Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category
STAN shortlisted for Big Chip Award
Twelve months of hard work and enthusiasm has borne fruit – STAN, my home away from home, has been nominated for Best Newcomer at the 2009 Big Chip Awards.
The award recognises outstanding new talent in the North West within the digital media industry. STAN is one of a few businesses nominated for the award. The Big Chip Awards are in their eleventh year, and have come to be recognised as the definitive, digital showcase for those working in the sector up North (read outside of London and the South East). The awards are run by Digital Manchester, an organisation which supports North West based digital agencies.
Update
Congratulations to AdInsight, worthy winners who beat us to the award. Just to be nominated is an endorsement of the work STAN has put in. Well done to the team.
Updated June 2009
Automagically
TuneUp software for iTunes promises to clean up your tracks. As the ad says, Your music collection is a mess. TuneUp fixes it. Automagically.
Whether or not the software works is not really a consideration. This is not a review. Need a verdict? Try choosing from: not sure, don’t care or could be a consideration as most people’s iTunes libraries are a mess, especially those with a little torrent help. It is the unnecessary word-smithing, or mash-up, of automatically and magic is of interest and certainly gets a nod.
Word mash-ups (or portmanteau for the literati), were popularised by Lewis Carrol in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland (1865) and the sequel Through the Looking-Glass (1871). Enjoy the opening of Jabberwocky, featured in the latter, for example of his craft and invention:
‘Twas brillig, and the slithy toves, Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
All mimsy were the borogoves, And the mome raths outgrabe.
Brillig might not be so well known as say chortling, from the same work, but we all know Tarmac, Blaxploitation and Wikipedia.
Advertising historically has never been one to miss an opportunity to make-up a feature or phrase for the sake of sales. Today’s mash could easily be in tomorrow’s dictionary. TuneUp is in good company with this attempt. There is a certain charm and elegance to blending the right words. Automagically might not be of the same calibre as Carrol’s work but it is fun to say – good effort.