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DIGO Brands CNET

POSTED BY Team DIGO | September 1, 2010 3:33 pm | PERMALINK


offlining_xoxoAugust 30, 2010 CNET.com

Click, send, call, text, Like, tweet, undo, reset, delete… it just doesn’t end. Which is why a couple of marketing guys are dubbing September 18 “No Device Day” for consumers who might be too involved with their gadgets.

Though the idea of dedicating an entire day to shutting devices off may seem silly (or virtually impossible) to some, Mark DiMassimo, CEO of ad firm Digo, and Eric Yaverbaum say they believe Americans need to be reminded to turn off their electronics from time to time. Thus, their “lifestyle intervention.”
They didn’t randomly choose September 18 for the latest installment of the larger Offlining ad campaign, though. It’s also Yom Kippur, considered by many Jews to be the holiest day of the year. On this day, also known as the Day of Atonement, observant Jews disengage from things like playing on their BlackBerrys, as well as other daily activities like writing, playing instruments, and even eating. To read more click here.

         

DIGO Brands Mel Gibson.

POSTED BY Team DIGO | August 27, 2010 5:42 pm | PERMALINK

offlining_melgibsonChoose your poster child for drunk dialing — we’ve chosen ours! Mel Gibson taught the world not to mix alcohol and communications devices, and he’s generously left us many, many recordings to remind us should we ever forget. We created Offlining Inc. to sell you on establishing a sane balance between online and offline time — and, well, we just felt that when it comes to insane examples of too much digital communication, well Mel set a new standard for us all to avoid. But, he’s not alone. Lindsay and Tiger have been pressed into service in this campaign as well. Check out this poster and a few more  (more…)

         

Tweeting On Weekends: Are We Becoming Socially Anti-Social?

POSTED BY Team DIGO | August 18, 2010 5:27 pm | PERMALINK

At kids soccer games around the country, hyperconnected Dads tweet about trivia to pass the time. Meanwhile, as you walk into a supposedly social event, people all around you pull out their devices to “check in” on Foursquare or Gowalla. Through the night, people continue sharing their real feelings and thoughts not with the person in front of them but to their audience of “followers” on Twitter, making a real life social event feel decidedly ANTI-social. Sound familiar? As technology allows us to share every moment instantaneously online, are we missing out on what is right in front us? And if so, is the only solution to turn our gadgets off, or is there some imaginary line of balance that we can strike? This session will explore those questions, and the anti-social path that our always-connectedness may be leading us towards. Most importantly, we’ll try to uncover how you might fight back and reclaim your humanity from the social media bubble around you. We like the idea, let them know what you think! … To read more click here.

         

Can’t Imagine Life Without a Cellphone? Read This Now

POSTED BY Team DIGO | August 17, 2010 10:01 am | PERMALINK

Even though it was only a few years ago, life in the year 1999 B.C. – Before Cell Phones – is difficult to imagine now. More than a platform to play ‘Bejeweled’, cell phones have become an essential tool for communicating in today’s modern world. With text messaging, e-mail and even Twitter now used as vital modes of communication, life without a cell phone seems little more than a a Yakov Smirnoff “In Soviet Russia…” joke — or if you’re truly tech-obsessed, a total nightmare. But even with the added convenience and ease that a cell phone brings, there are some definite downsides. Some experts believe excessive use can cause us to become more impatient, impulsive, forgetful and even more narcissistic, reports  the New York Times. A recent poll conducted by the paper found that people think cell phones are intrusive and increase stress levels. To read more click here.

         

DIGO Outgrows Its Britches - Adds Business, Space.

POSTED BY Team DIGO | August 16, 2010 5:18 pm | PERMALINK

digo_blue_prints12DIGO, the agency that builds brands and businesses, is now getting to build out some new space due to building its own business. The lease of new space contiguous with the current agency offices at 220 East 23rd Street has both architects and agency team-members delighted. The new space will contain more offices and project rooms, a common area. Rumors of a wet bar are all wet, however the agency ping pong table will remain. Clients and visitors will enjoy a new reception area, and Lee will finally achieve his dream of a state-of-the-art conference room. If you haven’t been to the space lately, may we suggest stopping by for a visit and a tour in the next few months.

         

DIGO Brands This “Tweeticide.”

POSTED BY Team DIGO | July 8, 2010 9:42 am | PERMALINK

MISTAKES NOT TO MAKE IN A SOCIAL WORLD.

Mediate reports CNN has fired senior editor of Middle East affairs Octavia Nasr. As Daniel Halper pointed out the other day, Nasr wrote on Twitter on July 4 that she was “sad” to hear of the death of Hezbollah’s Sayyed Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah–a man for whom she has “respect.” Fadlallah had justified suicide bombings, is believed to be responsible for the Marine barracks bombing, and had said that “Zionism has inflated the number of victims in this Holocaust beyond imagination.” To read more of this social mistake click here.

         

DIGO Brands The Off Button

POSTED BY Team DIGO | July 6, 2010 3:13 pm | PERMALINK

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Mark DiMassimo, CEO and Chief Creative Officer of DIGO and Eric Yaverbaum, CEO of Ericho Communications, talk about their new movement, Offlining on ABC TV.

NEW YORK (WABC) — A new campaign to spend more face to face time is called “Offlining”.  Eric Yaverbaum is a PR head, and Mark DiMassimo is a marketing executive. They frequently work together, but these days, they are the client. “We got together and said what’s bugging us about the world, and we said the off button. No one is selling the off button,” Yaverbaum said. In other words, everyone is yapping, texting and typing away. So, Eric and Mark are spending their own money to get people to turn off those devices, they call it Offlining. “We would like to accelerate a conversation of building offline time into life, that’s basically it,” said DiMassimo. To read more click here.

         

DIGO Brands New York?

POSTED BY Team DIGO | June 30, 2010 10:49 am | PERMALINK

While we are not taking credit just yet, DIGO put together some awesome ads in the May isssue of New York Magazine in an attempt to help bring LeBron James to New York.  check out the article from The New York Post

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June 30th, 2010 New York Post: LeBron Eyes Village Digs.

The “King” may be close to finding his castle. LeBron James has checked out several West Village townhouses, raising the hopes of city hoops fans that world’s greatest basketball player could be playing for the Knicks next season. “King James” has fallen in love with one of Manhattan’s most coveted neighborhoods — which is just minutes from his other potential future home, Madison Square Garden — said a broker who showed him the luxurious pads.”He seems to be set on that neighborhood,” big-league broker Dolly Lenz told The Post. That’s in part because the townhouses won’t make the 6′8″ Akron native worry about ducking when entering a room. to read more click here.

         

DIGO Brands Your Family Green

POSTED BY Team DIGO | June 29, 2010 10:06 am | PERMALINK

We love an articulate and informed fan… check this out from Growing a Green Family

Tappening has got to be the best flipping anti-bottled water campaign ever created. Tappening was covered at the New York Times last year but I just learned about them today at elephant.

Tappening targets bottled water companies with a simple tactic – they lie about them. One of their posters claims “Bottled Water: 98% Melted Ice Caps. 2% Polar Bear Tears” and another reads, “Bottled Water is the Primary Cause of Restless Leg Syndrome.” My favorite poster is the puppy poster though. I think it should be on an organic shirt that I could wear all the time!screen-shot-2010-06-29-at-100147-am1
Now, in case your morals are in a bunch over Tappening keep in mind that they based their idea to lie directly on the fact that water bottle companies lie continually. To read more click here.

         

DIGO Brands the Wall Street Journal

POSTED BY Team DIGO | May 25, 2010 12:17 pm | PERMALINK

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Deborah Ball Wall Street Journal May 25th, 2010.

CASCADE LOCKS, Oregon—In this idyllic town on the north slope of Mount Hood, an autopsy on three dead rainbow trout may play a role in Nestle’s SA’s efforts to reverse a deep slide in its bottled-water business.

Bottled water, which for years delivered double-digit growth for Nestlé, is under fire from environmentalists. They decry the energy used to transport it and the use of billions of plastic bottles, and oppose efforts to use new springs, citing concerns about water scarcity.

Bottlers say bottled water represents a small share of water use and is typically tapped in a sustainable way, a view backed by independent hydrologists. But the attacks hurt.

In 2007, one group launched a campaign called “Lying in Advertising” One poster read: “Bottled Water Causes Blindness in Puppies,” with a tagline reading, “If bottled-water companies can lie, we can too.” And now, a Congressional bill that would slap a 4% tax on bottled water to pay for upgrades of municipal water systems is gaining fresh attention, after a rupture in a water main left two million Boston residents without drinkable water in May. To read more click here.