view our work in advertising and promotion
print advertising
Our passion is taking a complex, conceptual idea and applying it as a print ad. There’s something to be said for a thought that is communicated with the right visual and the perfect combination of words. Our goal is to create stuff that you rip out and put on your refrigerator – stuff that evokes emotion, connecting consumer with brand and making someone’s day just a little bit brighter.
radio advertising
The manual screwdriver of marketing. The :30 and :60 radio spots are often considered obsolete due to the likes of more modern marketing tools. But sometimes the radio spot is the choice apparatus for selling your message. The radio ad, if done right, can connect your brand with your consumer very effectively.
television advertising
Honesty ranks as our top operating policy. Telling you we have extensive experience in television advertising would be a lie. Therefore, for the record, we do not have extensive experience in television.
However, our partners and advisors do. So if your job calls for it, and we all agree it’s the best way to spend your marketing dollar, so be it. We promise something outstanding.
point-of-sale
In the strange new world of digital video recorders and satellite radio, hitting your consumer can sometimes be a difficult task. That’s when we devise a point-of-sale attack. It’s a smart way to hit your audience when you need them most – about two minutes before they’re standing in the checkout lane. From in-store signage to take-one booklets and window clings, we can do it all.
viral & guerilla
The inspiration behind this entire operation. As young ad enthusiasts, we were always moved by the simplest ideas, the stuff you look at and say, “Fiddlesticks, I wish I would have thought of that.” These are the ideas that hit you at the most unexpected moments. They’re cost-efficient and highly effective. These drive forward-thinking brands.
The viral and guerilla component consists of anything beyond traditional advertising. That is about the only way you can describe it. Any other description would set parameters. And parameters would defeat the whole purpose. Catch our drift?