The advertising concept book. Think now, design later

Título:

The advertising concept book. Think now, design later

Autor, etc.:

Barry, Pete

Fecha de publicación:

2016

Editorial:

Thames & Hudson London

Número de páginas:

320 p.

Nota general:

Incluye glosario, Incluye bibliografía. Incluye índice analítico

Idioma:

Inglés

Formato:

il.,fig.,

Tipo de documento:

texto impreso

Tipo de medio:

Libro

ISBN/ISSN/DL:

978-0-500-51894-4

Clasificación:

659.1 Publicidad

Palabras claves:

SOCIAL MEDIA, ADVERTISING, CREATIVE IDEAS, STRATEGIES, CAMPAIGNS, BRANDED

Descripción:

This is the third edition of the highly successful Advertising Concept Book. As well as substantially expanded chapters on interactive advertising and integrated advertising, an entirely new chapter on branded social media has been added. This new edition contains fifty specially drawn new illustrations of key campaigns. It covers every aspect of the business, from how to write copy and learn the creative process to how agencies work and the different strategies used for all types of media. Pete Barry outlines simple but fundamental rules about how to ‘push’ an ad to turn it into something exceptional, while exercises throughout will help readers assess their own work and that of others. Fifty years’ worth of international, award-winning ad campaigns – in the form of over 500 ‘roughs’ specially sketched by the author – also reinforce the book’s core lesson: that a great idea will last forever. Pete Barry goes straight to the essence of how to write a great ad: work out what you want to say, who you are saying it to, and how you want to say it. Table of Contents 1: Basic Tools; 2: The Strategy; 3: Print; 4: The Campaign; 5: The Tagline; 6: Generating Strategies & Ideas; 7: TV; 8: Ambient; 9: Interactive; 10: Social; 11: Copy; 12: Radio; 13: Integrated; 14: Execution; 15: Presenting & Selling Your Work; 16: The Student Book; 17: Conclusion

Código Ubicación

659.1 B279 BG13773

Biblioteca Central Bloque B

The advertising concept book. Think now, design later