He and David Kennedy were listed as number 22 on the Advertising Age 100 ad people of the 20th century. He was named one of America's 25 most intriguing entrepreneurs by Inc.
Wieden has been Oregon’s Professional of the Year, Oregon’s Entrepreneur of the Year, one of the world’s 50 CyberElite by Time magazine, and one of 32 members of the One Club Creative Hall of Fame.
Wieden is the founder of Caldera, a nonprofit arts education organization and camp for at-risk youth located in Sisters, Oregon.
Wieden is the 4th municipal District of Vienna, Austria (German: 4. Bezirk). It is near the centre of Vienna and was established as a district in 1850, but its borders were changed later. Wieden is a small region near the city centre.
After World War II, Wieden was part of the Soviet sector of Vienna for 10 years.
History
The name Wieden was first recorded in 1137, and is thus the oldest Vorstadt (former municipality within the Linienwall) of Vienna. The main street (Wiedner Hauptstraße) is certainly even older. The district was the site of the former royal Summer residence, which was completed under Ferdinand II, and was expanded many times until Maria Theresa sold it to the Jesuits. Today it is the Theresianum, a prestigious private boarding school, while the Diplomatic Academy of Vienna resides in a wing of the building.
In the beginning of 18th century, the development of Wieden as a suburb began. Many palaces and other buildings were built. Two small Vorstädte in the area of the present fourth district were Hungelbrunn and Schamburgergrund.
Dan Wieden on why Wieden+Kennedy will never sell out
You wouldn’t know it from his affable demeanour that Dan Wieden is a legendary figure in advertising, known to virtually every junior art director and copywriter worldwide. The “Wieden” in Wieden+Kennedy, one of the world’s largest independent ad agencies, he is responsible for Nike’s “Just Do It” tagline. Here, the advertising veteran shares his feelings on his company’s success and the importance of breeding a culture of chaos.
From a small basement room in Portland, Oregon to a network of offices worldwide, Wieden+Kennedy can now boast 33 years of independence and a portfolio of work with an irreverent approach to branding. How have they done it?
Wieden puts it down to the culture he and his partner, David Kennedy, first created to retain the talented people working at the company in...
published: 16 May 2016
Dan Wieden (Part 1): We started by ignoring the rules of advertising
How a mutual disregard for traditional advertising kickstarted Wieden + Kennedy and Nike’s success.
“We were pretty stupid when we began,” says Dan Wieden, co-founder of one of the largest independent ad agencies in the world, Weiden + Kennedy. “Our client [Nike] didn’t know what to do with us either. So between Nike and Wieden + Kennedy we kind of just ignored the rules of advertising such as we’d heard them.”
Ignoring these rules meant that Wieden + Kennedy had to invent unusual advertising strategies and offer clients unexpected ideas. Its bold approach enabled the agency to survive on the edge and birthed breakthrough advertising campaigns for brands such as Nike.
The agency’s intrepid spirit could be summed up in the tagline it famously coined for Nike. Wieden came up with “Just...
published: 30 Apr 2015
Wieden+Kennedy Gary Vaynerchuk Keynote | London 2016
This is a keynote talk on the current state of marketing, TV, social media, and channel distribution I gave to executives at WIEDEN+KENNEDY one of the top advertising shops in the world.
for all of my keynotes on marketing in the year we live in watch HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfA33-E9P7FCEF1izpctGGoak841XYzrJ
--
Gary Vaynerchuk builds businesses. Fresh out of college he took his family wine business and grew it from a $3M to a $60M business in just five years. Now he runs VaynerMedia, one of the world's hottest digital agencies. Along the way he became a prolific angel investor and venture capitalist, investing in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Uber, and Birchbox before eventually co-founding VaynerRSE, a $25M angel fund.
The #AskGaryVee Show is Gary's wa...
published: 10 Jun 2016
Wieden+Kennedy's "Dream Crazy" — The One Show 2019 Print & Outdoor Best of Discipline
published: 12 May 2019
Colleen DeCourcy, Wieden+Kennedy on Brand Building in the 21st Century
Colleen DeCourcy, Chief Creative Officer, Wieden+Kennedy discusses brand building in the 21st century at the 2018 IAB Annual Leadership Meeting.
published: 15 Feb 2018
Wieden+Kennedy on Inspiration
Andrew Galak, Campaign US interviews Dave Luhr and Colleen Decourcy of Wieden + Kennedy at Cannes Lions 2015.
published: 30 Jun 2015
WIEDEŃ | Przewodnik | Co warto zobaczyć w Wiedniu?
Co można zwiedzić w Wiedniu w 1 dzień? Zobacz nasz praktyczny przewodnik po Wiedniu. Sprawdź co warto zobaczyć w Wiedniu. Pokazuję najważniejsze zabytki Wiednia (plac Św. Szczepana, Dom Mozarta, Hofburg, Prater, stadion itp).
Gdzie nocować w Wiedniu? Polecam Ci miejsce w którym nocowali moi znajomi:
https://goo.gl/7NxMx5 lub https://goo.gl/uiUpHM
Byłeś w Wiedniu? Daj znać co można jeszcze tam na szybko zobaczyć :) Niech inni skorzystają z Twojej wiedzy.
Na skróty:
1:05 - Plac św. Szczepana
2:06 - Dom Mozarta
2:48 - Hofburg
3:36 - Muzeum Historii Naturalnej
4:12 - Ratusz w Wiedniu
4:39 - Budynek Parlamentu
4:52 - Pomnik Mozarta
5:04 - Pomnik Johanna Straussa
5:30 - Wiedeński koncert noworoczny
5:57 - Park Prater / Wesołe miasteczko
7:15 - Stadion Erst-Happel
7:45 - Co można zobaczyć ...
You wouldn’t know it from his affable demeanour that Dan Wieden is a legendary figure in advertising, known to virtually every junior art director and copywrite...
You wouldn’t know it from his affable demeanour that Dan Wieden is a legendary figure in advertising, known to virtually every junior art director and copywriter worldwide. The “Wieden” in Wieden+Kennedy, one of the world’s largest independent ad agencies, he is responsible for Nike’s “Just Do It” tagline. Here, the advertising veteran shares his feelings on his company’s success and the importance of breeding a culture of chaos.
From a small basement room in Portland, Oregon to a network of offices worldwide, Wieden+Kennedy can now boast 33 years of independence and a portfolio of work with an irreverent approach to branding. How have they done it?
Wieden puts it down to the culture he and his partner, David Kennedy, first created to retain the talented people working at the company in its early days. When shareholders in the agency stopped dishing out fat salaries, the young founders had to come up with a reason to make everyone stay. Wieden tells the audience that their solution was to “create a culture that’s so damn weird, so wild, so sticky that it would hurt your very soul to leave the place”.
It was of utmost importance that employees didn’t feel like employees, he says. The working environment needed to inspire people and allow each person the freedom to express themselves without fear of failure. They were all given “permission to fail” – an idea that continues to be propagated throughout the company today.
Where most big ad firms have a wall dedicated to their shiny awards, Wieden+Kennedy has a wall of photos in tribute to the weird and wonderful people who work there.
When a bunch of hungry creative individuals is handed a licence to mess up as much as they like, the confines of creativity are invariably stretched. Any sense of authority and order goes out the window and what ensues is a culture of chaos. Wieden recognises “chaos” as a state of deconstruction that challenges comfort zones and demands creativity, as opposed to “order”, which thrives off structure and formality.
“I have sworn in private and in public that we will never, ever sell the agency. It just isn’t fair that, once sold, a handful of people will walk off with big gobs of money and those left behind will either face salary cuts or be fired, and the culture will be destroyed,” said Wieden.
He ended with this bold statement: “The partners and I got together a couple of years ago, took our shares and put them in a trust. A trust whose only obligation is to never, ever, under no circumstances, sell the agency.”
His announcement was a moment in advertising history, delivered almost spontaneously on stage at Design Indaba. It sent ripples of applause through the audience – and reverberated through the ad industry worldwide.
Wieden+Kennedy is where it is today because of this unique working culture, which cultivates a troop of gutsy, free thinkers and in turn, a legacy of provocative and thoughtful campaigns.
You wouldn’t know it from his affable demeanour that Dan Wieden is a legendary figure in advertising, known to virtually every junior art director and copywriter worldwide. The “Wieden” in Wieden+Kennedy, one of the world’s largest independent ad agencies, he is responsible for Nike’s “Just Do It” tagline. Here, the advertising veteran shares his feelings on his company’s success and the importance of breeding a culture of chaos.
From a small basement room in Portland, Oregon to a network of offices worldwide, Wieden+Kennedy can now boast 33 years of independence and a portfolio of work with an irreverent approach to branding. How have they done it?
Wieden puts it down to the culture he and his partner, David Kennedy, first created to retain the talented people working at the company in its early days. When shareholders in the agency stopped dishing out fat salaries, the young founders had to come up with a reason to make everyone stay. Wieden tells the audience that their solution was to “create a culture that’s so damn weird, so wild, so sticky that it would hurt your very soul to leave the place”.
It was of utmost importance that employees didn’t feel like employees, he says. The working environment needed to inspire people and allow each person the freedom to express themselves without fear of failure. They were all given “permission to fail” – an idea that continues to be propagated throughout the company today.
Where most big ad firms have a wall dedicated to their shiny awards, Wieden+Kennedy has a wall of photos in tribute to the weird and wonderful people who work there.
When a bunch of hungry creative individuals is handed a licence to mess up as much as they like, the confines of creativity are invariably stretched. Any sense of authority and order goes out the window and what ensues is a culture of chaos. Wieden recognises “chaos” as a state of deconstruction that challenges comfort zones and demands creativity, as opposed to “order”, which thrives off structure and formality.
“I have sworn in private and in public that we will never, ever sell the agency. It just isn’t fair that, once sold, a handful of people will walk off with big gobs of money and those left behind will either face salary cuts or be fired, and the culture will be destroyed,” said Wieden.
He ended with this bold statement: “The partners and I got together a couple of years ago, took our shares and put them in a trust. A trust whose only obligation is to never, ever, under no circumstances, sell the agency.”
His announcement was a moment in advertising history, delivered almost spontaneously on stage at Design Indaba. It sent ripples of applause through the audience – and reverberated through the ad industry worldwide.
Wieden+Kennedy is where it is today because of this unique working culture, which cultivates a troop of gutsy, free thinkers and in turn, a legacy of provocative and thoughtful campaigns.
How a mutual disregard for traditional advertising kickstarted Wieden + Kennedy and Nike’s success.
“We were pretty stupid when we began,” says Dan Wieden, co...
How a mutual disregard for traditional advertising kickstarted Wieden + Kennedy and Nike’s success.
“We were pretty stupid when we began,” says Dan Wieden, co-founder of one of the largest independent ad agencies in the world, Weiden + Kennedy. “Our client [Nike] didn’t know what to do with us either. So between Nike and Wieden + Kennedy we kind of just ignored the rules of advertising such as we’d heard them.”
Ignoring these rules meant that Wieden + Kennedy had to invent unusual advertising strategies and offer clients unexpected ideas. Its bold approach enabled the agency to survive on the edge and birthed breakthrough advertising campaigns for brands such as Nike.
The agency’s intrepid spirit could be summed up in the tagline it famously coined for Nike. Wieden came up with “Just do it” after hearing about Gary Gilmore, a troubled young man who was executed by firing squad for murdering an elderly couple. Before the executioners put the hood over his head, they asked him if he had any last words. Gilmore said, “Let’s do it.”
Wieden says the line “just touched people in a ways that had nothing to do with athletics even. It was just a sense of taking on your life, taking it head on. Whatever is coming.”
Wieden credits the success of the agency, which now has offices in seven countries, to its ragtag army of employees – “people fresh out of school or people who’ve been fired everywhere else”.
How a mutual disregard for traditional advertising kickstarted Wieden + Kennedy and Nike’s success.
“We were pretty stupid when we began,” says Dan Wieden, co-founder of one of the largest independent ad agencies in the world, Weiden + Kennedy. “Our client [Nike] didn’t know what to do with us either. So between Nike and Wieden + Kennedy we kind of just ignored the rules of advertising such as we’d heard them.”
Ignoring these rules meant that Wieden + Kennedy had to invent unusual advertising strategies and offer clients unexpected ideas. Its bold approach enabled the agency to survive on the edge and birthed breakthrough advertising campaigns for brands such as Nike.
The agency’s intrepid spirit could be summed up in the tagline it famously coined for Nike. Wieden came up with “Just do it” after hearing about Gary Gilmore, a troubled young man who was executed by firing squad for murdering an elderly couple. Before the executioners put the hood over his head, they asked him if he had any last words. Gilmore said, “Let’s do it.”
Wieden says the line “just touched people in a ways that had nothing to do with athletics even. It was just a sense of taking on your life, taking it head on. Whatever is coming.”
Wieden credits the success of the agency, which now has offices in seven countries, to its ragtag army of employees – “people fresh out of school or people who’ve been fired everywhere else”.
This is a keynote talk on the current state of marketing, TV, social media, and channel distribution I gave to executives at WIEDEN+KENNEDY one of the top adver...
This is a keynote talk on the current state of marketing, TV, social media, and channel distribution I gave to executives at WIEDEN+KENNEDY one of the top advertising shops in the world.
for all of my keynotes on marketing in the year we live in watch HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfA33-E9P7FCEF1izpctGGoak841XYzrJ
--
Gary Vaynerchuk builds businesses. Fresh out of college he took his family wine business and grew it from a $3M to a $60M business in just five years. Now he runs VaynerMedia, one of the world's hottest digital agencies. Along the way he became a prolific angel investor and venture capitalist, investing in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Uber, and Birchbox before eventually co-founding VaynerRSE, a $25M angel fund.
The #AskGaryVee Show is Gary's way of providing as much value value as possible by taking your questions about social media, entrepreneurship, startups, and family businesses and giving you his answers based on a lifetime of building successful, multi-million dollar companies.
Gary is also a prolific public speaker, delivering keynotes at events like Le Web, and SXSW, which you can watch right here on this channel.
Find Gary here:
Website: http://garyvaynerchuk.com
Wine Library: http://winelibrary.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/gary
Snapchat: garyvee
Twitter: http://twitter.com/garyvee
Instagram: http://instagram.com/garyvee
Medium: http://medium.com/@garyvee
This is a keynote talk on the current state of marketing, TV, social media, and channel distribution I gave to executives at WIEDEN+KENNEDY one of the top advertising shops in the world.
for all of my keynotes on marketing in the year we live in watch HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfA33-E9P7FCEF1izpctGGoak841XYzrJ
--
Gary Vaynerchuk builds businesses. Fresh out of college he took his family wine business and grew it from a $3M to a $60M business in just five years. Now he runs VaynerMedia, one of the world's hottest digital agencies. Along the way he became a prolific angel investor and venture capitalist, investing in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Uber, and Birchbox before eventually co-founding VaynerRSE, a $25M angel fund.
The #AskGaryVee Show is Gary's way of providing as much value value as possible by taking your questions about social media, entrepreneurship, startups, and family businesses and giving you his answers based on a lifetime of building successful, multi-million dollar companies.
Gary is also a prolific public speaker, delivering keynotes at events like Le Web, and SXSW, which you can watch right here on this channel.
Find Gary here:
Website: http://garyvaynerchuk.com
Wine Library: http://winelibrary.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/gary
Snapchat: garyvee
Twitter: http://twitter.com/garyvee
Instagram: http://instagram.com/garyvee
Medium: http://medium.com/@garyvee
Co można zwiedzić w Wiedniu w 1 dzień? Zobacz nasz praktyczny przewodnik po Wiedniu. Sprawdź co warto zobaczyć w Wiedniu. Pokazuję najważniejsze zabytki Wiednia...
Co można zwiedzić w Wiedniu w 1 dzień? Zobacz nasz praktyczny przewodnik po Wiedniu. Sprawdź co warto zobaczyć w Wiedniu. Pokazuję najważniejsze zabytki Wiednia (plac Św. Szczepana, Dom Mozarta, Hofburg, Prater, stadion itp).
Gdzie nocować w Wiedniu? Polecam Ci miejsce w którym nocowali moi znajomi:
https://goo.gl/7NxMx5 lub https://goo.gl/uiUpHM
Byłeś w Wiedniu? Daj znać co można jeszcze tam na szybko zobaczyć :) Niech inni skorzystają z Twojej wiedzy.
Na skróty:
1:05 - Plac św. Szczepana
2:06 - Dom Mozarta
2:48 - Hofburg
3:36 - Muzeum Historii Naturalnej
4:12 - Ratusz w Wiedniu
4:39 - Budynek Parlamentu
4:52 - Pomnik Mozarta
5:04 - Pomnik Johanna Straussa
5:30 - Wiedeński koncert noworoczny
5:57 - Park Prater / Wesołe miasteczko
7:15 - Stadion Erst-Happel
7:45 - Co można zobaczyć w Wiedniu przez 2 dni?
Kliknij, aby subskrybować kanał ► https://goo.gl/P75gVt
Instagram ►https://www.instagram.com/restandtravel_official
Facebook ► https://Facebook.com/RestAndTravel
www ► http://www.restandtravel.eu
Mail w sprawie pytań i wątpliwości ► [email protected]
Co można zwiedzić w Wiedniu w 1 dzień? Zobacz nasz praktyczny przewodnik po Wiedniu. Sprawdź co warto zobaczyć w Wiedniu. Pokazuję najważniejsze zabytki Wiednia (plac Św. Szczepana, Dom Mozarta, Hofburg, Prater, stadion itp).
Gdzie nocować w Wiedniu? Polecam Ci miejsce w którym nocowali moi znajomi:
https://goo.gl/7NxMx5 lub https://goo.gl/uiUpHM
Byłeś w Wiedniu? Daj znać co można jeszcze tam na szybko zobaczyć :) Niech inni skorzystają z Twojej wiedzy.
Na skróty:
1:05 - Plac św. Szczepana
2:06 - Dom Mozarta
2:48 - Hofburg
3:36 - Muzeum Historii Naturalnej
4:12 - Ratusz w Wiedniu
4:39 - Budynek Parlamentu
4:52 - Pomnik Mozarta
5:04 - Pomnik Johanna Straussa
5:30 - Wiedeński koncert noworoczny
5:57 - Park Prater / Wesołe miasteczko
7:15 - Stadion Erst-Happel
7:45 - Co można zobaczyć w Wiedniu przez 2 dni?
Kliknij, aby subskrybować kanał ► https://goo.gl/P75gVt
Instagram ►https://www.instagram.com/restandtravel_official
Facebook ► https://Facebook.com/RestAndTravel
www ► http://www.restandtravel.eu
Mail w sprawie pytań i wątpliwości ► [email protected]
You wouldn’t know it from his affable demeanour that Dan Wieden is a legendary figure in advertising, known to virtually every junior art director and copywriter worldwide. The “Wieden” in Wieden+Kennedy, one of the world’s largest independent ad agencies, he is responsible for Nike’s “Just Do It” tagline. Here, the advertising veteran shares his feelings on his company’s success and the importance of breeding a culture of chaos.
From a small basement room in Portland, Oregon to a network of offices worldwide, Wieden+Kennedy can now boast 33 years of independence and a portfolio of work with an irreverent approach to branding. How have they done it?
Wieden puts it down to the culture he and his partner, David Kennedy, first created to retain the talented people working at the company in its early days. When shareholders in the agency stopped dishing out fat salaries, the young founders had to come up with a reason to make everyone stay. Wieden tells the audience that their solution was to “create a culture that’s so damn weird, so wild, so sticky that it would hurt your very soul to leave the place”.
It was of utmost importance that employees didn’t feel like employees, he says. The working environment needed to inspire people and allow each person the freedom to express themselves without fear of failure. They were all given “permission to fail” – an idea that continues to be propagated throughout the company today.
Where most big ad firms have a wall dedicated to their shiny awards, Wieden+Kennedy has a wall of photos in tribute to the weird and wonderful people who work there.
When a bunch of hungry creative individuals is handed a licence to mess up as much as they like, the confines of creativity are invariably stretched. Any sense of authority and order goes out the window and what ensues is a culture of chaos. Wieden recognises “chaos” as a state of deconstruction that challenges comfort zones and demands creativity, as opposed to “order”, which thrives off structure and formality.
“I have sworn in private and in public that we will never, ever sell the agency. It just isn’t fair that, once sold, a handful of people will walk off with big gobs of money and those left behind will either face salary cuts or be fired, and the culture will be destroyed,” said Wieden.
He ended with this bold statement: “The partners and I got together a couple of years ago, took our shares and put them in a trust. A trust whose only obligation is to never, ever, under no circumstances, sell the agency.”
His announcement was a moment in advertising history, delivered almost spontaneously on stage at Design Indaba. It sent ripples of applause through the audience – and reverberated through the ad industry worldwide.
Wieden+Kennedy is where it is today because of this unique working culture, which cultivates a troop of gutsy, free thinkers and in turn, a legacy of provocative and thoughtful campaigns.
How a mutual disregard for traditional advertising kickstarted Wieden + Kennedy and Nike’s success.
“We were pretty stupid when we began,” says Dan Wieden, co-founder of one of the largest independent ad agencies in the world, Weiden + Kennedy. “Our client [Nike] didn’t know what to do with us either. So between Nike and Wieden + Kennedy we kind of just ignored the rules of advertising such as we’d heard them.”
Ignoring these rules meant that Wieden + Kennedy had to invent unusual advertising strategies and offer clients unexpected ideas. Its bold approach enabled the agency to survive on the edge and birthed breakthrough advertising campaigns for brands such as Nike.
The agency’s intrepid spirit could be summed up in the tagline it famously coined for Nike. Wieden came up with “Just do it” after hearing about Gary Gilmore, a troubled young man who was executed by firing squad for murdering an elderly couple. Before the executioners put the hood over his head, they asked him if he had any last words. Gilmore said, “Let’s do it.”
Wieden says the line “just touched people in a ways that had nothing to do with athletics even. It was just a sense of taking on your life, taking it head on. Whatever is coming.”
Wieden credits the success of the agency, which now has offices in seven countries, to its ragtag army of employees – “people fresh out of school or people who’ve been fired everywhere else”.
This is a keynote talk on the current state of marketing, TV, social media, and channel distribution I gave to executives at WIEDEN+KENNEDY one of the top advertising shops in the world.
for all of my keynotes on marketing in the year we live in watch HERE:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLfA33-E9P7FCEF1izpctGGoak841XYzrJ
--
Gary Vaynerchuk builds businesses. Fresh out of college he took his family wine business and grew it from a $3M to a $60M business in just five years. Now he runs VaynerMedia, one of the world's hottest digital agencies. Along the way he became a prolific angel investor and venture capitalist, investing in companies like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Uber, and Birchbox before eventually co-founding VaynerRSE, a $25M angel fund.
The #AskGaryVee Show is Gary's way of providing as much value value as possible by taking your questions about social media, entrepreneurship, startups, and family businesses and giving you his answers based on a lifetime of building successful, multi-million dollar companies.
Gary is also a prolific public speaker, delivering keynotes at events like Le Web, and SXSW, which you can watch right here on this channel.
Find Gary here:
Website: http://garyvaynerchuk.com
Wine Library: http://winelibrary.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/gary
Snapchat: garyvee
Twitter: http://twitter.com/garyvee
Instagram: http://instagram.com/garyvee
Medium: http://medium.com/@garyvee
Co można zwiedzić w Wiedniu w 1 dzień? Zobacz nasz praktyczny przewodnik po Wiedniu. Sprawdź co warto zobaczyć w Wiedniu. Pokazuję najważniejsze zabytki Wiednia (plac Św. Szczepana, Dom Mozarta, Hofburg, Prater, stadion itp).
Gdzie nocować w Wiedniu? Polecam Ci miejsce w którym nocowali moi znajomi:
https://goo.gl/7NxMx5 lub https://goo.gl/uiUpHM
Byłeś w Wiedniu? Daj znać co można jeszcze tam na szybko zobaczyć :) Niech inni skorzystają z Twojej wiedzy.
Na skróty:
1:05 - Plac św. Szczepana
2:06 - Dom Mozarta
2:48 - Hofburg
3:36 - Muzeum Historii Naturalnej
4:12 - Ratusz w Wiedniu
4:39 - Budynek Parlamentu
4:52 - Pomnik Mozarta
5:04 - Pomnik Johanna Straussa
5:30 - Wiedeński koncert noworoczny
5:57 - Park Prater / Wesołe miasteczko
7:15 - Stadion Erst-Happel
7:45 - Co można zobaczyć w Wiedniu przez 2 dni?
Kliknij, aby subskrybować kanał ► https://goo.gl/P75gVt
Instagram ►https://www.instagram.com/restandtravel_official
Facebook ► https://Facebook.com/RestAndTravel
www ► http://www.restandtravel.eu
Mail w sprawie pytań i wątpliwości ► [email protected]
He and David Kennedy were listed as number 22 on the Advertising Age 100 ad people of the 20th century. He was named one of America's 25 most intriguing entrepreneurs by Inc.
Wieden has been Oregon’s Professional of the Year, Oregon’s Entrepreneur of the Year, one of the world’s 50 CyberElite by Time magazine, and one of 32 members of the One Club Creative Hall of Fame.
Wieden is the founder of Caldera, a nonprofit arts education organization and camp for at-risk youth located in Sisters, Oregon.
When you're alone And life is making you lonely You can always go Down town. When you've got worries All the noise and the hurry Seems to hurt, I know. Down town. Just listen to the music of the traffic in the city, Linger on the sidewalks where the neon signs are pretty. How can you lose ? The lights are much brighter there, You can forget all your troubles, forget all your cares And go down town. Things will be great when you're Down town. No finer place for sure, Down town. Everything's waiting for you. Don't hang around And let your problems surround you, There are movie shows Down town. Maybe you know Some little places to go To where they never close, Down town. Just listen to the rhythm of the gentle bossa-nova, You'll be dancing with them, too, before the night is over, Happy again. The lights are much brighter there, You can forget all your troubles, forget all your cares And go down town. Where all the lights are bright Down town. Waiting for you tonight Down town. You're gonna be all right now. And you may find Somebody kind To help and understand you, Someone who is just like you And needs a gentle hand To guide him along. So maybe I'll see you there, We can forget all our troubles, forget all our cares And go down town. Things will be great when you're Down town. Don't wait a minute more, Down town. Everything's waiting for you.
Just as Dan Wieden, the advertising visionary behind Nike’s iconic slogan, put it, sometimes, the only thing left to do is “Just Do It.” Take the leap, follow the dream, and make your travel ambitions a reality. The world is waiting. .
"This was connected to this belief that Dan (Wieden) and David (Kennedy) had that creativity can come from anywhere. It's about the power of your voice. It's about the power of authenticity, the power of unique style." ....
When you hear the words "Just Do It," which company do you think of? ... The slogan, coined by Dan Wieden, co-founder of the ad agency Wieden+Kennedy a 1988 ad campaign, was chosen by Advertising Age as one of the top five ad slogans of the 20th century.
But the biggest single win goes to The Monkeys, part of Accenture Song, which on Friday picked up the Grand Prix in the coveted Dan Wieden Titanium Lions category for its work to help Tuvalu legally create a fully digital version of itself ... 2% ... .
Welcome to Day Four of Ad Age’s CannesToday newsletter. Reading online and want it delivered straight to your inbox? Sign up here. For real-time updates, follow our live blog ... AI overload ... 8 at Wieden+Kennedy, on founders Dan Wieden and David Kennedy.
Five years later it had hit $2.2 billion in sales each year ... He made him the new face of Nike's "Just Do It" campaign, originally conceived by Dan Wieden in 1988 as a paean to what he saw as the company's "willingness to f--- something up." ... CREDITS.