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Red Bricks Media Hires Russell Bongard as Creative Director

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

Ex-Publicis Creative joins Red Bricks Media’s San Francisco team.

San Francisco, CA – January 27, 2009 – Interactive performance marketing agency Red Bricks Media announced today it has hired Russell Bongard to serve as the agency Creative Director, based out of its San Francisco office.

Most recently, Bongard was an Associate Creative Director at Publicis Modem where he was the creative lead on several accounts, including Hewlett Packard, LG Electronics, PayPal, Nestle, and Sony.

Prior to that, he held ACD positions in Boston at Euro RSCG Circle, working on the IKEA, Verizon, and The Campbell’s Soup Co. accounts, and in New York at Agency.com, working on British Airways, Disney, General Motors, Sprint, Discovery Channel, Nokia, and Columbia House.

At Red Bricks Media, Bongard will focus on generating new and innovative ideas for clients, attracting new business and growing the creative department with the goal of securing its place on the advertising map.

“From his award-winning creative direction to his breadth of experience across video, web, and print, Russell was exactly who we were looking for to propel Red Bricks Media into the ranks of the best creative agencies,” said CEO, Ed Kim. “Our vision is to combine the most creative minds with our performance-driven marketing know-how to deliver true results to all of our clients. Russell is a key player in that equation.”

Regarding his new role, Bongard says, “People were telling me I was crazy to leave a secure job in this economy, but the opportunity was too good to pass up. I did my research. Red Bricks has a great track record and strong values regarding their people and their clients, which was a breath of fresh air. Plus I’m dressed as the Bearded Lady on my website and they still wanted to work with me, so it was a no-brainer.”

About Red Bricks Media

Red Bricks Media is a full-service integrated marketing agency specializing in search engine marketing, interactive media planning, email campaign management, award-winning creative services and emerging forms of media including buzz and mobile marketing. We take a performance-driven approach to our campaigns and measure our success by our clients’ successes. Red Bricks Media is an independent agency headquartered in San Francisco, with offices in New York and Hong Kong, creating world-class advertising programs for top brands like Microsoft Higher Education, Hearst Magazines, THQ, and the Los Angeles Times. Visit www.redbricksmedia.com to find out why Red Bricks Media is one of the fastest-growing agencies in the country.

Great PPC Copywriting: The Medium and the Message

Tuesday, March 13th, 2007

by Bain Smith, Lead Copywriter

In this article we will focus on the nature of search engine advertising itself and provide pointers on how to make your ad copy stand out in the ultra-competitive environment of search engine marketing and advertising.

Back in the day when people had something to sell, they traveled door to door with their wares. Their challenge was two-fold. Before they sold anything, they first had to create “the sale before the sale”:selling a prospect on giving them the audience before they could actually sell a prospect anything. The search engine turned this traditional paradigm on its head by eliminating the “sale before the sale”. Search engine users now generate ad content voluntarily based on words they use to search, which should be a boon for business, right?

As a copywriter, the challenge is not creating the opportunity to sell anymore –that’s been done for us – but crafting a winning ad in a prohibitively competitive environment. Where in the past a sale required two sales, now a sale requires that your ad be selected from a list of ads, often selling the exact same product or service.

I have no groundbreaking wisdom to impart on how to write a search engine ad. that resonates with an audience. There are precious few characters of space to employ in a search engine ad and consequently few chances to make your copy “pop”. I will list, however, in no particular order, tips for creating an ad that only a lunatic wouldn’t click.

• Ask yourself, “What am I selling?”
– The railroad industry sold railroads, not the bigger idea of transcontinental transportation. Look at it now.
• Make it readable.
– Don’t cram too much into one ad or you’ll lose the attention
span of your audience.
• Write as if you were speaking to a friend, not a stranger.
– Strangers and prospects are friendly people, too.
• Create a compelling offer.
– If you don’t have a reason to run an offer, make one up.
– A believable reason for a special offer gives it traction and
boosts response.
• Separate your copy into small compartments of information.
– Three facts in one ad are better than one.
• Create a unique message for each of your audience segments.
– Targeted messaging boosts response and customer loyalty.
• The strongest ads tell the truth dramatically.
– If you try to be everything to everybody, you wind up meaning
nothing special to anyone.
• Craft a call to action that’s an easy next step for the
prospect to take.
– If you wrote a good ad, the call to action will click the ad
for them.
• Don’t be afraid to experiment!
– Experiments can create happy accidents, boosting response
rates.

These tips will help you get started down the road to conversion and hopefully illuminate some finer points of writing a good ad for a search engine. There’s no secret to it. It’s like juggling, without the chainsaws. Practice, create tests, learn from your results, and practice some more. Voila!