Where have all the bees gone?

TED logo

Have you noticed there are fewer bees around this year?

It’s spring. The flowers are coming out, the trees are in blossom, the leaves are in bud and in a few weeks the swallows will be back. I’ve been out in the garden today, admiring some bumble bees and some honey bees that are doing their job with cherry pollen.


But here’s a weird thing… bee populations are declining at a staggering rate. Last year, about a third of bee colonies disappeared.


Here’s a great TED talk which I recommend you watch. It’s a talk about bees, and their place in nature and the mystery behind their alarming decline.

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Creatives do their bit for Red Nose Day 2009

A few familiar faces from the world of advertising join forces for Red Nose Day 2009

Thanks to Jonny Read (“it’s amazing what gets produced when people pull together for a cause”) for alerting me to this one.


It’s superb, had me in stitches.

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Red Riding, superb art direction

channel-4-red-riding

Red Riding on Channel 4: a brilliantly produced British screen project directed by Andrew Eaton, writer Tony Grisoni and directors Julian Jarrold, James Marsh and Anand Tucker 

Did you watch Red Riding on Channel 4 on Thursday 5th March 2009? If so, you were one of the 2.5 million lucky people to witness one of the greatest pieces of TV filming in a very long time. If the storyline didn’t grip you, then the quality of the art direction should have had you on the edge of your seats. From one scene to the next, I was gripped by the composition, lighting and filming of show. In a TV world of soaps and reality TV Red Riding delivers proof that there is such thing as great British TV drama.

 

The Channel 4 trailer below provides a few minutes of insight into the first drama of the trilogy. My advice to you is do not miss the next two episodes…


For a full review see James Walton’s piece in The Telegraph and Channel 4′s website.

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Colour trend for 2009 – officially, it’s Mimosa Yellow.

mimosa-yellow

It’s official.  ‘Mimosa Yellow’ is the colour for 2009.

I‘ve blogged previously about B2B and Corporate Color Trends for 2009 and am now delighted to report that Pantone (the international standard colour system) agree. They’ve just released their official colour for 2009 which is Mimosa Yellow – nominated because “in a time of economic uncertainty… optimism is paramount and no other color expresses hope and reassurance more than yellow.”

 

Expect to see plenty of bright, optimistic shades in 2009…

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The world’s most boring website

kitkat-logo

KitKat creates the world’s dullest online experience

I just read a post at BrandRepublic about KitKat’s new website. 

 

They report that KitKat have decided to go against the trend of exciting, interactive and compelling websites by developing a website that is really dull and boring. An online experience where nothing happens. 

 

The website is called www.thefirstworldwidewebsitewerenothinghappens.com (please note the dreadful spelling mistake in the domain name!). And quite literally, nothing happens. If you can be bothered to sit and look at it for long enough you might see a bug flying across the screen. An e-mail address is provided for consumers to report any of these “bugs”. Yawn…


Is this website clever, or smart or engaging? I’m afraid it does nothing for me.

 

Come on KitKat, give us a break.



Baked Bean sales soar as spending budgets plummet!

 

beans-beat-recession

Baked Bean sales UP 22.6% in December!

Sorry, couldn’t resist commenting on this story!

 

It’s a sign of the times… British housewives make their £s go further by buying beans… next thing we’ll be reading that British marketeers make their £s go further by doing things differently.


Read more about Beans at the BBC website.
Read more about Email Marketing at the WiseTiger website.

 

Contact me to find out how WiseTiger can help you with Online-Offline Marketing and Communications.

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B2B brand colour trends for 2009

b2b-colour-trends-for-2009

What colours are expected to be fashionable for B2B brands in 2009?

In these times of recession I have blogged elsewhere about the increased need for smart marketing and communications. Now is a good time to talk about trends in brand and brand design that will become increasingly important during the economic downturn. 

 

One thing I am often asked is “what colours should we be using for our brand”? For the last few years the colour palette of B2B brands has been pretty familiar. The usual suspect is ‘blue’ (I once heard that 65% of companies listed on the London Stock Exchange have blue in their corporate identity – note to myself, I must check this!) with most brands adding a second colour – perhaps a red, green, or grey – or occasionally a bright blue! Another recent trend during the pre-recession years were sophisticated colour palettes inspired by architects and interior designers (lets face it, most creative agencies have a Farrow & Ball colour chart knocking around for inspiration).

 

I remember back to the economic slump of the late 90s. I was busy designing Annual Reports for many of the UK’s top PLCs and can recall marketeers, brand managers and corporate comms guys telling us “the budget is fine, just make sure you don’t make it look like we spent too much”. Back then it was a case of printing on uncoated stock (shiny paper looked too flash), cutting back on photo shoots and not being too colourful.

 

So what of 2009? With the economy uncertain, should we expect Corporates and B2B brands to be doing the same as they did in the late 90s? I think not – and I’ll tell you for why. 

 

Firstly, a lot has changed in the last 10 years. In the late 90s the Annual Report was ‘the corporate bible’. These were the days before websites really counted, when an Annual Report told everyone what they needed to know – and that was that for the next 12 months. Gone are the days when you judged a company by the quality of it’s paper stock. Today it’s fast moving – email marketing, virals, online reporting and online news means everything is urgent and on demand 24 hours a day. Colour – even for B2Bs – has got to catch the viewer’s attention. Go bland, and there’s a good chance you won’t be noticed… 

 

Another big change in the last 10 years is the switch in ‘colour technology’. It’s a fact – more people come into contact with brands on-screen than in print. And here’s the rub – on-screen colours are considerably more vibrant than colours printed out of CMYK onto paper. Designers have realised that they can specify vibrant colours as part of a corporate brand, purely because they know they will look great online and on TV.

 

For my friends who ‘print’ it’s also worth remembering that printed colours are getting better too. Recent improvements to repro and printing techniques means that punchy colours are easier and more affordable to achieve on paper.

 

And here’s my final thought. Consumer brands switched all out to vivid, vibrant colours a couple of years ago. And as sure as day follows night, Corporate brands just love to follow Consumer brands for style (with a respectable gap, of course). The timing is just right for Corporates to get punchy with their colour palettes, and suspect 2009 will be the year they do it.

 

A final thought…

Please read this blog post with a measure of common sense. I’m not suggesting for a moment that all B2B brands will suddenly find their MoJo and go all psychedelic and funky on us. They won’t. But the successful Corporates will be dipping their toe in the rainbow river of colour in 2009 for all the right reasons. Watch this space…

 

If you love colour, and you want to explore it and current colour trends visit Adobe’s Kuler or the COLOURlovers websites. They’re well worth a browse…

 

Here are some great examples and inspiration for colour palettes we should expect from B2B’s and Corporates in 2009.


apple-ipod-nano-2009-range

Apple’s range of trendy iPod Nanos sets an exciting precedent for colour inspiration in 2009.

Below: some examples of brands using 2009 colour schemes…

barbican-logo

t-mobile-logo-pink

acrobat9-colours

freesat-logo

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Contact me to find out how WiseTiger can help your brand design in 2009…

 

See my other blog about Pantone’s Official Colour for 2009 – Mimosa Yellow.

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President Bush’s accidental product endorsement

veet-goodbye-bush-branding

Presidential brand endorsement isn’t just for Obama

I’ve commented previously about well known brands using Obama’s inauguration to promote their products. Well it seems that it’s not just the incoming President that’s accidentally found himself on the marketeer’s radar  – Veet, the ‘unwanted hair removal product’, have just run this lovely ad in Australia to coincide with George Bush’s departure. Nice.

 

Veet's Goodbye Bush branding takes advantage of the change of US president to drive it's message home

Veet's Goodbye Bush branding takes advantage of the change of US president to drive it's message home


Imbibros – new wine shop in Farnham

Imbibros logo

OK, this is one of my random posts!

Imbibros have opened a new wine shop in Farnham. Imbibros was recommended to me by Marc Cornelius of 80:20 Communications, so I thought I’d check them out. At first I thought they would be one of those ‘exclusive’ Surrey wine merchants, but I’m delighted to say they were utterly delightful, and didn’t treat me like the wine novice that I so obviously am! Quite clearly, you won’t find supermarket wine at Imbibros – but do expect carefully selected wine, expert and pleasant advice, and a selection of wines across a broad range of prices.

 

Seeing as their Farnham address isn’t on thier website I thought I’d help them out and put it here!



View Larger Map 
 

Imbibros are in The Lion and Lamb Yard, Farnham, Surrey:

Their contact details are:

Telephone: + 44 (0)1483 861 164 

Fax: + 44 (0)1483 861 127 

Email: wine@imbibros.co.uk

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New logo for Google

google-logo

Google have just announced a re-brand…

Google must be one of the most frequently seen and most recognised brands in the world. So why would they make any changes to their brand? Well let me be clear – the change is a minor one – marked by the introduction of a new ‘Favicon’. (A Favicon is the little symbol that appears to the left hand side of the URL in your browser – if you look you’ll see a ” simon-verrall-favicon ” at the top of this page which shows you’re looking at my blog).

 

So why all the fuss about Google and a new Favicon? Well take a look for yourself – can you see why everyone’s so excited???


google-favicon


Can you see it? Can you???


Probably not. Because this little Favicon hasn’t been designed to win Google a Yellow Pencil Award. It’s been designed for brand awareness. You see, the normal Google logo we all know so well is a ‘logotype’ – a type-only logo – without a symbol or graphic alongside it. This little Favicon is Google’s new symbol – something new to the brand.

 

You might argue that Google doesn’t need a symbol like Shell, Mercedes or HSBC – after all, Google’s a logo that’s so universally recognised it can be pulled and pushed all over the place without damaging the brand, see below:

google_doodles

Which brings us back to the Google Favicon. The reason Google does need a Favicon is because this little logo appears at the top of the 1.2 billion pages that Google serves up to users every day. Just imagine putting your logo in front of so many people! It’s a branding exercise – however small, this little Favicon is designed to keep Google at the front of the user’s mind.

 

I’ll end on an obvious cliché.

 

When it comes to logos, it’s not size that matters. It’s how often you use it. 



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