✖

Special Report: Creative Report Card: Breakdown: Creative Directors

Also in this special report:
* Palmer Jarvis leads the pack p.37
* Breakdown: Clients p.38
* Breakdown: Advertising Agencies p.38
* Breakdown: Creative Directors p.38
* Breakdown: Copywriters p.39
* Breakdown: Art Directors p.39
* Breakdown: Television p.40
* Breakdown: Magazine p.40
* Breakdown: Newspaper p.42
* Breakdown: Transit p.42
* Breakdown: Outdoor p.43
* Breakdown: Direct Marketing p.43
* Breakdown: Radio p.43

Chris Staples. Alan Russell. Ian Grais.

If you grew tired of hearing these names at industry awards shows in the past year … well, sorry, but here they are again.

As the architects of two of the past year’s most celebrated advertising campaigns – on behalf of Crime Stoppers and Vancouver’s Playland amusement park – this trio brought home a truckload of prizes for themselves and their agency, Palmer Jarvis Communications, in 1997.

And their success has, in turn, secured first-place honors for Palmer Jarvis (to be renamed Palmer Jarvis DDB by Jan. 9 if a planned merger with DDB Canada is approved by all parties) in Strategy’s annual Creative Report Card – further confirmation, if any should still be needed, that this Vancouver-based agency is currently one of the two or three most formidable creative shops in the country.

The Creative Report Card charts the results of the major Canadian advertising awards programs held in 1997, to provide a snapshot of Canada’s most celebrated agencies, clients and creative talent.

Staples took first-place honors in the creative director category, by a wide margin over the closest finisher, Steven Landsberg of Ogilvy & Mather.

Top copywriter honors went to Russell, while Grais finished first in the art director category.

Among clients, Timex Canada earned the greatest number of points, on the strength of Ogilvy & Mather’s much-lauded Olympic-themed campaign for Indiglo Night-Light watches. Federal Express Canada finished in second place, thanks to bbdo’s work for them in print and outdoor, while Playland took third.

bbdo took second place in the agency category, followed by Ogilvy & Mather. Roche Macaulay & Partners Advertising, the winner of Strategy’s 1997 Agency of the Year competition, finished fourth.

The Creative Report Card is undertaken separately from the Agency of the Year. In that exercise, Strategy asks a panel of clients and advertising professionals to evaluate work from a shortlist of agencies (see second section).

While the Agency of the Year competition evaluates current work, the Creative Report Card tends to reflect the performance of agencies during the previous year, since there is generally about a year’s delay between the time advertising creative is developed and the time it makes it to the awards circuit.

The Creative Report Card, therefore, largely reflects an agency’s work in 1996.

It should be noted that this ranking does not purport to reveal the names of the ‘best’ creative directors, art directors or copywriters – or that a low number of points means that one is among the ‘worst.’ Such judgments are purely subjective, and Strategy would never claim to possess the authority to make a definitive determination.

Rather, the Creative Report Card serves as a comprehensive record of whose work the industry has honored most highly in the course of the previous year.

Strategy has developed a grading system that provides a cumulative measure of the hundreds of individual advertising awards presented in the past year.

Here’s how the system works:

Strategy assigns a point value to each gold, silver, bronze and certificate of merit (or the equivalents), weighted according to the relative importance of each awards program, as judged by Strategy’s editorial staff.

National awards programs are accorded greater weight than regional shows.

In the same way, awards shows that honor a cross-section of media are accorded greater weight than those that look at only a single medium.

By adding up the points accorded to each award-winning piece of advertising, Strategy is in turn able to assign points to each agency, client, creative director, art director and copywriter whose work is honored.

The Creative Report Card uses, as its foundation, the results of the major national and regional advertising awards programs that recognize excellence in consumer advertising. These are:
* The Advertising and Design Club of Canada awards (all media), presented by the Advertising and Design Club of Canada.
* The Applied Arts awards (all media), presented by Applied Arts magazine.
* The Ad Rodeo awards (all media), presented by an independent advertising industry committee based in Calgary, Alta.
* The Bessies (tv), presented by the Television Bureau of Canada.
* Les Coqs d’Or (all media), presented by the Publicite Club de Montreal.
* The Extras (newspaper), presented by the Canadian Newspaper Association.
* The Marketing awards (all media), presented by Marketing Magazine.
* The Radio Impact awards (radio), presented by the Radio Marketing Bureau.
* The rsvp awards (direct response), presented by the Canadian Direct Marketing Association.

(The Billi awards, which honor excellence in outdoor advertising, have been postponed until early in the new year. The 1997 Lotus awards, the b.c. advertising industry’s annual celebration, were held too late this year to be included in our ranking. We hope to have both back in next year.)

As a group, these awards shows recognize excellence in seven media categories: television, radio, newspapers, magazines, outdoor, transit and direct response marketing.

The Creative Report Card begins with overall listings of advertising agencies, clients, creative directors, art directors and copywriters.

Within the seven media categories, results are broken out by agency, client, creative director, art director (with the obvious exception of radio) and copywriter.

A summary of the top performers in each category appears on the first page of this report.

As usual, since the various awards were announced, a number of creatives have changed agencies. (Can’t you people all just stay put?) To be consistent, they are listed with the agency for which they won the award. In categories where an individual won awards for more than one agency, each agency is listed.

Awards programs and annuals were our reference for all credits.

Due to limited editorial space, listings below 10 points have not necessarily been included.

Chris Staples
Palmer Jarvis 346

Steven Landsberg
Ogilvy & Mather 217

Larry Tolpin
BBDO 162

Geoffrey Roche
Roche Macaulay & Partners 145

Michael McLaughlin
BBDO 145

Stephen Creet
BBDO 145

Ian Grais
Palmer Jarvis 113

Rick Davis
MacLaren McCann 111

Jeff Finkler
Leo Burnett 88

Peter Holmes
Holmes Donin Alloul 73

Jim Noble
BBDO 72

John McIntyre
Axmith McIntyre Wicht 57

Neil McOstrich
BBDO 43

Doug Robinson
Ammirati Puris Lintas 39

Dave Crichton
Roche Macaulay & Partners 37

Graham Lee
Roche Macaulay & Partners 37

Jim Ranscombe
Ranscombe & Co. 37

Pete McLeod
OgilvyOne Worldwide 33

Roger Gariepy
Bos 32

Brad Riddoch
Bates Canada; Ammirati Puris Lintas 30

Duncan Bruce
TBWA Chiat/Day 28

David Kelso
MacLaren McCann 26

Marta Cutler
MacLaren McCann 26

Mr. Pink
Pirate Radio and Television 26

Mark Mizgala
Palmer Jarvis 21

Maura MacNeill
MacLaren McCann 21

Rick Shurman
Pirate Radio and Television 21

Stephen Blair
MacLaren McCann 21

Terry O’Reilly
Pirate Radio and Television 21

Jack Neary
Cossette Communication-Marketing 19

Allan Mah
Who Are They? 18

Chris Taciuk
Who Are They? 18

David Adams
Young & Rubicam 16

John Farquhar
Young & Rubicam 16

Brenda McNeilly
Wunderman Cato Johnson; DKY Integrated Communications 14

Brett Channer
Bensimon Byrne/DMB&B 13

Jean-Jacques Streliski
PNMD 13

Rich Wakefield
BBDO 12

Shirley Ward-Taggart
Leo Burnett 11

Gerald Schoenhoff
SMW Advertising 10

Jacques Labelle
Cossette Communication-Marketing 10

Peter Rigby
Saatchi & Saatchi 10

David Rosenberg
SMW Advertising 10

Brian Harrod
Harrod & Mirlin 9

Chris Harrison
Roche Macaulay & Partners 9

Francois Forget
Cossette Communication-Marketing 9

Jeff Lennard
Highwood Communications 9

Michael McGovern
FCB Direct 9

Steve Conover
Ambrose Carr Linton Carroll 9

Steve Williams
Highwood Communications 9

Tony Lee
BBDO 9

Richard Nadeau
Saint-Jacques Vallee Young & Rubicam 8

Bryan Tenenhouse
Wunderman Cato Johnson 7

Claude Dumoulin
FCB Direct 7

Ian MacKellar
Roche Macaulay & Partners 7

Paul Lavoie
TAXI 7

Trevor McConnell
Ogilvy & Mather 7

Bill Keenan
Promanad Communications 6

Dan Peppler
Doner Schur Peppler 6

Dana Cox
Carlson Marketing Group 6

Nicholas Casimir
Casimir/Choi 6

Salvatore Scali
Vroom Communication;
Communications Prodis 6

Wain Choi
Casimir/Choi 6

Yvon Brossard
Cossette Communication-Marketing 6

Egon Springer
Bates Canada 5

Ella Feig
CanadaDirect 5

Fransi Weinstein
BBDO Response 5

Louis Courteau
PNMD 5

Peter Weis
Grey Direct 5

Pierre Nadeau
Pierre Nadeau Direct 5

Tracey Oliver
Wunderman Cato Johnson 5

Ann Urban
AdCulture Group 4

Dennis Barham
Bensimon Byrne/DMB&B 4

Glen Hunt
Roche Macaulay & Partners 4

Glen Petrie
AdCulture Group 4

Guy Tasse
FCB Direct 4

Karen Hadden
Go Direct Data Based Marketing 4

Kirk Fischer
MacLaren McCann Direct 4

Pierre Lamothe
Sprint Communication Marketing 4