Author Archive

Conan O’Brien

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Yesterday, thanks to NBC 5 in West Palm Beach, a couple of people from Omni had the priveledge of meeting Conan O’Brien.

We learned about his vision for The Tonight Show,  asked some questions and took some pics.

First, he said the Tonight Show will be a little different from his Late Show. Some characters and sketches will not appear during the 11:30 slot in an effort to appeal to a wider audience. He didn’t elaborate on which sketches will not appear, but one can guess Masturbating Bear and Horny Manatees will not be a staple on Conan’s Tonight Show. Conan did mention the Year 2000 will continue.

I was only able to ask one question and I wisely wasted it on a Simpson’s question: Is John Swartzwelder real? Conan responded, “He’s surreal. A surreal talent and very real.”

As for the picks, you can view them after the jump.

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Random Office Pictures

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Right now in Omni country, we just finished preparing a proposal for a very hush-hush potential client. We’ve got high hopes and expectations. We also have our fingers crossed for good measure. But the proposal allowed me the opportunity to take some candid pictures of the people in our office.

Without further ado, because I know you’re just dying to see what we look like, here are some people from around the office. Just click on the thumbnails below.

Dan helping Steve Fearless Leaders

Jake Hamby Rachael Case

Adam Lopez & Rachael Case Tia Larsen

Deck of Cards

Thursday, January 29th, 2009
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The new Lexus ES is so smooth… How smooth is it?… It’s so smooth it won’t knock down a giant city of cards when the engine is running. Wow! What a terribly literal joke for a terrific lateral thinking commercial.

You can see how they created the ad here.

From Adfreak.

Payments You Need

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009
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After posting an over 600 word rambling rant, I’m going to keep this post nice and breezy. The above spot is an ad that is currently running for the South Florida Honda Dealers. The ad plays up both the low down payment and monthly payments currently available on Hondas.

Some food for thought. When advertising low payments, keep in mind that most customers don’t have a lot of money to put down right now. Ads that have low payments but a high down payment will bring in traffic but ultimately make customers angry.

Sacrifice

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

Originally I was going to post about this article from Ad Age. Basically, Ford is consolidating all of its brands under one umbrella so to speak. But I couldn’t. I couldn’t write that post. My mind has been consumed, for much of the day, on one thing, sacrifice.

Right now you can’t turn the corner without being smacked in the face with more depressing news about the economy. It seems that a company’s first reaction is to layoff employees to keep the business afloat. However, the first reaction the company really had was indifference.

Let me explain. The economy has been heading downhill for quite some time. It did not become this way overnight. When the economy first started its tumble, comapnies could have altered their business strategy or model. They could have made some changes. But, for the most part, companies stayed with the same plan they’ve had for years.

Look at the newspaper business. The newspaper is quickly fading away, going down the path of Morse code and the pigeon carrier for how news is spread. A few years ago, they could have jumped online and changed their business model. But most papers kept true to their history and shunned the online community. Where they have failed, blogs have thrived.

Now, newspapers are moving online and are posting high readership. For some newspapers though, it may be too late.

Of course, hindsight is 20/20 and it seems obvious that newspapers should have made the move online a long time ago. But I guarantee there are many things at your business, at your dealership even in your personal life that you wish you would have done.

So why don’t we do it? Well, one reason is the fear of failure. People are crippled by this. No one wants to go out on a limb, take a chance and then fail. But if we never failed, how would we learn? The Japanese consider every failure a gift. They view every failure as a learning experinece. By learning from your failures, from your mistakes, you can better ensure that you won’t fall off that limb again.

Another reason (and there are many more than these two) is sacrifice. Anyone can put up a website, anyone can offer a sale, but it takes sacrifice do it the right way. Most people just go through the motions. They put up the Facebook account, but they don’t update it. They offer the sale in their advertising but don’t explain it to their salespeople. Why? Because they have to sacrifice their time to do it.

In fact, everything takes sacrifice. That’s why diets are a multi-billion dollar industry. People don’t want to sacrifice their time, TV or food to be in shape. They want the do-it-all pill.They want to set it and forget it. They want the gimmick.

Anything that is worth having in life does not come easy. It takes hard work. It takes change. It takes sacrifice. But until you’re ready, you will never move to where you want to be. No one just wakes up and works off their God given talent. Athletes train. Students study. These are all forms of sacrifice.

The ball is now in your court. You can continue to do what you are doing. You can stay on the same path. Or you can make some sacrifices. Start working a little more. Start reading a little more. Start giving up some things you cling to and gain much, much more.

Sorry for the rambling. I didn’t draft out this post. I just wanted to speak from the top of my head. Let me know what you think. And in no way shape or form do I think our current economic crisis could have been avoided if people would have sacrificed. But I do think people and companies would have been better prepared.