Posts tagged messaging
VW
Nov 16th
VW has always done some really nice advertising. They remain one of the few companies who really has understood that what differentiates them is their product’s brand character and not really their features (or the lack thereof).
What I mean by that is while they will talk about a sometimes quirky appearance or how much gas mileage a VW owner can get from their product (a feature) … a feature, by the way, that everyone is talking about so it is all kind of a blur to everyone watching … they decide to talk about their features within what seems to be a very well defined brand character.
In other words they highlight a feature but do it in such a charming brand personality driven way that it becomes distinct.
And entertaining.
And fun to watch.
And, frankly, just makes you feel darn good about a VW.
If you own a VW you end up saying “hey, did you see that VW tv commercial?” (and feel great that it is your ‘brand’).
And if you don’t own a VW you actually chuckle and get what they were really trying to say (and maybe the next time you are in the market for a car you may take a look at a VW for no other particular reason then you feel good when you think VW).
The most recent example of what I have seen that speaks to gas mileage but does it in a very VW way. In fact it was this tv commercial that made me decide to write this post. Very well done. Clever. And VW to its core.
Vamanos: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SsTqGa2gd0E
And, of course, the VW Darth Vader tv commercial is spectacularly charming.
And it is the penultimate example of how do differentiate based on brand character.
I struggle to envision how some agencies would even present an idea so brand character driven … let alone the fact that most of car manufacturers wouldn’t even produce it.
The advertising, even more than selling a car, is a reflection of the company and brand itself. Envision the fact that almost 50 seconds of the entire 1 minute commercial has nothing to do with the car itself. And, yet, the advertising is unequivocally associated with VW.
Darth VW: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R55e-uHQna0
And then a commercial that involves a slice of ordinary life which everyone can relate to.
Somehow in this commercial they covered pretty much any and every one who could possibly be considered in their potential demographic profile by finding something similar within everyone’s life … that moment when we sing to ourselves.
Rocket Man: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWy-LCGDsd8&NR=1
So.
Ever since Bill Bernbach infamously touted a VW Beetle in a print advertisement as a “Lemon” VW has maintained a sense of believability and charm and understanding that communicating product ‘truths’ within an honest brand character can create value in people’s minds.
Are VW’s REALLY better than other cars? Nope.
Is there another car brand that REALLY makes the same kind of self-image statement about its owner? Nope.
Others may make different statements (Jaguar, Porsche, Ford trucks, etc.) about their owners but not the same as a VW.
Good stuff.
Oh.
And you know how I know they understand their brand so well?
Doesn’t matter who their advertising agency is (DDB, Crispin, Deutsch) the advertising remains good.
That is a sign of a company that understands what is important.
one hundred monkeys
Oct 3rd
Ok. Everyone knows I love trying to understand why people do the things that they do (attitudes, behaviors, etc.). therefore I am hoping no one is surprised that I find the 100 monkey theory fascinating.
It is almost like a different version of crowd clout. But with a twist.
As some of you may be scratching your head at the moment – here is the 100 monkey theory:
In 1952, on the Japanese island of Koshima, a monkey named Imo washed a sweet potato before she ate it. She and her fellow, Macaca Fuscata monkeys were given sweet potatoes by the scientists who studied them. The monkeys like the taste of the potatoes, yet did not like the dirt. Imo taught her mother and the other monkeys she came into contact with and over time more and more monkeys were washing their potatoes.
Imo’s practice catches on.
Well, the interesting observation is that after a significant minority (let’s say 100 monkeys to use a number) of the monkeys were washing their potatoes, the scientists observed that very quickly after this, all the monkeys were washing their potatoes. Like a critical mass had been reached and now all the monkeys were able to access this knowledge somehow even if they did not come into contact with Imo and her friends. More interesting is that scientists observed that at the same time, on other islands monkeys were also washing their potatoes.
It appears that when 99 monkeys were washing potatoes and one more joined, a critical mass was achieved and this awareness was now available to everyone (please don’t get hung up on the exact 99 or 100 numbers).
This is known as the 100 Monkey Theory.
So. The foundation of the theory is when a certain critical number achieves an awareness of “something” (an attitude or behavior) that this new awareness may be communicated from mind to mind. Yup… mind to mind.
I believe the truly stunning aspect of this theory is the ‘island to island’ aspect.
And these monkeys didn’t have internet.
Nor a classroom.
Nor any physical content.
This theory suggests that, although the exact number may vary, that the 100 Monkey Phenomenon suggests when only a limited number of people know a new behavior it may subconsciously reside as the conscious property of the collective people.
And while I really do not want to get hung up on the actual numbers it is fascinating to think that there is a point at which if only one more person absorbs the new attitude and changes its behavior that somehow this awareness is picked up by almost everyone. The implications to this is interesting particularly in a business sense (not just culturally).
This suggests finding a group of influencers, or early adopters if that makes it easier for you to get a handle on, is more important to future success than simply grinding out success building “awareness.”
Anyway. There is a book on this theory, “The Hundredth Monkey,” by Ken Keyes, Jr. I don’t suggest reading it because, well, the concept is pretty simple and you don’t need a book to explain it nor do I believe a lot of ages with graphs and explanations will convince you.
Let me explain why I like it as well as how I rationalize it.
First. Trying to explain behavioral transition from specific tactics is very difficult – and it aggravates me when people try to associate specific expenditures or activity to create behavioral activity. This whole idea with 100 monkeys is about doing things, real behavior, creating enough critical mass so that it gets recognized and absorbed in some subconscious way which inevitably creates the behavioral change desired.
Oh. By the way. The fashion industry should take note of this one.
Anyway. I believe any one even remotely interested in creating cultural change should invest some time thinking about this theory. Instead of needing dollars to create change or wacky ideas to affect attitudes or investing energy trying to create “a wave of change” someone can focus on “the 100.” Creating change by focusing the few. Gosh. Sure would make life a little simpler huh? (some people, like me for an example, call this creating an influencer base to influence mass behavior).
Second.
100 monkeys (or any individuals with brains) is enough critical mass to ensure either extensive collaborative thinking or the presence of a superior individual innovative mind. Either way the group attains the same objective – an innovative idea. Combine this with my overall belief that great minds puzzling over similar situations are quite likely to have the same idea & thought (and inevitably the same innovation) then the 100 monkey theory is not as wacky or cerebral as it may seem at first blush.
You may not buy it.
You may not think people are related to monkeys.
You may think 100 isn’t enough.
But you should think about this (while eating a banana of course).
hope, low prices & marketing (part 1)
Aug 22nd
Working in the marketing business I often find myself in some heated debates about whether advertising & marketing is “selling” (or it is often stated “oh, so you are in sales”).
Here is the answer.
It’s not sales. It may not even be selling (in the traditional sense).
Sure.
Ultimately marketing & advertising wants to “sell stuff” but the craft of communications itself is not about selling.
Or convincing.
Or persuading (in some weird and creepy way) someone to do something they don’t want to really do.
Is it about “persuading” in the sense I want someone to “choose me!” to be on their wallet team? Sure.
Is it about persuading someone through some trickery to buy or do something that is bad for them? Nope.
Because in the end It is really about attitudes (creating or aligning to a ‘truth’ – a real truth not a made up one) and behavior (understanding why someone does something they do and inserting a choice into their existing behavior … and sometimes modifying that behavior if you can truly offer something better for them as an alternative).
So marketing & advertising is really about informing so someone can make a choice – whatever is the best choice for them.
Therefore. Marketing & advertising is not in the selling business.
It is in the choice business.
And while choices have dollars & cents attached to them and features & benefits and all that truly functional crap … a person’s final choice preference is never any of those things.
A choice may be made based on them (that truly functional crap) but typically it is only made that way for lack of an alternative.
And that is why communicating “choice” is an art. Because communicating choice is about education and emotion and, well, hope.
Because the bottom line is that people want to make the choice that gives them the most hope.
Now.
That may sound hopelessly lofty but its not. In fact it is what marketing & advertsing & frankly just about any consumer business is all about.
We are in the hope business.
Hope of something (it doesn’t have to be some big audacious hope … sometimes it can just simply be some small glimmer of hope in an otherwise hopeless day).
Yes.
This is truth (and some businesses may cry & weep & gnash their teeth … I just wanted to type gnash).
People don’t really want cheaper prices.
People don’t really want better technology.
People don’t really want faster answers.
People don’t really want more time.
People don’t cooler features or more flashing widgets.
People even don’t really want more money at the end of the month.
None of that really matters to customers.
They want hope.
They want to know that they are going to be ok.
And they want to know that it can get better for themselves.
In a world where natural disasters wipe away lives in a second and leaders make decisions that take billions of dollars from hard working saving & investing people the only thing people can truly hold onto is a belief of something better.
Yet.
In our ROI-driven marketing world we not only seem content to pretend that a “faster, cheaper, better” is what people want but we also relentlessly pursue ineffective marketing communicatiosn initiatives expounding upon a litany of usefless features and functional doo-dads.
And we are wrong. Dead wrong.
People want hope.
In a lot of ways ‘the people’ are no different than you & I (because oddly enough we are people also).
They want to be listened to.
They don’t want to be lied to.
They don’t want you to talk over them.
They want you to validate their concerns.
They want their questions answered.
They don’t want you to ignore them.
They want you to inspire them.
They don’t want a sales pitch.
They don’t want you to be annoying.
They don’t want to hear about you.
They do want a distraction from real life.
They don’t want to be pressured.
They want to know that you have problems too.
They want a consistent partner.
They don’t want you to fake it.
They want truth in answers (the first time & every time).
They don’t want you to tell them what they want to hear.
They want to feel like you care.
They want you to hear what they aren’t saying.
And most importantly …
They want more than what they have (not materialistically but “happinesswise”)
They want more than what they expect (not just functionally but in life)
They want something better (not just functionally but in life)
They want optimism (based on truth not blarney).
So.
Enough of that.
(that is the common denominator in all the things I just typed)
And if you aren’t providing that in your marketing you … will …. not … be … successful.
Sure.
You can buy some sales and a “consumer relationship” with lowest prices & coupons and cool features and some functional widgetry but those people aren’t buying “you” they are buying the ‘feature of the day.”
In my words? You have bought a date not a relationship.
And you have missed an opportunity to be a hero. Instead you are a salesman.
You have missed an opportunity to have offered,and given, hope.
C’mon. be honest with yourself as you read this.
Think of all the times that were hoping that someone really cared about how bad you hurt inside. Or recognized the pain.
So ii guess if you really feel like you have to ‘sell’ … then sell hope.
Because as Hugh Macleod drew in his cartoon at the beginning of this post … if you can sell hope you can get someone to buy anything.
libyan public relations
Aug 3rd
Every once in awhile you read something really wacky. So wacky it becomes slightly hard to believe.
This one?
Moammar Gaddafi is looking for some PR help.
No shit.
A New Report Says Moammar Gaddafi Is Shopping For a New York PR Firm To Help Him Clean Up His Image.
Really Moammar? Are you serious?
It gets even better.
“Libyan Dictator Seeks Rep To Oversee Press Briefings and Prove His Claim To Power.”
Awesome.
“prove his claim to power.” Right. Public relations is gonna do that.
Here is what his new PR agency is going to be asked to do:
- polish his homicidal image
- help to counter the fallout of a civil war that threatens to topple his regime
- someone to head daily press briefings (and look good in Kevlar i may add)
- spread the good word on the tyrant’s “moral” and “legal” claims to power.
Ok. I cannot wait to see who would step up to the plate for this task.
Apparently this became news when a pitch letter an official in Tripoli emailed to New York and London agencies this month went public.
Ali Darwish of the Libyan Ministry of Information asked prospective reps to “present our just and fair case to the world” and claim the moral high ground. “We have good moral, political and legal logic supporting our position as the legitimate, sovereign and popular government of Libya. We also have proofs [sic] in written, audio and video forms to take our case forward,” he added, according to the pitch letter. Darwish even claims NATO attacks, which began in March in response to the regime slaughtering protesters, resulted from bad spin. “Libya has been under an unjustified media and PR attack which led to NATO’s military involvement,” says the email.
Alrighty then.
And I have some swamp land I want to sell in Florida to someone.
Anyone think a PR firm could help me?
So far there are no takers.
In the category of “let me state the obvious” .. Ronn Torossian of SWPR states “I highly doubt any PR firm will positively respond to this request.”
Geez.
I would have thought firms would have been lining up.
But. Whoever is interested better hurry up.
The somewhat not-so-solid government seeks to move quickly. “We can formalize any deal with your organization through a third party to help move things forward fast.” said the initial letter
And just in case you question the story. Libya officials have confirmed it.
According to an official with the Libyan Mission … “The government is trying to have the support of people outside the country,” said Dia Abubaker Alhutmany.
So. While this is absolutely crazy I got to thinking that maybe in some far corner of the PR world would believe this is an acceptable challenge for the field of Public Relations.
Therefore with this fascinating piece of gossip I swung my curiosity over to the public relations experts and sought out advice on whether Libya could solve their problems through PR.
Some expert states (which I thought was quite appropriate given my curiosity search) “Can public relations solve the world’s problems? Of course not. But can it solve all the problems for your business that appear out of the blue in the middle of the night and leave you pacing the floor? Definitely! Even the toughest cases can be fixed with a little savvy and wit.”
So with that I looked at his criteria (in italics below) and said “whoa, maybe Moammar has the right idea!”
Solvable issues (per a PR expert not me):
1. Freudian Slips
Your highly rated politician client is enjoying the love of the public and the comfort of a sure win come election day. Then one day he decides to foam at the mouth and manages to offend half his voters. Comfortable lead no longer exists.
Even worse, your opponent takes the gaffe and runs with it! They use it on every commercial, every print and Internet ad, during every speech. Before it gets out of control, get your foul-mouthed pundit out in public view to start making apologies and kissing babies! Then, have him publicly mingle with whichever group he offended to show what a great guy he is.
OMG.
This is Gaddafi! Moammar. Don’t hire anyone. Here is your solution. And every morning you should wake up, look in the mirror and say “gosh, I am a great guy.” A good way to start every morning.
2. Internal Rumblings
Times are tough, and your employees are naturally worried about layoffs. Once that rumor starts bouncing around the company walls, it could quickly lead to insubordination and employees bailing. If you pick up even the slightest of rumors your employees believe the company is having problems, hold an intervention to stave off any unforeseen problems it could cause! Reassure everyone their jobs are safe, and if there ARE problems within the company, be perfectly frank about them.
OMG (part 2).
Moammar. Do you see yourself in this situation? Stop shooting missiles and call everyone together and reassure them and, well, be frank. Once again. No need to hire anyone. You can do this (just leave guns at home in case you are tempted).
3. False Information
What a nightmare! Once in a while, something gets out in the press, be it a rumor or misunderstood info, that can totally derail your campaign. I honestly think this is one of the worst issues you can face as you probably had absolutely nothing to do with it! There’s no other option, though, other than to not only assure your customers the information is false but to also publicly show why the rumor is just that, a vicious rumor.
OMG (part 3).
Moammar. This perfectly describes your situation (as you stated in your request for PR help). Silly silly people believing all that false information. If you would just stop beheading all those people and simply publicly show why it is just a vicious rumor instigated by others who are jealous of you I can pretty much guarantee all will be well in the end (and you once again need not hire anyone)
4. Property Damage
When a fire tears through your small warehouse, ruining quite a bit of your product, people are worried their orders won’t get filled. Even worse, the future of your company is in jeopardy.
Of course, you’re not going to let a little fire ruin your life long dream, so you need to let everyone know that business is running as usual. Assure customers that there might be a delay in their order, but you firmly intend on honoring every order. Even though the fire wasn’t your fault, offer a coupon for their next order due to the delayed delivery.
OMA (part 4 excpet this time it is Oh My Allah).
Moammar, dude, you are surrounded by property damage these days. And not just fires. And I know for sure you did not personally start any of them. Offer people coupons. It will be great. Problem solved.
So.
In the end.
Maybe Moammar isnt that dumb.
Maybe hiring a PR firm truly is the answer to his problems.
please note:
(what a frickin’ wacky world we live in)
heineken & music
Jul 1st
First. I love a cold Heineken. Probably my favorite brew when the day calls for a beer.
Second. I have hated Heineken advertising for a very very long time. I have continuously thought whomever was doing the work was missing what Heineken was all about as a brand. In general the advertising seemed to continue to Americanize the brand.
Oh.
Side note. I love America (this being the 4th I wanted to reinforce that thought so no one came trundling into my comment section mentioning that I was some communist or something. The point is that Heineken is not American – nor communist I may add).
Whew.
All that said.
The new Heineken advertising.
Love it for Heineken.
It is interesting to me not only because they have developed advertising that is quirky and with lots & lots of personality but strategically it is their version of “the most interesting man in the world “ (Dos Equis).
This is “I see myself in that brand” 101 (a basic college lesson).
It is over the top but in an odd European quirky way. It reestablishes Heineken is not for the mainstream. It clearly showcases that Heineken is not for everyone, it may only be for those who like to be different and it has an international feel to it.
It is the type of advertising that people in other categories should sit up and pay attention to not because they should copy it but because they could learn from it.
Smart stuff from a smart advertising agency – wedien & kennedy.
Even better?
Love the music.
And the music tied to the over-the-topness of the commercial itself is absofrickinly perfect.
The song is “the golden age” by The Asteroids Galaxy Tour.
So.
Here is Heineken “the entrance” tv commercial (done by Weiden & Kennedy – good stuff from a good agency):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-0KvbSqfd28&feature=related
as a bonus.
This is the full Golden Age music video if you want to see it (and you like the song):
The asteroid galaxy tour: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=On6U-kQGBcA
Happy 4th of July weekend. Have a Heineken.
find your beach with corona
Apr 22nd
Ok.
I just saw (heard) the Corona television campaign again this weekend. Haven’t seen it in a while and I had almost forgotten how much i like it.
First. Let me say that I have always liked the Corona advertising. Simple. Charming. Always a little smile. And always perfectly captured the essence of all ‘senses’ which you would want associated with drinking a Corona (bring the beach, sunset, warmth, comfortable love/companionship to wherever you are).
They have never been slapstick. They have been steadfastly Corona in character. And they have always done it with style.
Second.
The best part of the new Corona commercial (to me the music lover) is the song it features: A song called ‘Secret Sun’ by Jesse Harris and the Ferdinandos (I had never heard of him or the Ferdinandos butthis song comes from their 2003 album ‘The Secret Sun.’)
Of course the commercial features stunningly photographed seasons and beautiful settings, young couples and friends sharing the view all the while, of course, sharing their beer. (side note: you can always count on a Corona commercial to always be impeccably shot with glaringly clean unfiltered lenses which capture every natural hue at its richest)
Find Your Beach: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQoRmy9G864&feature=related
Anyway.
All the beautiful footage sweeps over the screen to the light music with the following words:
“Meet me by the sea again. Past the point where the shoreline bends. Where the sand is soft and warm. And hangs upon your golden arm. And time won’t move at all.”
(awesome)
This (debut but now old) TV spot (called “Moments”) is a little different than what we have seen in the past from Corona in that it features a montage of scenes at slightly unexpected places for a typical Corona spot – from a mountain vista to a Big Sur cliff to a New York City rooftop. Luckily (just so no one gets confused) the commercial ends with a couple on an iconic beach with a new tagline “Find Your Beach.”
The other thing I like about this campaign is the point of view. You never see anyone’s face full on. You are always looking at the view and the people from behind. It is always about the experience and the environment and the feeling that is captured when you have a Corona in your hand. Awesome subtle thinking. Managed well.
Hey.
I admit.
I like it (and I like a nice cold Corona too).
And, for once, I actually thought the quotes I could find from the advertising/marketing people associated with the commercials to make sense and articulate the thinking very well:
“What we want ‘Find Your Beach’ to do is literally show that the beach is where you make it,” said the chief creative officer of Cramer-Krasselt (Corona’s ad agency). “We want to give literal, visual permission for people to take the Corona mindset with them. Even to the ski slopes or the big city. ‘Find Your Beach’ is a kind of how-to guide for the Corona way.”
“White beaches, gentle waves, a guy and a girl relaxing seaside … these have long been symbols of the escape mindset associated with Corona,” said the EVP Marketing, Crown Imports/Corona. “Our new ‘Find Your Beach’ ads encourage fans to find their beach, wherever it may be expanding that Corona state of mind beyond the ‘sun, sand and surf.’”
Well said gentlemen.
And well done.
Well.
Time for a Corona.
Find your beach.
something old but new, new and old – music post
Apr 14th
So. This is a nifty 3 part music post. Mostly because I was too lazy to create three separate posts.
Old but new …. “Old Man.” Yeah. “Old Man” by Neil Young. But not Neil this time.
Ok.
This first one is awesome. One of my favorite Neil Young songs of all time “old man” but made into a rap/hip hop song. And a great hip hop song.
The band is Redlight King.
I don’t really know shit about them (but I found out some stuff which I will share below). What I do know is I love what they did with this Neil Young song.
As a bonus? The song reminds me of everything I love about Neil Young (he had to have given his permission to sample the song) and everything I love about great hip hop (sampling classics and showing how they are relevant and timeless).
What they do with Old Man is the perfection of sampling. And they even weave in some original Neil (whoda thunk we would ever hear Neil Young rapping?).
Old Man: http://redlightkingmusic.com
Ok. Redlight King. Redlight King is a white guitarist (the “white guitarist is from Ontario – I would tell you where specifically but most of us think of Canada as just the ‘great white north’ – and his name is Mark Kasperczyk, or “Kaz”).
His first song is “Old Man” based on a rocky patch he had endured with his father. It is a song “with a melodic strut intertwined with a hip hop groove sampling Neil Young’s iconic “I don’t want YOUR life” story in “Old Man” creating a song with the same name but a completely different contemporary vibe.
As an FYI. Crusty ole Neil has rarely lent his music for sampling. So good for him I say.
Look.
I may not like another thing they (he?) do but they will always hold a nice spot in my listening heart for what they did here. They took an awesome classic song and brought it to an entirely new generation of listeners. The message of Old Man was good then. It is good now. And that is all that really matters when you thing about crap like this.
Great music carries forward great messages. If that is what Redlight King has done than let us give them credit where it is due.
Enjoy.
Next.
The new .. Scars on 45 “Give me Something.”
Whew. This song is about everything I love in new music. A great hook. Great melody. Great refrain. Great listening song.
Scars on 45 are a new band. Here is what I know. Scars on 45 are an acoustic indie-pop band from Leeds, England. They kind of have an alternative/acoustic indie-pop kind of thing. In their words … “I guess one could call it Fleetwood Mac meets Brit-Pop meets Ryan Adams.”
And beyond that here is what I know. “Give me Something” is a great radio song.
Give Me Something: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2GNWH9ZmT2Y&feature=related
I have no clue whether they will ever do anything as good but … frankly … I don’t care. In this age of buying individual songs off iTunes instead of buying entire cds who cares if they do anything else. It is a frickin’ good song.
And now the last.
The old.
Ok.
So I am throwing this in on the end because I heard this song on the radio the other night and it reminded me of how good old classic songs are good contemporary songs.
Good songs are timeless.
But this one may scare you at the beginning.
Ok. Let’s remember (or let me remind you).
Before REO became this sappy Kevin Cronin driven schlock band they created some awesome rock music.
What reminded me was that I was driving home and I heard “Roll with the Changes.” Awesome.
Roll with the Changes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eGgLPriZUSA
Look.
Before all the sappy crap they were just “the Wagon” and they cranked out some good stuff.
“Keep Pushin.” Awesome.
“Riding the Storm Out” (which I believe they still end every concert with). Awesome. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPk4EX2GDc0&feature=related
“Time for me to Fly” (their original ballad song). Awesome.
And “Roll with the Changes” which is a non stop riff rolling song.
Those songs defined “The Wagon” and should be remembered as the original band and the original sound. And as I noted with “Old Man” upfront … they are timelessly good. You can listen to any of these songs today and you will still tap your toe and maybe drive an extra 5 miles an hour as you listen. They just get your heart pumpin’ a little and they are just damn good to listen to.
Ok
That’s my three part music post for today.
Something old but new.
Something new.
Something old.
Something for everyone.
All good.
Enjoy.
ideas and finding them
Apr 14th
Ok. This is about ideas.
Not my ideas or even my thinking.
This is about other people’s ideas. And the fun associated with rolling around in not only “what could be” but what some people are actually doing and trying.
Hey. We all have ideas.
But I have to tell you that it is a lot more fun exploring other people’s ideas … and ideas as they spring up anywhere globally at any time. Before the internet we often had to wait for some of the big research companies to issue these reports on what they believed were the best of the best ideas. Today? You can track ideas daily. Globally. And assess the best of the best as they happen. As with anything on the web tracking can be overwhelming. So my following tip is a way of watching what is happening globally with little work on your own end (because they do all the work for you).
Springwise (http://www.springwise.com) is where you can find a wide variety of new business ideas (new ideas … not new business ideas) which are a smaller selection of ideas pulled from Springspotter Network (http://www.springspotters.com).
It is a great site for ideas where new topics are posted daily and are searchable by category:
• Automotive (http://www.springwise.com/automotive)
• Eco & Sustainability (http://www.springwise.com/eco_sustainability)
• Education (http://www.springwise.com/education)
• Entertainment (http://www.springwise.com/entertainment)
• Fashion & Beauty (http://www.springwise.com/fashion_beauty)
• Financial Services (http://www.springwise.com/financial_services)
• Food & Beverage (http://www.springwise.com/food_beverage)
• Gaming (http://www.springwise.com/gaming)
• Government (http://www.springwise.com/government)
• Homes & Housing (http://www.springwise.com/homes_housing)
• Life Hacks (http://www.springwise.com/life_hacks)
• Lifestyle & Leisure (http://www.springwise.com/lifestyle_leisure)
• Marketing & Advertising (http://www.springwise.com/marketing_advertising)
• Media & Publishing (http://www.springwise.com/media_publishing)
• Non-profit, Social cause (http://www.springwise.com/nonprofit_social_cause)
• Retail (http://www.springwise.com/retail)
• Style & Design (http://www.springwise.com/style_design)
• Telecom & Mobile (http://www.springwise.com/telecom_mobile)
• Transportation (http://www.springwise.com/transportation)
I firmly believe you can never have enough ideas. And springwise is an awesome place to see the newest (and sometimes oddest) ideas from around the world.
Enjoy.














