Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business. Show all posts

Thursday, June 12, 2014

We Won! 31st Healthcare Advertising Awards

After 18 years in business, it’s still extremely exciting for everyone at VSBrooks ADVERTISING when we hear that we won an award. So when we recently found out that we won awards for a print campaign we created for our client CarePlus Health Plans, we were downright ecstatic.

Healthcare Marketing Report – The National Newspaper of Healthcare Marketing – awarded us and CarePlus two silver awards in its 31st Healthcare Advertising Awards. We won for the stellar campaign we created to advertise CarePlus’ Medicare Annual Election Period (October 15 – December 7), the time when Medicare recipients over 65 can change their health plan.

The Healthcare Advertising Awards are the oldest, largest and considered the most widely respected healthcare advertising awards. A national panel of judges grants awards to entries that exemplify exceptional quality, creativity and message effectiveness.

In the statewide member testimonial campaign, we showcased today’s "senior" – not the traditional grandmother in a rocking chair of yesterday. We spent months identifying CarePlus’ members who are reinventing themselves for their next act – opera singers, dog walkers, motorcycle riders and more – to speak to their active lifestyle.


CarePlus Health Plan's award-winning print campaign.


It’s our business to create mind-blowing, unconventional ads. And we do it well. And … we love it. Not only do we wake up every day eager to develop amazing advertising for the healthcare industry, but also education, government, real estate, travel, retail and non-profit, among many others.


What will our next award be? Who knows. But we know we’ll have one heckuva great time creating the advertising to deserve it.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

It’s Hard to be Ideal and Humble, but We’ll Try!

On Thursday, the Coral Gables Chamber of Commerce informed us and everyone else in the room of a little tidbit that we already, kind of, sort of knew – VSBrooks ADVERTISING is an Ideal Workplace.

Like the cliché says, we know how to work hard and play hard. In the process, we have a pretty good time, take care of each other and make our clients happy along the way.

When we arrived for the 2013 Coral Gables Diamond Award ceremony, we were feeling rather nice. As finalists in the Large Business Category, we were hoping for the best and received an even better surprise. The Ideal Workplace Award is not advertised, and we were not nominated. Instead, the judges look at all the applicants’ questionnaires and select the workplace they find most ideal, based on employee benefits, training and recognition.  

The four judges selected VSBrooks ADVERTISING, Miami Children's Hospital and Tarpon Bend as their top three, and our team won. If you thought we had an Ideal Workplace before, just check us out now. There are smiles, laughter, pats on the back and hugs galore.

Yep, we already knew we worked in a cool place with awesome people, but now everyone else knows too.

Thank you, Coral Gables Chamber of Commerce for the public shout-out!

Friday, June 28, 2013

VSBrooks ADVERTISING – The 2013 American Business Awards’ win – 6.18.13


Can you hear the music? Can you feel the vibrations through the walls? Can you smell the food?

We’re having a party over here at VSBrooks ADVERTISING because we just won a big one!

After months of accepting one honor after another, our incredible VSBrooks ADVERTISING team won its first American Business Award on Monday in Chicago. We took home the Silver “Stevie®” Award in the Marketing Campaign of the Year – Non-Profit Organization category, beating out some heavy-hitters.

The 11th Annual ABA is the nation’s premier business award program. More than 3,200 entries from international industries and companies were evaluated by 320 executive-level judges.  

We won the Silver award for our work for Feeding South Florida. To win another great award for work we enjoy is extra icing on the cake.

Cake? OK, we’re back to the party. Happy dance, everyone. We’ve gone global.

Thank you to our friends, family, clients and fans for cheering us on as we were honored and recognized locally and nationally for work we’d do if we won nothing at all.

It’s been a fantastic 2013 – all six months of it.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Facebook Page Insights - Use Them!


   When trying to measure just how well your Facebook campaign or daily posting efforts are doing, it can get really confusing listening to all the different acronyms and conflicting advice about what days and times to post are best, and what not to do or do. Who should you listen to? The answer is simple: Your online customer or page’s fan base.
   Yes, there are some great tips about Facebook and what works for businesses. Photo posts are king, while plain-jane html links, or long videos are usually shunned. But where’s the best place to get information as to what works? All you need to look at are your page’s own Insights. Everything you need to see about what’s really working on your page is available within your Admin tools. All the advice in the world is useless without actively checking to see your page’s “health.”
   On the basic screen shown below, you have a lot of information available to you. You’ll be able to see how everything is going on your page, with the only drawback being a two-day backlog with some of the data.

Facebook Insights Graph
 
   Here you can see just how many likes your page has, your potential reach of content, how many people are sharing or talking about your content, and even how many people actually saw content from your page. There are two ways you can get this information. Either use the basic view with the charts available (shown above), or you can download even more detailed information into an Excel spreadsheet so you can really drill into your page’s worth.
   There are a few things I like to look at. One of them is the information on each individual post, which is shown below the graph that is depicted in the screen above. This will show you the virality measurement along with the amount of people who talked about the post. This is really what is connecting your fanbase on a day to day basis. You may notice that photo posts work better than video posts or vice-versa. Did that funny quote you posted to your status really hit it off with your fans? Now you can actually see if it fell on deaf ears or not, and make adjustments to your plans for future posts.

Facebook Page Demographics

    Another good pair of insights to work with are your Demographics and your Reach pages. These insights will show you the age ranges and sex of your fans, as well as the geographical locations, browser types used, and a whole host of other information to use. That, my dear reader, is the whole point to all this information: USE IT! If you find that your page is mostly being viewed by males ages 18-25, it makes no sense to post something about tips for expectant mothers, unless that’s what your page is about. If it is, then you’ll be able to see that whatever you have been posting is attracting the wrong audience.
   The bottom line is, blindly posting random statuses and links, or constant spam about your business won’t win you a huge fan base. Facebook is about building a community for your page. You can’t do that if you aren’t speaking its language. What works for your page that goes against conventional wisdom? Please comment below if you’ve found some other information that has helped you hone in on your fanbase, and visit our Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/VSBrooksAdvertising

 By: Stephen Kish - Social Media Coordinator/ VSBrooks Advertising

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

So That’s WTF I Was Thinking!

By: Olivia Errasti / Account Executive 
       Here I am – over a year after my WTF Was I Thinking post – and dear Lord have I learned more lessons than a newbie that’s mistakenly found them self on the men4men section of craigslist. Those never stop, apparently; the lessons that is. One year and eight months in, one promotion down, two office moves completed, and dozens of client meetings later, I feel like my eyes have been opened to a world that is nothing like the Never-never Land I tried to stay in before my career started. The learning continues every day, and here I was thinking school was over – crap. 
   And I love it. It turns out becoming a working adult (emphasis on BECOMING) in the advertising realm is not scary and boring. Yes, we work plenty of long hours, and yes we have to fulfill some routine tasks, but life at VSBrooks is challenging, engaging, and best of all, fun. Every day is different than the next. So different that it’d make the models of a United Colors of Benetton ad jealous.
   
   Now, as Account Executive at VSBrooks Advertising, I present some ::Insert British accent here:: Pearls of Wisdom, that I have acquired over the last year.


 1)    Don’t trash ANYTHING

I get a sense of gratification and relief by throwing things out. Let’s put it this way, I have a mini basketball hoop over my trash bin. Contrary to what counselors on Hoarders will tell you, throwing away some unassuming pieces can hurt you down the road, in a big way. Take it from me…

We needed to come up with a company name and logo for a new client. This client came to a meeting with a one-page description of what the company does and what areas it specializes in. This solitary paper is what our agency was using to draw inspiration from for a company name – essentially, square one of creating a brand. I took a copy of that paper home, jotted notes, highlighted the crap out of it, came into work the next day, typed all my thoughts, and trashed the paper.

I threw that paper out for three reasons: 1) I had chicken scratched all over it with the penmanship of a doctor; 2) some one else had the original paper; they had to. Why would they ever throw it out? 3) I WAS DONE, and thus ran to the garbage can with the conviction of a politician whose party is not in office.

It turns out that my ideas were received about as well as the Gap’s attempt at updating their logo (Industry humor – picked that lesson up somewhere along the line), and I found myself back at square one. But I had thrown that paper out, and the original paper was lost. Fu…dge.

Moral: That may not have been the first time I’d thrown something out that I didn’t realize I was going to need later, but it sure was the last. Here in the office we keep binders upon binders of materials for our reference if ever in the future we need inspiration or information. Now I get why! After all, those binders are like my little cousins – I use the crap out of them when I need to find something.

 2) Keep ya damn trap shut!

            This one you can learn firsthand, or from watching those around you. I have a complex about coming off as an idiot, so at times I’m quiet if I’m not sure what the right answer is. But I’ve had a few foot-in-mouth situations where I’ve promised the client a deadline that I swear would make the old guy in the Dos Equis ads say, “I don’t always drink beer, but when I do I smash the empty bottles over account executives’ heads.”

Moral: “I’ll get back to you” and “Let me discuss this with my team” should be just about the only phrases in your lexicon for what’s an acceptable answer when a client says, “how soon can we get this?” Otherwise, you’re going to have quite a few pissed off people back in the office (read: creatives and media people). And it might help to remember that a beer bottle doesn’t break with slight force.

 3) Clients are people, too

            I’m still grappling with this one. It was somehow so obvious during my first few months in the industry. And then I lost sight of that after a client woke me up at the crack of dawn on a Saturday morning. I now actively remind myself before every client meeting, phone call, or interaction, that I’m about to talk to an actual other human being with a family and life, not a machine that’s just going to mercilessly throw another thing on my plate. “It might be nice if they were a machine, though,” I think to myself sometimes. My job would certainly be less stressful. But then again it wouldn’t be as exciting and challenging, and I wouldn’t have work TO DO.
           
            Clients are people, too. That also means that you have to connect with them on a personal level. I’m not talking about telling them your darkest fears, but tidbits here and there about yourself help ease the stiff feeling that often comes with business meetings. It also communicates your genuine sense and trust that may allow the client to reciprocate. Sometimes it doesn’t work, but more often than not you’ll have the client feeling comfortable. So comfortable, even, that they might say or do something that actually makes YOU uncomfortable – like licking your face. True story.

Moral: If you’re new in the ad world (any working world, really) and are intimidated by client meetings, take the client off that pedestal. If you think “Ay Dios mio, la hora llego!” even before your conference call, like any grandmother watching the news that thinks it’s all going to hell, stop. You may come to realize that just because they give you more work or present a new problem, that “problem” is actually an opportunity. 


       

Friday, February 3, 2012

The Super Bowl of Advertising

The big game is also when you bring your “A” game as an agency­­–and at a price tag of $4 million per 30 seconds of airtime, there’s more at stake than professional pride. A memorable Super Bowl spot can propel a new brand onto the minds of millions of viewers, and for established brands it can give them a push that often transcends marketing, becoming part of popular culture. Remember “Whassup?

For us advertising types, the Monday after the game is dominated by discussions about who had the funniest or most memorable spot, if it was an up year or a disappointing one, many “how did they pull that one past the legal department?” and what do recent trends such as crowdsourcing (Doritos) mean for the industry. So in anticipation of the big game, and another batch of entertaining spots, here are our favorites from past years:


Ingrid Serrano
Let’s start with a classic. I don’t know how many times I’ve heard “through the window, off the wall, nothing but net.”



Stephanie Cruz
Who among us hasn’t wished for a Terry Tate to instill fear on violators of office etiquette?





Olivia Errasti & Maureen Fitzpatrick & Danny Timiraos (our Star Wars FREAK)
The absolute favorite from last year, the Force was strong with this combination of simple insight and charming execution. Can Volkswagen repeat this year?

Danielle Sokoloff and Yisel Zas
One of the advantages of Super Bowl advertising is its capacity to create instant iconic characters. The E-Trade baby is one of those. Plus the writing is spot-on. “Milkawhat?”


Vivian Santos
How many times we recall a great spot, but not the brand featured? No danger of that with Google’s “Search Stories” campaign. Perfect integration of product and concept in a simple and emotionally charged execution.



Gabriela Zamorano
Another Super Bowl icon, the Clydesdale horses for Budweiser never fail to put a smile on viewer’s faces. When the first notes of “Gonna Fly Now” play? Goosebumps.


Barbara Marchena
Not only a SB classic, but one of the most beloved spots ever, perfectly capturing the essence of an iconic brand.
 
Alejandro Barreras
Towards the end of the workaholism-fueled frenzied dotcom years, Monster.com asked if your career matched your dreams. Poignant, emotional, simple and spot-on for the brand. 
Eric Zamorano
No list of Super Bowl favorite spots is complete without the one that launched Apple and the Macintosh into the national consciousness -and created the SuperBowl spot as must-see event.