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The Woodies have a blog. It’s a kind of collective. Not sure we’re about to start a revolution baby, but we might kindle a small debate or two and perhaps raise a smile. Anyway, rather than just blogging corporate Woodreed by fielding our top Woodie (as so many other companies seem to do in a thinly veiled attempt at impressing with their profundity), we wanted all our individual voices to be heard. An agency’s most valuable assets are its people after all. Everyone’s got something to say here and with us everyone’s ideas and opinions matter.

Each week someone different will be blogging. It's mostly about stuff that rocks our world as well as the flipside – the things that just don't cut it with us. We'll blog about inside and outside – inside this glorious industry where we work and outside in the real world.
It's a bit of an experiment, so go with us on this one.

Hope you enjoy.

Monday, 19 March 2012

Who let the dogs out? Insurance advertising's gone to the dogs (and pigs, cats and mice and wolves)

Never work with children or animals, so the old adage goes. Clearly something that's passed the chaps tasked with creating insurance ads by. What is it with this animal obsession? Swiftcover's dodgy dogs and Gocompare's homage to loony tunes to name two of the worse offenders. Actually it's pretty easy to see why. It's all down to a meerkat called Aleksandr Orlov. Advertising can be a pretty me too arena and I think since compare the market's meerkat first hit our screens (and subsequently our vernacular and high street, entering our public consciousness in a way that only truly big advertising ideas can) the competition have been scrabbling round desperate to recreate even a tenth of the magic of that phenomenon, with little success. John Heggarty said at a recent IPA lecture that around 95% of all advertising was shit (he did fail to tell our esteemed MD Jo Moffatt when she innocently enquired at the same lecture what proportion of his own body of work he deemed shit, but that's another story). It's true to say that it's once in a blue moon we are treated to something as big, magnificent and truly mind blowing as the meerkat. It's anything but simples.

2 comments:

  1. It seems to me that using an animal in advertising is an easi-route option, one that is bound to emotionally involve the consumer and induce them to buy the product. My God, I've even done it myself when I purchased some toilet rolls and box of monkey bag tea.
    But I agree, what's so surreal about the meekat is that it is so unexpected, so unlikely, yet so endearing (if a little irritating). I'd love to have seen the brief!

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