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Board

First Time Board Member Tells All

I became acquainted with the Advertising Club of Buffalo nearly a decade ago. I was a student at Canisius College (where leaders are made) and my advisor, Dr. John Dahlberg, advised me to get involved.

As this post may indicate, I did get involved. Very involved. I started attending events and networking the old fashioned way. I found myself having a genuinely great time geeking out with other people who love to talk about clever headlines and make fun of lame fonts. I also found myself learning a lot and meeting really great people (the kind of people it never hurts to know in an industry like ours.)

The Ad Club has helped me to grow as a professional, land my job, grow some more, hire interns, help the interns to grow, find freelance gigs, and stay tremendously interested and involved in the Buffalo advertising community despite the fact that I work client side. What’s helped me grow the most however, is serving on the Board of Directors.

I’m writing this post with a purpose. Board nominations are due this week and I know that some of you may be on the fence about running. As someone who was in your position around this time last year, I can only offer you one piece of advice and it’s the same piece of advice that Dr. Dahlberg gave me so many years ago: get involved.

I knew that being on the board would be a resume booster – but I had no idea how much I would enjoy it. It’s a beautiful thing when your profession and your passion are one and the same  but to share that with a great group of motivated doers is another thing all together. And it’s nothing short of incredible.

As a club, we’re doing a lot of things right these days. Our events are selling out, we’re bringing world-class speakers to Buffalo, we’re offering practical education on topics people want to learn about, we’re reaching out to students, and our membership numbers are higher than ever before. That’s no coincidence. Our board is consciously driving this revival of sorts, and while I’m usually not one to brag I am confident that we collectively have much to be proud of.

The success is undoubtedly a result of great leadership, hard work, and personal accountability. That being said, if hard work and accountability aren’t really your thing you probably shouldn’t be looking to join our board.

As the co-chair for our AdLab series, I spent a lot of time planning and coordinating the monthly panel discussions. Sure, it takes time, a lot of emails, and some back-and-forth but it’s given me the opportunity to meet and correspond with Buffalo’s best and brightest. Along with all of the AdLabs, it’s expected that I attend the club’s happy hours and events – but I was already doing that anyway. There are board meetings once a month and committee meetings on occasion but I don’t dread them – I enjoy them.

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A personal highlight was being asked to represent the club (and my company) by reviewing commercials on the morning show Winging It! the day after the Super Bowl.

Anyone who knows me knows how much I love talking about commercials.

I could go on and on about all of the reasons I’ve enjoyed being on the board this past year, but I’d rather have you find out for yourself.

So, if you’d like to be an instrumental part of something awesome and you want to help us make things happen, we’d love to have you join us.

You can check out the specific areas of need and submit your nomination (for yourself or any other qualified candidates who might be interested) through this Friday, and I hope you will.

If you have any specific questions about what’s involved, feel free to get in touch

ADDYS Blog

Four local companies win regional advertising awards

The Advertising Club of Buffalo is proud to announce that four local companies have won regional advertising awards through the American Advertising Federation. To enter the regional competition, submissions had to win a Gold ADDY award at the local level. Western New York is part of the AAF District 2, which includes: New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware, and Washington DC. The regional winners representing WNY are:


Crowley Webb / Judge’s Choice – Fireworks Poster Campaign
COLLATERAL MATERIAL – 10 – Poster – 10-B – Campaign

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Hadley Exhibits / Zippo Outdoor – Outdoor Retailer

SALES PROMOTION – 03 – Point of Purchase – 03-C – Trade Show Exhibit

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White Bicycle / Andrew Bird “Lusitania” Poster
ADVERTISING FOR THE ARTS & SCIENCES – 55 – Collateral – 55-E – Poster

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Print Collection / State of America
COLLATERAL MATERIAL – 10 – Poster – 10-B – Campaign

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The award-winning work will now move on to compete for a national American Advertising Federation award at the 2013 ADDY® Awards Show during ADMERICA! in June in Phoenix, Ariz. National ADDYs are some of the most prestigious awards in the ad industry. They are awarded annually to the best campaigns in the country.

Blog

The Middle Ground

Written by:  Board Member Ben Kirst

As marketers, there is often an overwhelming urge to embrace the latest and greatest tools at our disposal. A new social network that will change how you attract customers, a unique quantitative approach that’s going to reinvent the way you’ve considered ROI, a buzzworthy strategy you want to give a rib-bending embrace… we have all felt that lightheaded desire for new tools with the intensity of a teenage crush.

We pressure ourselves to integrate fresh industry approaches into our workplace and get frustrated when we face opposition. We envision the glory of success, the hearty slaps on our backs, the jealous glares of rivals as our fearless innovation changes the game.

This is fine, by the way. This is not a screed meant to mock people for seeing the value in the constantly changing communication environment (and this is coming from a guy who works at a newspaper, the most notoriously slow-to-change industry in the media world). However, some of the boring stuff in online marketing still works really, really well.

For example, over 59% of respondents to the 2013 Email Marketing Industry Census in a survey of 1,300 British email marketers gave organic search (SEO), email marketing, and paid search ROI scores of “good” or “excellent.” [1]

What’s equally interesting is that these same marketers admitted in fairly significant numbers that they don’t really work that hard to improve their campaigns, despite the solid ROI. My guess is that there is a tendency to cringe at the analytical or developmental grind that will increase organic search results or the suspiciously-like-math work involved in AdWords campaign management.

Mobile marketing, by comparison, feels now, sexy. Social media marketing doesn’t even seem like work. Affiliate marketing looks like a shortcut to a pot of gold. But are the results as apparent? In fact, are you seeing results at all?

Here’s the thing – in the coming weeks and months, we are going to see more and more successful strategies for integrating all of these processes.

Content marketing, social media marketing, email marketing, mobile marketing and display marketing are playing together more and more as savvy companies of all sizes get better at fully integrating campaigns. Check out the way Virgin America rolled out its most recent campaign,[2] which included Richard Branson serving drinks on a coast-to-coast flight, digital billboards in Times Square, and a strong Instagram presence.

Content marketing, mobile marketing, and search marketing are already inextricable. Consider the movement Foursquare has made to integrate these fields in its latest app update[3], where the company is apparently trying to “out-Yelp” their competition by offering improved recommendations and location-based exploration.

Promotions – which Borrell already predicts will dominate local media advertising budgets over the next four years, growing from $32 billion to $80 billion[4] — are going to be increasingly relevant to our work as clients demand more exposure in and around the fragmented digital audience space.

So what’s my point?
There is a middle ground that allows us to satisfy our urges to experiment with emerging technology while cementing the tried-and-true strategies that we know will get results. By remembering that the digital audience still engages deeply with brands via search and email, and using these tactics as foundation pieces in campaigns that branch into social media, promotion, mobile, etc., we will find that we are serving our customers and our audience better – while keeping our own skills sharp and our work engaging.

With rare exceptions, most of us don’t have the resources of Virgin America or Foursquare, but that does not mean we are stuck. When you work on your next project or campaign, consider all of the tools at your disposal, think about how you are using them, and most importantly, if they are working in concert with each other. There’s no need to fight against the work you’re already doing in order to innovate now.

Blog

‘Reverse mentoring’ can lead to social media success

Post by Emily Burns Perryman originally on BizJournals.com

I firmly believe that individuals in all fields and industries should be continually learning and evolving as professionals throughout all points of their career. From college intern to C-level executive, continued professional development through education and new experiences help add to your skill set, understand how different areas of business and industry work together, and can often uncover beneficial new perspectives.

However, it’s not just the individual who should be concerned about ongoing professional development. It’s important for the decision makers and senior leadership within businesses and organizations to place value on new skills and knowledge, offer and encourage training when their resources allow, and recognize that well trained and motivated employees can help meet their most important business goals and objectives. Some of these objectives may include building community and public relations, increasing lead generation and sales, and building brand awareness.

As many are aware, the skills and knowledge attained for both personal development and career advancement can often be achieved through mentoring situations. This one-on-one process generally involves an individual with finely tuned skills or experience, who can provide career advice, direction and guidance to someone at a more junior level. You may be familiar with or have taken part in mentor situations, but consider that often times “reverse mentoring” can be helpful and beneficial as well… especially in the ever evolving web and social media spaces.

Mentors in the workplace used to be a generation or two older and more seasoned than their charges. That model isn’t the only one these days. Many companies have put forth an effort or created internal programs to educate senior executives in the areas of workplace trends, technology and social media. Upper level employees are paired up with or study under younger employees in a trend known as reverse mentoring, which has become popular within a wide range of industries.

According to a 2011 article in The Wall Street Journal, chief executive of General Electric Co. Jack Welch firmly advocated for reverse mentoring, and ordered 500 top-level executives to reach out to subordinates to learn how to use the web. He saw the value in new skills and experience, and wanted his employees to connect and share their knowledge in an important space.

It’s well recognized that frequently young mentors can provide valuable insight on navigating the complexities of various social media platforms, all of which have become essential for business communication, but often overwhelming to older generations. With globalization, technology and access to data shifting and evolving so rapidly, older generations are increasingly identifying the need to catch up and study how to use new web tools and techniques.

With many employees in the Gen X and Gen Y (also known as the Millennial generation) demographics more familiar with and skillful in regard to social media and web tools, they have unique expertise and skills of value to share with their more seasoned coworkers. Reverse mentoring can also help younger employees become more comfortable within a company or organization, promoting trust and cooperation.

In my experience, reverse mentoring situations and social media training must be part of a company’s corporate culture. From top down it must be communicated and reinforced that social media skills are incredibly useful in the business space, and that reverse mentoring opportunities, internal and external social media and web training are all vital to an employees’ success. Reinforcing the importance of these skills can help motivate employees, and placing team members side by side to work together can help champion effective communication.

My firm leadership shares the philosophy that reverse mentoring is important.

“When you have talent in an organization with a passion and a vision, trusting these people and empowering them is an essential ingredient in creating success,” says Ronald J. Soluri Sr., our managing director. “Freed Maxick has always been successful when allowing talent the opportunity to champion new ideas and areas of practice development. Social media is a growing and a diverse area with many channels to reach people, but having content that is relevant is a challenge. Here we are fortunate to have young professionals like Emily pushing this area and enlisting more disciples every day. We have also chosen to invest more in this area, and have recently added a content writer to help manage a steady flow of quality content for our social channels.”

Although your company or organization may not offer reverse mentoring opportunities yet, there are some local groups that may be able to assist. Social Media Club Buffalo is the local chapter of a national group designed to host conversations that explore key issues facing society as technologies transform. The club offers members networking opportunities and thoughtfully designed programs and special events to educate attendees about the world of social media. Check their schedule, get involved, and you may find some talented local professionals who can help reverse mentor you or your team.

Another skillful group is The Advertising Club of Buffalo. With mobile penetration rates rising across the globe, and social media’s exponential growth, marketers are increasingly viewing paid social media advertising as an integrated part of their strategy. Advertising professionals must be skilled in all creative approaches, from print, to outdoor, to online.

When I recently touched base with my contact there, I discovered that organizers are eager to explore the creation of reverse mentoring programs, special events and educational opportunities in the near future. They understand the value that this new mentoring relationship model can bring to the table, especially in the area of the web and social media, and are working to create new opportunities for their members.

The qualities of a great leader can be found in many individuals. Remember that social media is a powerful tool within business, and reverse mentoring can help educate those who need a bit of help and guidance. It may appear overwhelming, but the sharing of a few simple best practices, a review of which social platforms work best for different purposes, and a little inter-generational teamwork can go a long way, helping meet many of the most important business objectives.

Emily Burns Perryman is a State University of New York Fashion Institute of Technology graduate and started her career in New York City working for fashion and digital media companies. She is currently e-Marketing Communications Specialist for regional accounting firm Freed Maxick CPAs. Follow them on Twitter @FreedMaxickCPAs.

Blog Students

Two students awarded scholarships by the Ad Club.

The Buffalo Ad Club recently awarded two bright communication students scholarships. That’s right, our annual Don Nichols Scholarship competition has come and gone, and Juan Esguerra and Marissa Caggiano won us over, to say the least.

The competition is named in honor of Don Nichols, who founded the Albright Art School’s Graphic Design Department in 1950. He brought the program to UB, where he served as its head until his passing in 1987. He educated countless graphic designers, some of whom went on to national prominence. Nichols was awarded the Alex Osborn Award for Creativity from the Art Directors/Communicators of Buffalo, along with the Chancellor’s Award for Teaching from UB.

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The Don Nichols Scholarship competition has been around for 15 years now, awarding promising communication students a little financial help with their education. This year, Juan Esguerra of Daemen College was awarded first place for his “No Futuro” poster. Marissa Caggiano of UB took home second place for her “Roots” poster. Congratulations to both and good luck to all students wishing to take part next year. And students, be sure to look for more information about our next Don Nichols Scholarship competition in the fall.

new

ADDYS Blog

Our site is up for a Webby.

The dust has barely settled from the scientific soirée that was our 2013 ADDY show, and the website promoting our event is already up for a Webby Award for Best Events Website. Exciting, right? The Webbys are the digital world’s highest honor and judged by industry experts, along with some of the world’s most powerful people. So the nomination is an honor in and of itself.

Created by Crowley Webb, the site carries the Science of Persuasion theme and includes little nuggets of fun for visitors looking for information on our ADDY show – including a neat comparative of past and present tools of the trade. Check it out here.

With the nomination, the site is also automatically up for a Webby People’s Voice Award. That’s where you come in. You can vote for the site right here. And be sure and spread the word to your social networks to help put this thing over the top. Come on Buffalo, we can do this.

ADDYS

Touching Down in a Puff of Snow and Frozen Bills Fans’ Tears – Judging the 2013 Buffalo ADDYs

ADDYs_AdClubBanners_WrapUp_v2This is part four of our 2013 ADDY Recap. (Part one: Best of Show(Part two: A Word from the Judges) (Part three: Special Award Winners)

Today, we bring you a recap from one of our judges. 

For those of you paying attention to how we pick judges, we don’t normally set out to have a judge who is from the area. But when they come highly recommended, run a digital agency in New York, and have been removed from the market for about a decade, we can make an exception.

Dave Fletcher (@davefletcher) is the Founder / Executive Director of The Mechanism, New York. This is his experience coming back to town to judge our show.

350-downtown

I gracefully exited Buffalo in 1994, swept away from one unbelievably frigid place filled with more bars than gas stations to another city (Cleveland), which also had arguably more alcohol than petrol. Despite the seemingly year-round threat of lake effect snow, fear of a probable yeti attack on Elmwood Ave or the misery of being a sports fan in this town, I have never met folk who are more kind-hearted, fun to spend time with… or dare I say it “clever” than in Buffalo. It will always be my home away from wherever I currently live, and if I could simply bottle up just some of the enthusiasm exuded by the people who dwell in this chilly little slice of New York State, I would. Well, I kind of did on my recent trip to Buffalo to judge the Addy’s, but more about that later.

Between DJ’ing at WBNY, The Inn-Between and Mickey Rats (two of them), I was a semi-functional designer after graduating from your Buffalo State College in 1992. I worked for one massive art director Gregg Fox as an intern, freelanced for Marine Midland Bank, and eventually, with a creative titanosaurus in Michael Anthony; my first design “boss” after graduating. In fact, during my tenure with Mike Anthony, we won an Addy for a pizza box design and cheesy, er…cheeky campaign for Picasso’s Pizza. I think we might have even gotten a free slice from them for our hard work.

arrivalSo back to the semi-present. Opening my eyes as our plane touched down, I was reminded of the quintessential glacial Buffalo landscape — a delicate smashup between the flat earth society and residing on the planet Hoth. Rampaging Wampa may have come into blurry focus as the plane touched down in a puff of snow and frozen Bills fans’ tears. My driver, who should have simply complained about the weather, swapped bartending and sports stories for the entirety of the trip to the Comfort Inn, a luxury hotel filled with various Sabres fans who were in to watch their favorite hockey team get pummeled by whatever opponent was in town. Alcohol becomes the mighty equalizer for many of these fans, but considering that only half of the actual players are hammered during the game, the rest of them have to simply beat each other silly just to stay warm.

Only one other judge had made it into town, due to a hatchet of a storm that likely was brewed by Buffalonian warlocks to keep the real weirdos out, so we travelled to Cole’s with our resilient hosts from the Buffalo Ad Club. Cole’s is a restaurant that also functions as a fully sanctioned boxing ring at 2am, when the kids are really worked up into a froth. In the late 80s and early 90s, I used to go to Coles to hang with smarter people after I got tired of drinking quarter beers (and discussing how we were paying too much for beer) at Mr. Goodbar next door. After a lively debate about the difference and similarities between fried pig anus and calamari, we munched on what used to be trash before the kind folks at the Anchor Bar, turned it into Buffalo Gold — chicken wings.

Time was running out, the bars were only open ‘til 4am… so we took a quick pit stop at Founding Fathers — a bar overrun with bearded intellectuals and a few Sabres fans, drowning the evening’s loss over some microbrews and “make your own nachos,” just like the real “founding fathers” would have liked it. For a second, I felt like I was in Williamsburg, Brooklyn — but without the fear of a sudden irony attack. One night down and one magical night to go.

colesAfter a terrible night’s sleep, I awoke at 2am after having a nightmare about a wide-right kick in Super Bowl XXV… yes, I still have them (and if you must know, they intensify the closer I am to Orchard Park). Rising eventually at 6am, I slipped into my Gortex bodysuit, 12 layers of flannel, and a hat made from a real Seal (the singer, not the cuddly beast) and trekked out into the sharp morning air to find a good cup of coffee to pour over and eventually into my skull. The Spot, inexplicably positioned directly across from a Starbucks — almost as if the Buffalo coffee gods dared Seattle to try to serve coffee on the same street — was perfect. Again, despite the bitter cold, the coffee, baristas and customers were all smiling, the design of the place was inviting, and there I was, in a Gortex bodysuit. I may have been wearing aviator goggles. Anywhere else in the world, I would have been beaten to a pulp for looking so foolish. Here, they practically revered me like a god, or at least as one of them…which in my book is even better.

We were picked up promptly at 9am and hurtled to the local PBS bunker to judge and (likely) be judged by the Buffalo Ad Clubbers. Hordes of coffee and Tim Horton’s were pumped into our stomachs through the feeding tubes that were apparently installed the night before during our pig rectum discussion at Cole’s, to enable us to focus “razor-sharp” on the vastly enticing and exciting entries — a veritable designers cornucopia of creative output. Now, as I mentioned earlier, I went to the big show in the early 90s and one thing stood out — we all kind of sucked compared to the work we reviewed on this day. My only helpful comment would be that the website coders need to pay a little more attention to the order of their JavaScripts (Google “analytics code” at the bottom of the page! You lost points…), and a WordPress site is still a WordPress site, no matter how much effort you put into the theming (you know who you are).

dave-in-judging-roomNow, myself and the other judge “what’s his name”  were bonding like sailors on a long voyage until, seemingly just in time for free wings and “quarter-sized pepperoni” pizza from La Nova, in waltzed the second “what’s his name” or as I like to lovingly call him, “Thing 2”. After announcing something about how fantastic he looked and repeatedly announcing how much better his parka was than mine, and after I finished weeping, we also bonded like sailors, this time on an ancient hunt for the mighty Kraken — the coveted “Best of Show” award.

After we were forced to take increasingly “nuder” photos for your awards programme, and after the initial humiliation and obvious delight of our (captors) hosts of said nudity, we finished the day by watching the commercial entries and choosing Best of Show, huddled with arms around each other weeping like willows. Now, choosing Best of Show wasn’t an easy task, as many of the entries were most deserving, so we deliberated with a fourth judge, transmitted in via some large mobile device without buttons someone called an “i” Pad (don’t worry, it’ll never catch on, so don’t even bother making your website responsive).


Now for those of you that think being a judge is an easy task, or that we must have been crazy to pick what we finally did instead of your marvelous entry, I say “Bully!” We all took things very seriously, and were very much in sync with our choices. We looked at, held and likely made love to, many of your entries from 9am to 8pm. The best truly won, and if you didn’t get an award, just keep trying. Oh, and be sure to get real drunk at the Addy’s, because I hear they stop serving liquor during the halftime ceremony.

calumetWe had a great dinner during our last night with folks that I will now gratefully consider friends, and even more drinks later that night. We all patted each other on the backs for a job well done, and again, despite my painful back welts from one of the judges (you know who you are), I don’t hold any grudges. Only love for my Buffalo brethren. I was with you when the Bills were beaten by Giants, and beaten like dogs in three Super Bowls afterwards. I was there for all that “fun.”

It’s worth supporting organizations run by pros and truly fantastic Creatives like you have. One of the judges nearly got a Buffalo tattoo while we were hanging out at the old Merlin’s on the last night, and the only thing in my mind that was truly crazy about it — is that I didn’t think of doing it first…

…And I have permanent bruises from where Thing 2 slugged me with a La Nova pizza slice, because I disagreed with his opinion on kerning.

Now I mentioned that I managed to nab a piece of Buffalo. My firm has nabbed one of your great Creatives, Michael Anthony —not only because he is a great friend and a better designer, but believe it or not, I truly want some of your Buffalo magic at my agency in New York. My firm, The Mechanism will be better for it, and for a 99 buck flight, you can come visit him, and we’ll talk too…

blue-monkYou’re all REAL, never pretentious and never given the credit you all rightfully deserve. I wanted to buy a “Buffalo Hates You Too” shirt while I was there, not because I thought it was particularly offensive, but because it’s got some attitude. You’re living in a great city — one of the entries used a local band’s tune to narrate the point that Buffalo is rising. It choked me up because I know it’s true.

…There you go. I was moved, because I get it.

So this post is a love letter to Buffalo and its great tradition of creativity and camaraderie as much as an occasionally serious account of my judging experience for the Addy’s. I still think they must have drugged me when they picked me up. Because no freezing, flat, insanely windy place on earth should still be this much fun — more than 10 years after I left.

Ah yes, and a sincere and heartfelt thanks to Jason Yates, Tricia Barrett, Michael and the other great folks from Buffalo for hosting me, and judges Brett McCoy, Joseph R. Stanfa and David Hodge via our iPad chat. You’re all class acts.

xo,
Dave
The Mechanism

ADDYS

Here’s to the 2013 WNY ADDY Special Award Winners.

ADDYs_AdClubBanners_WrapUp_v2This is part three of our 2013 ADDY Recap. (Part one: Best of Show(Part two: A Word from the Judges(Part four: Judging the ADDYs)

Each year as part of the local ADDY show, we recognize a small handful of stellar individuals who have left their mark on our ad community. Here are those we honored this year.

charlier
Jim Charlier
The David I. Levy Communicator of the Year Award

During his long and storied career, Jim has really done it all. So honoring him with the Levy was a no-brainer. Most recently – and perhaps most notably – Jim helped transform Garden Walk Buffalo from small neighborhood event into the largest garden tour in the country. Not too shabby.

paterson

Bill Paterson
The Alex Osborn Award for Creativity

A masterful writer and creative director, Bill’s quick wit and incredible talent made him an obvious choice for this honor. He’s worked at AM&As, Travers Collins, and as a freelancer for stint. Today, he spends his days at Gelia – an agency he helped shape into a true creative powerhouse.

farbo

Rebecca Farbo
The Odysseus Award

This award recognizes an outstanding client – a perfect description of Phillips Lytle’s CMO. Before the position in which she skillfully branded a nearly 200-year-old law firm, she was a writer, creative director, and agency president. Today, she’s a wonderful wife and mom – and the embodiment of what this award is meant to honor.

pastwik

Tina Pastwick
Advertising club of Buffalo’s Service Award

It was about time we sung the praises of our club’s mostly unsung hero. This mainstay of the Buffalo ad community and backbone of the club has given countless hours and matchless energy. This honor was long overdue, to say the least.

selby

Lillian Selby
Future Star Award.

An art director at Crowley Webb, Ms. Selby honed her skills at EMA and Loyola College following her graduation from William and Mary. Her profound work in such a short amount of time not only makes her deserving of this award, but also worthy of many others in the foreseeable future.

Congratulations to this year’s honorees.
Photos by Aaron Ingrao

ADDYS

2013 ADDYs – A Word from the Judges

ADDYs_AdClubBanners_WrapUp_v2This is part two of our 2013 ADDY Recap. (Part one: Best of Show(Part three: Here’s to the Special Award Winners(Part four: Judging the ADDYs)

Judge’s Choice

One of the new additions to the show this year was a Judge’s Choice award. We let each of our four judges choose their favorite piece for special recognition. After they finished judging Best of Show, we asked them to explain why they made their pick.

 

I was amazed by the level of creativity and range of outputs and media displayed by Buffalo’s creative community. From augmented reality to incredible posters, to awe-inspiring charitable works, at every turn i was impressed and delighted by not only the thinking but the production of such great ideas and boundary-pushing executions. To illustrate this point, i cant remember the last time i was a part of a group of grown adults squabbling over who might theoretically be able to acquire (ethically or not) samples of represented projects. Alas, we came out empty handed, but reinvigorated and refreshed by generally great work. We literally spent 3 hours discussing the final pieces and, although it was difficult, it was fun and we felt determined to give every piece its due effort.

Thank you Buffalo for the honor of viewing your work. Please keep pushing the envelope. And thank you for raising the bar for my own work.
Can’t wait to come back!
-Joe Stanfa, Senior Art Director, Golin Harris, Chicago, 2013 ADDY Judge

 
 

 

Judge’s Choice: David Hodge
Principal, Anstey Hodge Advertising Group, Roanoke
Smiling Ted’s Poster Campaign – Gelia

teds

 

Judge’s Choice: Brett McCoy
Engagement Director, MyJive, Charlotte
Spain Rodriguez Spain Rodriguez Exhibition Catalog – White Bicycle

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Judge’s Choice: Dave Fletcher
(@davefletcher)Founder / Executive Director, The Mechanism, New York
The Wake Website – Crowley Webb
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Judge’s Choice: Joe Stanfa
Senior Art Director, Golin Harris, Chicago
Fireworks Poster Campaign – Crowley Webb
fireworks

 

 

 

ADDYS

2013 ADDY Awards

ADDYs_AdClubBanners_WrapUp_v2This is part one of our week-long ADDY recap. (Part two: A Word from the Judges) (Part three: Here’s to the Special Award Winners) (Part four: Judging the ADDYs)

Thanks to everyone involved for another great ADDY awards. We have a bunch of post-ADDY stuff planned for our blog this week. Today, we look at the winners, including Best of Show.

Online Showbook

For those of you who couldn’t make it to the show, we’ve put the showbook online. See all the winners, and be envious of your colleagues who were able to bring home the attractive printed version.

Best of Show Judging

Take a look at how our judges picked the 2013 Best of Show. This year was a particularly thorough deliberation, so we broke the video into two parts.

Part one: Choosing a Top 5 

 

Part two: The Final Decision

 

A huge thanks to our judges:

Dave Fletcher (@davefletcher)
Founder / Executive Director
The Mechanism, New York

David Hodge
Principal
Anstey Hodge Advertising Group, Roanoke

Brett McCoy
Engagement Director
MyJive, Charlotte

Joe Stanfa
Senior Art Director
Golin Harris, Chicago

 

Best of Show

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JDRF A Spark of Imagination Invitation – Gelia

 

Runners-Up

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Friends of Night People Poster – Crowley Webb

 

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Andrew Bird “Lusitania” Poster – White Bicycle

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Ultra Lube Clearview Mailer – Gelia

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The Wake Website – Crowley Webb

 

The Night’s Big Winners

For those of you keeping a count, Crowley Webb was awarded the most ADDYs of the night, taking home 24 awards (six Gold and 18 Silver). Gelia received a total of 14 awards (three Gold and 11 Sliver), White Bicycle was honored with seven awards (three Gold and four Silver), and Hadley Exhibits took away three awards (two Gold and one Silver). Other awards highlights include:

The Martin Group (one Gold and four Silver)
SKM Marketing Group (one Gold and two Silver)
McDade Media (one Gold and two Silver)
Cenergy (one Gold)
First + Main Media (one Gold)
Print Collection (one Gold)
Travers Collins (three Silver)
Telesco Creative Group (two Silver)

 

Other Awards

Gelia took home our first-ever Voice of the People award, for their Cornerstone TV Campaign.

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Crowley Webb won the xpedx Creative Use of Paper Award, as well as Best Showbook ad

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And don’t forget that everything entered in the show is available to view in our online gallery.