Feel free to build upon or alter the rules, but please be so kind to respect the Creative Commons license.
- Great work is stuff that ends up on T-shirts
- We hate to pay for artists, we love to pay for craftsmanship. Artists don’t belong in creative agencies, unless a piece of art is on the briefing.
- If it ain’t worth talking, it’s shit.
- We are total suckers for smart arguments. We just love to get convinced
- We like to see ourselves as the Quentin Tarentino’s of the persuasion industry. We direct brands in such a way that they become truly remarkable. Plus we get to say “fuck” all the time.
- We have an unhealthy fascination for Kim Jung Il, one of the last real evil scums. We want to have our own country with worshipings and mindfucking propanda.
- No matter where we come, we always prefer Amsterdam.
- We are addicted to riding along the canals in Amsterdam going “aaaaaaah” and “ooooooh”.
- If we didn’t convince a client, than we weren’t convincing enough. Period.
- It is totally forbidden to use Apple as an example in presentations. No serious, you can get fired for that.
- Apple is an incredibly interesting brand. They are the most talked about brand on the planet, while meanwhile acting like total dicks.
- Sometimes we find ourselves acting like married couples. We’re not sure yet whether that’s a good thing.
- Never mistake having fun with not being serious. We’re bloody fanatic about work, we just need to compensate a lot for that.
- If you think we hate you, that’s usually not the case. We just think you’re an idiot.
- We are absolute suckers for little acts of kindness. We think that world domination is in getting the little details.
- We usually get very disappointed in the creativity of the self-proclaimed creative class. Those who were once good in the shouting advertising business, usually suck in the creation of ideas that are driven by a passion to tell, to inspire, to surprise and to get shared.
- An idea for an idea is not an idea.
- Great ideas make you want to do little dance steps. You just know when you met a great idea.
- We get horny by geekness. And by utterly useless knowledge, like the fact that an office desk has 400 times more bacteria than a toilet.
- Our Belgian roots manifest themselves at worst when there’s eating involved. When we organize an event, we are only totally stressed out about the catering.
- We embrace politics and tactics. When the right idea reaches the right person at the right time with the right arguments, we tend to sit back and smoke a cigar, just like Hanibal of the A-team, mumbling “I love it when a plan comes together”. Some of us add some crotch scratching to this, but this is not a compulsory part of this ritual.
- Fresh pasta flamed on a big parmegiani cheese bowl… and other delightful little rituals really make u shut up for like at least half a minute, while leaving a silly grin on our face.
- We decided that no strategic planner could leave the office without a translation buddy. Stuff can get really fluffy sometimes.
- In a creative agency, democracy is overrated. Collaboration along strikt lines isn’t. And yes, this still leads to subversive ideas.
- We all adore the word serendipity, while the word “remarkableness” get us in to really nasty semantic fights.
4 comments
Nice, but is there a translation buddy in the room for n° 17?
Damn, we should have left Tom leave the office without one 😉
As far as I'm concerned, there are several possible interpretations:
1) "Let's create an idea" isn't a great idea. We usually work by defining a "purpose", what will a brand ACTUALLY add to the consumer's life. "We created a social movement" sucks as well btw.
2) When you present something, make it 200%, people who will watch your presentation most likely will understand only half of your idea. So while you think it's awesome (and have a biased, more positive perception of the idea), most people will understand a fraction of the awesomeness (and will have a more neutral or even more negative perception).
3) Creatives tend to present "ideas for ideas", vague, arty-farty and sometimes event arrogant rough concepts. That just doesn't cut it.
But maybe we should better ask Tom 😉
Mmmokay, makes sense. Thanks for clearing that up. You'd make an excellent translation buddy 😉
26. Let a copywriter do his job.