RIESTER

Archive for November, 2009

Tim Riester

Greenbuild is in Phoenix. Tom Ortega is leading the way.

Greenbuild, the largest conference in the world dedicated to promoting sustainable construction and design, is in Phoenix this week. My business partner and RIESTER’s Executive Creative Director, Tom Ortega, was featured on ABC News last night discussing sustainable building design. Ortega used his soon to be built home as an example of a way to live that lightens his family’s footprint.

Sustainability communications is an area of expertise for RIESTER and is especially relevant this week with Greenbuild Conference in Phoenix. Ortega is not only leading by example as he prepares to break ground on his family’s home, he is also a leader in creating campaigns that effectively communicate why it is important and necessary to live lives with sustainability in mind. His new home will be powered with solar electricity, he will be harvesting rainwater on his property and the home will be built with sustainable materials.

Sustainability is more than a buzz word. We all must adopt more sustainable lifestyles if we hope to pass on a healthy and prosperous world to our children and grandchildren.

Tim Riester

Mirja Riester discusses the fall of the Berlin Wall on television.

My wife, business partner and RIESTER’s Executive Director Mirja Riester appeared on Fox 10 in Phoenix discussing the fall of the Berlin Wall:

Don’t miss Mirja’s post on our web site: http://tinyurl.com/MirjasBerlinPost

Mirja Riester

Germany’s 9/11 and multiculturalism.

9 November 1989, celebrating at the Berlin Wall. For the first time in two generations people move freely between East and West Berlin. Political systems have a profound impact on culture. Photo by Sue Ream.

9 November 1989, celebrating at the Berlin Wall. For the first time in two generations people move freely between East and West Berlin. Political systems have a profound impact on culture. Photo by Sue Ream.

9/11 in the U.S. marks a dark day in American history. Europeans use a different syntax to express dates. The day comes first and then the month. 9/11 in Europe is a day to celebrate. On the ninth day of November, exactly twenty years ago, a non-violent revolution brought down the Berlin Wall.

For forty-four years Germany had been divided. The East lived under the grip of a Communist police state. The West thrived under what is best characterized as a social market economy. After the Wall fell, Germany was reunified. Yet, twenty years after the reunification, significant differences remain between the eastern and western parts of Germany. How could this be?

If you travel to Berlin today, you can see how arbitrary the division of the city was. The same was true for the 858 mile-long border that split Germany into two separate nations during the Cold War. German culture dates back over many centuries, it seems implausible that a divide that lasted less than two generations would alter a culture so much. Yet it did. It may take two more generations for the cultural divide that grew between east and west to dissipate in Germany.

The story of Germany’s division and reunification holds some unexpected lessons in multiculturalism. The effects of living under different political systems for as short as two generations impacted the respective parts of Germany more than one would have imagined.

As people from other cultures move to new places they are challenged to adapt and assimilate quickly to the dominant culture. The case of Germany is interesting because few people physically moved after 1989, yet the former East Germans found themselves needing to assimilate within a unified nation. In some regards people adapt quickly in these circumstances, but the process of acculturation is uneven and people are slow to let go of certain parts of their cultural heritage.

RIESTER’s understanding of cultural issues goes beyond any specific cultural group. We are fortunate to have the ability to truly comprehend other cultures prior to applying acculturation models for marketing purposes. Only when one clearly understands different cultures, is it possible to understand the societal dynamics that arise as people assimilate, and then identify what matters most to those people.

Today the boundary that split Germany for nearly half a century is gone. November 1989 was a turning point in history. After decades of tensions, a non-violent uprising brought an end to communist rule over East Germany. Political systems are more important than we often realize. An oppressive regime can have a profound effect on the culture of a people, no matter how old that culture may be.

Mirja Riester

Brand Activists for clean air.

We are privileged to have a business where every day we make a difference in the world. Whether it’s helping to break the grip of addiction, promoting sustainable living, fighting for stronger education or any one of dozens of other causes or products we fight for on a daily basis, at RIESTER we are lucky and honored to work for our clients. We are Brand Activists and we come to work each day fighting for many worthy brands.

One of these brands is the air we breathe. Last month RIESTER helped the Maricopa County Air Quality Department conduct its first annual conference. Lawrence Odle, the department’s director, had this to say after the event: “The Partnering for Cleaner Air Conference was the first in many steps needed to clean the air in Maricopa County. Each and every person has an individual responsibility to improve air quality and unless we educate our citizens and community leaders about what processes need to be followed, we take the risk of losing crucial federal funding for the state, and that is not an option.”

Our team was thrilled to meet Denis Hayes who was the keynote speaker. Hayes was the national coordinator of the first Earth Day when he was only 25. Since that day in 1970, Hayes has continued to distinguish himself as an activist for our Earth. Thank you Denis and a special thank you to the Maricopa County Air Quality Department’s staff for the fine work they do every day to promote clean air.

A group of activists photographed at Maricopa County’s first Clean Air Conference: Teri Morris, Christina Borrego, Denis Hayes and Mirja Riester.
A group of activists photographed at Maricopa County’s first annual air quality conference: Teri Morris, Christina Borrego, Denis Hayes and Mirja Riester.

 

Read more about last month’s conference at http://tinyurl.com/Maricopa1stCleanAirConf

Jim Breitinger

Mad Men, smoking and lung cancer.

The year is 1963 and Annabelle Mathis, an old flame of senior partner Roger Sterling, stops by Sterling Cooper, the fictional advertising agency on the television show “Mad Men.” She is in New York shopping for a new ad agency for her family dog food business, as well as possibly reigniting her romance with Roger. The show’s protagonist, Don Draper, is sitting in on the meeting with Roger and Annabelle. Annabelle says that she is now single because her husband died of lung cancer. He was 51. A moment after she delivers this news the camera cuts to Don Draper as he lights up a cigarette.

Lung cancer. Smoking. The juxtaposition is intentional.

This is classic “Mad Men.” The smoke is thick. Characters smoke in every possible setting, and they smoke often. The writers overdo it with the smoking to create a not so subtle visual reminder of the ethos of another time. From the first episode of the series titled “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes,” to the recent scene with Annabelle, a woman whose husband died from his addiction to nicotine, the air on the show is constantly clouded with tobacco smoke.

Because we understand fully today the true effects of smoking, there is little glamour left in taking a long drag and artfully exhaling smoke. RIESTER has been a leader in changing the character of our culture and its relationship with tobacco. One of our signature campaigns characterizes smoking in these words: Tumor causing, teeth staining, smelly, puking habit. There is another important word that describes smoking: killer.

Smokers are addicts. This is not an insult, it’s a physical fact. A massive and repetitious public awareness campaign has changed the way we think of smoking. While these efforts have not ended tobacco addiction, the mind shift that has occurred among millions of people is profound. Today a show like “Mad Men” can use smoking as a backdrop to help capture the feel of a different era. The thick smoke mocks another time. While people still smoke today, very few smoke in public places. The scene described above in “Mad Men” is almost unheard of today. Not many people can get away with smoking at work.

This is a good thing. There is no reason for Annabelle’s husband to be dead from lung cancer, though he was just a fictional character. Every day real people die as a result of their addiction to tobacco. We’ve come a long way since 1963, but the battle continues. Public awareness campaigns are one of the most effective tools available for breaking the grip of addiction.

The final episode of season three of Mad Men airs this Sunday on AMC.

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