Tag: Donald Gunn

  • Stay creative, the awards will follow

     

    Emma Wilkie has been Donald Gunn’s collaborator and co-presenter of The Gunn Report since January 2003. As managing director of the famed benchmark of advertising excellence globally, Wilkie was in Mumbai last week to witness the Kyoorius Creative Awards held last Friday. Earlier in the day, she also had lunch with a section of senior agency captains. The fact that the Gunn Report managing director was present at Kyoorius led to some speculation whether the report will now factor in the winners of the Kyoorius Creative Awards in the advertising, digital and media categories. Excerpts from a quick chat with Emma Wilkie:

     

    So what brings you to Kyoorius?

    I just came to see what goes on at the festival, and I have to say the size of the event is fantastic. Their connection with D&AD and Tim Lindsey says a lot about Kyoorius, so I wanted to see it for myself.

     

    Does your presence confirm murmurs that the Kyoorius awards are going to be part of the GUNN Report’s scrutiny?

    We never publicise the shows which are included in the report. Obviously, Kyoorius is a relatively new show so it would be. I am doing my job as an ambassador to see how it is running and what is going on. That is why I am here.

     

    You have been tracking India for a number of years. What is your view about creativity in India?

    I think it is fantastic. In the last few years, it has definitely joined the global stage in creativity. It has an exciting future.

     

    But we do not seem to get any major awards on the international circuit.

    [It will happen] slowly, I think. The UK, US and Europe are losing their grip and at Cannes you see plenty of work from smaller countries, so there is no barrier now to do well in Cannes. So, it’s just a matter of time before India makes its mark at Cannes.

     

    How big is the Indian market for the GUNN Report?

    Our work is done globally. My work is to make contact with small and independent agencies and find more local and independent agencies.

     

    Any word of advice to Indian agencies on how they could possibly be doing better in the GUNN Report?

    Keep doing creative work. If you do creative work, the cream rises to the top. The awards and recognition will follow.

     

  • Saare Jahaan Mein Achcha… Happy Dent humaara!

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    In these intolerant times, playing with the lyrics of an ever-so-popular nationalistic song, may be the wrong thing to do. But, heck, this is celebrating what appears to be a significant achievement for India. The McCann Erickson Mumbai creative for Happy Dent Teeth Whitening Gum titled “Happy Dent Palace” is in Gunn Report’s 20 Best Commercials of the 21st Century.

     

    The results were based on a public pulled on who voted on a list 30 candidates with provision made for other nominations, The Gunn Report has been able to select the Reel of The 20 Best Commercials of The 21st Century So Far (here!). The reel complements the much-viewed Gunn Report collection of The 100 Best Commercials of The 20th Century.

     

    Sharing the honour equally, the 20 ads (from 2000 to 2015) and their creators are:

     

    BGH Silent Aircon, “Dads in Briefs”, Del Campo Saatchi & Saatchi, Buenos Aires

    Budweiser, “Wassup/True”, DDB, Chicago

    Cadbury’s Dairy Milk, “Gorilla”, Fallon, London

    Canal+, “Closet”, BETC Euro RSCG, Paris

    Canal+, “The Bear”, BETC Euro RSCG, Paris

    Chipotle, “Back to the Start”, Creative Artists Agency, Los Angeles

    Dove Self Esteem Fund, “Evolution”, Ogilvy & Mather, Toronto

    Guinness, “noitulove”, Abbott, Mead, Vickers, BBDO, London

    Happy Dent Teeth Whitening Gum, “Happy Dent Palace”, McCann Erickson, Mumbai

    Honda, “Cog”, Wieden & Kennedy, London

    Honda, “Grrr”, Wieden & Kennedy, London

    John West Salmon, “Bear”, Leo Burnett, London

    Metro Trains, “Dumb Ways to Die”, McCann, Melbourne

    Nike, “Tag”, Wieden & Kennedy, Portland

    Nike, “Write The Future”, Wieden & Kennedy, Amsterdam

    Old Spice, “The Man Your Man Could Smell Like”, Wieden & Kennedy, Portland

    Peugeot 206, “The Sculptor”, Euro RSCG MCM, Milan

    Sony Bravia LCD TV, “Balls” Fallon, London

    Volkswagen Golf DSG, “Kids On Steps”, DDB, Berlin

    Volvo Trucks, “Epic Split”, Forsman & Bodenfors, Gothenburg

     

    Needless to say, Prasoon Joshi, chairman, McCann Asia-Pacific, and CEO, McCann Worldgroup India is ecstatic. Really feels good, he said in response to a text.

     

    Commenting on the 20 Best Commercials of the 21st Century So Far, Donald Gunn, Founder of The Gunn Report says, “We’re delighted that the participation was high, the result of which is a reel selected by our industry of iconic, game-changing and much loved commercials produced during the last 15 years.”

     

    “Not only do these commercials stand the test of time, but they have also influenced changes in brand communications. As such, we hope that they will bring inspiration and learning taking our industry to new creative heights,” added Donald Gunn.

     

  • The Gunn Report releases book and showreel honouring the best in advertising

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Gunn Report, the global index for creative excellence in advertising, has published its 2014 Book and Showreel, a round-up and showcase of the world’s best advertising performance in the year January to December 2014 based on the results of 45 global, regional and national creative award contests.

     

    The Gunn Report 2014 Book and Showreel have been guest edited by Malcolm Poynton, Global Chief Creative Officer of Cheil, who has written the Introduction ‘Ad Agencies, who needs ’em?’ as well as chapter commentaries and analysis of the featured award-winning work.

     

    Also included are ‘Messages to the Industry in 2015’ by guest essayists Jean Lin, Global CEO of Isobar, and Rob Reilly, Global Creative Chairman of McCann Worldgoup. Whilst their career stories are quite different, their messages are remarkably similar:

     

    In Jean Lin’s essay ‘Creativity Liberated’, she suggests that “only two major roles exist in a contemporary creative team: the storyteller and the software developer”. And that “We have to get used to the fact that the game-changing ideas, at times, come not from the storyteller but from the software developer”. She goes on to say that “Great ideas create immediate results, in real-time. And most of the time, the right solution to the actual problem will not be an ad.”

     

    Rob Reilly’s essay ‘Creative Is The Only Way To Survive’, pursues the theme that ‘In today’s reality, influencing people’s minds and behaviour requires more than great advertising’. Analysing creative problem-solving, Rob cites examples where clients and agencies innovate in ways that demonstrate that they are truly responding to their customer needs, such as the creation by American Express of ‘Small Business Saturday’; Barcelona’s Teatre Neu’s ‘Pay Per Laugh;’ and the world’s oldest corporation, the Catholic Church, which brought in a new CEO, Pope Francis, who through creativity has single-handedly revived a struggling brand.

     

    In addition, The Gunn Report Book includes:

    – League Tables of the most awarded ads in Film, Print/Out of Home, Digital and All Gunns Blazing (the Integrated/Titanium/Innovative et al work)

    – League Tables of the world’s most awarded Agencies, Digital Agencies, Networks, Advertisers, Production Companies, Directors and Countries.

    – More than 170 award-winning ads showcased with their synopses and credits.

    – The Gunn Report for Media 2014, a global evaluation of media creativity, innovation and effectiveness.

    – Cases for Creativity 2014:The Year of Share by James Hurman, Founder and Principal of Previously Unavailable

    – Consolidated Tables based on sixteen years of overall performance 1999-2014

    – The Showreel of the Year, a DVD featuring the top 126 most awarded commercials and campaigns in 2014

     

    “This edition of The Gunn Report Book and Showreel bring together and showcase the very best creative campaigns of 2014 as selected by the hundreds of industry professionals that have sat is darkened rooms around the world, voted and debated for countless hours to award great and brave ideas that impact brand communications worldwide,” says Donald Gunn, a champion of creativity and Founder of The Gunn Report.

     

    “Not only is it a reminder of the ground-breaking ideas that make this industry special, but also serves as a unique and essential educational and inspirational tool for those who want to learn more about the power of creativity,” added Donald Gunn.

     

  • Gunning for more ad awards, creativity loses plot

    By Ravi Balakrishnan

     

    A little over a decade ago, when the Abby awards were still the only show in town, the after party found Prasoon Joshi in a pensive mood. As team Ogilvy celebrated their ‘agency of the year’ win with a characteristic lack of subtlety – drums, horns, and people in black posing for interminable photoshoots – Mr Joshi, then early in his stint at Mc-Cann Erickson reasoned, “There are youngsters from many agencies who’ve won their first trophy tonight. But all of that is being forgotten in this obsession with who won most. We should celebrate the work and not the numbers.”

     

    Mr Joshi may have been among the first to voice this concern, but he’s far from the last. Several creative leaders in India are increasingly vocal about missing the forest of creativity for the trees of a final tally.

     

    Festivals like Cannes Lions have arguably made things worse, adding layers to the competition like Holding Company of the Year. WPP won for the fourth time running in 2014, which according to media reports led Interpublic to boast of its far better win to entry ratio. Closer home, Goafest officially scrapped ‘agency of the year’, ostensibly to make it more about the work and less about the numbers. It however resulted in a cottage industry where previously math-phobic creatives sliced and diced the numbers till they were left with a rank that satisfied them.

     

    Apart from no year being complete without some controversy, protest or conspiracy theory, the numbers game is tainting large parts of the industry.

     

    Remember all the worldwide chief creative officers who’ve lashed out against scams? Creative directors in their employ will tell you, off the record of course, that the scamming happens entirely with their approval, frequently on their insistence. Truth be told, it’s hard to say no when even a laggard that gets lucky and scores bronze adds one more to the total tally. It’s resulted in a business where scams are the worst thing to happen only so long as you get caught.

     

    The judging process too is compromised as long as tallies – official or unofficial – continue to be important. Says Bobby Pawar, chief creative officer, Publicis, “Judges may be more open to acknowledging how they feel about a piece of work when voting for it doesn’t make them losers. When you have younger people on the jury who haven’t won that much, it’s hard (for them) to be charitable.” In every award jury, if some industry folk are to be believed, there are people wondering “what’s in it for me?”

     

    With the role of tallies coming into question, the Gunn Report is perceived to be the biggest villain of the piece. Started in 1999 by former Leo Burnett adman Donald Gunn, it’s currently the largest, most authoritative source of league table on ad agencies. The 2013 edition considered 46 award shows – global, regional and national. While undoubtedly a definitive source of information on the varying creative fortunes of agencies, doing well in the Report has become an unhealthy obsession.

     

    Mr Pawar says sardonically, “It’s a great idea – for Donald Gunn. Or CEOs and creative guys looking to put notches on the belt. I don’t think it’s a good idea for work. Let’s not reduce creativity to accounting because that’s what these things do.” Adds a creative chief who wishes to remain anonymous, “I know the networks love Gunn but does the report motivate me to break the mould? Is it inspirational?

     

    Or just an impotent report card?” The latter has no place in an industry that’s playing it fast and loose, finding ideas from unlikely sources, some of whom are not agencies. The Gunn Report had not responded to our questions at the time of going to print.

     

    The alternative: Let the year be remembered not for who scored the maximum but for the best work. Irrespective of where it came from or what else the agencies who created those pieces won. In spite of being the top ranked Indian shop by Gunn this year, Mr Joshi, currently president – South Asia, McCann Worldgroup continues to have a purist perspective.

     

    “The creative world is more like a garden than a wrestling ring. We shouldn’t be trying to outshine each other but to complement each other. People will say ‘here comes Prasoon again with his poetry’, but I’ve said this since I was in school. Every child is unique but the moment you ask ‘kitne number aaye?’ you make him start thinking in those terms.”

     

    However, in spite of these pious and occasionally poetic sentiments, it’s unlikely that tallies are going anywhere. Because as KV Sridhar aka Pops, chief creative officer at SapientNitro points out Gunn and accounting are unnecessarily being pilloried. For one, the report is a lot more nuanced, measuring both the width as well as depth of wins.

     

    At worst, it represents a deeper malaise: “Gone are the days when creative people were obsessed with peer recognition. Awards are now more about business development. There’s nothing wrong (in wanting to win big) since this is how advertising agencies sell themselves. It’s both for the benefit of new marketers and to tell your existing clients ‘we’ve still got it.’”

     

    The obsession with tallies is less about creative oneupmanship. Says Mr Sridhar, “It’s the obsession of people like Martin Sorrell and Maurice Levy. It’s a global diktat to every agency since this is how a brand seeking to enter the country decides on who to start talking to. Every country head is measured by creative reputation as much as bottomline. If you deliver 21 per cent instead of 23 per cent you are sacked, but if you’ve got a creative reputation with 21 per cent, you get your bonus.”

     

    And so what it comes down to is this; when the agency man’s stuck at the wrong end of the barrel, even the most virtuous will start Gunning for more awards. Don’t blame the player, blame the game.

     

    Source:The Economic Times

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