The greatest TED Talk ever sold Morgan Spurlock

[Music]

I have spent the past few years putting

myself into situations that are usually

very difficult and at the same time

somewhat dangerous I went to prison

difficult I worked in a coal mine

dangerous I filmed in war zones

difficult and dangerous and I spent 30

days eating nothing but this fun in the

beginning a little difficult in the

middle very dangerous in the end in fact

most of my career I have been immersing

myself into seemingly horrible

situations for the whole goal of trying

to examine societal issues in a way that

make them engaging that make them

interesting that hopefully break them

down in a way that make them

entertaining and accessible to an

audience so when I knew I was coming

here to do a TED talk that was gonna

look at the world of branding and

sponsorship I knew I would want to do

something a little different so some of

you may or may not have heard a couple

weeks ago I took out an ad on eBay I

sent out some Facebook messages some

Twitter messages and I gave people the

opportunity to buy the naming rights to

my 2011 TED talk that’s right some lucky

individual corporation for-profit or

nonprofit was going to get the

once-in-a-lifetime opportunity because

I’m sure Chris Anderson will never let

it happen again

  • by the naming rights to the talk

you’re watching right now that at the

time didn’t have a title didn’t really

have a lot of content and didn’t really

give much hint as to what the subject

matter would actually be so what you

were getting was this your name here

presents my TED talk did you have no

idea what the subject isn’t depending on

the content could ultimately blow up in

your face especially if I make you or

your company look stupid for doing it

but that being said it’s a very good

media opportunity you know how many

people watch these TED Talks it’s a lot

that’s just a working title by the way

so even with that caveat I knew that

someone would buy the naming rights now

if you’d have asked me that a year ago I

wouldn’t been able to tell you that with

any certainty but in the new project

that I’m working on my new film we exam

in the world of marketing advertising

and as I said earlier I put myself in

some pretty horrible situations over the

years but nothing could prepare me

nothing could ready me for anything as

difficult or as dangerous as going into

the rooms with these guys

you see I had this idea for a movie what

I want to do is make a film all about

product placement marketing and

advertising where the entire film is

funded by product placement marketing

and advertising so the movie will be

called the greatest movie ever sold so

what happens in the greatest movie ever

sold is that everything from top to

bottom from start to finish is branded

from beginning to end you know from the

above the title sponsor that you’ll see

in the movie which is Brand X now this

brand the Qualcomm Stadium the you know

Staples Center these people will be

married to the film in perpetuity

forever and so the film explores this

whole idea

it’s what in perpetuity period forever

but not only we’re gonna have the Brand

X title sponsor but we’re gonna make

sure we sellout every category we can in

the film so maybe we sell a shoe and it

becomes the greatest shoe you ever wore

the greatest car you ever drove from the

greatest movie ever sold you know the

the greatest drink you’ve ever had Kurt

see the greatest movie ever sold so the

idea is beyond just showing that brands

are part of life but actually get them

to finance the film is them to finance

the film and actually we show the whole

process of how does it work the goal of

this whole film is transparency you’re

gonna see the whole thing take place in

this movie so that’s the the whole

concept the whole film start to finish

and I would love for scene journey to

help make it happen yeah you know it’s

funny because when I first hear it it is

the ultimate respect for an audience

I don’t know how receptive people are

going to be to it though

you have a perspective or do you I don’t

want to use angle because that has sort

of has a negative connotation but do you

think that do you sort of know how this

is gonna play out no idea how much money

did it take to do this

1.5 million they’re good I think that

you’re gonna have a hard time meeting

with them but I think it’s you know

certainly worth pursuing a couple really

big obvious brands who knows maybe by

the time your film comes out we look

like a bunch of blundering idiots what

do you think the response is gonna be I

the responses mostly will be no but as

the toughest cell because the felmers

tough sell because of me

both that meaning I’m not so optimistic

so can you help me I need help I can

help okay good good awesome yeah we got

a fight figure out which brands yeah

that’s that’s the challenge when you and

you look at like the people you deal

with we’ve got some places we can go

okay I’ll turn the camera

I thought turn the camera off meant

let’s have an off-the-record

conversation turns out it really means

we want nothing to do with your movie

and just like that one by one all of

these companies suddenly disappeared

none of them wanted anything to do with

this movie I mean I was amazed they

wanted absolutely nothing to do with

this project and I mean I was blown away

because I thought the whole concept the

idea of advertising was to get your

product out in front of as many people

as possible to get them as many people

to see it as possible especially in

today’s world this this intersection of

new media and old median the fractured

media landscape isn’t the idea to get

that new buzz worthy delivery vehicle

that’s going to get that message to the

masses now that’s what I thought but the

problem was you see my idea had one

fatal flaw and that flaw was this

actually no that was not the flaw

whatsoever that would’ve been a problem

at all see this would have been fine but

what this image represents was the

problem see when you do a google image

search for transparency this is

this is one of the first images that

comes up so I like the way you roll

sergey brin no this this was the problem

transparency free from pretense or

deceit easily detected or seen through

readily understood characterized by

visibility or accessibility of

information especially concerning

business practices that last line being

probably the biggest problem you see we

hear a lot about transparency these days

you know our politicians say it our

president says it even our CEOs say it

but suddenly when it comes down to it

becoming a reality something suddenly

changes but why

well transparency is scary like that odd

still screaming bear it’s unpredictable

[Music]

like this odd country road and it’s also

very risky what else is what else is

risky eating an entire bowl of Cool Whip

that’s very risky no when I started

talking to companies you know and

telling them you we wanted to tell this

story and they said no we want you to

tell a story we want you to tell a story

the way we just want to tell our story

see when I was a kid and my father would

catch me in some sort of lie Mary is

giving me the look he often gave me he

would say son there’s three sides to

every story there’s your story there’s

my story and there’s the real story now

you see with this film we wanted to tell

the real story but with only one company

one agency willing to help me and that’s

only because I knew John Bonham Richard

Kirshenbaum for years I realized that I

would have to go on my own I’d have to

cut out the middleman and go to the

companies myself you know myself with

all of my team so well you suddenly

started realize or what I started

realized that we started having

conversation with these companies the

idea of understanding your brand is a

universal problem I have friends who

make great big giant Hollywood films and

I have friends who make little

independent films like I make and the

friends might make big giant Hollywood

movies say that the reason their films

are so successful is because of the

brand partners that they have and then

my friends who make small independent

films say well how are we supposed to

compete with these big giant Hollywood

movies and the movie is called the

greatest movie ever sold and so now how

specifically what we see banned in the

film it’s any time I’m getting ready to

go any time I open up my medicine

cabinet you will see ban deodorant well

any time

do an interview with someone I could say

are you are you fresh enough for this

interview are you are you ready look a

little nervous

I want to help you calm down so maybe

you should maybe you should put some on

for the interview this little offer you

know one of this fabulous says whether

it’s a floral fusion or paradise wins

you know they’ll have their chance you

know what we will have have them geared

for both male or female you know solid

roll-on or stick whatever maybe that’s

the that’s the two cent tour so now I

can answer your questions and give you

the five-cent tour we are a smaller

brain much like you talked about being a

smaller you know movie are very much a

challenge of brands so we don’t have the

budgets that other brands have so doing

things like this you know remind people

about ban is kind of why we’re

interested in it what are the words that

you would use to describe ban ban is

blank

technology’s not the way you want to

describe something somebody’s put in

their armpit you’re talking about bold

oh yeah fresh guyhnic fresh is a great

word that really spins this category

into the positive versus a fights odor

and when this right it’s keeps you fresh

fresh either we keep you fresher longer

better freshness more freshness three

times fresher things like that that are

you know more of that positive benefit

and that’s a multi-million dollar

corporation what about me what about a

regular guy I need to go talk to the man

on the street the people who are like me

the regular Joe’s they need to tell me

about my brand how would you guys

describe your brand

my brain

I don’t know like

all right really nice clothes eighties

revival meets skater Punk

unless it’s laundry day right what is

brand Jerry unique unique I guess what

kind of genre style I am would be like

dark glamour I like a lot of black

colors a lot of Gray’s and stuff like

that but usually some that have an

accessory like sunglasses or I like

crystal and things like that too

if Dan were a brand he might be a

classic convertible I’m insane

the brand that I am is I would call it

casual fly part hippy part yogi part

Brooklyn girl I don’t know I’m the pet

guy

I sell pet toys all over the country all

over the world so I guess that’s my

brand in my warped little industry

that’s my brand my brand is FedEx

because I deliver the goods failed

writer alcoholic brand is that something

I’m a lawyer brand I’m Tom well we can’t

all be brand Tom but I do often find

myself at the intersection of dark

glamour and casual fly what I realize I

needed an expert I need someone who

could get inside my head somebody who

could really help me understand what

they call your brand personality and so

I found a company called Olsen’s Altman

in Pittsburgh who they’ve helped

companies like Nestle Febreze hallmark

discover that brand personality if they

could do it for them surely they could

do it for me

you brought your pictures right I did

the very first picture is a picture of

my family so tell me a little bit how it

relates to your thoughts and feelings

about anyway these are the people who

shaped the way I look at the world tell

me about this world I think it’s the I

think your world is the world that you

live in like people that are around you

your friends your family the the way you

live your life a job you do like all

those things stemmed and started from

one place and for me there’s them

installed with my family in West

Virginia what’s the next one going to

talk about the next one this was the

best day ever

how does this relate to thoughts and

feelings about who you are there’s like

who do I want to be I like things that

are different I like things that are

weird things

tell me about the Y phase what does that

do for us what does the Michelle people

state genuine now as important

what is the red represent

[Music]

thank you thank you yeah thanks for your

patient great job yeah yeah I don’t know

what’s gonna come of this there was a

whole lot of crazy going on in there the

first thing we saw was this idea that

you had two distinct but complementary

sides to your brand personality the

Morgan Spurlock brand is a mindful play

brand those are kind of juxtaposed very

nicely together and I think there’s

almost a paradox with those and I think

some companies will just focus on one

one of their strengths or you know or

the other instead of focusing on both

most companies tend to it’s human nature

to avoid things that they’re not sure of

avoid fear those elements and you really

embrace those and you actually turn them

into positives for you it’s a neat thing

to see what other brands are like that

the first one here is a classic Apple

and you can see here to target we mini

from Mini Coopers and JetBlue now

there’s playful brands and mindful

brands those sort of things that have

come and gone but a playful mindful

brand is a pretty powerful thing

a playful mindful brand what is your

brand if somebody actually described

your brand identity your brand

personality what would you be are you an

up attribute are you something that gets

the blood flowing are you more of a Down

attribute are you something a little

more calm reserved conservative up

attributes are things like being playful

being fresh like The Fresh Prince

contemporary adventurous edge you’re

daring like Errol Flynn nimble or agile

profane domineering magical or mystical

like Gandalf are you more of a Down

attribute are you mindful sophisticated

like double-oh-seven are you established

traditional nurturing protective

empathetic like the Oprah are you

reliable stable familiar safe secure

sacred contemplative or wise like the

Dalai Lama or Yoda over the course this

film we had 500 plus companies who were

up and down company say no they didn’t

want any part of this project they

wanted nothing to do with this film

mainly because they had no control they

would have no control over the final

product but we did get 17 brand partners

who were willing to relinquish that

control who wanted to be in business

with someone as mindful and as playful

as myself

and who ultimately empowered us to tell

stories that normally we wouldn’t be

able to tell stories that an advertiser

would normally never get behind they

enabled us to tell the story about neuro

marketing as we got into the telling the

story in this film about how now they’re

using MRIs to target the desire centers

of your brain for both commercials as

well as movie marketing we went to San

Paolo where they abandoned or

advertising in the entire city for the

past five years there’s no billboards

there’s no posters there’s no flyers

nothing and we went to school districts

where now companies are making their way

into cash-strapped schools all across

America what’s incredible for me is the

the projects that I’ve gotten the most

feedback out of are I’ve had the most

success and are ones where I’ve

interacted with things directly and

that’s what these brands did they cut

out the middleman they cut out their

agencies and said maybe these agencies

don’t have my best interests in mind I’m

gonna deal directly with the artist I’m

gonna work with him to create something

different something that’s going to get

people thinking that’s gonna challenge

the way we look at the world and how is

that been for them has it been

successful

well since the film premiered at the

Sundance Film Festival let’s just take a

look according to Burrell’s the movie

premiered in January and since then and

this is heating the whole thing we’ve

had more than 900 million media

impressions for this film

that’s literally covering just like a

two and a half week period that’s only

online no print no TV the film hasn’t

even been distributed yet it’s not even

online it’s not even streaming it’s not

even been out into other foreign

countries yet so ultimately this film

has already started to gain a lot of

momentum and not bad for a project that

almost every ad agency we talked to

advise their clients not to take part

what I always believe is that if you

take chances if you take risks that in

those risks will come opportunity I

believe that when you push people away

from that you’re pushing them more

towards failure I believe that when you

train your employees to be risk-averse

then you’re preparing your whole company

to be reward challenged I feel like that

what has to happen moving forward is we

need to encourage people to take risks

we need to encourage people to not be

afraid of opportunities that may scare

them ultimately moving forward I think

we have to embrace fear we’ve got to put

that bear in a cage

embrace fear embrace risk one big

spoonful at a time we have to embrace

risky and ultimately we have to embrace

transparency today more than ever a

little honesty is going to go a long way

and that being said through honesty and

transparency my entire talk embrace

transparency has been brought to you by

my good friends at EMC who for $7,100

bought the naming rights on eBay

[Music]

ENC turning big data into big

opportunity for organizations all over

the world

EMC presents embrace transparency thank

you very much guys

[Music]

morgen

in the name of transparency what exactly

happened to that $7,100 that is a

fantastic question I have in my pocket

a check made out to the parent

organization of the Ted foundation the

sapling foundation they check for $7,100

to be applied towards my attendance for

next year’s tag

[Applause]

[音乐]

在过去的几年里,我一直把

自己置于通常

非常困难同时又

有些危险的境地 我进监狱

很困难 我在煤矿工作很

危险 我在战区拍摄

困难和危险 我花了 30

一天什么都不吃,一

开始很有趣,中间有点困难,最后

非常危险事实上

,在我的大部分职业生涯中,我一直

沉浸在看似可怕的

情况中,整个目标是试图

以一种

使 他们引人入胜,让他们变得

有趣,希望

以一种让他们

有趣和观众可以接触到的方式

分解他们 想做

一些不同的事情,所以

你们中的一些人可能在几周前听说过,也可能没有听说过

我给了人们

购买

我 2011 年 TED 演讲的冠名权的机会,这是正确的,一些幸运

的营利性或

非营利性公司将

获得千载难逢的机会,因为

我相信克里斯安德森会 永远不要

让它再次发生

-通过您现在正在观看的演讲的命名权,

当时没有标题并没有真正

有很多内容,也没有

真正暗示什么

主题实际上是这样你

得到的是这个你的名字在这里

展示了我的 TED 演讲你不

知道主题不是什么

取决于内容最终可能会在

你的脸上爆炸,特别是如果我让你或

你的公司看起来 这样做很愚蠢,

但据说这是一个很好的

媒体机会,你知道有多少

人观看这些 TED 演讲

,顺便说一句,这只是一个临时标题,

所以即使有这个警告,我知道

现在有人会购买冠名权,

如果 你会 一年前我曾问过我,

我无法肯定地告诉你,

但在

我正在制作我的新电影的新项目中,我们

在营销广告领域进行考试

,正如我之前所说,我把自己

多年来在一些非常可怕的情况下,

但没有什么能让我做好准备,

没有什么能让我为任何

困难或危险的

事情做好准备

关于植入式营销和

广告 整部电影

由植入式营销

和广告资助 所以这部电影将被

称为有史以来最伟大的电影 所以

在有史以来最伟大的电影中发生的事情

是从头到尾从头到尾的一切

从头到尾都是品牌你从

上面知道你会在电影中看到的冠名赞助商

是品牌 X 现在这个

品牌高通体育场你知道

斯台普斯中心这些人会

永远与这部电影结婚

,所以这部电影探索了

整个想法,

这就是永远的永恒,

但我们不仅会有 Brand

X 的冠名赞助商,而且我们要

确保我们能

在 电影,所以也许我们卖了一只鞋,它

变成了你穿过的最棒的鞋 你

开过的最棒的车

有史以来最棒的电影 你知道

你喝过的最棒的饮料 库尔特

看过最棒的电影 所以这个

想法是 不仅仅是展示品牌

是生活的一部分,但实际上让他们

为电影提供资金是他们为电影提供

资金,实际上我们展示了

它如何运作的整个过程整部电影的目标

是透明度,你

会看到整个 事情发生在

这部电影中,所以这就是

整部电影开始到结束的整个概念

,我很想通过场景之旅来

帮助实现它,是的,你知道这很

有趣,因为当我第一次听到它时,这是

对你的终极尊重 r 观众

我不知道人们对它的接受程度

,尽管

你有一个观点,或者你我

不想使用角度,因为它

有一种负面的含义,但你

认为你会排序吗 知道

这将如何发展 不知道要花多少钱

才能做到这

150 万 他们很好 我认为

您将很难

与他们会面 但我认为您知道

当然值得追求一对 真正

明显的大品牌谁知道,

也许当你的电影上映时,我们看起来

像一群笨手笨脚的白痴

两个意思是我不是那么乐观

所以你能帮助我我需要帮助我可以

帮助好的好好棒是的,我们

打架了找出哪些品牌是

的,当你和

你看起来像你交易的人时,这就是挑战

我们有一些地方 可以去

好吧 我会关掉相机

我以为关掉相机意味着

让我们进行一次不

公开的谈话 结果这真的意味着

我们不想与你的电影有任何关系

就像那样 所有

这些公司突然 消失了

他们都不想与这部电影有

任何关系

尽可能多的人

让尽可能多的

人看到它,尤其是在

当今世界,这种

新媒体和旧中位数的交叉点,破碎的

媒体格局并不是

获得新的值得关注的传播

工具的想法 现在把这个信息传达给

大众,这就是我的想法,但

问题是你看到我的想法有一个

致命的缺陷,而这个缺陷

实际上是不,那不是

任何会成为问题的缺陷

总而言之,这会很好,

但是这张图片代表的是

问题,当你用谷歌图片

搜索透明度时,

这是第一个出现的图片

,所以我喜欢你滚动 sergey brin 的方式,

不,这个 问题

透明度是否

易于检测或通过

易于理解的方式发现或看到,其特征

是信息的可见性或可访问性,

尤其是关于

商业实践的最后一行

可能是你看到的最大问题我们

这些天听到很多关于透明度的问题,

你知道我们的政客们说 它是我们的

总裁说的,甚至我们的首席执行官也这么说,

但突然当它

成为现实时,事情突然

发生了变化,但是

为什么透明度就像那只奇怪的

仍在尖叫的熊一样可怕它是不可预测的

[音乐]

就像这条奇怪的乡间小路,它也

非常 有

风险 吃一整碗 Cool

Whip 还有什么风险 风险很大 不,当我开始

谈话时 联系你认识的公司,

告诉他们我们想讲这个

故事,他们说不,我们希望你

讲一个故事,我们希望你讲一个

故事,我们只想讲我们的故事,

看看我小时候和我的 父亲会

在某种谎言中抓住我 玛丽

给了我他经常看我的眼神 他

会说儿子

每个故事都有三个方面 有你的

故事 有我的故事 现在

你看到了我们想要讲述的这部电影的真实故事

真实的故事,但只有一家公司

一家机构愿意帮助我,这

只是因为我认识约翰·博纳姆·理查德·科

申鲍姆多年,我意识到我

必须自己去,我必须

去掉中间人,去

我自己的公司 你

对我所有的团队都很了解自己 你突然

开始意识到或者我开始

意识到我们开始

与这些公司进行对话

了解你的品牌的想法是一个

普遍的问题 我有朋友

可以成为伟大的巨头 Hol 莱伍德电影和

我有朋友

制作像我这样的小型独立电影,而

朋友们可能会制作好莱坞大片

说得好,我们应该如何

与这些大型好莱坞

电影竞争,这部电影被称为

有史以来最伟大的电影,所以

现在我们在电影中看到的禁止内容是

多么具体 在我的

药柜上你会看到禁止除臭剂在

任何时候

都很好 采访某人我可以

说你是否对这次

采访足够新鲜你准备好看起来

有点紧张

我想帮助你冷静所以也许

你应该也许 你应该

在面试时穿上这件小礼物你

知道其中一个很棒的说

无论是花卉融合还是天堂般的胜利

你知道他们会有机会你

知道我们想要什么 会让它们

适合男性或女性你知道坚实的

滚动或坚持任何可能

那是两美分的旅行所以现在我

可以回答你的问题并给

你五美分的旅行我们和你一样是一个更小的

大脑 谈到成为一部

规模较小的电影,你知道电影对品牌来说是一个很大的

挑战,所以我们没有

其他品牌的预算,所以做这样的

事情你知道提醒

人们禁令是我们

对它感兴趣的原因

你用来描述禁令的词是

空白

技术不是你想要

描述某人放在

他们腋下的东西的方式你在谈论大胆的

哦是的新鲜的家伙新鲜是一个很棒的

词,它真的把这个类别

变成了积极的与 抗异味

,如果正确,它会让你保持

新鲜,或者我们让你更新鲜,更持久,

更好的新鲜度,更

新鲜三倍,像这样的事情,

你知道更多的积极好处

,那就是多 百万美元的

公司 那我呢 一个

普通人呢

我不

知道真的很漂亮的衣服八十年代

复兴遇到滑冰朋克

除非是洗衣日对什么是

品牌杰瑞独特独特我猜

我是什么样的流派风格我会喜欢

黑暗魅力我喜欢很多

黑色很多 格雷之类的东西

,但通常有些带有

太阳镜之类的配饰,或者我也喜欢

水晶之类的东西,

如果丹是一个品牌,他可能是

经典的敞篷车

飞行部分嬉皮部分瑜伽部分

布鲁克林女孩我不知道我是宠物

我在世界各地全国各地销售宠物玩具

所以我想这是我

在扭曲的小行业

中的品牌那是我的品牌我的品牌是联邦快递

因为 我送去 ods 失败的

作家酒精品牌是

我是律师品牌 我是汤姆好吧,我们不能

都是汤姆品牌,但我确实经常发现

自己处于黑暗

魅力和休闲飞行的交叉点 我意识到我

需要一个专家 我 需要一个

能深入我内心的人 一个

真正能帮助我理解

他们所说的品牌个性的人,所以

我在匹兹堡找到了一家名为 Olsen’s Altman 的公司

,他们帮助

雀巢、纺必适标志性这样的公司

发现品牌个性,如果他们

能做到的话 为他们当然他们

可以为我做

你把你的照片拿对了我做

的第一张照片是

我家人的照片所以告诉我它

与你的想法和

感受有什么

关系 我看待这个世界的方式 告诉

我这个世界 我认为它是我

认为你的世界就是你

生活的世界 就像你周围的人

你的朋友 你的家人 你的

生活方式 你的生活 你确实喜欢所有

这些事情都是从

一个地方开始的,对我来说,它们

和我的家人一起安装在西

弗吉尼亚 你在哪里

我想成为

谁 代表

[音乐]

谢谢谢谢谢谢你的

耐心很棒的工作是的我不知道

这会发生什么那里发生了

很多疯狂的

事情我们看到的第一件事就是这个想法

你有两个

与您的品牌个性截然不同但互补的方面

Morgan Spurlock 品牌是一个用心的游戏

品牌,它们很好地并列

在一起,我认为这

几乎是一个悖论,我认为

有些公司会 只关注

他们的优势之一,或者你知道

或其他,而不是同时关注两者。

大多数公司

倾向于避免他们不确定的事情,

避免害怕这些元素,你真的

接受了这些,你实际上把它们变成了

对你来说

,看看其他品牌是什么样的,

这是一件很有趣的事情,这里的第一个是经典的苹果

,你可以在这里看到我们

从 Mini Coopers 和 JetBlue 瞄准我们的 mini 现在

有好玩的品牌和有意识的

品牌那些东西

来来去去,但一个有趣的正念

品牌是一个非常强大的东西

一个有趣的正念

品牌 如果有人真正描述了

你的品牌标识,你的品牌

是什么?

你更多的是 Down

属性 你是不是

更冷静 保留保守 up

属性是

像 The Fresh Prince contempo 一样好玩 新鲜

rary 冒险的优势 你

像 Errol Flynn 一样敏捷 敏捷或敏捷

亵渎神明

像 Gandalf 那样神奇或神秘 你是否更像一个 Down

属性 你是否

像双哦七那样专注 成熟 你是否建立了

传统的培育 保护性

善解人意 像 Oprah 你

可靠吗 稳定 熟悉 安全 安全

神圣 沉思或智慧 像

达赖喇嘛或尤达 在这部电影的过程中

我们有 500 多家公司

上下公司都说不 他们不

想要这个项目的任何部分 他们

不想与这部电影有任何关系

主要是因为

他们无法控制最终

产品,但我们确实有 17 个品牌合作伙伴

愿意放弃这种

控制权

讲述通常我们

无法讲述的故事,而广告

商通常永远不会支持他们

使我们能够讲述 关于神经

营销的

故事,因为我们在这部电影中讲述了他们现在如何

使用核磁共振成像来

针对广告

和电影营销的大脑的欲望中心的故事,我们去了

圣保罗,他们在那里放弃或

做广告 在

过去的五年里整个城市没有广告牌

没有海报没有传单

什么都没有,我们去了学区

,现在公司正在

进入美国各地资金短缺的学校,

对我来说令人难以置信的

是我的项目 我得到了最多的

反馈,我取得了最大的

成功,并且是我

直接与

事物互动的

地方 牢记我的最大利益 我

将直接与艺术家打交道

我将与他合作创造一些

不同的东西 让

人们认为这将是挑战

了解我们看待世界的方式以及

他们的情况如何,

自从这部电影在

圣丹斯电影节

首映以来,它是否很成功?

整件事我们

为这部电影获得了超过 9 亿次媒体印象,这部

电影实际上涵盖了

两个半星期的时间,只有

在线没有印刷没有电视这部电影

甚至还没有发行,但它甚至没有

在线它甚至没有 流媒体它

甚至还没有在其他

国家上映,所以最终这部电影

已经开始获得很大的

动力,而且对于

我们采访过的几乎每个广告代理商都

建议他们的客户不要参与

我一直认为的项目来说还不错 如果你

冒险,如果你冒险,那么在

这些风险中就会有机会

当你

训练你的员工规避风险时,

你就在准备整个

公司接受奖励挑战

最终可能会吓到他们的机会 我认为

我们必须拥抱恐惧 我们必须把

那只熊关在

笼子里 比以往任何时候都更

诚实会大有帮助

,通过诚实和

透明说

我在 EMC 的好朋友给你带来了我的整个演讲拥抱透明度,他们以 7,100 美元

购买了 eBay

[Music]

ENC 的冠名权 将大数据转化

为世界各地组织的重大机遇

EMC 提出拥抱透明度

非常感谢你们

[音乐]

morgen

以透明度的名义到底

发生了什么 我收到了 7,100 美元,这是一个

奇妙的问题,我口袋里

有一张支票,开给

Ted 基金会的上级组织,

树苗基金会,他们检查了 7,100 美元

,用于我参加

明年的标签

[掌声]