MOVEMBER – The Power of a Good Idea

Greg Porter
Operations Manager

We live in a world where Bad Ideas can be prevalent, and in this digital age impossible to erase from the landscape. HD-DVD? Expensive flop, by all accounts. Investing a lifetime of hard-earned savings in your local branch of Northern Rock? You may be ruing that as a bad judgement call. Continually allowing Bono access to a microphone in public places? Don’t even get me started. Even our own industry has been known to drop a clanger – just how many advertising high-fliers at major corporations were left with their heads in their hands this June as the national team they had invested so much jingoistic branding to capitulated at the World Cup?

The good thing about a bad idea is that it makes a good one that much more prominent, and the now-famous Movember campaign belongs firmly in the latter camp. For the uninitiated, Movember is a worldwide charitable occasion so blissfully simple but effective it’s a wonder that nobody thought of it sooner – throughout the eleventh month of the year, gentleman the world over fight off the winter chill by growing moustaches to raise awareness for the Prostate Cancer cause. After a quick straw poll to ensure there are no pogonophobics among our ranks, PLBR have embraced this concept whole-heartedly – the men (and a couple of the ladies, but we find it politic not to comment on that) of our agencies have been sporting soup catchers in a variety of shapes and sizes, from the noble handlebar to the elegant Fu Manchu, via the lampshade and the chevron.

With celebrities, executives, students and royalty all getting in on the act, Movember has started as a devastatingly simple idea that has grown into a cultural phenomenon – all in the name of charity. So when you’re tucking into dinner this evening and pondering why your waiter looks like a Freddy Mercury tribute act or you step into a meeting and wonder why Magnum PI is taking the minutes, resist the urge to smirk –Movember is proof that just sometimes, the quirky little ideas are the ones that can run and run.

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