-By Eleftheria Parpis, Adweek
Bartle Bogle Hegarty late Wednesday said it has declined an
invitation to participate in Levi's review of its Americas creative
assignment, which the Publicis Groupe-backed agency has held since
2001.
Emma Cookson, CEO of BBH in New York issued this statement: "Levi
Strauss & Co. yesterday announced its decision to initiate a
review of the advertising account for the Levi's brand in the
Americas region. BBH N.Y., the incumbent U.S. agency of record on
the brand, was invited to re-pitch, but has declined that
opportunity. BBH remains the Levi's brand agency of record in
Europe and Asia -- a partnership which dates back to 1982."
Levi's spends about $70 million annually on ads, per Nielsen
Monitor-Plus.
The San Francisco-based client in a brief statement yesterday said:
"A small selection of U.S. agencies has been identified and will be
invited to pitch the business. A decision is expected by
mid-December."
Consultancy Jones Lundin Beals in Chicago is assisting Levi's with
the search.
Levi's launched a separate media review in late August. Interpublic
Group's Initiative handles all buying. Planning is split between
IPG's DraftFCB (Dockers) and BBH (Levi's).
At the time the media pitch began, a client rep declined to comment
on whether the incumbents were defending and characterized the
review as "standard operating procedure. It's something we do with
all of our vendor relationships from time to time." A decision on
media chores is expected later in the fall.
On the creative front, several Levi's efforts this year have
captured attention. One such spot was called "Change," by BBH,
which featured alternate endings—one showing a man walking off with
a woman, another showing him walking off with a man.
The client also made headlines with a viral video developed by
project shop Cutwater. Called "Jumpin' In," the clip featured agile
youths who appeared to back-flip into jeans held aloft by their
buddies. The video garnered 3.5 million hits in 10 days. Cutwater
also produced a cinematic 90-second spot, "Onion Peel," that showed
the reverse transformation of a glamorous supermodel into an
average woman wearing Levi's jeans.
Omnicom Group's Cutwater was launched in early 2007 by former
executives of Omnicom's TBWA\Chiat\Day in San Francisco, which
handled Levi's domestic creative business from 1998-2001, prior to
BBH winning the assignment.
A few weeks ago, a somewhat raunchy Levi's Web push by EVB garnered
news items in mainstream media and mentions on late-night talk
shows for its "crotch humor" aimed at young males.
—David Gianatasio contributed to this report
This story updates and expands on an item posted yesterday with
the news that BBH is not defending the business.
Update: Levi Puts Creative Under Review
Oct 22, 2008
-By Eleftheria Parpis, Adweek
Bartle Bogle Hegarty late Wednesday said it has declined an invitation to participate in Levi's review of its Americas creative assignment, which the Publicis Groupe-backed agency has held since 2001.
Emma Cookson, CEO of BBH in New York issued this statement: "Levi Strauss & Co. yesterday announced its decision to initiate a review of the advertising account for the Levi's brand in the Americas region. BBH N.Y., the incumbent U.S. agency of record on the brand, was invited to re-pitch, but has declined that opportunity. BBH remains the Levi's brand agency of record in Europe and Asia -- a partnership which dates back to 1982."
Levi's spends about $70 million annually on ads, per Nielsen Monitor-Plus.
The San Francisco-based client in a brief statement yesterday said: "A small selection of U.S. agencies has been identified and will be invited to pitch the business. A decision is expected by mid-December."
Consultancy Jones Lundin Beals in Chicago is assisting Levi's with the search.
Levi's launched a separate media review in late August. Interpublic Group's Initiative handles all buying. Planning is split between IPG's DraftFCB (Dockers) and BBH (Levi's).
At the time the media pitch began, a client rep declined to comment on whether the incumbents were defending and characterized the review as "standard operating procedure. It's something we do with all of our vendor relationships from time to time." A decision on media chores is expected later in the fall.
On the creative front, several Levi's efforts this year have captured attention. One such spot was called "Change," by BBH, which featured alternate endings—one showing a man walking off with a woman, another showing him walking off with a man.
The client also made headlines with a viral video developed by project shop Cutwater. Called "Jumpin' In," the clip featured agile youths who appeared to back-flip into jeans held aloft by their buddies. The video garnered 3.5 million hits in 10 days. Cutwater also produced a cinematic 90-second spot, "Onion Peel," that showed the reverse transformation of a glamorous supermodel into an average woman wearing Levi's jeans.
Omnicom Group's Cutwater was launched in early 2007 by former executives of Omnicom's TBWA\Chiat\Day in San Francisco, which handled Levi's domestic creative business from 1998-2001, prior to BBH winning the assignment.
A few weeks ago, a somewhat raunchy Levi's Web push by EVB garnered news items in mainstream media and mentions on late-night talk shows for its "crotch humor" aimed at young males.
—David Gianatasio contributed to this report
This story updates and expands on an item posted yesterday with the news that BBH is not defending the business.