Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Sunday, March 8, 2020
AMA St. Louis presents Foresight 2020
Bill Ellis skillfully served as MC at the American Marketing Association of St. Louis 59th Annual Conference at the Danforth Plant Science Center.
Board members had been planning this conference for months, but success is determined in a lot of well-planned details that assure quality speakers who are prepared with smart professional content. The venue, technology, foodservice and hundreds of other details can have an impact on profitability and living up to the ambitious goal of being relevant. The chapter mission to advance the study and practice of marketing is also an important measure of this and all of our programmimg.
This conference scores high marks. Notable was the quality of presentations and the smooth transitions from speaker to speaker. While the audience had opportunities to move to breakout sessions, I stayed put in the auditorium for Kathy Button Bell (CMO of Emerson), Jeff Stevens (Owner of Wellbeing), Hafiz Huda (former Creative Director at Amazon), Mitch Meyers (CEO of BeLeaf Company) and Tara Rogers-Ellis (co-founder of MOJO PR). As a bonus, conference goers had the opportunity to visit local agencies 2e Creative, Coolfire and New Honor Society in the afternoon.
Heidi Singleton deserves special recognition for taking on conference co-chair responsibilities. She was instrumental in the critical program and technology support for speaker interface, PowerPoint, sound and more. She lead the effort to keep the program focused on its name, FORESIGHT 2020: A LOOK AT WHAT MATTERS NEXT.
Congratulations to all at AMA St. Louis and all of those who made this the 03.06.2020 conference among the best in 59 years.
Here's the summary of events as posted on chapter website:
Board members had been planning this conference for months, but success is determined in a lot of well-planned details that assure quality speakers who are prepared with smart professional content. The venue, technology, foodservice and hundreds of other details can have an impact on profitability and living up to the ambitious goal of being relevant. The chapter mission to advance the study and practice of marketing is also an important measure of this and all of our programmimg.
This conference scores high marks. Notable was the quality of presentations and the smooth transitions from speaker to speaker. While the audience had opportunities to move to breakout sessions, I stayed put in the auditorium for Kathy Button Bell (CMO of Emerson), Jeff Stevens (Owner of Wellbeing), Hafiz Huda (former Creative Director at Amazon), Mitch Meyers (CEO of BeLeaf Company) and Tara Rogers-Ellis (co-founder of MOJO PR). As a bonus, conference goers had the opportunity to visit local agencies 2e Creative, Coolfire and New Honor Society in the afternoon.
Heidi Singleton deserves special recognition for taking on conference co-chair responsibilities. She was instrumental in the critical program and technology support for speaker interface, PowerPoint, sound and more. She lead the effort to keep the program focused on its name, FORESIGHT 2020: A LOOK AT WHAT MATTERS NEXT.
Congratulations to all at AMA St. Louis and all of those who made this the 03.06.2020 conference among the best in 59 years.
Here's the summary of events as posted on chapter website:
59th Annual Saint Louis AMA Conference
March 6, 2020 at the Danforth Plant Science Center
March 6, 2020 at the Danforth Plant Science Center
Be inspired by global thought leaders on what matters next in
the future of marketing.
Conference
Program:
7:30 to 8:00 Registration and
Networking
8:00
to 8:15 Welcome – AT&T Auditorium
8:15
to 8:50 – AT&T Auditorium
Kathy Button-Bell, Senior Vice President
and Chief Marketing Officer, Emerson
The Demand for Authentic Purpose for all Businesses in 2020
Customers, investors, corporate boards, the Business
Roundtable, employees and prospective employees are all currently casting a
cynical eye toward companies and their moral compasses. The newfound
transparency offered by LinkedIn, Glassdoor and other social media vehicles
make corporations as porous as an egg shell, and just as fragile. This is
a discussion of developing authentic company values and consistently
communicating a story of rich corporate culture both inside and out. It could
be your prescription for illuminating your Purpose in 2020.
9:00-9:30 Breakout Session 1 (Choose 1)
Jeff Stevens, Owner, Wellbeing Brewing –
AT&T Auditorium
What is Authenticity?
It’s rare to see a creative brief that doesn’t include the word
“authenticity.” Every brand wants it, but what does it actually mean? Jeff
Stevens talks about his journey in creating brands and what authenticity
actually means (or doesn’t) in a creative brief and the work that follows.
Dr. Raj Sachdev, Professor, Columbia
College – Lagenberg Theater
The Future of Marketing Strategy in a Global Security and
Privacy Environment
Cybersecurity is becoming the new mark of a stalwart brand, and
its success or failure can make or break a consumer’s trust. Dr. Sachdev will
describe key cybersecurity and privacy issues that marketers can expect over
the next 5-10 years and beyond, and analyze key marketing strategies in this
ever-changing environment.
9:40
to 10:15 – AT&T Auditorium
Hafiz Huda, Fmr. Creative
Director, Amazon
Finding Human Purpose for Your Brand
In the age where every brand is trying to find a brand purpose
that can change the world, we need to become much more grounded in the daily lives
of the customers we serve. Everyone wants to break through the clutter, but if
your brand can provide a relevant opportunity for people to engage, you win in
the marketplace. Hafiz will discuss his experiences in shaping the Amazon Go
brand and how a practical approach to storytelling creates the right
opportunity for people to care.
10:30-11:00 Breakout Session 2 (Choose 1)
Mitch Meyers, CEO BeLeaf Company –
AT&T Auditorium
The Future of Cannibas Marketing
A great scholar once said, “Whoever laughs last is probably the
most stoned.” In the age where the cannibas category is becoming more
legitimate (and legal) by the year, the brands and marketers who get there
first will certainly have the last laugh. Learn about how cannibas is changing
the face of health and wellness, and how marketing will set the stage for the
adoption and explosion of this emerging catgeory.
Ryan Brown
Chief Strategy Officer, New Honor Society – Lagenberg Theater
Ready for Hire: Future-proofing your Portfolio
The ubiquity of our media, the marketing within it, and the
tools to create the content that feeds it, have placed a new premium on the
perspectives that inform the solutions we create. Yet articulating your ‘why’
behind your work is as impossible as ever in a time-starved world of goldfish
attention spans and hard-to-impress super-critics. In this session we’ll expose
how the desperation in the hunt for creative talent is changing the industry’s
filter on portfolios of work, the people behind them, and the new expectations
of creatives in the workplace.
11:10
to 11:45 – AT&T Auditorium
Tara Rogers-Ellis, Co-founder & Managing
Partner, Mojo PR
The Myths, the Truths & the Fundamental Tools to be
Successful in Business Anywhere in the World
Having worked across a number of continents, and in vastly
different cultures, Tara has learnt the fundamentals of being successful in
business no matter where you are in the world.
In today’s world, where geographies can be traversed in a day,
and business opportunities abound around the globe, knowing the basics for
building a successful business anywhere will stand you in good stead.d.
11:45
– 12:00 Student Awards –
AT&T Auditorium
12:15 Leave for Agency Crawl
2:00 – 2e Creative, 411 N 10th St #600
3:00 – Coolfire, 415 N 10th St
4:00 – New Honor Society, 555 Washington Ave
2ndFloor
Thursday, August 15, 2019
Parker is Back
I
was excited to see Parker and his bandmates return to Off Broadway in Saint
Louis on August 15, 2019. The venue is a great one for live music lovers. I‘ve
anticipated his return to Saint Louis even before I had the pleasure of seeing
him in Nashville when he married my niece in June. I noted that my brother was
unable to contain his joy at that union. As father of the bride he was
compelled to windy toasts and well wishes for the couple. To be sure, my
brother vetted the singer/songwriter thoroughly. This is the fifth time I’ve
seen him in concert in St. Louis and I think he’s pretty okay as well. More
importantly, my niece is ready and has no plans to make Other Arrangements. Parker’s
new wife is gonna help Root Nashville, a public-private campaign, led by Metro
Nashville and the Cumberland River Compact, to plant 500,000 trees across
Davidson County by 2050. Wow.
Parker
Millsap, originally from a small town in Oklahoma (Purcell). He first picked up a
guitar when he was just nine years old. After becoming interested in blues greats
like Stevie Ray Vaughan and Eric Clapton, Millsap switched over to electric
guitar and started a cover band with classmate, Michael Rose, who still plays
bass with the band. Millsap attributes his lifelong dedication to music to
his Pentecostal upbringing. Over the years he recruited musicians Daniel Foulks
(fiddle) and Andrew Bones (Drums) to join his band.
Since
the release of his first full length album, Palisade, in 2012, Parker has
enjoyed tremendous success in the music industry. Three more CDs (Parker
Millsap, The Very Last Day and Other Arrangements), recognized as emerging
artist of the year by the Americana Music Association in 2014, appearing on
TV - Conan in 2016, performing with Sir Elton John in London and taped
for Austin City Limits. What fun it is to see the band again at Off Broadway.
He’s here one night and “poof” he’s on the road to perform the very next night in
Paducah.
Photo of Parker by James Coreas
A
summary of my local fandom as of this night:
Parker is back at Off Broadway Thursday night August 15, 2019. In the sky that night a full moon is forming (officially the next morning). Jack Klatt opens for Parker, Michael, Daniel and Andrew Bones.
Parker on stage at the Old Rock House on Seventh Avenue September 26, 2018, a Wednesday night with a full moon.
At the Pageant on November 23, 2016 are Parker Millsap and his band mates on stage supporting J J Grey and Mofro Parker Millsap plays the Pageant in the loop of University City.
The Glory Bound Grahams opened with a set that included the lyrics - Put your hand in mine, it’s revival time set the stage for Parker, Michael and Dazniel audience was treated to a well orchestrated show that worked its way up to Hades Pleads as the finale on Friday May the 13, 2016 at Off Broadway in the Cherokee Lemp Historic District of St. Louis.
The band with Michael Rose (Bass), Parker Millsap, Daniel Foulks (Fiddle) at the Old Rock House in St. Louis April 2, 2014.
A shout out to Dave and Joyce Cox, Alex Bornstein and some staffers from Litz who came out on a school night to hang with me
Wednesday, July 3, 2019
Airplane Parts Warehouse
This story by David Drimer is a draft he shared with me via e-mail on July 3, 2019. The guy has always had a way with words. The image of the airplane parts warehouse was borrowed from somewhere on the world wide web - a place in Seattle I think.
Drug Mule: Down & Out in Paradise
by Dave Drimer
So I was near dead broke in Miami in the middle of a blistering
summer and I needed do-re-mi. Yeah, it’s a thing. “Judge Yoda not, needed the
money Yoda did, mmm.” Got a no skills/no experience necessary job doing
inventory in a gigantic airplane parts warehouse alongside lifelong proles and
ex-cons.
One guy had been a union forklift operator at the airport, working
on the international cargo loading dock. In the 70s, he was making $65 per hour,
time and half for overtime and double time over 50 hours. Sometimes he worked
60-hour weeks and he socked away a lot of dough. So he and his best friend got
entrepreneurial in a creative way that only uneducated guys with too much money
and a lot of time on their hands can. America is the land of opportunity,
right?
They went down to Jamaica, bought one ton of weed (it was easier
to make connections like that, given the place and time, than you would
imagine). They had their box shipped to a fictitious company in Miami.
The plan worked perfectly: the weed came in; he picked it up and set it aside;
called his friend who rented the truck. They agreed they would do the pick-up
right before closing time when everybody was tired and nobody gave a crap. For
my shipping industry pals, it was classed as “Household Goods, NES.” This was a
perfect crime; nobody ever checked. Not ever.
About 5 minutes before he expected his friends and the truck, he
sees a little cold, wet black nose turn the corner and come through the door, 2
uniformed customs agents in tow. He didn’t even have time to register his heart
sinking when the dog goes freaking berserk (this was before they were forced to
do the passive reaction thing, which is another drug mule story for another day).
The agents release the dog and he runs right to the guy’s crate, starts barking
up a storm, literally biting the box. They crack the crate and it’s packed in
so tightly the contents burst out, flying up into the air.
The entire loading dock crew pissed themselves laughing. The
agents were high fiving and jumping up and down because they finally made a
bust. My guy was kicking little bits of pot into the corner, trying not to
burst into tears. He ended saving about an ounce and a half. He was never implicated,
just out $12K plus.
Terrific denouement for the story: he ended getting laid off from
his great union job. Some real world irony, right? Totally broke. Working in an
airplane parts warehouse with me, and a lot of big scary guys you didn’t talk
to if you didn’t have to and never, ever looked them straight in the eyes. I
lasted 2 weeks on that job. The boss didn’t appreciate my cogent opinions about
improving warehouse logistics.
To this day, I am confident my co-worker doesn’t realize he was
set-up by his seller. You see, throwing a one-time buyer under the bus
was no sweat off his nose. In fact, it was good for business. Everybody was on
the take in those days, it was take the money or be dead. People chose being
rich over being cold. The agents had to show something occasionally to
avoid the scrutiny that eventually ended up coming their way (greed gets you
every time). My guy thought he had bad luck. He never had a chance.
###
David Drimer
Monday, May 27, 2019
Neu Talent Show 2019

The
World Awaits – 2019 Talent Show
Friday,
March 15, 2019 is the date for our annual talent showcase. The show is held
from 12:30 – 2:00 on the Friday before Spring break. Consistent with the school
year theme THE WORLD AWAITS performers were encouraged (but not required) to
leverage content about the world/travel/destination. Acts could consist of
individuals, groups or solo acts (music, song, dance, magic, performance or
artistic expression). Students must have signed permission slips to participate
(and sponsors are responsible for appropriate material). A sign-up sheet was
available months in advance in the staff mailroom and the front office. It
included some acceptable music choices (suggestions). Wes Morgan, talent show impresario
was on hand for this his fourth year of being point man for this annual
happening.
Some
details in advance of the show: The World Awaits – themes about
travel/destination/global issues (or any display of talent/performance). Students
interested in performing may sign up on a sheet located in the front office. Students
must be signed up by February 15, 2019 and have signed permission slip by March
1, 2019. Students must be compliant with all school rules and be in good
standing to be eligible to participate. It is sponsor’s responsibility to
oversee act, assure appropriate material, and supervise student performers.
(Classroom teachers for acts involving their class only are assumed to be
supervising sponsor for class acts. Students should be supervised by homeroom
class staff unless approved by school administrator.) Acts are limited to 2
minutes (for classes) and no more than 90 seconds for individual/small group
acts. Invitations for parent and families will be provided by March 1, 2019.
Please make sure they get home. (You may also want to include Talent Show in
your monthly newsletters in February and March). Students must remain in good
standing to participate. (Suspension from school on show date will make student
ineligible to participate.)Music, CD or flash drive of music/graphics must be
provided before March 1, 2018 for review and processing for the show. Dress
rehearsal will be in the gym on March 14 (the day before the show)
Thank you for your enthusiasm.
It was a great show.
2019 American Marketing Association Golf Outing
2019
AMA Golf Outing
June
28 @ 12:30 pm - 5:00 pm
$24.25
– ($97 foursome)
Join
us for the AMA annual golf outing at Creve Coeur Golf Course on June 28, 2019.
Everyone is invited to play regardless of skill level. Shotgun start at 12:30
p.m.
Book a foursome or we'll arrange one for you. Make your reservations early. Special
Pricing this year $24.25 per golfer (Foursome $97)
Beverages
and refreshments sold separately. All
golfers receive a FREE gift bag for 9 holes. Closest-to-the-pin
contests on #2 and #9. Long
drive competition on #8. Reserve
golf online, or contact Wes Morgan for more information on sponsorships,
golfing, and more. Questions contact Wes Morgan at morganwes@aol.com
June
28, 2019
12:30
pm - 5:00 pm
$24.25
– $97 (foursome)
Creve
Coeur Golf Course
11400
Olde Cabin Rd
Saint Louis, MO 63105 United States
Saint Louis, MO 63105 United States
Sunday, May 12, 2019
Mother's Day 2019
Life savers always there
No-one ever shows more care
Through binoculars you can see
Attractions, distractions, on the beach
But no-one replaces the eagle eyes
Of moms watching those kids in the tide
Happy Mothers' Day 2019
P.S. The lifeguard sculpture was in a booth at the show. Appologies to the artist - I don't recall his/her name but this piece did stop me in my tracks. Laumeier Sculpture Park Mothers' Day 2019
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