How Many Agency People Does It Take to Send a Tweet?

How Many Agency People Does It Take to Send a Tweet?

The awards season is upon us. The Clios announced its winners. The One Show is next week. Cannes Lions and AICP are still to come next month.

A big issue awards judges will grapple with is how to award simple ideas. Put more succinctly, how to award simple executions. There’s little doubt that big ideas are, in fact, often simple ideas. But with the world moving to short bursts of communications, awards juries are left with the quandary of how to judge a tweet.

There’s probably nothing that will arouse more rancor in a jury room as the now-famous Oreo Super Bowl blackout tweet. It was perfectly timed and well executed, seven words of copy along with a photo of an Oreo. The real genius of the tweet was the work that led up to it, the fact that Kraft and its agencies 360i and MediaVest were all prepared to act fast. That kind of planning and coordination, as we’ve written about, is neither easy nor common.

The Clios gave the Oreo tweet, entered by 360i, two bronze medals this week in the “innovative media” and “social media” categories. Interestingly, 360i lists 13 people in the creative credits for the tweet, including two copywriters, which averages out to two agency staffers per word.

As Matt O’Rourke, creative director at Wieden, tweeted about the issue, “I can see a body of work winning, but a single tweet seems wonky.”  Jesse Brightman of VaynerMedia was more direct, calling the award “the dumbest fucking thing I’ve ever seen.”

Awards aren’t set up to recognize systems. They’re set up to laud executions. (This is, of course, a business-model decision. Why confine yourself to systems when you can collect more entry fees across any number of execution categories?) That will leave juries with the task of judging the creativity of at tweet. And considering most tweets nowadays are written in-house, that should worry agencies.

Image via Shutterstock

https://digiday.com/?p=37688

More in Marketing

WTF is the CMA — the Competition and Markets Authority

Why does the CMA’s opinion on Google’s Privacy Sandbox matter so much? Stick around to uncover why.

Marketing Briefing: How the ‘proliferation of boycotting’ has marketers working understand the real harm of brand blockades

While the reasons for the boycotts vary, there’s a recognition among marketers now that a brand boycott could happen regardless of their efforts – and for reasons outside of marketing and advertising – that will need to be dealt with. 

Temu’s ad blitz exposes DTC turmoil: decoding the turbulent terrain

DTC marketers are pointing fingers at Temu, attributing the sharp surge in advertising costs across Meta’s ad platforms to its ad dollars.