By Eleftheria Parpis

David Lubars
On the eve of the Cannes Adverising Awards, Adweek editor
Elefthereia Parpis sat down with David Lubars, chairman and chief
creative officer of BBDO North America, and the president of this
year's Cannes Film and Press juries, to talk ask if advertising
awards are still relevant in today's business climate.
Lubars won his first Cannes Lion in the early 1990s for Polaroid
while he was at Leonard/Monahan in Providence.
Since then, he has won every major industry creative award
including multiple Grand Prix Lions. As president and executive
creative director of Fallon Worldwide, Lubars was honored with
Cannes' first Titanium Lion -- an award introduced in 2005 to
celebrate groundbreaking work -- for the trailblazing online series
BMW Films. Last year, BBDO's multimedia "HBO Voyeuer" was the big
winner at Cannes, taking both the Outdoor and Promo Grand Prix
Lions.
Parpis: Are awards even important considering the economic times
we live in? Some people are saying that in this economy, Cannes and
the other big shows are unnecessary "beauty contests."
Lubars: Well, there is a beauty contest element to it, sure, but
that's a small part of what these shows are about in my view.
Consider that in the past year, clients all over the world had to
cut back massively. They had to accomplish more with way less.
Logic follows that everything they created had to pop that much
more and be that much more of a punch in the face. In this light,
you could view Cannes and other big shows as a primer on how to
take the power of creativity out for a ride, press the pedal down,
and see what it can do on a bumpy economic road. These good shows
are the closest thing we'll ever have to measuring this kind of
"pop." It's not an exact science, it never can be. But if a bunch
of creative people who rarely agree on anything believe one piece
stands out from thousands, it probably is working hard to get
noticed.
Parpis: Will this year's economic environment return Cannes back
to basics?
Lubars: The whole thing about this is to recognize brilliant work
that pops out. It should be about studying and recognizing the best
work. And what it became was a Euro beach version of Vegas. That's
all fine, but the original charter of this show is to recognize
brilliance and work that distinguishes itself, that doesn't pollute
the culture [that epitomizes] all the best aspects of the industry,
tries new things -- all those idealized things that we all shoot
for. I'm going to be spending 12 days there doing this thing.
Parpis: BBDO was the most awarded agency network in the world
last year. To what do you attribute this success?
Well, that's an area where we believe we should consistently be
No.1 every year. The cool thing about BBDO is, it's not just a few
offices that are creating excellent work around the world. Last
year, we had 20-plus BBDO agencies winning Lions and another
20-plus short-listed. The network has sort of become a global
boutique, if you will. You have these great -- and for the most
part, not huge -- agencies doing brilliant individual things. But
you also have groups of them working together on cross-border
things. Recently, we had 10 offices doing an international project
with Gillette. It was inspiring; it was all about the work, not ego
-- a thing of beauty.
Parpis: You've enjoyed success at Fallon. Now BBDO. How do you
shape an agency's culture?
Lubars: I've only worked with a few agencies, and the decision to
join them came down to the same question: Whether we all agreed
that big ideas are economic multipliers for clients. It's not
award-winning work so much as giving them big ideas. Yes, big ideas
do win awards. But they don't always, which doesn't mean they're
less big. You may remember the first year of BMW Films, it didn't
win at Cannes, it was considered too "out there."
Parpis: What about the fact that you were the most awarded
creative director last year? Did it go to your head or change you
in any way?
Lubars: It didn't. Some years are good and some not as good. The
permanence lies in keeping your head down and putting all your
focus and concentration on giving clients the work they need.
Everything else is artifice; there is nothing else.
Parpis: You talk about the philosophy of keeping an agency
culture out in front doing new things. You mentioned BMW. Other
"new things" associated with you are HBO Voyeur and the Dodge Ram
Challenge. How did you convince your clients to get those
made?
All three happened exactly the same way. You had clients who wanted
something new to crack the "cement." And you had
creative people, production people, account people, planners and
everyone else who believed in a big idea and killed themselves to
make it happen. By the way, Ram Challenge isn't winning as many
awards as the other two did. I can't say why, but in my view that
doesn't make it any less of a big idea.
Parpis: How did last year's award run benefit BBDO and the
network? What was, as they say, the ROI?
Lubars: We believe in awards because it distinguishes us from our
competitors. If you win a sports championship, forever you are the
champ. Even if you do nothing else, it cannot be denied that you
won the World Series. That's not the way it works in our industry.
You are only as good as what you do now, that's why I don't get too
worked up.
Parpis: How do you follow up a year like that?
I don't think I'll be the dominant figure this year; I'll do fine,
but that's not what it's about for me. However long the career is,
it's about giving clients big ideas. It's not about award-winning
work, but giving them big ideas that move their business. That's
how you feel you are contributing to the economy.
Parpis: How do you feel about presiding over the judging of the
two oldest categories in the festival, Print and Film?
In 2006, I did the Titanium. That's about the new breakthrough --
and then there's the old stuff. Now it's getting so blurred. Film
isn't necessarily 30 seconds. It's all overlapping. We're looking
for the freshest things as well. Film is new again because you can
do so many things with it.
Parpis: Everything is about "engagement" these days. How will it
play a part in judging Film and Print?
Lubars: I've been singing this song for the last eight years. The
polarity of what we do has shifted, from us sending the electricity
out to them to them coming to us. It's got to be creative that
people seek out since they can avoid it. If it's not seek-out
creative, then it's probably not awesome. You know immediately if
it's that, I want to send it to my friends. There's an element to
it, you get vacuumed into it and you want to be part of that
world.
Parpis: What advice would you give young talent aspire to create
award-winning work?
Lubars: Especially this year [at Cannes], there will be lower
attendance and the people who will be there will seriously be about
that work. I would seek them out and study how that work popped.
You can't learn creativity, but you can understand the inspiration.
Concentrate a little less on drinking yourself legless.
BBDO's David Lubars On Ad Awards In Today's Economy
June 19, 2009
By Eleftheria Parpis
On the eve of the Cannes Adverising Awards, Adweek editor Elefthereia Parpis sat down with David Lubars, chairman and chief creative officer of BBDO North America, and the president of this year's Cannes Film and Press juries, to talk ask if advertising awards are still relevant in today's business climate.
Lubars won his first Cannes Lion in the early 1990s for Polaroid while he was at Leonard/Monahan in Providence.
Since then, he has won every major industry creative award including multiple Grand Prix Lions. As president and executive creative director of Fallon Worldwide, Lubars was honored with Cannes' first Titanium Lion -- an award introduced in 2005 to celebrate groundbreaking work -- for the trailblazing online series BMW Films. Last year, BBDO's multimedia "HBO Voyeuer" was the big winner at Cannes, taking both the Outdoor and Promo Grand Prix Lions.
Parpis: Are awards even important considering the economic times we live in? Some people are saying that in this economy, Cannes and the other big shows are unnecessary "beauty contests."
Lubars: Well, there is a beauty contest element to it, sure, but that's a small part of what these shows are about in my view. Consider that in the past year, clients all over the world had to cut back massively. They had to accomplish more with way less. Logic follows that everything they created had to pop that much more and be that much more of a punch in the face. In this light, you could view Cannes and other big shows as a primer on how to take the power of creativity out for a ride, press the pedal down, and see what it can do on a bumpy economic road. These good shows are the closest thing we'll ever have to measuring this kind of "pop." It's not an exact science, it never can be. But if a bunch of creative people who rarely agree on anything believe one piece stands out from thousands, it probably is working hard to get noticed.
Parpis: Will this year's economic environment return Cannes back to basics?
Lubars: The whole thing about this is to recognize brilliant work that pops out. It should be about studying and recognizing the best work. And what it became was a Euro beach version of Vegas. That's all fine, but the original charter of this show is to recognize brilliance and work that distinguishes itself, that doesn't pollute the culture [that epitomizes] all the best aspects of the industry, tries new things -- all those idealized things that we all shoot for. I'm going to be spending 12 days there doing this thing.
Parpis: BBDO was the most awarded agency network in the world last year. To what do you attribute this success?
Well, that's an area where we believe we should consistently be No.1 every year. The cool thing about BBDO is, it's not just a few offices that are creating excellent work around the world. Last year, we had 20-plus BBDO agencies winning Lions and another 20-plus short-listed. The network has sort of become a global boutique, if you will. You have these great -- and for the most part, not huge -- agencies doing brilliant individual things. But you also have groups of them working together on cross-border things. Recently, we had 10 offices doing an international project with Gillette. It was inspiring; it was all about the work, not ego -- a thing of beauty.
Parpis: You've enjoyed success at Fallon. Now BBDO. How do you shape an agency's culture?
Lubars: I've only worked with a few agencies, and the decision to join them came down to the same question: Whether we all agreed that big ideas are economic multipliers for clients. It's not award-winning work so much as giving them big ideas. Yes, big ideas do win awards. But they don't always, which doesn't mean they're less big. You may remember the first year of BMW Films, it didn't win at Cannes, it was considered too "out there."
Parpis: What about the fact that you were the most awarded creative director last year? Did it go to your head or change you in any way?
Lubars: It didn't. Some years are good and some not as good. The permanence lies in keeping your head down and putting all your focus and concentration on giving clients the work they need. Everything else is artifice; there is nothing else.
Parpis: You talk about the philosophy of keeping an agency culture out in front doing new things. You mentioned BMW. Other "new things" associated with you are HBO Voyeur and the Dodge Ram Challenge. How did you convince your clients to get those made?
All three happened exactly the same way. You had clients who wanted something new to crack the "cement." And you had creative people, production people, account people, planners and everyone else who believed in a big idea and killed themselves to make it happen. By the way, Ram Challenge isn't winning as many awards as the other two did. I can't say why, but in my view that doesn't make it any less of a big idea.
Parpis: How did last year's award run benefit BBDO and the network? What was, as they say, the ROI?
Lubars: We believe in awards because it distinguishes us from our competitors. If you win a sports championship, forever you are the champ. Even if you do nothing else, it cannot be denied that you won the World Series. That's not the way it works in our industry. You are only as good as what you do now, that's why I don't get too worked up.
Parpis: How do you follow up a year like that?
I don't think I'll be the dominant figure this year; I'll do fine, but that's not what it's about for me. However long the career is, it's about giving clients big ideas. It's not about award-winning work, but giving them big ideas that move their business. That's how you feel you are contributing to the economy.
Parpis: How do you feel about presiding over the judging of the two oldest categories in the festival, Print and Film?
In 2006, I did the Titanium. That's about the new breakthrough -- and then there's the old stuff. Now it's getting so blurred. Film isn't necessarily 30 seconds. It's all overlapping. We're looking for the freshest things as well. Film is new again because you can do so many things with it.
Parpis: Everything is about "engagement" these days. How will it play a part in judging Film and Print?
Lubars: I've been singing this song for the last eight years. The polarity of what we do has shifted, from us sending the electricity out to them to them coming to us. It's got to be creative that people seek out since they can avoid it. If it's not seek-out creative, then it's probably not awesome. You know immediately if it's that, I want to send it to my friends. There's an element to it, you get vacuumed into it and you want to be part of that world.
Parpis: What advice would you give young talent aspire to create award-winning work?
Lubars: Especially this year [at Cannes], there will be lower attendance and the people who will be there will seriously be about that work. I would seek them out and study how that work popped. You can't learn creativity, but you can understand the inspiration. Concentrate a little less on drinking yourself legless.
Fashion photographer Caesar Lima presents flavor and fun with good taste for Taste Clothing.