In the advertising world, producing a commercial that runs
during the Super Bowl is like, well, winning the Super Bowl. When
creative director Bill Cochran pitched an idea that Bridgestone Tires
liked enough to air during the 2010 game, it was a career-defining
moment."It was huge," said Cochran. "To have something
on the biggest stage for advertising meant the world to me." Cochran was
soon to have another career-defining moment. It involved coming up with
a new spot for Bridgestone's Super Bowl campaign the following year.
Bill's
boss at the Dallas-based Richards Group sent out a mass email to more
than one hundred creative
directors, art directors, copy writers and
producers at the agency, assigning them to teams that would compete
against one another to come up with a winning campaign.
"On
something as juicy as a Super Bowl spot, it, it gets a little more
cutthroat around here," admitted Cochran. "I just saw that list and I
was like, 'Okay, we gotta get fired up.'"
Intending only to
inspire his art director, Patrick Murray, Cochran sent out an email
rating their competition. In it he used language that can only be
described as colorful. "There are words you might say in a locker room
about another team," explained Cochran, "And there are words you might
say at a press conference. I used locker room words."
After
sending the email Cochran went about his day until he got a phone call
minutes later from a copywriter named Wendy Mayes."Oh, God, Bill!" a
horrified Mayes told Cochran. "You sent that to all! You replied to
all!"
"Within moments, "said Cochran, "you could hear some cackles and laughter."
Cochran's
R-rated email had been sent to more than one hundred people, many of
whom were described unfavorably in it. Some of them felt compelled to
write back to Cochran. "The most memorable," recalled Cochran, "Was just
the one-word email that just said, 'Moron.'"
But the
17-year-veteran creative director had more than his reputation to worry
about. He also had his career. "I'm gonna get fired for this," a
panicked Cochran thought at the time. "I'm gonna lose my job, I'm gonna
have to move, I'm gonna have to start over. I have undone all of this in
one stupid click."
Not so, said his boss, Richards Group founder
Stan Richards. "You don't get fired for making a mistake," said
Richards of his agency. "You accept mistakes, you accept going in a
wrong direction, you accept taking risk, and then living with the
consequences of that."
Cochran's marching orders from Richards
were simply to get to work. After brainstorming a number of concepts for
a Super Bowl spot, Cochran had a light bulb moment.
He went to
the clients with a fresh idea: to shoot a commercial about a guy who
believes he mistakenly hit "reply all" in an email response and then
races around in his car - which of course, runs on Bridgestone tires -
trying to stop colleagues from seeing the email.
"This is the
funniest commercial I've ever done," says Cochran. "In advertising, you
always try to search for universal truths. If it hasn't happened to you,
on some measure, usually someone knows someone it has happened to."
Bridgestone
Tire executives liked the "Reply All" idea, so Cochran and his team
produced the spot. It ran during the 2011 Super Bowl. Lesson learned,
Cochran now says he reveals his innermost thoughts only one way: "In
person."
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