November 23, 2009
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Catching the Smile Train

Sometimes Hitting It Big in Advertising Just Isn't Enough

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Working for years in advertising, Brian Mullaney opened his own shop and rode the crest of the mid-1990s technology wave. After selling the $100 million shop, though, he had to figure out what to do next. Here's what he found.

They told me there's no such thing as a boring product.

And I believed them.

Brian Mullaney is the co-founder of the Smile Train.
Brian Mullaney is the co-founder of the Smile Train.
I was fresh out of college, a junior copywriter trainee at Young & Rubicam. I worked on everything: Jell-O, Birds Eye, Ford, Ruffles, Burger King, Miller beer, Kodak, Ronzoni.

Single and determined to improve my $15,000 a year starting salary, I worked every night, every weekend trying to become the next David Ogilvy. I traveled everywhere -- to factories, focus groups, stores, conventions, trade shows, sales meetings, farms, paper mills, shopping malls -- trying to learn everything I could about every product I ever tried to sell. I learned why some potato chips have green spots, why Miller beer is darker than Bud and what the inside of a nuclear power plant looks like.

But after years of working hard trying to make mundane, everyday household packaged goods interesting and exciting, I stumbled across a product that actually took my breath away: computer software.

It was 1987 and even though I didn't know how to use a computer, I did know enough to be the first to volunteer for that new-business pitch. Nobody else at JWT wanted anything to do with it. A tiny, ugly, $5 million mainframe software account called Computer Associates that ran most of their ads in ComputerWorld.

After winning the pitch, I barged into my boss' office to complain that the office manager said there was a nine-month wait for a PC. I argued that we would look pretty silly submitting ad copy to a computer client that had to be written on an IBM Selectric. "You want a PC?" JWT Chairman James Patterson asked me with a pained look on his face. "Take mine. They suck."

I stood up, and walked over to his desk and unplugged his IBM XT with a floppy disk drive and walked out without saying a word. Like they say, when they say yes, hang up the phone.

Two years later I quit JWT and started my own agency with my art director partner, Mike Schell. Our firm, Schell/Mullaney, specialized in high-tech products and services. Three months after we started our business, we won that ugly little $5 million dollar account, Computer Associates, from JWT. And we worked night and day over the next seven years and grew our agency into a $100 million shop. CA was our flagship client, which we handled in 70 countries and 90-plus languages.

It was worth all those late nights and cold pizza. Because in 1996, we sold our agency for more than we ever dreamed. Lucky? For sure. But did we make our own luck? I think that the saying is very true: The harder you work, the luckier you get.

Now at this point, I had a big decision to make: Start another agency or another business and try to make some more money, or do something else. I was 36 years old and confused: too young to retire and play bad golf, too old to do another start-up.

Thankfully, at this point I stumbled across another product that would change my life. As a volunteer for a medical mission group, I somehow ended up in China, in an O.R., watching a surgery on a very young, very poor 9-year-old girl who had lived her entire life with a cleft lip. After watching her surgery and carrying her out to the post-op ward, I waited with her father for her to wake up. When she woke, a nurse handed her a mirror and I'll never forget watching her stare at that mirror as nine years of tears streamed down her cheeks.

That surgery didn't just change her life, it changed mine.

I decided to leave advertising and co-found with my client and friend, Charles Wang, the chairman of Computer Associates, a children's charity called the Smile Train.

This year the Smile Train will provide free cleft-lip and -palate surgery for 125,000 children in 78 of the world's poorest countries. To raise the more than $100 million we need to pay for those surgeries, we do quite a bit of advertising, direct mail, PR, promotion, events, etc.

I still write all our ads, much of our direct mail, jingles, videos, etc. We even conceived of and produced a documentary that won an Oscar last February. (Like they say, you can take the boy out of advertising...)

I never became the next David Ogilvy.

But not a day goes by that I don't appreciate all that I learned on Madison Avenue. And I feel very fortunate that I ended up finding a "product" that I really believe in.

Brian Mullaney is co-founder of the Smile Train, an international charity that provides cleft-lip and -palate surgery to children in need as well as cleft-related training to doctors.

14 Comments
Subscribe to comments on: Catching the Smile Train
  By MinerJr | Largo, FL November 2, 2009 01:48:52 pm:
Great Story!
I have been in fundraising for over 30 years and the good you can accomplish with your efforts is very satisfying.
Terry Mowery
USA Savings Club
  By brianpowell | DALLAS, TX November 2, 2009 02:23:27 pm:
Kudos Brian. I wasn't aware of how Smile Train came about when I blogged about Smile Pinki winning the Oscar:

http://bit.ly/4jwszy

Good to see "Ad Guys" using their gifts and talents for greater good and helps explain why the work is so well done.

Brian Powell
@goodconcepts
thegoodconcepts.com
  By tommyzman | Oak Ridge, NJ November 3, 2009 07:58:57 am:
Just a terrific story, Brian and we all appreciate you sharing with us. If that saying does hold true - The harder you work, the luckier you get - then you must have worked pretty damned hard to be this damned lucky.

Congratulations bro - the world doesn't need more Ogilvy's, we need more guys like you.

Tommy Z • Publisher, PlanetZman
The Last Great Bastion for REAL Men
http://www.planetzman.com
http://www.twitter.com/planetzman
  By MarkKolier | WILTON, CT November 3, 2009 08:41:31 am:
Who needs David Ogilvy when we have Brian?
  By AnneKenney | New York, NY November 3, 2009 09:16:38 am:
To Brian -- I love Smile Train, but didn't know your story. COngratulations and wishing you much continued success. I recently received the SMile Pinki DVD in the mail from ST and really look forward to watching. Thanks for the inspiration. Anne
  By mbaran | Washington, DC November 3, 2009 09:20:16 am:
My son was born with cleft lip and palate. I have always provided funds for the Smile Train during our Combined Federal Campaign. Thank you for creating such a wonderful organization. You not only helped children with this genetic abnormality, but you have also provided a learning curve for millions of people. You are a true pioneer.
  By donohuej | the villages, FL November 3, 2009 09:27:18 am:
Wow! This is wonderful, Brian. You are generating a lot of smiles with this story! Thanks for inspiring us all to use our gifts and talents in new and unexpected ways.
Judy Donohue
  By rituashrafi | New York, NY November 3, 2009 10:24:35 am:
I've been a supporter and donor to Smile Train for almost 2 years now and this article only proves that I made a wise choice when picking a charity to donate to. Brian Mullaney seems like an old friend because of the emails from him I receive in my inbox every now and then, but I had no idea that he has had such an accomplished personal story.
  By David | Chicago, IL November 3, 2009 10:38:46 am:
Great Story Brian!
Its always wonderful to hear how transformational people extend their expertise in other ways that enrich the lives of others. A very inspirational story with a happy ending. Thanks.

Best Regards,
David Berg/Business Development Director
Merge Design & Interactive
www.mergeworld.com
www.twitter.com/mergeworld
  By Gringo | Corona Del Mar, CA November 3, 2009 11:17:21 am:
Great work Mr. Mullaney! We all appreciate those who give back to make the world a better place. Keep doing the good work you do and kudos to all who help do that work with you.

Mark Green
Senior VP
Cell Phones for Good
www.cellphonesforgood.com
  By stclark | Los Angeles, CA November 3, 2009 01:48:19 pm:
you've realized what is often pitched to clients but is rarely if ever supported by the work produced: authenticity.

What a great accomplishment and cause. All the best on your journey.

Sean T. Clark
www.sagebranddirections.com
  By creativeo | London November 3, 2009 02:26:09 pm:
I think this is just great. I think that Brian should be given more praise than David Ogilvy. Which has contributed more to a better world? David set up a successful agency. Wrote a book. All very good but did he change the lives of lots of kids? Don't think so. Maybe David, if he was still alive would be thinking, maybe one day I could be like Brian.
Chris Arnold
Creative Orchestra, London
  By mediaspace | Norwalk, CT November 4, 2009 08:38:43 am:
Brian, remarkable stories, yours and The Smile Train. On behalf of everyone at Mediaspace, it's satisfying to be part of such a wonderful cause and we wish you and TST continued success!

Warm regards

Jose Rodriguez / VP Client Services & Research
Mediaspace Solutions
jrodriguez@mss-mail.com
  By Andrew | Santa Barbara, CA November 4, 2009 11:14:34 am:
"Take mine! They suck!" Dude, that's awesome! As is your passion and Smile Train magic. - AB in Santa Barbara
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