ADDYS

Where the hell do they find these judges?

This question asked every year after the ADDYS. It’s understandable. These four strangers you know only as a headshot in the show book are judging you; rating your work on a scale of 0-100, and scrutinizing your font choices.

Contrary to popular opinion, our judges are not drifters picked up from the Greyhound terminal. We fly in Advertising professionals from around the country to judge all of the work submitted to our show. Choosing the ADDY judges is a pretty intensive process with more requirements than just a free weekend, and the willingness to take an all-expenses paid trip to Buffalo in January.

In order to give a peek into our process, here are some of the considerations that go into selecting judges each year:

urlWhere we start
The AAF provides a list of willing judges for the ADDYS. While this list is a good place to start, many of those names were added during the Carter administration. If they’re still alive, they’re simultaneously being contacted by every other AAF-affiliated Ad Club that’s also putting on a show. Chances are if the Miami Ad Club asked, they’re not returning our emails.

Past that, it’s largely word-of-mouth. We ask past judges and other Ad Clubs for suggestions. This has proven the most successful, and has found our best judges. We try to avoid someone who is a friend of a friend of someone at an agency in town.


urlMadison Avenue or Madison, Wisconsin
One big consideration is where the judges come from. One school of thought is to bring in judges from like markets. These would be ad men and women who work on similar clients, and understand the landscape of industries we have in Buffalo. Places like Cleveland, Baltimore, and Charlotte. To keep some balance, we also shoot for some big markets like New York, Chicago, and Philadelphia.

We have to be careful to avoid some of those intolerable creeps you may have seen on The Pitch. There is the tendency of some view Buffalo like Mayberry, and there have been judges in the past who score things they don’t like as straight zeros, ruin the score balance, and act rather dickish.

So we try to strike a balance. It’s nice to get the opinion from someone in a big market, as well as a place that is similar to Buffalo.

url-1

We try to be diverse – TRY.
There are a lot of things to consider when creating a diverse judging panel. We strive for a mix of writers and designers, big to small agencies, traditional and digital, large to medium markets, and ethnicity and gender. Unfortunately, situations arise where we reach out to 25, hear back from 12, and only eight are available. We can’t always cover all of the bases.

It’s not a good thing, but think about the diversity of the Buffalo Advertising industry. You’ll probably struggle to reach two hands counting all the creative directors that aren’t white dudes. This trend is not far off from the pool of possible judges.

They don’t know who Rick Jeanneret is
When submitting to the show, one item to realize is that these people do not know our market. This is intentional. By this, we mean we won’t have a judge who knows the agencies in town well enough to form biases.

Because of that, there is going to be a bit lost in translation. They won’t know if something is part of a long-established campaign in the Buffalo market, and may not get the local references. Think about that next year when you are considering entering a piece that contains a delightful “cheekta-vegas” pun.

url-3Cash money
Another consideration is cost. You may not know this, but the Buffalo ADDYS are not a multi-million dollar endeavor. We keep a pretty lean budget, as this show often funds much of the Club’s activity for the next year. We try to have judges that are a direct flight away. As so, we tend to stick to the east coast. If we can convince someone from Toronto or Cleveland to drive, that’s even better. (Freight hopping is largely discouraged.)

 

The Final Four
Once we get a handful of candidates who are willing to come, we then assemble our list. We need to have the right balance, so using the criteria above, the ADDY committee collectively picks four to five judges. An alternate judge is wise to secure since weather – and creative directors – can be unpredictable. Locking into the final judges is still a bit of a gamble. You may think you have all the right people, but don’t really know until they show up to judge. Creatives are a strange bunch, finding four of them whom you want to be in a room with for eight hours can be a tall order. The important thing is that we’ve done enough of our homework, so it (usually) works out well.

This Year’s Group
For the 2013 ADDYS, we have four judges. They hail from New York, Roanoke, Charlotte, and Chicago. We’re going to let you get to know them more on this blog in the coming weeks. Hopefully this post has helped provide a little context for when you complain about lousy judging the day after the ADDYs.

Jason Yates is an Ad Club board member, and Co-Chair of the 2013 WNY ADDYs.

Blog Events

Twas 2 weeks before Christmas

Written by board member: Shannon Fisher

Twas 2 weeks before Christmas and all through the bar,

Board members hoped friends would come from near and far

The Food Bank barrel was placed by the front door with care

In hopes that food donations soon would be there

Members started arriving with colleagues and friends

While visions of cold drinks danced in their heads

Some from ad agencies and some from PR

Had just settled in for a long open bar

When what to our wondering eyes should appear

But a full barrel of food long before the end of the night was near

With members and friends always giving their all

We knew in a moment they had answered the call

On soup! On pasta! On tuna fish!

On food upon food to fill many a dish!

The night was great, everyone had a blast

The only complaint we heard was it went by too fast

And we heard them all say before they drove out of sight

Happy Holidays to all and to all a good night!
Food Bank of WNY

“Thanks to the generosity of our members, the Ad Club donated 179 pounds of food, $100 cash and $50 in TOPS gift cards (donated by Pat McCarthy http://patmccarthyphotography.com) to the Food Bank of Western New York. Special thanks to: Jenemy Juhasz and Polla Milligan from the Food Bank; Arielle Blanchard for event planning and April Chmurzynski for event creative. Cheers!”

Blog Events

Stuff Aaron Draplin Says

Aaron Draplin

So who is this large man coming to speak here in Buffalo? Get a little more insight into Aaron Draplin from his interview on the Adventures In Design podcast, or one of the youTube videos that have gotten him a cult following:

Why America is Fucked.

Advice For the Young Designer

Trinkets and Treasures

Check out his website, or come meet him in person next week and see what else he has to say.

Aaron Draplin: “Tall Tales from a Large Man”
A Part of Ad Week 2012
October 11 | Pearl Street Grill & Brewery | 76 Pearl Street, Buffalo
Cash Bar, Hors D’oeuvres and Mingle with Aaron @ 7 p.m. | Presentation @ 8 p.m.
Get Your Tickets Now >

Blog

Quinlan & Co Give Back with an App Giveaway

Quinlan App Give Back

By Board Member Elizabeth Chatterton AdLab Co-Chair

It’s no secret that advertising professionals possess valuable skills, talents and connections. To use those aforementioned abilities to wow clients, drive sales, and increase business is a wonderful thing – and when you have the time and occasion to use them to help the community as well, it’s nothing short of incredible.

To celebrate 25 great years as a Buffalo advertising agency, the extremely generous folks at Quinlan & Company [www.quinlanco.com] have decided to give back to their city – and they need you to be involved as well.

With an exceptional “tradigital” advertising team in-house, Quinlan has decided to build a custom app that they will graciously give away to a local nonprofit for FREE.

Yep, that’s right – for FREE.

They know what they want to do, and they have all of the right people to do it –  they just need the right recipient. That’s where you come in.

Nominate your favorite nonprofit organization & help us spread the word!

Take these 3 simple steps and you too can make a BIG difference for a local charity or organization:

  1. Visit quinlanco.com/appgiveback
  2. Register online and nominate your favorite nonprofit
  3. Click submit

Once you have your nomination in, make sure to tell your friends!

Nominations will be accepted through October 7th and voting will begin Sunday, October 14th.

For the official rules, just click here


We love to spread the word when our ACB members are doing great things in the community. If you’re a member and would like to share your story on the ACB blog please contact Terri Swiatek at tswiatek@traverscollins.com about becoming a guest blogger.

Blog

From Charlie to Charlie

Dear Charlie:

Congratulations on the appointment to lead the next era of leadership for the Advertising Club of Buffalo, you are already one step ahead by being born with the greatest name ever. As you usher in a new era of leading the greatest collection of creative and communications folks across Western New York, I figured I would share some advice to help you over the next two years, and maybe reduce some alcohol consumption.

You are embarking into unchartered waters, but its ok, you have a great team behind you. Listen to the uber-talented board of directors (and especially Tina) who over the past few years have doubled programming, increased membership, built up scholarships and more. They are the ones responsible for a vibrant array of events and expand the Club membership past the “big agencies”. They work obnoxiously hard for little recognition and will be your lifeblood. Learn to delegate. Seriously.

You will lead the professional organization that provides the best bang for the buck around, so make sure people know they are part of the American Advertising Federation, a global organization of professional and aspiring communicators and to take advantage of all of these benefits . Remind them that work from Buffalo, yes Buffalo, wins at the national level each year.

As the president, you are probably going to hear about the ADDY Awards: how they aren’t the same, how the categories don’t fit for certain people, that the judging is fixed and Jimmy Hoffa is burned under our secret judging lair (Only 3 out of 4 statements will happen). It’s your job to remind people that creativity can come from everywhere, not just Crowley Webb, The Martin Group or Travers Collins. Remind students that if they want to get a job in the field, walking into an interview with a gold ADDY around a chain on their neck is a better discussion piece than anything else, and remind people that supporting the show by attending, volunteering and most importantly, entering, helps build the collective creativity of the region. Sure, not every category is covered correctly, but remind them they can create their own category and sponsor it (xpedx Best Use of Paper Award anyone?) if they really feel that passionate about it. And finally, remind them if they really think the judging is fixed, volunteer for the day and they will see the difficult decisions judges make to stay true to the craft. It’s as legit as MC Hammer.

You will probably get a lot of emails, calls and comments at events about what should be done to improve the Club or how it used to be operated. These are all great, as it shows people are genuinely interested in seeing the Advertising world prosper and are concerned. Kindly remind them the Club is not only operated by the board, that members can run events and serve on committees, or at least, pay for a student to attend an AdLab. But jot these down and see what ideas are feasible. Great ideas and improvements should come from the membership and that keeps you and the Board on your toes. They are constantly trying to help you improve the Club for the general membership, and fostering that type of involvement is a great thing for an organization like the Ad Club.

Finally, have fun. You are leading a collection of seasoned, mid-level and rookie art directors, marketing managers, social media strategists, copywriters, print producers, photographers, voice-over talent, account executives, business owners, students and who knows what other titles are out there. The Ad Club is a great collection of interesting people you will meet, so get to know the different backgrounds and try to provide a benefit to each of them, they all contribute to the greatness of the WNY creative culture and sometimes all they want to do is attend a happy hour and gripe about bad clients (no one has those!). Provide a nice mix of events and throw a great ADDY party and your two years at the helm will fly by.

Seriously, I hope you enjoy the Board presidency as much as I did. I deeply appreciated all of the support from the board members I was honored to serve with and the relationships made with members have been priceless. It has been great to see different members and prospering new companies and agencies get involved with the Club. I wish you and the rest of the board plenty of luck moving forward, and feel free to discount my membership moving forward for all the savings I created by leaving everything as president Charlie for another two years. Thanks for the opportunity.

Best,
Charlie Riley

Blog Board

Year in the life of a first time board member

My first year as an ACB board member is coming to a close. Now our group is looking for some new board members to join in so I though I’d share a little insight into my experience and what it’s really all about.

To be honest I wasn’t really sure about being on the board. I’d never been a board member for anything before, and it sounded like a big commitment, but some friends and colleagues convinced me I should go for it. It would be a good experience and only good could come from it. To my complete surprise I was voted in.

They were right of course. As part of the Digital Communications Committee, with Jason Yates and Lauren Cius, I’ve gotten the chance to assist with the clubs email marketing, website updates and social media presence. There have also been tons of great events I’ve gotten to participate in. But the best part has been all the great people and organizations I’ve gotten to meet and learn more about along the way.

There’s been a lot happening this past year but here’s a quick list of what you could be a part of:

•  Talking to students. Getting the chance to go talk to college students and professors about our field and how it’s changing.

•  Personally meet the speakers we bring in. I got to meet Peter Shankman and Vic Carucci this year.

•  Meeting lots of great local photographers and writers.

•  Visiting board members offices. Once a month we host our monthly board meeting at one of the member’s offices.

•  Chance to work with other local clubs. I’ve gotten the opportunity to work with Buffalo Niagara 360, Social Media Club of Buffalo and Buffalo Niagara Sales and Marketing Executives.

•  Planning current and new events. I learned a lot about event planning this year, what it takes and what the venues in Buffalo NY have to offer.

•  Meeting and working with people from many different industries. Our members come from banks, ad agencies, tech companies, product distributors, broadcast, start-ups and more.

If you have any questions about being on the board feel free to contact me at tswiatek@traverscollins.com. And if you want to your name in the hat there’s more information on how to apply here.
Tomorrow’s the last day to apply.