Feb 13, 2004

PRIVATE VIEW: KC Tsang is a director at CTWCM Advertising in Hong Kong

The Association of Women for Action and Research (Singapore): The visuals are charming and the treatment of the graphics is fresh. However, the strategy is similar to AMV BBDO's 'Pregnant Man' ad from so many years ago. That ad posed the question: 'would you be more careful if it were you that got pregnant?' I also question its effectiveness since readers may not be able to identify themselves with maids. Within the context of switching points of view or perspectives, I think The Economist's 'Would you sit next to you?' ad still reigns.

PRIVATE VIEW: KC Tsang is a director at CTWCM Advertising in Hong Kong

Langham Hotel: The strategy is simple and to the point. And it works.

It's always safe to use history to sell a hotel because consumers very rarely challenge the validity of the proposition. As long as people like nostalgia, they'll feel good about the hotel.

Tradelink: It is obvious that much work was given to the art direction.

Unfortunately, however, the end result is that it makes the images look fabricated. In addition, the copy could have been more personable. My final thought is that this campaign feels as though it came out in the 1970s.

O2: There's a lot of room for improvement in this campaign. For instance, the layout could be cleaner and the retouching could look more natural.

The copy is somewhat generic. However, it definitely looks better on the Mass Transit Railway, where the scuba diver seems to subtlely come to life behind the platform doors.

Allianz: I had to read the body copy in order to get the headlines of these print ads. It's not a good sign sign when that happens. This campaign is really not much different from the millions of 'different perspective makes a huge difference' advertising campaigns that we've seen in many places. The successful ones should let readers experience the difference instead of telling them what the difference is.

Wall's Ice-cream: I don't get this campaign. I think it lacks a strong and clear creative concept. In addtion, the tagline does not explain or add any value to the spots. It's a tough category to create ads for. But it seems that the client managed to exercise a great deal of influence on the executions.

1 Association of Women for Action and Research

Project: Maid

Client: The Association of Women for Action and Research

Brief: promote respect and fairer treatment for Singapore's domestic

helpers

Agency: Saatchi & Saatchi

Writer: Jagdish Ramakrishnan

Art director: Simon Cox

2 Langham Hotel

Project: Langham Hotel

Client: Langham Hotels International (Hong Kong)

Brief: rebrand Great Eagle Hotels under the Langham name

Agency: Ogilvy & Mather

Creative directors: Simon Handford, Annie Wong

Copywriters: Simon Handford, Florence Lai

Art director: Ben Yeung

3 Tradelink

Project: Unleashing the power of e-commerce

Client: Tradelink Electronic Commerce

Brief: highlight the strengths of Tradelink as a premier e-transaction

platform in Hong Kong

Agency: Grey PR

4 O2

Project: Life Support

Client: O2

Brief: boost the brand image in Asia and launch two products: Xda and

Xphone

Agency: Ultra-asia

Creative director: King Ho

Copywriters: Darren Plested, Alistair Waddell

Art director: King Ho

5 Allianz

Project: You

Client: Allianz

Brief: position Allianz as an insurance company which cares

Agency: BBDO Germany

6 Wall's Ice-cream

Project: Mini Magnum Baby

Client: Unilever China Walls Ice-cream

Brief: bring consistency to the Wall's brand across China

Agency: Nitro Advertising Shanghai

Creative director: Chris Clarke

Copywriters: Chris Clarke, Herbert Xue

Art director: Jennifer Lau

Production house: Hub Productions

Interested in having your campaigns reviewed? Send submissions to Alfred

Hille in the form of trims, transparencies or video printouts for TVCs

plus the TVC itself, and proofs for print ads and posters.

Please send all material to Media, 2201, 22/F The Centrium, 60 Wyndham

Street, Central, Hong Kong.

Source:
Campaign Asia
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