Advertising > Video
They say it’s impossible. That you can only pick two. Want it fast and cheap? Well, it’s not going to be good. You get it. I do, too, and agreed with it until I figured out how to get all three at once.
VersaMe’s Starling was an amazing little piece of technology. If you haven’t read the strategy bit behind this, then take a few minutes and go for it. You’ll get the big picture. This part’s all about the YouTube videos we launched in support of a giant AdWords buy worth tens of thousands of dollars. And I only had two weeks to concept and produce video for it.
When pitching the Starling, there’s a lot to get across. We had to describe a wearable technology for early-learning that no one had ever seen before, and then explain the problem it solved to people who didn’t know the problem existed. Before I got involved, VersaMe had signed onto an expensive Google AdWords plan where Google would assign you a personal rep who’d not only set you up with their best practices for production on every front, but also do Google-y things in the background to maximize your kill count. First, I dove into the secret sauce they gave us on video production. What you see here follows EVERY one of Google’s recommendations to the letter.
They say if you don’t have anything to say, sing it. Well, if you have too much to say, sing it and add pyrotechnics, a chorus line, and maybe a donkey. That was the idea behind these spots. The Starling’s whole existence involved explaining some pretty dry early-education research. And, as I note in the strategy part, you couldn’t really prove any kind of results, because, well, the results would be intangible. Oh, it worked, or would work, based on decades of research, but not like a vacuum that could pick up a bowling ball. You couldn’t immediately see X affect Y. And remember, even though we were spending a lot of money on placement, production had to be done on a shoestring.
This is the fun part for me. No time and no money – so what can I bring to this party to help solve the problem, be on brand, and come in on no budget? It’s such a challenge! Hahaha. Oh, also, the spots had to really make a big impact.
FINAL: One of my illustrations in the Brain Hacking spot. They go by so fast! See more of my illustrations for these spots here.
WORK: My professional storyboard style and OH! Hey, look! It’s me at VersaMe actually drawing the brain hacked baby! Yes, that tie does go with that shirt.
Luckily, I’s cans draws. In various styles, too. So I put together a kinetic, breathless campaign for the Starling that a talented After Effects editor I knew (Peter Baker with sound assistance from his partner Anthony Proctor) could hopefully put together quick. I boarded out the spots, then illustrated or scrounged up all the elements and laid them out in a super-detailed, layered Photoshop Tiff. The “animation” I illustrated frame by frame, and I included them as layers for Peter, too. My copywriting wife had the perfect voice for this, so we recorded her VO in a sound studio in Charlotte (Hi, Ground Crew!). Peter would get the VO and Tiff file and apply his After Effects wizardry. Then we’d make some adjustments, and send it off to Anthony for SFX additions and final mixing. In the end, each of these spots cost about $1,250 to produce.
Between following Google’s best practices, the frenetic pacing and the fun visuals, the view-through rates for this campaign were off the charts. After so many years in the business I’ve become more than a little cynical regarding praise from people who you’re paying tens of thousands to. Right? But our Google rep was legit blown away to the point where I didn’t think she thought these would do well at all! Of course we didn’t stop there. We started running these spots on every other platform, too. We also tried some tamer material too, but later on. It was more traditional tech/baby stuff that was soft and fuzzy and important sounding. The analytics on that weren’t as amazeballs in comparison to the fun stuff, which kind of surprised me. Oh, why don’t I also show you the stuff we did with social influencer and legit funny guy, DudeDad. He made some of his own videos, and you can see how someone else explains the Starling to parents.
DAVE SOPP – Creative
Yep, that’s me. I’ve got over 20 years of marketing strategy, graphic design, advertising art direction, and illustration experience. Want to use some of it? Email me at dave@davesopp.com