Blair and Co. developed the Victory and Venture print campaign around a single creative insight: the open-concept, space-maximizing floor plans that Victory and Venture offered were the antithesis of the cramped, compartmentalized layouts that have plagued the condo category for decades. That insight led directly to the Hey, 1968 called concept, using an image of a retro 1960s television set as the visual vehicle for a headline that was sharp enough to make a reader laugh and considered enough to make them pause. The body copy extended the concept cleanly, drawing a parallel between the way televisions got smarter and smaller over the decades and the way floor plans should have done the same. The retro television image gave the ad a stopping power that no building render or lifestyle photography could match on the page, while the concept itself communicated the product differentiator, smart, modern, space-efficient layouts, without resorting to a specification list. The V and V monogram mark was used to anchor the brand in the ad without overpowering the creative concept. The Discovery Centre details, location, hours, sales manager contact, and website, were carried at the base of the ad in a clean information panel that gave motivated buyers everything they needed to take the next step.