Introduction
On Being the Second-Smartest Person in the Room.

I got my first job in the business in 1979.

Some kid out there just went, “In 1979?? Dude, did they even have ads back then?”

Why, yes we did, thank you very much. My first agency job was at Bonetool, Thog & Neanderthal, and I worked on prestigious new products like Fire® and The Wheel.®

Actually, the kid does have a fair question. I mean, what can some 60-year-old know about digital advertising? Or animated GIFs, clickstreams, and superstitials?

As it turns out, a lot, actually, because to survive 33 years in the ad business, I had to stay completely up to the minute. And so will you.

You'll have to know about optimizing search engine results. You'll have to know what cool technology was just unveiled at SXSW Interactive. You'll have to know about APIs and RFIDs. And you'll have to keep learning new skills all the time.

Fortunately, you don't have to be an expert at everything. As a copywriter, I don't really have to know how to prototype an app. But if I want to be a valued member of my team, I basically have to be the second-smartest person in the room on that subject, and on every subject except copywriting…. Where I'd hope of course to be first-smartest.

Digitally, I've managed to hold my own through four editions of this book. Just the same, I figure it's time to bring in someone smarter than me on the subject.

Which brings me to our contributing author, Edward Boches. During his 31 years at agencies like Mullen and Hill Holiday, Edward went from being an early adopter and advocate of digital to a thought leader and recognized expert.

Edward wrote Chapters 10 through 15, but we passed the pen back and forth while writing this fifth edition, and so sometimes the word “I” means Edward, sometimes it's me.

Throughout the text you will occasionally see little boxes, like bit.ly/whipple5

It's usually next to the description of a piece of work that our words (as transcendently perfect as they are) do not do justice. It's work you really ought to see.

Bit.ly is a URL shortener. The main site for this fifth edition of Whipple is bit.ly/whipple5, and many of the pieces cited here reside there. Put that address in your bookmarks bar, after which you need only remember the suffix to get to any particular piece—like whipple5skittles or whipple5redbull.

One last note before we begin. You have purchased what is known as a “book.” Touching the pictures will not make them “play.” Note also, the pages do not “swipe.” You must grip the corner at the top of the right page and then sort of roll it back and to the left.

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