Love and War is the agency we wanted to hire, but couldn't find, when we were on the client side.
It is the company we wanted to work for, but couldn't find, as creatives.
Instead of departmental silos, we wanted a single "go to" team that could attack problems, develop
creative solutions, and execute across print, web, and broadcast media. We wanted to work with
people who had an intuitive grasp of brand strategy and a knack for breakthrough creative.
We wanted a streamlined structure and a flexible process. We wanted to work with people who would roll
up their sleeves and get it done.
We couldn't find the agency we wanted. So we created it.
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Branding
Brand Strategy
Product Positioning
Brand Architecture
Visual Identity
Advertising
Print Advertising
Television Advertising
Website Development
Online Advertising
Social Media
Outdoor Advertising
Direct Mail |
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Take a stand.
It’s perfectly natural to want to fit in - to stick with what’s familiar and play it safe. But for
a brand, playing it safe is dangerous business. To stand out, you must be willing to take a stand.
Keep it simple.
If a brand strategy or campaign rationale is difficult to understand, it’s probably wrong.
The best brands are built on a simple concept.
Great ideas take time. Sometimes.
Developing breakthrough creative often takes a lot of time and effort. But not always.
Sometimes the best ideas are the first to emerge. |
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Prototype early and often.
Brand strategies, mission statements, and positioning concepts are often essential and almost always helpful. But
the real test is creative execution. The sooner a strategy can be prototyped creatively, the sooner it can be
evaluated and refined.
Stay open and inspired.
Inspiration is an attitude – a willingness to entertain the illogical, to stretch beyond personal taste, to embrace
what you may initially dismiss, to ask questions and stay curious. Look to everything and anyone for inspiration. |
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Love and War is structured around a core, multi-disciplinary team with experience in brand strategy, advertising, design, and broadcast
production. Complementing this core team is a network of creative specialists used for specific projects.
As a group, we’ve written brand strategies, positioned consumer
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products, and developed advertising campaigns. We've made technical
brochures interesting and readable. We've designed individual logos and full identity systems. We’ve scripted and directed television and
radio commercials. We've made websites and banners. |
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Each member of our team brings different skills. But we are united by a passion for creative problem solving. Whether we are working for a
Fortune 500 company or a small startup, we approach every client and project fresh. It's all about keeping an open mind, seeing new
possibilities, and staying inspired.
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Peter Tashjian
Partner
Peter’s experience is in brand strategy and advertising. As a consultant at FutureBrand – one of the
largest worldwide branding agencies – he developed brand strategies for Fidelity Investments, Bell
Canada, State Street Bank, and spent a year in Buenos Aires on a full rebranding assignment for
Argentina’s national telecom. As a creative director at Chadwick – a New York advertising agency –
Peter developed campaigns for companies such as Brut ECN, The Financial Times, ESPN, General Dynamics,
and the City of Pittsburgh. Prior to founding Love and War, Peter worked as independent consultant
developing consumer product positionings for companies such as Gillette, J&J, McNeil, and RealNetworks,
among others.
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Eng San Kho
Partner
Eng San is an experienced designer, commercial director, and art director. While at Hornet Inc., he
developed television commercials, branding systems, and advertising campaigns for MTV, Titleist Golf,
Orbit Gum, Bravo, Smirnoff, and PBS, among others. Eng San also oversaw all branding and broadcast design
as a Creative Director at Pseudo Programs Inc. – the world’s first online video website. His work has been
featured in books such as “False Flat: Why Dutch Design is so Good,” and in publications such as “Ad Age:
Creativity,” “Print Magazine,” and “Boards Magazine,” among others.
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