Ad Review: Highland Spring

highland_spring_sparkling_ad_2015

As a creative, I’m always torn between what I think looks cool and what I think makes sense for a brief. My position though is always start with the meaningful message and then build something beautiful around it.

I’m also always aware that what I consider great design work lies somewhere in the middle of my own personal preferences, current design trends, and historical reference points. What motivates me personally is shaping the world according to my creative vision, so when I see artwork that I don’t like, it troubles me to my very core. #firstworldprobelms

But like I said, you have to bear in mind that sometimes excellent communication doesn’t look like something you want in your living room.

QED: Highland Spring’s recent ad campaign. My first reaction was that it looked a bit tacky. But then I read the line and it all came together.

Highland Spring is being positioned as a classic “magician” brand – one that provides a moment of transformation, of magic, transporting you to another (fancier, more special) place with just the twist of a cap. Sparkling water is often used as a kind of shortcut to a more sophisticated dinner party or event. Bubbles! Wow. You are truly spoiling us.

That’s what Highland Spring can do for you. And no, it doesn’t look as trendy as Voss or Ty Nant, and the visuals of the ad for me look a bit photoshopped and OTT (when you’ve got the natural epic beauty of Scotland to work with, does it need to be pushed this far?) – but the message of this campaign is absolutely on-point.

PS Shout out to David Boni, the photographer – some stunning stuff to look at on his website

 

Creativity: Connecting the Dots

One of the main pieces of advice I give to marketers is “keep your eyes open”. People think that creativity is all about racking your brain really hard to produce a brilliant idea. It’s not.

Partly it’s about letting your imagination free so it can play, and find its own path to a great idea. That’s why you hear people saying that things just came to them as they were taking a walk, on the tube, or chopping vegetables.

Partly it’s about approaching the problem from innovative angles, and pointing your mind down interesting pathways to see what happens there. (What if this was a film? An illustration? A music video? An art installation?)

To do both of these things well, there’s a crucial element that allows your innate creativity to arrive at something wonderful. Input.

Input is a bit like when you create a moodboard as stimulus in a brainstorm session. Images, words, objects… they all spark off thoughts which can lead to something big.

What I’m suggesting is that rather than waiting for someone to bring you this kind of stimulus, you should be constantly seeking it out yourself. Filling your head with all sorts of weird and wonderful stuff, so that when someone presents you with a brief, a brand thought or position, a product, idea or story, you have a whole field of fertile ground and exciting bits and pieces in your head to make links with. Creativity is about playing connect the dots – and you can’t play connect the dots without any dots, no matter how good you are at drawing lines.

And I think that everything is interesting. Watch one episode of a random TV show you’d never normally watch to see what it sparks off in your head. Read up about an obscure medieval principality. Study art nouveau furniture. Analyse racing bike design. Anything and everything. This might sound silly, but you never know what you might be reminded of at some point, and what will spark off something new and beautiful. The most creative people actually refer back to old things when making something new.

“It reminds me of…”

“Have you seen…”

“What if we crossed…”

The more you’ve seen and remembered, the more sparks you can create, and the more great ideas you can be at the heart of.

This blog first appeared on, and was written for, Creative Huddle. http://www.creativehuddle.co.uk/2014/06/connect-dots/