Lenny Stern Explained

Lenny Stern
Occupation:Co-founder, SS+K
Advertising Executive
Political Consultant

Lenny Stern is a founding partner of creative marketing communication agency SS+K, the advertising agency that created the youth campaigns for the Barack Obama presidential campaigns of 2008 and 2012, credited with providing the decisive margins that resulted in Obama victories in each year. Stern and his company are also known for developing the yellow LIVESTRONG bracelet and messaging for the Lance Armstrong Foundation.[1]

Another innovation led by Stern was CAA Marketing, a venture of top talent and sports agency Creative Artists Agency with the mission of developing strategic brand marketing opportunities in entertainment media for commercial clients. CAA owned a 40% stake in SS+K from 1999 through 2014.[2]

Background

Lenny Stern graduated from Brandeis University in 1983 with a BA in political science. He started his career working for Walter Mondale's presidential campaign (1984), followed by Philadelphia mayor Ed Rendell's gubernatorial campaign (1986), and then Michael Dukakis' presidential bid (1988). (The 1992 Bill Clinton presidential campaign proved Stern's first electoral victory.) Stern earned his JD at the University of Pennsylvania Law School (1989), and after briefly working with Wall Street law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison joined PR firm Sawyer/Miller Group in 1990, where he met communications strategist Rob Shepardson, PR specialist Marty Kaminsky and legendary ad man David McCall.[3] Together, the four would start their own agency in 1993.

The strategic muscle Stern and Shepardson earned at Sawyer/Miller was noted by author James Harding in the book Alpha Dogs: The Americans Who Turned Political Spin Into a Global Business (2008).

SS+K

Founded as Shepardson Stern & Kaminsky, the firm was soon noted for its unique approach to marketing communications, which they described as "an integrated approach – a political way of thinking about communications."[4] Stern clarified the lessons that politics could teach corporate marketers: "With politics you face a diverse set of audiences. There is a set time period, there is a need to focus, unify the message, understand the landscape. In the end, you either win or lose."[5]

SS+K promotional programs typically go beyond simply making ads for their clients.[5] For example, the agency's first client was Time Warner, which with the emergence of Internet technology was planning to expand its cable service into then-groundbreaking areas like video on demand and digital video recording. Stern and his partners felt that there was no way for Time Warner to succeed as a visionary company without first rectifying the strongly negative attitudes consumers held about the poor quality of the cable company's customer service. They proposed an on-time service guarantee – if Time Warner missed a customer appointment, the customer would get a free month of service – and developed advertising meant to disarm consumers' skepticism. Using the tagline "We just might surprise you," the TV ad campaign depicted typically unflappable New Yorkers unfazed by all manner of preposterous circumstances, like real lions on the steps of the New York Public Library, yet being dumbfounded by the suggestion of a cable company honoring its customer service promises.[6] As documented in Victoria Clarke's book Lipstick on a Pig: Winning In the No-Spin Era by Someone Who Knows the Game (2006), the idea not only worked for Time Warner, but service guarantees became a staple of the cable industry.[7]

Over the following years, the agency added a continuous stream of cachet clients, including General Motors, Ralph Lauren, Allstate, Pfizer, Honest Tea and dozens more. The company continues to add top-tier clients to its roster, with JW Marriott, The New Yorker magazine, Starbucks, Wells Fargo, Fresh Direct[2] – and most recently Sirius XM and Comcast – all signing with the agency since 2014.

CAA Marketing

Richard Lovett, president of Creative Artists Agency – a top Hollywood talent agency – has said of Stern: "His strategic thinking is the best I've ever encountered,"[5] and in 1999, CAA – at the time an SS+K client – purchased a 40% stake in SS+K.[2] Between 2005 and 2009, Lenny Stern took the reins of CAA's new division, CAA Marketing – though without leaving SS+K[7] – building the west coast operation designed to help companies capitalize on branding opportunities in entertainment media beyond sponsorships and product placements.[8] Stern envisioned the development of strategic entertainment-based content for brands;[8] the organization he built would go on to create the Cannes-award-winning short video Back to the Start for Chipotle in 2012, featuring Willie Nelson. In 2014, SS+K bought out CAA's investment; later that year, M&C Saatchi took a 33% investment in SS+K.[2]

Notable client work

SS+K also created award-winning work for the Obama reelection campaign in 2012, most notably a web video featuring Lena Dunham, slyly discussing voting "your first time" as akin to losing one's virginity.[12] The strength of the youth vote again proved instrumental in swinging the 2012 election for Obama.[13] Documentary videos can be viewed on the SS+K Vimeo channel.

Personal

Lenny Stern has said that his goal is to use creative thinking to make a difference, whether through commercial, political or non-profit work, and SS+K is very active in supporting advocacy programs.[17] The agency currently works with Smile Train (cleft palate repair), and has in the past worked with Bono's African relief effort, Share Our Strength/No Hungry Kid, First Lady Michelle Obama's Let's Move! campaign to fight childhood obesity, Sandy Hook Promise (protecting children from gun violence), the Center for American Progress advocacy campaign to fight genocide, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.Stern has been a long time visiting professor at Yale University School of Management and a visiting lecturer at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, and is on the board of Communities in Schools, the nation's largest and most-effective dropout prevention program.Stern is married with three daughters.[18]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://vimeo.com/16939076 SS+K LIVESTRONG case study on Vimeo
  2. Eliott, S. (2014, November 17) M&C Saatchi Buys a Stake in SS&K. The New York Times
  3. O'Leary, N. (1999, April 26) David McCall Dies Aiding Refugees. Adweek
  4. Cummings, C. (2012, January 10) Political: SS+K. Retrieved from MediaPost Publications website
  5. Atkinson, C. (1999, July 19) PROFILE: Stern - a specialty strategist. Along with his partners, Lenny Stern has a flair for putting the right PR pros in the right place. Claire Atkinson finds out what draws in colleagues and clients. PR Week
  6. Cranin, A. (1995, November 27) Cable TV; Chastised Cable MSOs Choose Service, and Smile; Consumers Unhappy With Response, & TELCO Industry Looming as Competition. Advertising Age
  7. Creamer, M. (2006, June 19) For SS&K, Small Size Means Big Business. Advertising Age
  8. Diaz, A-C. (2007, November 19) Stars Align. Advertising Age
  9. Dahl, M. (2008, November 5) Youth vote may have been key in Obama's win. Retrieved from NBCNews.com
  10. Wheaton, K. (2008, October 17) Special Report: Marketer of the Year. Adweek
  11. Creamer, M. (2009, June 27) Yes, We Cannes: Obama Campaign Takes Titanium and Integrated Grand Prix. Advertising Age
  12. Vary, A. (2012, October 25) Lena Dunham: My first time was with Barack Obama -- VIDEO. Entertainment Weekly
  13. Robillard, K. (2012, November 7) Election 2012: Study: Youth vote was decisive. Retrieved from Politico.com
  14. http://www.yale.edu/printer/bulletin/archivepdffiles/Management/Management_2001-2002.pdf Yale School of Management course catalog, 2001-2002
  15. Bucci, J. (2011, May 23) Honest Tea Formula SS+K PR Campaign Turns Sampling Stunt into Search for the "Most Honest City in America." Bulldog Reporter's Daily 'Dog
  16. https://www.facebook.com/ssandk SS+K Facebook page
  17. (2012, October 15) Big Players, Big Ideas. Video profile, retrieved from Adweek.com
  18. Information retrieved from SS+K website