A while back we were asked by Lenovo to design an ad banner and landing page/microsite campaign.
What we learned was how flexible and adaptable our Interactive team can become to meet deadlines. While it is not how we "love" to work, we learn a lot about each other and our abilities when our clients ask us to do the extraordinary. Let's face it, clients we want to work with want an agency that gets them but almost more importantly they want an agency that feels like they're down the hall.
We operate in a competitive field and there are many firms that would really like to have the opportunities that we earn. How quickly we adapt has impressed me since I started working here.
I have also learned that adaptability is synonymous with abilty to produce a lot of quality in a short amount of time. We have learned that it also means being able to execute changes in real time to react to how A/B tests serve us results. Long gone are the days where agencies like ours have the courage to say, "we'll get to it..."
I think adaptability defines us. We measure our value by how
"down the hall" our clients feel we are. In reality, some of our
clients aren't in our time zone. We also measure our value in terms of
how quickly our working relationship spreads from one business unit to
another like wildfire within big corporations. We attribute this to
being adaptive.
The results of this campaign are actually worth bragging about. There was a 850% higher rate of conversions than we (agency and client) expected. The purpose of this ephemeral site campaign was to drive folks to the lenovo.com Web site.
In addition, the superhero motif that we created has begun to take hold internally, within Lenovo. This is a strong and versatile campaign that you should see more of in the coming year.
I agree with you about agencies not wanting to talk about the success or failure of their creative. It is a peeve of mine as well and I will try to expose more of that from this angle. Thanks for your comment.
It looks pretty, but was the site effective? I tried to find it and it looks like the site was taken down.
Will we ever reach an age when a design agency talks about actual results and not just show off pretty screenshots? I guess this would also require the customer to have a clue as well...
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