Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW Creativity is a process. FUEL SPARK Marketing Mastery FIRE TORCH 1 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW FUEL --What we start with --Tinder before lit by fire --You --Your experience --Your expertise --Your knowledge --of client, competition strategy, research --Your heart --Your mind --Your creativity --The agency creative atmosphere Marketing Mastery 2 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW Five Creative Freedoms 1. Freedom to fail 2. Freedom to be foolish 3. Freedom to feed back 4. Freedom to flex AGENCY OXYGEN 5. Freedom to be flaky Marketing Mastery 3 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW SPARK --Birth of an idea --A spark --A germ --A seed --A thought --A visual --A word --That will develop into a fully developed idea --Quantity important here: lotsa sparks! Marketing Mastery 4 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW SPARK “Logic will get you from A to B. Imagination will take you everywhere.” --Albert Einstein Marketing Mastery 5 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW SPARK Goal: Generate and capture large number of ideas. Approach: Whether 1, 2 or in a group, you must be 100% tolerant of all ideas. No ideas are rejected. (You never know which idea will be a winner.) The sky’s the limit. Crazy, foolish ideas all welcome. No judgement, criteria, no negativity. Supportive attitude. Build on one another’s ideas. Principle: Initial ideas will be routine, superficial, obvious. It’s only after working hard at this that the deep, insightful, fresh ideas come. Principle: We don’t start with “I’m going to create an ad.” We start away from the idea of advertising to avoid routine solutions. We start with ideas. Marketing Mastery 6 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW SPARK General/Always Techniques • Forced relationships (juxtapose two seemingly unrelated ideas) • Ask “What if?” • Rephrase the problem in a variety of ways: broader, more specific, with “who”, “what” where”, “when”, “why”, “how” questions. • Search for ideas in your/customers’ dissatisfaction • Challenge the underlying rules • Projection: Imagine yourself as the problem, (GE inventor T.A. Rich imagined himself as an electron) as a part of the problem; as the product or service; as the idea; as a child. • Domain association: associate the idea with multiple other domains to generate ideas: cooking, architecture, medicine, parenting, etc. • Unknown: Ask “What is the unknown here?” Marketing Mastery 7 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW FIRE --Idea development --Fanning the flames --Fleshing out promising ideas --Exploring expansion of ideas --Exploring variations on ideas --Synthesizing ideas --Building on one another’s ideas --Developing concepts --Defining problems --Analyzing problems Marketing Mastery 8 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW --Highly largeted use of fire --Idea selection --Idea evaluation --Idea prioritization --Idea taming --Idea focusing --Idea de-abstraction --Idea usefulness --Application of advertising principles --Idea optimization --Full, final expression of the spark TORCH Marketing Mastery 9 CREATIVE WORKSHOP OVERVIEW FACILITATOR CREDENTIALS Randy Hobler was trained in SATE (Systems Approach to Education) at IBM and trained under the father of adult education, Malcolm Knowles. He also received teacher training in the Peace Corps and Teacher Corps. He has been conducting successful business training for 18 years for such companies as IBM, GlaxoSmithKline, Chase Bank, AXA Equitable, Walmart.com, Intel China, Marcus Evans China, IBM Brazil, Metaxa (Greece), IBM Belgium, Johnson & Johnson and many more. He is an official marketing instructor for the ANA (Association of National Advertisers) in the U.S., representing the largest advertisers in the U.S. He worked on General Foods children’s cereals and P&G’s Charmin accounts at Benton & Bowles and was Executive VP, Group Supervisor at Grey Direct on D&B, Lexmark and other accounts. He participated in a number of major pitches, including Dell, Travelers Insurance and Microsoft. He consistently gets 90% + ratings on his training for expertise, knowledge, enthusiasm, energy and interactivity. He is a graduate of Princeton University, is fluent in French and conversational in Arabic and Spanish. He has traveled to 38 countries, including Morocco, Japan, France, Germany, Algeria, Tunisia, Egypt, Lebanon, Bahrain, Syria and the UAE. He worked for two years in Libya and two years in Saudi Arabia. Marketing Mastery 10