A publication of Brunico Communications Ltd.

Outdoor

JAMES READY: LEO B BREWS CO-OP BEERBOARDS

Heading into high beer season, James Ready Beer wanted a fun way to remind drinkers that its discount Canadian brew was only $1 per bottle. Building on the year-old "Help us Keep this Beer a Buck" umbrella campaign, James Ready and Leo Burnett Toronto launched an outdoor UGC campaign last summer that split its billboards with beer drinkers.

In the first phase, messaging on billboards divided by a dotted line explained that James Ready couldn't afford the cost of a whole billboard, inviting others to share the space, thereby keeping the cost-per-bottle down. The open call was extended online, in classified-style newspaper ads, emails and in-case newsletters to the James Ready community of beer drinkers. Those who had a message of their own to share with the world could upload images and/or "ad copy" to Jamesready.com.

Phase two took the user-generated element back to the great urban outdoors. The James Ready co-op ads were featured on over 100 unique billboards across 26 markets in Ontario. The helpful fans saw their messages and pictures writ large - from birthday and wedding announcements to band advertisements to less sober group shots of dudes wearing nothing but empty beer boxes.

"We tried to match them up where they lived so they could see their own board and be a hero in their own community," says Leo Burnett Toronto SVP/CCO Judy John. "It was a logistical nightmare for the print production and media, making sure we had it [right]. You don't want to have a marriage proposal in a different city that your girlfriend is never going to see, or if you're selling generators, you might want it [to run] close by."

By giving consumers cheap-and-cheerful claims to fame in their hometowns, JR extended the buzz throughout the summer and created some solid brand advocates. This year's campaign takes the concept to local radio with a "Share our Radio Space" execution which launched in May, with the first shared spots rolling out this month. The campaign has won a gold Clio, a silver One Show Pencil, two Andy awards and the Obie Best of Show.

VESPA: DENTSU'S SQUAREHEAD STREET GANG

Skinny jeans, Converse sneaks, plaid shirt. This is the uniform for hundreds of guys hanging around Queen Street West in Toronto or Kitsilano in Vancouver. But few have scooter handlebars instead of heads.

A promotion for the new Vespa S scooter line - with its bulky square look evoking the Mod-era styling of the original 1960s model it's based on - eschewed traditional out-of-home media for a street-wise postering campaign.

To appeal to the ad-resistant 25- to 45-year-old segment, Toronto-based Canadian Scooter Corporation (CSC) - Vespa's distributor in Canada - and Dentsu Canada enlisted the skills of Dan Bergeron, a.k.a. street artist Fauxreel. Bergeron designed a posse of "Squareheads," larger-than-life paper cut-outs of hipsters with iconic Vespa S handlebars for heads and pasted them up in trendy neighbourhoods in Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Ottawa and Calgary last spring.

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Magazine

September 2010

In our Next Big Things issue, industry execs reveal the ideas and issues poised to reshape the biz and Telus Quebec's Catherine Patry explains how a zebra became the telco's LGBT spokescritter. We also investigate how magazines are reinventing themselves online and off to reconnect with readers and spice things up for advertisers.