Back to Shawn Carter the hustler, Jay-Z is dead... This cat is georgey-porgey puddin' pie right about now—he's got his hand in so many pies it's unreal...
and to think Interpublic won't hire black people who are trained ad professionals, but they'll hire Jay-Z and Steve Stoute--a former record label exec--as ad men?
Screw going to portfolio school, getting an MBA and learning the ad biz inside out. Aspiring Black ad professionals should just work on making hit records.... that's clearly the best way to get hired in the ad biz.
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Interpublic, Steve Stout and Jay-Z form Translation Advertising agency
By Stuart Elliott
N.Y. Times
Jay-Z is a Grammy-winning rapper, a club owner, a clothier, a fledgling hotelier, the part-owner of a basketball team and the former president of a record label. Now, he gets to add adman to his resume.
Jay-Z -- real name, Shawn Carter -- is joining forces with another African-American entrepreneur, Steve Stoute, to open Translation Advertising in New York, an agency that will help marketers reach
multicultural consumers.
The new agency will be part of Translation Consultation and Brand Imaging, which has worked for mainstream advertisers like General Motors, Hewlett-Packard, McDonald's and Reebok.
Translation
Advertising expects to announce its first clients soon, said Mr.
Stoute, who sold Translation Consultation last October for an estimated
$10 million to $15 million to the Interpublic Group of Companies in New
York.
Interpublic, the third-largest agency
company (behind the Omnicom Group and the WPP Group) also owns agencies
like Campbell-Ewald, Deutsch, Draft FCB, GolinHarris, R/GA and
Universal McCann. Interpublic and Translation Consultation share
clients like the Chevrolet division of G.M.
Interpublic
will own 49 percent of Translation Advertising. The majority stake will
be owned by Mr. Stoute, 37, and Jay-Z, 38, who will be the co-chairmen.
"You
know his story," Mr. Stoute said of his new partner, who grew up in the
Marcy Projects in Brooklyn. "He came from nothing and turned it into
something before our eyes."
Mr. Carter, in a telephone
interview, said he considered his involvement in an agency "part of the
natural growth" of his career.
"As an artist, you make
music," Mr. Carter said. "And if you see people who don't know how to
market your music, you get involved in it."
Otherwise, what you want to accomplish "gets lost in translation," he added, "no pun intended."
Mr.
Carter was referring to his work first at Roc-A-Fella Records and later
at Def Jam Recordings. Mr. Carter stepped down last month as president
at Def Jam, part of the Universal Music Group.
"He left his day job at Def Jam; he has to do something," Mr. Stoute said, laughing.
The
Interpublic venture, which is to be announced on Friday, is indicative
of the intensifying interest on Madison Avenue in minority consumers.
One
reason is the growth of the African-American, Hispanic and
Asian-American populations in the United States, which together account
for an estimated $2 trillion in consumer buying power.
Another
is the increasing influence of minority consumers on the general
market, by setting trends and influencing buying decisions in
categories like apparel, automobiles, beverages, food, music and sports.
For
instance, think back to the commercials that appeared nationally on
Sunday during the Super Bowl, the biggest night of the year for
advertising.
A spot for Diet
Pepsi Max featured musicians like Missy Elliott, Macy Gray, LL Cool J
and Busta Rhymes. Naomi Campbell danced in a commercial for SoBe Life
Water to a song by Michael Jackson.
Another Super Bowl
spot, for Bud Light, was centered on the comedian Carlos Mencia. And
the basketball players Charles Barkley, Shaquille O'Neal and Dwyane
Wade appeared in commercials for T-Mobile and Vitaminwater.
Some advertisers already believe
there is no longer "a so-called general market," said Lisa Skriloff,
president at Multicultural Marketing Resources, a consulting company in
New York, but rather a coalition or collection of diverse consumer
groups.
"It's especially true for companies doing business in 'minority majority' states" like California and Texas, she added.
Despite
those demographic and cultural changes, Ms. Skriloff said, estimates
are that ads aimed at minority consumers account for less than 4
percent of the total ad spending in the United States.
"There
are major advertisers that are still not getting it, that don't have
anyone in-culture helping them, in the company or at an agency," she
added, while others "are afraid of missteps, afraid they will do the
wrong thing."
That apprehension is not totally unfounded.
"There
are people who don't understand the culture," Jay-Z said, citing as an
example a commercial for a wireless carrier "that shows guys
break-dancing in the phone store."
"It's just not something we do," he added dryly.
"We
go into the stores and want the same thing as everyone else," Jay-Z
said, adding: "We may care about the style of the phone a little bit
more, but we want our phone to work. We care about the functionality."
Mr.
Stoute described multicultural consumers as "a very loyal audience if
you come to them in the right way -- if you speak to them, and not
speak down to them."
Interpublic owns 49 percent stakes
in several agencies that specialize in multicultural marketing to
primarily Hispanic and Asian-American consumers, among them
Accentmarketing, the IW Group and Siboney USA.
But
Interpublic has not been represented in the
multicultural/African-American realm for several years, since selling a
49 percent stake in an agency named GlobalHue back to its managers.
"It's
all part of the integrated-offering approach," said Michael I. Roth,
the chairman and chief executive at Interpublic integrated not in a
racial way but in a marketing way, providing clients with a multitude
of advertising services that "we can bring to the table all at once,"
Mr. Roth said.
Jay-Z is not the only urban entertainment figure to become involved in advertising.
Spike
Lee leads an agency, Spike DDB, that is part of the DDB Worldwide
division of Omnicom. And Damon Dash has announced the start-up of
BlockSavvy.com, an interactive ad agency and social-networking Web site.
"If
we sit in a room," Mr. Carter said, "and offer our ideas of how to
reach consumers, how to speak to them -- and this is not a cocky
statement—put us up against anything, and we'll win our fair share of
battles."
Mr. Carter said his role at Translation
Advertising would be to offer his creative and entrepreneurial ideas.
Mr. Stoute described it as not "day-to-day operations" but rather
"using his eye, his taste, his understanding of the culture."
"As an owner of the New Jersey Nets, he's not coaching," Mr. Stoute said
of Mr. Carter.
Mr.
Carter's work as an endorser in ads will be independent of what he does
for Translation Advertising. He has appeared as part of campaigns for
brands like Hewlett-Packard and Reebok.














