Beyond the Boundaries

Yatsenyuk Billboard Campaign Perplexes, Eventually Charms


We're going to surprise a few people - and it certainly wasn't a unanimous opinion among our editorial staff - but we view the famous (or infamous) Arseniy Yatsenyuk billboard campaign as the most effective Ukrainian political advertising to come down the pike in quite some time.

Hold the brickbats. We have our reasons.  First, let's examine the ad.
Are the colors drab? Do they remind you of an aging military vehicle? Yes.

Does the stencil typography lack sophistication, even for a political ad? Absoliutely.
Is the candidate's image just a little reminiscent of the sinister Soviet secret police head and Stalin enforcer Lavrentiy Beria?  Is the copy - "To Save the Country" - over the top?   Correct on all counts.

So, what gives?

For the first few weeks after the billboard began sprouting up, we thought it was an abomination.  We hated it.  Four weeks into the campaign, we began seeing motives in the madness.  Then later, we asked whether this could be a stroke of brilliance.

The reason we named this column Beyond the Boundaries is to illustrate advertising that is either so bad or so good that it garners awareness beyond the ad itself. We believe the Yatsenyuk billboards, ostensibly the precursor to a full-fledged presidential campaign, meet our criteria.

Throughout the history of advertising, there have been ads that people loved to hate, but which elevated the product to market leader status.  Primarily, ads of this sort have been in the fast moving consumer goods category.

We don't know if this approach will work for Yatsenyuk, but we can't join the chorus that has called the billboard design a tactical, if not strategic, error.  It is memorable and it has been defining early in the campaign.

On our number scale, we give it a B+.  That's not bad for a political ad in Ukraine.

Trust Me


Our goal is for the magazine to be a useful learning tool for the marketing community. Our goal is for it to become a sounding board for all businesses in Ukraine when it comes to issues of communications.

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When it listed "10 countries in deep economic trouble" last April, US News & World Report magazine placed Ukraine third. Only Mexico and Pakistan ranked worse.

Group Hug


Facebook has 250 million users worldwide; 70,000 are in Ukraine. They are online five billion minutes a day. That's a lot of people spending a lot of time with other people they call friends.

The 12 Most Annoying Types of Facebook Users


The Friend-Padder. The average Facebook user has 120 friends on the site. Schmoozers and social butterflies - you know, the ones who make lifelong pals on the subway - might reasonably have 300 or 400

Scan This!


Businesses have been offering discount cards in Ukraine for at least seven years. Restaurants blazed the trail, followed by supermarkets, pharmacies and other service-oriented firms

Remember My Name


In the hospitality business, we primarily sell beds, just as airlines sell transportation, supermarkets sell food, and auto salons sell cars

The Conglomerate Disease


If there is an ad or PR agency that has ever been made better by being acquired by one of the conglomerates, then I think it must exist on some far-flung planet.

Quiet Meal
Beyond the Boundaries
Don't confuse charity with corporate social responsibility
Fast Forward
Ad Budgets Get the Axe
The Great Cartoon Caption Challenge
Strategic Approaches

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