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Mar 14, 2014

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A New Agency Spreads Its Wings

Argonaut Lands Its First Super Bowl Commercial


Mar 13, 2014

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Foote, Cone & Belding is back!

Foote, Cone & Belding is back! Draftfcb changes their name to FCB.


Mar 12, 2014

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Insights from John Matejczyk

We talked with the 2013 One Show judge about his work, his office and getting social.


Mar 04, 2014

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"If We Made It"

Sitting down with Droga5's Scott Bell


Feb 27, 2014

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Got milk?

After more than 20 years, the "got milk?" ads are finally coming to an end.


Feb 26, 2014

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Three Days in Tucson

A quick attempt to bottle the magic of The One Club?s first-ever Creative Leaders Retreat.


Feb 18, 2014

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60 Seconds of Parenthood

Parenthood has often been called the toughest job?


Feb 06, 2014

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Window to the Soul

For five people, this was more than a commercial?it was offering up their lives.


Feb 04, 2014

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A History of African-American Advertising

mainstream companies realized the advertising potential.


Jan 30, 2014

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1985 Apple Lemmings

A year after Apple made history with the 1984 ad, they wanted to go big again.


Jan 24, 2014

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Mary Knight's Ad World

Get to know this year's One Show Jury.


Jan 24, 2014

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The Creative Revolution of the 60s

the creative revolution is just as relevant today as it was over 60 years ago.


Jan 17, 2014

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Hashtags for Mental Health

DentsuBos for The Center for Addiction and Mental Health


Jan 16, 2014

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Mad Times

Do the 1960s have a copyright on drama in the advertising business?


Jan 16, 2014

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Don't Know Your Place

The Midwest as a creative destination That’s not how people typically refer to the Midwest. Usually they call it “flyover country,” “the boonies,”or my favorite, “East Bumfuck.” I’ve even heard someone refer to it as “a creative desert.” We get why people say that, but there is a deep creative undercurrent that runs through the Midwest. For example, every week we all watch TV shows and movies put together by people from here.   We actually prefer being the underdog There’s more opportunity to surprise. And when you have something to prove, it energizes the team: we’d rather be playing offense than constantly defending our ground.   We don’t need to be first with everything. “The Coasts” typically set trends, but it doesn’t mean we always follow. All it means is we have to be original.     There is an openness in the Midwest When you work at an agency in LA or NY, there is more structure, more layers. You spend your energy navigating politics. There’s “the way things get done.” Violate that at your own peril. It can be stifling.   The Midwest doesn’t have those territorial tendencies. Maybe it’s because there aren’t as many precedents here. There’s a willingness to challenge the status quo. There’s no less pressure—but every individual is on the hook for the outcome. And anything is possible. We tend to say “Why not?” more often then “It’ll never work.”   The benefits of not knowing any better Not knowing the rules usually leads to breaking new ground. Alex Bogusky famously said that starting CP+B in Miami was one of the best things that could’ve happened to them. They weren’t surrounded by ad agencies. There wasn’t anyone to follow or copy. They had to invent their version of an advertising agency. Worked out pretty well for them.   The same goes for my agency. Young & Laramore was founded in 1983 by a philosopher/poet and an artist. There weren’t any big advertising agencies to “learn” from. They made up their own rules. David Young and Jeff Laramore didn’t start their agency in Indiana because they had to. It was because they wanted to. They wanted to prove that a national advertising agency could be headquartered in Indianapolis.   They lived by four simple words: Don’t know your place. That is still our mantra today. It’s not a lofty mission statement. It’s what the individuals, teams and the agency live by.   Don’t let yourself get pigeonholed Not knowing your place is about refusing to be defined by geography, size, experience or discipline. It’s about understanding that it’s all your job. The best people in this business act this way. They don’t have to tear down walls, because they never see them in the first place. They go beyond the title on their business cards everyday in the agency and boardrooms.   The Operating System of agencies that don’t know their place Agencies who decide they’re about the work—and not just revenue—share common values. I like to call this their OS. Here’s what I imagine theirs look like:   1. They only work with decision makers. When you don’t have the decision makers in the room, it leads to passivity in the work, and in the relationship.   2. They’re not afraid to bring ideas that affect operations. They understand that a good ad has to come from a good product or experience. Improving the product improves the ad.   3. They like to be on the front lines of research. They don’t subsist on M&M’s. And they have the benefit of feeling those people, not just observing them through a two-way mirror.   4. They will only test their work in a market, not a focus group room. That’s the only way to truly understand how effective it is.   5. They aren’t afraid to say “No”. This is a big one. They’re in it for the long haul, and they know that one ineffective campaign can change their destiny.   Not an easy path Making a name for an agency in the Midwest has its drawbacks. It takes longer to achieve and finding talent that works at the bar that the agency sets is no easy feat. But, in the end, it’s worth it. If you are surrounded by people who don’t know their place, you can make greatness happen—even in the Midwest. Especially in the Midwest.  Carolyn is Principal/EDC at Young & Laramore in Indianapolis. She also maintains a blog focusing on art, advertising and culture. 


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