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Archive for April, 2010

A review of 500 (Cinquecento) restaurant on Holloway Road, London N19

This restaurant really is a gem.  And I live reasonably close to it so I am a happy man.

The first time I was in there around 2 years ago and I found myself sitting in a table adjacent to Paul Whitehouse and Charlie Higson.  I hope they would regale with me tales and jokes but instead I chose to play it cool and pretend not to notice them.  Instead I fully focussed on the food that was being served.

The crab meat starter is amazing.  Furthermore, the main course of deep fried seafood was just out of this world.  I can’t quite remember all that was in there but I’m sure there were 4 different fillets  (and can’t be specific of what), numerous pieces of octopus, calamari, king prawns, mussels and more.  It is also a quite inexpensive restaurant with a brilliant selection of wines.

What I think makes this place so special is that it is run by two guys who actually work there every day.  They have a smile on their face and obviously have a big desire in their heart to serve great food.  I wish them all the best for the future with this wonderful restaurant.

A word of warning though – make sure you book well in advance.  The chances of turning up without  a reservation to get a table are extremely slim.  Although you could try lunchtime when it doesn’t seem as crowded.

500 Cinquecento Restaurant

500 on Urbanspoon

See some more reviews at Urban Spoon

New business on the frontline

Today saw the IPA launch its latest book, New business: A guide to life on the frontline. Here Helen Weisinger and Mark Robinson, the marketing directors at Fallon and Chick Smith Trott respectively and joint chairs of the IPA New Business Group, give an account of the role in the modern environment.

The thing is that we seem to be a dying breed and there are very few of us out there that want to make a career out of it.

It’s amazing that the role is still shrouded in mystery and can be treated like a dark art and is sadly perceived by some as the grubbier end of the business and a sales role rather than a marketing one.At the end of the day our job is to market our brand, the agency, adopting clever strategies to get ourselves on clients’ radars.

As things have toughened, it means agencies have to be cleverer and even more creative with their approach.  But as we see it, whatever the economy, there are two options. Retrench, or step forward into the bullets.
New business has always had these characteristics. You have to inspire those within and always keeping an eye on those outside.

But as clients have battened down the hatches and there’s less to share around, the last 18 months or so has meant agencies have had to be even more dogged.

Perversely, any new business person should thrive on these tough times – its diversity, its pressure, its exposure and above all its rate of change.

Gone are the days of lunches at The Ivy – although who you know definitely goes a long way – its now more competitive, more legislated and there’s even a new language to contend with. Pitches rarely move these days unless you’ve filled in an RFI, an RFP, a PPQ or appeared on an LLQ.

New Business used to be about being out and about, but now it’s as much about proposals and submissions that have to be turned around in days.

New Business people need to be able to combine the skills of being gregarious, sociable types who can get people motivated internally, build relationships externally (with consultants, journalists, prospects, influencers, etc) and network with people they’ve never even met, as well as skills more akin to planning – such as forming strategic responses in short timeframes to the demands of new business prospects.
Then there are the pitches themselves, where clients are asking more and more of agencies. The hoop jumping process is escalating, as indeed are the pitch costs and time.

It is rare that anyone makes the top of agencies without having earned their stripes in new business in one form or another.

It’s a path that must be taken if you want to reach the giddy heights of chief executive or managing director. That doesn’t mean you have to have worked as a new business director but it does meant that you need to have built yourself a reputation and appetite for new business and what it entails.  

The highs are brilliant because they are real highs – not just the winning but getting on a shortlist, being told you’re on the pitch, having a brilliant tissue session with the client and best of all maybe seeing work that just knocks your socks off and you just know you should win the business.

But of course new business isn’t just there for the good times. It’s our job to create energy and excitement, having lost the third pitch in a row – it’s about getting the agency back on its feet and off and running on the next.

In short though, it’s about having something interesting and relevant to say and at the right time. That coupled with a bit of who you know is a winning formula.

The current modus operandi of a full-blown pitch is expensive, time consuming and frankly an unrealistic benchmark of what it’s really like to work with an agency.

As an industry we should look to other ways of finding a new partner – for example the strategic workshop, the 48-hour pitch or the two-week pitch.

This piece was taken from Campaign

Win a private screening of Disney’s ‘The Princess and The Frog’

VILLAGE Hotels has partnered with Walt Disney to give one lucky winner a private screening of Disney’s latest feature animation ‘The Princess and The Frog’.

Teaming up with their digital marketing agency, Equator, VILLAGE Hotels are promoting the competition through a number of bespoke components embedded into their sites, plus an email to their database in order to drive traffic to a competition microsite.

The microsite, which was also produced by Equator, contains the competition mechanic along with a trailer of the feature animation and links to the online Disney store. Through the online store users can purchase items against which they are able to redeem their unique 15% off discount code that is automatically received on entering the competition.

“We have really enjoyed being involved in this project with VILLAGE Hotels”, says John McLeish, Equator’s Managing Director. “There is something magical about a Disney animation that makes us all feel like children again. The hand-drawn animation is fantastic and our Creative Team loved working with such high quality artwork, producing a great microsite and all the traffic driving components that really capture the spirit of the film and everything that a Disney animation embodies.”

Chris Fielding-Martin, Director of Online Sales & Marketing at VILLAGE Hotels says: “Working with an international brand with the stature and reputation of Disney is a challenge for any organisation. Given the excellent suite of assets for ‘The Princess and The Frog’ promotion I was confident that Equator would produce a fine piece of online promotional material. The execution of the assignment through account management, design and deployment was of a very high standard, resulting in an excellent web presentation, but I would expect nothing less from Equator.