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Here are various odds and ends that have interested me enough to think they might interest you. Hope I'm right.

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Economissed

Economist adsHave you seen the latest Economist ads? If you have, do you share my sense of an almost inevitable doom being played out, like a Greek tragedy, before our eyes? One always hoped this wouldn't happen but, like a favourite sitcom that goes on that fatal series too long, it seems this once majestic campaign may at last have run out of steam.

'Sparks & Mensa' is not only a real groaner (it ought to say 'Geddit?' on the end), it's too 'on the nose', as screenwriters say. The classic Economist ads compliment the audience in elegantly oblique fashion. This one says 'You're really clever if you read The Economist', and sticks an Eric Idlean elbow in your ribs. (And what has Marks & Spencer got to do with The Economist anyway?)

'Avoid typecasting', rendered in OTT circus-style type, is another horrendous pun, this time visual, and now I'm not even sure what it's trying to say. How many business leaders worry about being 'typecast'? And 'Are all your ideas rough?', presented as a marker scamp, only reinforces the sense that the whole campaign feels like a bunch of scribbles retrieved in desperation from the AMV waste bin.

'Is your indecision final?' seems to strike a sour note. Rather than congratulating its audience on their intelligence (and implying that non-readers had better join the club), it says very clearly, 'You're really struggling, aren't you? Better read The Economist.' Economist readers (in the world of the campaign) don't read it because they're struggling - they read it precisely because they're not.

It's easy to knock, of course. I know this is the point where someone says, "Have you got any better ideas?" To which I can only reply, "I'd be more than happy to provide an estimate."

(Apologies to members of 26 who've seen some of this article already, in the 26 newsletter. That was an edited version, but here there's no-one to temper the excesses of my ego.)

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I know you're there

For a while now, I've been able to watch the traffic on my website, seeing who clicks what, how often, how they got there and where they went next. All thanks to a nifty online product called FlySoup.

FlySoup is a real-time web tracker, which means at any moment I can log on and see exactly what's happening at my site. Like which pages are the most popular, what search terms have been used to find me, and sometimes even the actual organisations who've been visiting.

In the past few days, for example, I can see I've had visitors from Boots, Dunn Humby and an educative body in Verona, New York. My portfolio's even been perused by someone in the New Zealand government.

There are masses more statistics available. And of course, the bigger your organisation, the more useful all this information becomes. It's also quite fun. You can try FlySoup free for a month, so why not give it a go? (I promise I'm not getting a commission.)

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Apple bites back

Apple adsAs all us Apple-lovers know, PCs don't stand a chance against Macs. And now Apple have made some lovely ads comparing the two machines in a very clear, simple and devastating way.

I think they're only on in the US, but they're also available on the Apple website. (You may need to scroll down a bit to see the whole set.)

Some are, inevitably, stronger than others, but overall they're great: friendly, funny, smart and really rather pleased with themselves. A bit like Mac users themselves.

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