Jump to content

GSD&M

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Nmckinney828 (talk | contribs) at 20:23, 15 December 2008 (Clients: removed this section b/c it repeated). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

GSD&M Idea City
Company typePublic
IndustryAdvertising
FoundedAustin, Texas (1971)
HeadquartersAustin, Texas
Key people
Steve Gurasich, co-founder
Roy Spence, co-founder
Judy Trabulsi, co-founder
Jim Darilek, co-founder
Tim McClure, co-founder
Number of employees
400+
Websitewww.gsdm.com
www.ideacity.com

GSD&M Idea City is an advertising agency located in Austin, Texas, United States. It was founded in 1971 by graduates of University of Texas at Austin. Since 1998, GSD&M has been part of the Omnicom Group.

The main office of GSD&M is located on 6th Street in Austin, across the street from the Whole Foods Market headquarters. Satellite offices are located in Chicago, Illinois and New York City, New York.

The agency was known as GSD&M until August 27, 2007 when it changed its name to GSD&M's Idea City.[1] "Idea City" was previously the name of the agency's Austin headquarters.


Clients

Of their current clients, some notables are: BMW, MasterCard, Hallmark, Southwest Airlines [2], the U.S. Air Force, the American Red Cross, the PGA TOUR, AARP, World Market, American Legacy Foundation [3], Kohler [4], Texas A&M [5] Marshalls [6], Popeyes [7], Norwegian Cruise Line [8] and John Deere. They recently added L.L.Bean to their roster in the Spring of 2008.

History

The agency started with local retail accounts and expanded to more regional work. In 1986, the agency created the Don't Mess with Texas anti-litter slogan for the Texas Department of Transportation.

In the 1990s GSD&M began to acquire more national brands outside of Texas and was regarded as a "creative hot-shop."[9] The agency relinquished Chili's, Dreamworks, Frito-Lay, Fannie Mae and UnitedHealthcare in 2006-2007. The agency's Omnicom sibling, BBDO, was given the lead on the AT&T account, although GSD&M still works on it.

Wal-Mart

From 1987 until 31 January, 2007, GSD&M was one of two agencies that held the Wal-Mart account. In October 2006, Wal-Mart moved its $580-million account to Draftfcb, but Draftfcb soon lost the account when, on 7 December 2006, Wal-Mart fired two marketing executives who had led the account review and initiated a second review, alleging that the executives had accepted gifts from the agencies under consideration. Draftfcb was not permitted to participate in the second review. GSD&M was invited to take part, but declined. "We helped build Wal-Mart from $11 billion in sales to $312 billion," said one of the agency's founders, Roy Spence, "We declare victory, and we are moving on."[10]

Trivia

The founders noted that their initials, which formed the company's name, could also stand for "Greed, Sex, Drugs, and Money", all of which could be factors in an advertising campaign. [11]

References

  1. ^ "Idea City: GSD&M Retools for the Future," Adweek Online December 27 2007. [1]
  2. ^ Chicago Sun Times, June 6th 2006. “Southwest has an edge in Rare Fight”.
  3. ^ http://publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=79507 MediaPost, March 31, 2008
  4. ^ All Business, GSD&M Goes for the 'Bold' for Kohler. http://www.allbusiness.com/marketing-advertising/4122583-1.html
  5. ^ Hoover's "Site provides window into life at A&M" http://www.hoovers.com/free/co/news/detail.xhtml?ID=52465&ArticleID=200810120400KRTRIB__BUSNEWS__0075000000a3b9a0_MB&source_type%5B%5D=
  6. ^ AdWeek, “GSD&M Snares pair” http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/account-activity/e3ie4014cd99a43c45e582fc782c0451fd7
  7. ^ AdWeek, “GSD&M Snares pair” http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/account-activity/e3ie4014cd99a43c45e582fc782c0451fd7
  8. ^ “Norwegian Cruise Line Floats 'Unrestricted' Vacation Idea”, May 15th 2007. Brandweek
  9. ^ Imperato, Gina (1997). "Greetings from Idea City". Fast Company. Retrieved 2008-08-09. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Stuart Elliot, "Why an Agency Said No to Wal-Mart," New York Times 15 December 2006, p. C4.
  11. ^ Mark Morrison, "Herb Kelleher on the Record, Part 3," BusinessWeek Online December 24 2003. [2]