Steve Hayden will be speaking at:
Fear, Love and Advertising
Tuesday, April 21, 2009 05:30 PM - 06:30 PM
In his talk, Steve Hayden, Vice Chairman of Ogilvy Worldwide features Bunkspeed as one of three technologies that will change the advertising industry over the next 6 years.
Steve Hayden has created some of the most effective and enduring advertising of our time. He launched his career in Detroit as a copywriter on the General Motors corporate account. When he returned to his native California (he is a graduate of USC), he divided his attention between advertising and TV scriptwriting (for Welcome Back, Kotter), eventually focusing on advertising. After honing his craft at a number of agencies on a variety of accounts, Steve was recruited to Chiat-Day where he and Lee Clow
made advertising history as co-creators of the breakthrough "1984" Orwellian take-off campaign for Apple. In 1994, Ogilvy asked Steve to join the agency in a newly created role: the ultimate "Brand Steward" for the IBM global account. While leading IBM's advertising renaissance and global brand renewal, Steve played a key role with other Ogilvy clients including American Express, Kodak, Motorola, Dove, Cisco and SAP, in addition to participating in many new business development efforts. These contributions earned him awards and recognition for the company. In 2002 Ogilvy was named AdAge's Agency of the Year. As a member of Ogilvy's Worldwide Board and leader of the IBM account, Steve was instrumental in the company's engagement with digital technologies and the Internet, setting the scene for a revitalized OgilvyOne to take a leadership role in interactive media. He was an early and vigorous proponent of integrated communications, helping to transform Ogilvy's brand-focused business platform into a broader offering - 360 Degree Brand Stewardship. In 2001, Steve was promoted to Vice Chairman of Ogilvy & Mather Worldwide to act as Shelly Lazarus' partner in service to global brands becoming the company's highest-ranking creative leader since David Ogilvy himself."