada named, “Brighter Mornings for Brighter Days”, set to roll-out after the closing ceremonies of the 2010 Winter Olympics. As a kick-off to the campaign they ventured out to Inuvik, a small town out in the remote Northwest Territories, in order to light up a helium balloon capable of emitting 100,000 lumens. Filmed as part of the campaign this experiment brought ‘sunlight’ to an area of Canada that hasn’t seen the real sun in many months. This piece was directed by Samir Mallal for BBDO Toronto and Film Group, Vancouver/Radke Film Group, Toronto.

Credits:

Advertising Agency: BBDO Toronto, Canada
Creative director: Ian MacKellar
Copywriter: Adam Bailey
Art director: John Terry
Agency Producer: Dena Thompson
Planner: Dino Demopoulos
Account Management: Tim Welsh, Sheng Sinn, Adam Jardine
Production House: Film Group, Vancouver / Radke Film Group, Toronto
Director: Samir Mallal
Executive Producer: Michael Haldane
Line Producer: Michael Haldane
Director of Photography: Chris Mably
Editorial: City: Bijou Editorial, Toronto
Editor: Ross Birchall
Music and Sound Design: Apollo Studios
Studio: Cherry Beach Studio
Engineer: Inaam Haq
Music: Licensed track “The Great Escape” by Patrick Watson
Sound Design: Ross Birchall, through Bijou Editorial and Didier Tovel, through Apollo Studios
Media Agency: OMD Canada, Toronto
Managing Director: Lori Gibb
Group Director of Strategy: Daniele Boem
Broadcast Buying Group: Nancy Haggith, Raquel Mullin

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If you’ve ever had the chance to attend any type of marketing or tech conference, you’ve undoubtably experienced the madness that goes on in whatever area is designated as the exhibit/merchant or “Meet-Market” hall packed with companies looking for leads. Packed like sardines into booths of all sizes you’ll find merchants, advertisers, startups and well, virtually every type of business service imaginable standing in front of their booth, trying to entice you to a conversation with either booth flair or conference schwag. One of the big things that no booth-pimping salesman will let you walk away from is the opportunity to give them your business card. Honestly it seems as if most don’t even care what you do for a living, they just want your contact information just in case they can find a way to convert you into a customer of some sort down the road. In the least you’ll just add to their ever-growing mailing-list that starts pumping out newsletters shortly after they return home and go through their newly gained pile of business cards.

Well this time for ASW 2010 I decided a different approach that I hadn’t seen attempted before. I did not pack or bring a single one of my real business cards. Instead I brought a very simple card with only a few words on each side, my name and a link (shown above). Now if you’ve read the post prior to this one you’ll know that I’m about ten days into a four week long charity drive called Mustache for kids. It benefits an organization called DonorsChoose.org which connects public schools with the necessary funding on a per-project basis and lets you not only donate to specific projects but also lets you search for them via location as well as project type (English, Science, Special Needs, etc..). Kinda cool. So as most attendees undoubtably did, I handed my cards out at practically every booth that I would pause at, whether it was after a brief conversation with the booth owner about their services or even by random passerby’s who noticed my tag/affiliation printed on my Conference pass. Regardless this is not a card I could just hand out and walk-away from. It came with a simple pitch that I must have repeated hundreds of times during the course of the 4 days I was in Las Vegas. It’s extremely simple and began with the line,

This card is actually an offer:

If you donate just $2 to any project on DonorsChoose.org website and mention ASW in the comments, I will mail you my real business card along with a hand-written thank you letter. I even said I’d email those that provided their email address for me to reply to so that they’d have my information even faster. Now the looks that I received after explaining my proposition to people at this point were rather varied. Some laughed and said they thought it was clever, others looked at the card in dismay, as if it was some kind of scam or joke and then a few even looked as if they were disgusted by the fact I would hand them something requiring action on their part to get my contact information. It was at this point when I would tell them to please turn the card over and notice that I included my full name on the back of the card. If they really wanted to, they could first google my name, Brent Terrazas, and see if I was the type of lead they were looking for. That way they wouldn’t have to go through the ‘trouble’ of donating $2 to a charity to add me as a contact. I also added something that I still think was very true:

Out of all the business cards that you’ll get today,
This is the only one that promises a response.

Think of it – You leave the expo with hundreds of cards, but this is the only one where the person who handed you the card actually includes a promise that they’ll be the one who will reach out to contact YOU, and all it’d take was a $2 donation to a great charity.

Judging by the fact that most people are just now finally getting back to work after the event (which was just last week), they are undoubtably going through their piles of cards, sorting out potential leads from those that aren’t as promising, so I hope that if you were one of the merchants or service providers that I spoke with last week and you find my card, you’ll at least check out the link I provided. Whether you want my contact information or not, it’s a good cause, and heck, you probably paid more than $2 for the coffee you’re drinking.
Once again here’s the link – http://bit.ly/DonorsChooseASW

Thanks go out to all my friends at the conference for helping with this endevour, I will somehow find a way to pay you all back for your kindness. Btw, if you missed his session on linkbait at ASW, i’d recommend you go visit FullSpeedSeo.com by my friend Joshua Ziering where he’s posted a few of his own observations from the expo.

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Skype just announced a new business spin-off of their popular VOIP service partnering with European Directories to offer free click-to-call services for their business listings (free to the consumer at least). Pretty much it takes your typical yellow pages a step further by allowing the user to connect directly to the service provider by clicking on a “Free Call” button attached to each listing. According to their press release, this will provide free consumer phone calls for up to 700,000 business across Europe. The most interesting part of this deal is that the Skype/European Directories partnership doesn’t end with just covering directory services. Skype plans on offering each company the ability to embed the “Free Call” button anywhere else on the web that their number is posted.

Is there a catch? Of course there is. In order for you to be able to use (or probably even see) the click-to-call button you will need to have both the latest version of Skype for Windows installed in addition to the latest Skype browser plug-ins. This now sounds more like a click-to-download promotion. Ouch.

I should point out that this isn’t even close to being a new idea, directories like Yext have been around since 2006 offering fully-loaded click-to-call advertising & directory services. Yext just recently was awarded $25 million dollars in funding after participating in the TechCrunch50 (they also broke this news story a few hours before the official Skype press release).

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The marriage of VOIP & Online Advertising is something that will soon be taking over the current way we interact with online ads with companies like Twilio & Voxeo leading the way by providing inexpensive developer platforms for creating IVR/VoIP solutions (and of course, really cool web-apps!)

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