John Kovacevich is a creative director and the founder of Agency SOS. He鈥檚 an alum of Goodby Silverstein & Partners, FCB, Duncan Channon, and others. He鈥檚 made campaigns for everything from cars to cat food, pants to pretzels, hamburgers to HR software.
John> As a child of the 70s, I consumed a LOT of commercials growing up, but it was a book that made me want to get into the industry: 鈥淥gilvy on Advertising.鈥
I bought it when I was in high school when it first came out and I devoured it. David Ogilvy鈥檚 lessons from those pages still kick around my brain.
A few years later, when I was in college and it was time to get my first internship, there was really only one agency on the list: Ogilvy & Mather. (It was there I learned a big lesson about agency life: But that鈥檚 a story for another time. 馃榾)
John> Ever fall in love with a song that you heard on a commercial?
One of my all-time favourites is the piano track on the .
The ad was made by (years before I worked there). It was directed by Matthias Zentner. Music was written by Christoph Blaser and Steffan Kahles and produced by
It鈥檚 a gorgeous spot. And it may be the most beautiful piece of ad music ever written. I loved it well before I worked in advertising鈥 and many years before I dreamed that I鈥檇 work with the folks who made it.
When I started working at GS&P, I asked about it and they said that it was so popular when it was released, the agency got lots of calls from people who wanted to play the song at their wedding.
While I was there, I tracked down a longer two-minute version of the track. And one of my favourite things to do was to put it on repeat on my headphones when I was tasked with writing my own anthem spots. (None of them ever lived up to that one, but the track inspired many a writing session.)
The tradition continues today. Whenever it鈥檚 time to write an anthem spot, I say, 鈥淚 think I鈥檒l listen to my old friend.鈥 and put it on. It's still great.
John> My first professional project is still one of my all-time favourites. (And not just because future princess Meghan Markle was in the spot.)
It was at Goodby Silverstein & Partners for Tostitos. I probably wrote a million different concepts and scripts before we sold 鈥,鈥 those little internal monologues we all do when we鈥檙e in the grocery store, considering what to buy.
Looking back, I鈥檓 especially grateful for the mentorship of the ACDs on that project: Marc Sobier and Hart Rusen. (I really didn鈥檛 know ANYTHING about commercial production before I got the gig at GS&P and they were infinitely patient, encouraging, and gracious.)
Plus, the spots were directed by wonderful Speck/Gordon! It was a pretty great 鈥渇irst ride鈥...and I naively thought all future projects would be as great. (Spoiler: they weren鈥檛. )
John> I know its influence is ubiquitous in ad land now, but I still remember how freakin鈥 DELIGHTED I was the first time I saw 鈥淒umb Ways to Die鈥 at Cannes Lions in 2013.
It was, and still is, the perfect combo of humour, animation, and music. It was catchy as hell (even after many repeat plays) and created characters that became valuable IP. Plus, I still can鈥檛 really believe that the agency sold a three-minute song as a way to promote train safety.
鈥淲ork that enters culture鈥 is such a tired trope, but this legit did and deserved all the flowers it received.
John> I made a lot of work that I am proud of, but it was an 鈥渋nternal鈥 project at Goodby Silverstein & Partners that probably did more to establish my reputation (and is still a thing that people ask me about, 15 years later.)
It was a weekly show we made for the agency called 鈥淢orning Announcements.鈥 It was sort of a Daily Show / Weekend Update-esque send-up of agency culture and news. ( of it a few years back for the 10-year anniversary.)
It was a side-project that put me on the radar for others in the agency and opened up opportunities on briefs and clients I never would have gotten otherwise. It taught me a ton about production and crafting a joke and making an audience happy. It taught me about the value of content that creates community and builds culture.
Plus, it was just鈥 fun. A chance to be funny and entertain and not worry so much about 鈥渢he rules鈥 of creating content.
John> We had a chance to help Element[AL] Wines launch their first-of-its-kind aluminium wine bottle.
There are a lot of wonderful, environmental benefits to aluminium, but the brief wasn鈥檛 鈥渟ell the eco credentials鈥 but rather, to make these sleek, silvery bottles a must-have accessory. We helped them come up with a launch campaign that owes more to fashion than vineyards鈥搉ot your traditional wine campaign for not your traditional wine.
And it was so fun to see it come to live in connected TV, social, spectacular out-of-home, and print in iconic magazines like Vogue and Elle.