Tribal DDB Names Rasmussen CCO

He joins the Omnicom shop from BBH N.Y.

(Brian Morrissey) Tribal DDB has named Robert Rasmussen as its U.S. chief creative officer and executive creative director in New York.

Rasmussen, who joined Bartle Bogle Hegarty, New York, in November 2008 as ecd of innovation, replaces Steve Nesle, who has left Tribal after serving as its N.Y. ecd. The U.S. chief creative officer is a new position.

Rasmussen, an art director by training, joined BBH after 18 months as ecd at R/GA, where he worked on the Nike account. Continue reading

George Foreman Biz Shifts to Zimmerman

The work traveling to the Omnicom shop is backed by $25-30 mil. in media spending

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Zimmerman Advertising said it has been chosen as lead agency for the George Foreman brand of household appliances.

The Omnicom Group agency in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., said it won the business, previously handled mainly in-house, following a review.

Per Nielsen, the client spends about $5 million annually in major measured media, but that total does not include infomercials, which are a major part of the assignment, along with short-form ad development and media buying. The business moving to Zimmerman, including long-form paid media, totals in the $25-30 million range, sources said. Continue reading

Zicam Moves to C-K

Independent shop succeeds IPG’s Lowe on pharma biz

(D Gianatasio) Cramer-Krasselt said it has won ad chores on the Zicam cold remedy following a review.

“We are very excited to start working with Cramer-Krasselt for all our creative and strategic needs,” said Bill Hemelt, president and CEO of Zicam parent Matrixx Initiatives, in a statement. “With C-K/Phoenix, we get the advantages of a large advertising network as well as the attention that a smart, talented local firm can offer.” Matrixx is based in Arizona.

The brand spent about $25 million in 2008 on ads and $15 million through November 2009, per Nielsen, but the agency said Zicam’s media outlay is expected to increase substantially — and perhaps hit $50 million — this year.

C-K’s first Zicam work will break in April.

The review stemmed chiefly from the merger of Intepublic Group shops Lowe and Deutsch. Lowe’s Zicam business conflicted with Detusch’s larger Tylenol account, leading Zicam to conduct an agency search five months after hiring Lowe.

Ford Plays Tag With iTunes

Automaker adds iTunes song tagging to its high-tech options

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Ford, the first U.S. automaker to offer factory-installed HD Radio receivers, is adding iTunes song tagging to its growing list of high-tech options. In 2010, Ford vehicles will offer the two new features alongside terrestrial radio, Sirius satellite radio and Internet radio.

iTunes tagging allows listeners of HD Radio to “tag” songs they like, store the information in an Apple iPod, then purchase and download those songs via the Apple iTunes music store when the iPod is synched with the computer. Continue reading

VeriFone to Acquire CC Taxi Media

Firm looks to move beyond simply supplying technology

(MediaWeek) VeriFone, a provider of technology for electronic payment transactions, has inked a deal to acquire the Clear Channel Taxi Media business from Clear Channel Outdoor. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

The deal vaults VeriFone to the front lines of the growing place-based advertising video network business. VeriFone will add all of CC’s inventory from 5,000 New York taxis to its existing network of 6,500 taxis. Continue reading

MRM Takes Home Depot Digital, CRM

(Brian Morrissey) MRM Worldwide has won the digital and customer relationship management business of Home Depot after a review, according to sources.

The McCann Worldgroup shop bested incumbent Digitas — along with Wunderman, Rapp Collins and Huge — in a competition managed by search consultancy Select Resources International in Santa Monica, Calif. Digitas was named to the Home Depot roster in April 2006, taking over CRM duties from DDB in Chicago.

Sources pegged the account at $12 million in annual revenue. In the first 11 months of 2009, the client spent more than $415 million in major measured media, about as much as it spent for the entire year of 2008, per Nielsen.

MRM referred calls to the client. A Home Depot representative was unavailable for immediate comment.

AdweekMedia Forecast 2010 – Digital

(ADWEEK) The tricky thing about any sort of forecast for 2010 is that even though the recession appears, at least on paper, to be near an end, this was no ordinary recession for the media business.

“It’s difficult to separate what’s cyclical and what’s structural,” says eMarketer CEO Geoff Ramsey. That’s undoubtedly true for media like newspapers and radio, which have felt the earth shake beneath them this year. But it’s also true for a still-maturing medium like digital.

Overall, eMarketer predicts that online advertising spending will increase by 5.5 percent to $23.6 billion in 2010, reversing a 4.6 percent decline last year. But all won’t be well on the Web, which has seen several major issues exposed and exacerbated by the recession. As it turns out, not all traditional brands love banner advertising. There is still far too much display inventory out there. And even the red-hot video segment lacks a sure business model. Continue reading

2009’s Most Effective Ads

Ace Metrix reveals which TV spots resonated most with viewers
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Rubbermaid’s ad tops the chart.

A TV ad from Rubbermaid, promoting the marketer’s line of Easy Find Lids food storage containers has been named the most creatively effective ad of 2009, according to Ace Metrix, the syndicated commercial tester. The spot, dubbed “Neat. Not,” which was created by WPP Group’s Y&R and debuted in June, features two women and their respective kitchen cabinets, one messy, one neatly organized with (you guessed it) Easy Find Lids containers. The ad also directed viewers to a Web site for coupons. “Consumers clearly connected with the Rubbermaid creative treatment,” said Ace Metrix CEO Steve Goldman. “The combination of a simple message, clear calls to action and a differentiating product all helped this ad to stand out from others.” Steve Pawl, vp, marketing at Rubbermaid, said the ad and the product “were the result of understanding our consumers’ frustrations around cluttered cabinets. We are especially pleased that the spot resonated so well with our audience.” Pawl credited Y&R for “bringing this solution to life in an engaging and compelling way.

Continue reading