In 2005, Tate Britain saw declining visitor numbers as it had become overshadowed by Tate Modern. Fallon was tasked with increasing visitors and changing perceptions of Tate Britain. Through research, they realized art conveys universal human emotions that are timeless. They created "Collections" tours grouping art by emotion to guide visitors on an emotional journey. This reframed the permanent collection as contemporary and increased visitors by 20%. Outdoor ads, leaflets, and a website promoted the Collections.
Brand Storytelling: Hoe gebruik ik verhalen voor mijn merk?Ralph Poldervaart
Hoe kun je technieken uit storytelling inzetten om je merk sterker te maken? In deze slideshare leer je wat de belangrijkste bouwblokken voor Brand Storytelling zijn, oftewel: hoe maak je een merkverhaal of brand story? Hoe zet je verhalen in voor je merkstrategie en voor content marketing. Ons Brand Storytelling Canvas is een mooie houvast om je verhaalstrategie te bepalen. Deze is gebaseerd op The Hero's Journey van Joseph Campbell en specifiek geschikt gemaakt voor merkstrategie. Zie ook: www.storydiggers.nl
Coke Zero Official Document 2013: It’s Not Your Fault You Can’t Stop Watching...Coke Zero
This presentation offers a detailed exploration into all of the reasons why man is unable to do anything but watch basketball during the NCAA tournament. Plus, it has pictures!
Download the full presentation: http://bit.ly/YLX8Ul
Brand Storytelling: Hoe gebruik ik verhalen voor mijn merk?Ralph Poldervaart
Hoe kun je technieken uit storytelling inzetten om je merk sterker te maken? In deze slideshare leer je wat de belangrijkste bouwblokken voor Brand Storytelling zijn, oftewel: hoe maak je een merkverhaal of brand story? Hoe zet je verhalen in voor je merkstrategie en voor content marketing. Ons Brand Storytelling Canvas is een mooie houvast om je verhaalstrategie te bepalen. Deze is gebaseerd op The Hero's Journey van Joseph Campbell en specifiek geschikt gemaakt voor merkstrategie. Zie ook: www.storydiggers.nl
Coke Zero Official Document 2013: It’s Not Your Fault You Can’t Stop Watching...Coke Zero
This presentation offers a detailed exploration into all of the reasons why man is unable to do anything but watch basketball during the NCAA tournament. Plus, it has pictures!
Download the full presentation: http://bit.ly/YLX8Ul
In a time when consumers have been confined to their homes and social contact has been limited, influence has been pulling to the forefront of our increasingly virtual reality. But now that we are beginning the slow transition out of lockdown, how should brands be preparing to future-proof their influence for a post-COVID-19 world?
Disney\'s Princess and the Frog Movie Premiere PR Planmissmarisam
A complete PR plan for the mock premiere of Walt Disney\'s upcoming full length 2-D animated film, The Princess and the Frog. PR Plan includes event planning strategy, media plan, budget, press calendar, sample news release, company bio, media advisory and more. Slide show design, implementation and production were all created by me for my media relations class at Boston University in Fall of 2008.
This is the presentation that I gave to the Young Planners at Cannes 2014. The data herein is taken from survey distributed through @cheiluk, @yellif and @cr
In a chaotic world, where storytelling, marketing, advertising & technology are beginning to intersect, the importance of branded content is rising. A deeper partnership with relevant content surely fast-tracks brand advocacy and growth.
But content marketing is not new. Brands have invested for many years in content, such as long-form film, advertiser-funded programming, advertorials or branded magazines. However several things have now evolved, including the types of brand investing in it and the mindset of the marketers behind it. Today, Brands think more like publishers and build strategies around content production and distribution.
This deck focuses on the importance and showcases the process of creating a robust content strategy.
Project: Create a deck proposing a product & campaign to help Netflix better serve their increasingly social audience.
Summary slides are above; full details below.
Team:
- Norman Tran: Digital Strategy
- Gabriella Pizzitola: Account Management
- Laetitia de Camas: Account Management
Role:
- Work with 2 other TBWA\Chiat\Day interns with limited resources and 6 week timeframe to create a new product & campaign for Netflix
- Facilitate brainstorming sessions
- Project management
- Research
- Design deck template and product mockups
Skills Utilized: Visual Design | Personas | Competitive Analysis | Trend Analysis | Product Development | Campaign Development | Storytelling
TBWA\Chiat\Day: TBWA\Chiat\Day is part of TBWA Worldwide. TBWA is one of the top ten US-based agency networks made up of 250+ full service agencies around the world with expertise in all of the disciplines required for the positioning, launching and long-term management of brands. TBWA is a highly awarded agency and our clients include Nissan, Infiniti, Pepsi, Gatorade, Sara Lee, Energizer, Principal Financial Group, Crate & Barrel, and Southwest Airlines.
Effectiveness is at the heart of everything we do. David Ogilvy himself wrote a series of full-page ads in the New York Times in the 1960s with headlines such as "How To Create Advertising That Sells." His most famous book, Ogilvy on Advertising, is packed with guidance on the success factors of effective campaigns.
However, the marketing landscape has changed beyond recognition in the past fifty years. We are delighted to share our latest publication, The Ogilvy & Mather guide to effectiveness. In it, Worldwide Effectiveness Director, Tim Broadbent, deals with one of the most central questions in marketing: how to increase the effectiveness of our campaigns.
As marketing budgets come under increasing pressure in response to economic uncertainty in Europe and elsewhere, effectiveness is rising higher on clients' agendas. The message is timely.
The planning, creative and broader marketing community uses insights or an insight to get to ideas that will solve their marketing or business problems. This is a brief exploration into the definition of the insight.
In a time when consumers have been confined to their homes and social contact has been limited, influence has been pulling to the forefront of our increasingly virtual reality. But now that we are beginning the slow transition out of lockdown, how should brands be preparing to future-proof their influence for a post-COVID-19 world?
Disney\'s Princess and the Frog Movie Premiere PR Planmissmarisam
A complete PR plan for the mock premiere of Walt Disney\'s upcoming full length 2-D animated film, The Princess and the Frog. PR Plan includes event planning strategy, media plan, budget, press calendar, sample news release, company bio, media advisory and more. Slide show design, implementation and production were all created by me for my media relations class at Boston University in Fall of 2008.
This is the presentation that I gave to the Young Planners at Cannes 2014. The data herein is taken from survey distributed through @cheiluk, @yellif and @cr
In a chaotic world, where storytelling, marketing, advertising & technology are beginning to intersect, the importance of branded content is rising. A deeper partnership with relevant content surely fast-tracks brand advocacy and growth.
But content marketing is not new. Brands have invested for many years in content, such as long-form film, advertiser-funded programming, advertorials or branded magazines. However several things have now evolved, including the types of brand investing in it and the mindset of the marketers behind it. Today, Brands think more like publishers and build strategies around content production and distribution.
This deck focuses on the importance and showcases the process of creating a robust content strategy.
Project: Create a deck proposing a product & campaign to help Netflix better serve their increasingly social audience.
Summary slides are above; full details below.
Team:
- Norman Tran: Digital Strategy
- Gabriella Pizzitola: Account Management
- Laetitia de Camas: Account Management
Role:
- Work with 2 other TBWA\Chiat\Day interns with limited resources and 6 week timeframe to create a new product & campaign for Netflix
- Facilitate brainstorming sessions
- Project management
- Research
- Design deck template and product mockups
Skills Utilized: Visual Design | Personas | Competitive Analysis | Trend Analysis | Product Development | Campaign Development | Storytelling
TBWA\Chiat\Day: TBWA\Chiat\Day is part of TBWA Worldwide. TBWA is one of the top ten US-based agency networks made up of 250+ full service agencies around the world with expertise in all of the disciplines required for the positioning, launching and long-term management of brands. TBWA is a highly awarded agency and our clients include Nissan, Infiniti, Pepsi, Gatorade, Sara Lee, Energizer, Principal Financial Group, Crate & Barrel, and Southwest Airlines.
Effectiveness is at the heart of everything we do. David Ogilvy himself wrote a series of full-page ads in the New York Times in the 1960s with headlines such as "How To Create Advertising That Sells." His most famous book, Ogilvy on Advertising, is packed with guidance on the success factors of effective campaigns.
However, the marketing landscape has changed beyond recognition in the past fifty years. We are delighted to share our latest publication, The Ogilvy & Mather guide to effectiveness. In it, Worldwide Effectiveness Director, Tim Broadbent, deals with one of the most central questions in marketing: how to increase the effectiveness of our campaigns.
As marketing budgets come under increasing pressure in response to economic uncertainty in Europe and elsewhere, effectiveness is rising higher on clients' agendas. The message is timely.
The planning, creative and broader marketing community uses insights or an insight to get to ideas that will solve their marketing or business problems. This is a brief exploration into the definition of the insight.
Great marketing can save the world. And small marketing can kill it. I talk about the Broad Street Pump, London in 1854, and what it means for the future of marketing communications.
Source code control is the most important practice that a software professional can do. This presentation introduces Git, the modern, distributed, version control designed for speed and efficiency.
This was delivered for a local Drupal user group.
I originally gave this presentation at the Drupal Self-Help Group meetup, in May 2012.
Museum of the future debate transcriptionbritishmuseum
Transcription of the first Museum of the future debate 'A living building: how could the British Museum best deliver its constant purpose for a changing public?' on Thursday 11 September 2014
How art helps us to be human, healthy, and stay connected. Making and looking at art has long-term effects like boosting our brain function and our immune systems as well as contributing positively to our mental and emotional health.
How do Instagram and Twitter influence the visit experience of London museums? This research uses data collection and analysis to get a better understanding of visitors' behaviour and suggests which strategies are more successful in creating an community that lasts beyond the visit.
2. Synopsis
Tate Britain is an emblem of British culture.
But by 2005 it was losing its relevance.
The launch of Tate Modern in 2000 had repositioned Tate Britain
as classic and institutionalised.
Its permanent collection of British art had become over familiar
and less appealing.
Planning set about addressing this issue by breathing new life
into the gallery.
Our objective was to make Tate Britain as contemporary as Tate
Modern and to reframe ‘Old’ work through ‘Fresh’ eyes.
The delivery of the campaign had to be new and unexpected,
for not just Tate Britain but for art galleries as a whole.
This paper will show how planning led the process from start to
finish.
How it helped to create a paradigm shift in the perception of
‘old’ art and modernised Tate Britain.
Planning created a breakthrough insight and strategy that led to
a brilliantly elastic creative idea.
An idea that was successful in boosting both visitor figures and
broadening the gallery’s appeal.
3. Can you help?
In 2005 Tate Britain came to Fallon with a challenge:
Can you refresh an old institution and increase visitor frequency at the
gallery?
We said anything was possible.
But we knew we had a tough task on our hands.
The gallery is a national institution with a solid reputation for attracting either
tourists or art aficionados.
4. A bit of background
Launched in 1897, Tate Britain displays the largest collection of British art in
the world; from 1500 to the present day.
That is both a good and a bad thing.
Good because it’s drenched in history, has enviable kudos and is seen as
being the ‘best of classic British art’.
Bad because many people have an inbuilt perception about what it
represents.
Many see the gallery as traditional, part of the establishment, stuffy and old
school.
Others see it as worthy, educational and dull*.
A place many go to only once just to say they’ve ‘done it’.
It was our job to make Tate Britain interesting again and create energy
around the gallery.
As Tate Director of Communication Will Gompertz said at the time:
* Tate Through Visitors Eyes and Fallon Qualitative
5. "We're working with
Fallon because we want
to raise the benchmark in
gallery marketing. We
want creative solutions
that are original and
compelling”.
6. A double eclipse
We immersed ourselves in their business, read all of their commissioned
research* and carried out our own groups.
The problems were becoming clear.
Firstly, the gallery had been overshadowed by the arrival of Tate Modern in
2000 which had rapidly become a ‘must see’ attraction.
It was seen as cooler, more fashionable and accessible than Tate Britain.
It grabbed the headlines and the visitor numbers.
This prolific success came at the expense of Tate Britain which became old-
fashioned, staid and out-dated – a reference for how art used to be.
Secondly, we knew that those who did visit Tate Britain were drawn by its
exhibitions and not the permanent collection that is housed within the gallery.
Tate Britain had become a ‘museum’ for art.
This was a major problem.
To tackle these issues we knew we’d have to trigger a change in attitude and
behaviour.
We needed to refocus attention back on Tate Britain and steal some of the
limelight from Tate Modern.
Our job was to inspire people to see old art in a new way.
* The Anatomy of a Visit/ MEW
7. Objectives
The business context was simple.
Tate Britain and its permanent collection had been eclipsed by:
• Tate Modern which had repositioned it as old and dull.
• Its own exhibitions which were seen as more attractive than the
permanent collection.
The communication objectives were:
• Change the perception of the gallery and its permanent collection.
• Increase visitor figures and frequency.
To achieve these objectives we knew we’d have to create an idea that
would encourage people to reconsider Tate Britain and what it offered.
We had to make Tate Britain - and its permanent collection – contemporary
again.
8. An army of culture fans
In 2005 we were told that more people had visited museums and galleries
than attended football matches.
Art fairs were packed out, the home was now seen as a gallery and institutes
of learning had become destinations for experience.
Art and culture was going through a renaissance.
This growing cultural fan base would be our core audience.
But we also wanted to target a secondary audience; people who didn’t think
art was for them.
These people were important because the Tate is funded by the government
and the gallery’s mission is to make ‘art accessible to more people’.
In all honesty, this made the job a little harder.
But it spurred us on.
Our goal was to arrive at an idea that would truly broaden Tate Britain’s
appeal.
9. ‘Looking’ to learn
We spent hours at Tate Britain and soaked up all of those great paintings from
1500 to the present day.
Turner to Blake, Freud to Emin, Bacon to Whiteread.
We approached it with one purpose in mind:
We wanted to rethink the collection.
This was easier said than done.
So as planners we immersed ourselves in art.
We became culture vultures, visited other galleries in London and read books
by some of the great art critics like Robert Hughes.
It was a fascinating journey.
10. Understanding the norms
We made a series of observations by looking at conventional ways of
behaviour within the ‘art’ world;
1.) Artist
Gallery marketing was dominated by the artist being elevated beyond the
art.
Like a modern day celebrity or ‘cult of the artist’.
2.) Content
Other campaigns shone the spotlight on the art itself; from the time period it
was from to the movement it belonged to and its country of origin.
3.) Theory
From reading books, watching films and speaking to staff at Tate Britain we
understood how experts analyse art.
We found that art criticism is the ‘pursuit of a rational basis for art
appreciation’*.
This was art from a distance, to be respected, not felt.
* Robert Hughes ‘Shock of the New’
11. Away from the crowd
These, it seemed, were the confines and conventional wisdoms of gallery
advertising that we knew we had to differentiate ourselves from.
We decided to revolt against these preconceptions.
We didn’t want people to think that Tate Britain attracted a certain type of
person; educated, academic and knowledgeable about the discipline.
We didn’t want the gallery to be seen as elitist and exclusive to ‘those in the
know’.
This would further institutionalise the kind of experience offered at Tate
Britain.
We didn’t want to paint the future with the colours of the past and we knew
we’d have to behave differently.
It was our aim to make Tate Britain accessible.
We noticed contemporary art tapped into the mood or tone of the moment.
Modern art felt like it touched our times and reflected our sense of self and
society.
12. A new take
Armed with this fresh, modern perspective we re-approached the permanent
collection.
We stepped back from study and got ourselves down to Tate Britain and
enjoyed the art as individuals.
The works (without even knowing their origin) provoked and enthused from
the inside out.
The artist, not the academics or curators, spoke directly through their work.
Tolstoy famously once said: “by words a man transmits his thoughts to
another; by means of art he transmits his feelings”.
These pieces of art were like portraits of the artists feelings.
13. The creation of art
The reality was that these artists created masterpieces:
• To display their feelings, emotion, and mood.
• Connect to other people.
• Stimulate an emotional response.
All of this meant that art is very much rooted in everyday life.
It deals with feelings that we all have in common.
So, whether it’s a Turner painted in 1839 or a Freud pained in 1972, that art is
as relevant to our day as it was then.
Mood, feeling and emotions are timeless.
When based on an emotional response, Tate Britain and its permanent
collection were as contemporary as Tate Modern.
This was our epiphany.
14. The insights
We felt like we had arrived at a place which would help us reframe the
permanent collection and see it through new eyes.
We knew that art conveyed something that is here, now.
We understood that emotion is the key behind all art.
And this is what people relate to (consciously or sub-consciously).
Emotions are universal and never change.
Therefore all art is contemporary.
15. A modern art experience
The idea was to invite the audience to experience the emotional journey of art.
We set about creating themes based on universal emotions and made a selection
of ‘Collections’.
It was a new way of looking at the permanent collection and provided a relevant
and engaging ‘experience’ to a broad group of people.
In collaboration with the client we grouped paintings into twenty eclectic
‘Collections’ to guide people through the art at the gallery.
They suggested a number of personal journeys people could take, responding to
their different moods and feelings, each and every day.
We felt people could enjoy art in the same way they enjoy films or books.
Sometimes they want silly and at other times profound.
Sometimes happy, at other times dark.
The ‘Collections’ directed visitors to paintings or exhibits based on whether they
were hung over, newly heartbroken, planning a big meeting or a first date.
We produced leaflets which acted as ‘guides’ for people to have in their hands as
they enjoyed the art.
They responded to the true story of everyday life; the joy and the heartbreak, the
good and the bad.
It was an idea that helped people to make connections between the works of art
and made the sprawling Tate Britain an emotional and sensational journey.
If you walk into the gallery today you’ll see twenty ‘Collections’ that you can
choose from.
Twenty tours for different feelings.
Twenty tours for different days.
16. “Tate Britain’s new
set of bespoke tours
make it an ideal
destination – no
matter how you’re
feeling”.
Source: Evening Standard, 21st September 2006
17. Create your
own ‘Collection’
Gallery visitors were given the chance to create their own collection of up to
six works in a competition.
The winner’s selection appeared on a leaflet for other visitors to enjoy.
We also asked celebrities to create their own collections.
Actor and Office star Mackenzie Crook created a ‘Paintings from the Olden
Days’ collection with works from William Hogarth, JW Waterhouse and Ford
Madox Brown.
18. Media
The campaign included the creation of twenty ‘Collections’ leaflets.
We made long copy outdoor ads; 4 sheets, cross track tube posters and
escalator panels.
Online we created a ‘make-your-own-collection’ website – responding to the
way you felt and what you needed.
This media strategy contributed in a number of ways to the campaign:
The use of leaflets was an important progression for media. Although
outdoor had and did play an important role bringing Tate Britain to a broader
audience, it did little to physically influence the behaviour of our target.
Leaflets provided a perfect means to do this.
The first stage was to use them as navigational tools within the gallery as the
public entered. These would be used, then kept or passed on by visitors.
The second stage was to take them to the streets. This provided topical
opportunities by exploiting key calendar dates (e.g. ‘Valentine’s Collection’ in
Valentine’s edition of Time Out) and tactical opportunities by reaching
audiences in unexpected places at timely moments (e.g. ‘I’m In A Hurry
Collection’ on Monday, ‘I’m Hung-over Collection’ on Friday leaflets that were
distributed outside key tube stations).
19. Results
The campaign inspired a brilliant 20% increase in visitors (Tate Britain
research figures).
It changed perceptions of the gallery in the mind of consumers with the help
of a major UK PR campaign; which ranged from the Evening Standard to The
Daily Mail.
‘Tate Collections’ has won a number of creative awards;
Amongst which are the Cannes Lions Grand Prix for Best Outdoor Campaign,
Poster Campaign of The Year (Campaign), Gold at Art Directors Club, Winner
at London International Awards and Silver at Epica and the Clio Awards.
20. Conclusion
This paper has set out planning’s contribution to a creative idea that made
people (and Tate Britain) look through ‘new eyes’ at the gallery’s permanent
collection.
By understanding the relationship between art and the public, we were able
to update and refresh Tate Britain.
We achieved this by focusing on how art makes people feel.
As a result, everyone became free to enjoy Tate Britain on their own terms,
depending on their mood.
We provided a set of guides (which we called ‘Collections’) that gave people
an emotional journey through some of the art housed in the gallery.
We also invited them to create their own.
The idea reframed what Tate Britain offered, was motivating and distinctive
from the competition.
We made the familiar seem new.
And a gallery that houses art from 1500 to the present day relevant in today’s
world.
‘Tate Collections’ became an invitation open to all and broadened the
gallery’s appeal.
35. Thank you
Alex Sullivan Channel Planner
Chris Kay. Account Director
Richard Flintham Creative Director
Juan Cabral Creative Director
Ali Alvarez Creative
Ginny Carrel Designer
Arjun Singh Print Producer
Word count 1986 (minus synopsis)