top of page

CASE STUDIES

Can your brand afford to wing it?

In today’s world, a brand requires solutions that last. Your consumer needs relevant, engaging, meaningful information that meets a real need. Understanding how to put it all together is what makes the difference. Time to bring in the cowboys and bulldogs. 

Unknown-1.png

Heineken

Heineken needed some ideas for their new mini CO2 Technology kegs. We obliged and created their Good-Bye/Hello Heineken campaign for TV and interactive channels.

  • Good-By Yesterday. Hello Heineken

  • Good-Bye Foam. Hello Heineken

  • Good-Bye Cruel World. Hello Heineken

Unknown.jpeg

Vaseline

When a swanky Connecticut agency was losing ground with Vaseline, they called for backup. Seven hours later we pitched Vaseline's ‘Skin is Amazing’ campaign. The brand went from jump seat to Racer X  by milk and cookie time.

  • From Dry to Amazing in Just Five Days

  • Arm Your Skin

5d7f64538ecf015eb5408f75034ba072.gif

Mars Chocolate

Mars Chocolate was looking to reposition their brand.  After an intensive search and rescue mission, we positioned their origin story to speak to the universal affinity America  has  for chocolate. We then leveraged this new positioning to create their ‘For the Love of Chocolate’ campaign. Yum. 

Unknown-2.png

Martha Stewart

After writing a couple commercials for Martha, we wrote her tagline for her Everyday Paint brand and also named the entire line using the indigenous wildlife and colors found around her three homes (country, sea and city) for inspiration.

  • You can find them at Sears or K-Mart, but you can take them anywhere.

Unknown-1.png

American Movie Classics

AMC needed some fresh ideas, so we created a series of TV spots and slogans they're still using today.

  • The way movies were meant to be

  • Hollywood, like you remember it

  • We’ll take you back

cadbury_logo.jpg

Cadbury Schweppes 

Everyone loves candies in pretty little tins, but when it came to La Vie Bonbons and Vichy mints, sales had dropped off a cliff. Turns out consumers weren’t buying because shopkeepers weren’t stocking their shelves. After redirecting their positioning, Cadbury's revenues went from bleak to sweet overnight.

  • For Tongues in Every Flavor

  • Lick a Vichy Today

America-Express-logo.jpg.webp

American Express

Amex needed an ad for their new Open charge card. Our 'Open For Business' campaign launched across print and interactive channels. Ka-ching.

  • Limitless

  • The Power of No

images.png

Amazon

One of NYC's largest PR firms was having a tough time selling the new media guide for Amazon's consumer electronics online store. They brought us in to position their new program and create a multi-channel campaign—generating Amazon's highest earnings in the category.

  • Come in from the confusion

  • It's a jungle out there

panasonic-logo-design-history-and-evolution-kreafolk.jpg.webp

Panasonic

Panasonic had a new off-brand wi-fi product for in-flight entertainment, and needed a new campaign to go with it. Our @Altitude campaign was a hit and was  splattered across airports coast-to-coast.

  • Be Free

  • Do you sky-fi?

  • Surfing @Altitude

pge_reg_logo-1.png

PG & E

You never saw anyone more grateful than PG&E when we agreed to lend a hand in the midst of their grizzly media slam. They needed some good PR so we wrote a spot for their Solar Schools program promoting renewable energy (CBS). Don’t tell Erin Brockovich.

New-York-Times-emblem.jpg

The New York Times

Among the many campaigns we created for their partners (NASCAR, Apple, Saab, LinkedIn, Beijing Olympics), we also wrote some of those cool taglines on the front page. 

  • I subscribe to 156 Years of Newsmaking

  • I subscribe to a world of ideas

linkedin-new4645.jpg

LinkedIn

LinkedIn wanted some clout, which came in the form of America's iconic newspaper: The New York Times. And the Times wanted to be ushered into the digital age. It was a match made in cyber heaven. 

  • Yo, Big Shot / Hey Bigwig

  • How to Become a Mover and Shaker in 1 Easy Step

  • Being a Know-it-All Has its Advantages

bottom of page