Posts Tagged ‘digital’

December 3rd, 2008

Can marketing use social media networks for advertising?

,So the mighty P&G has spoken about social media. When these companies speak the marketing community has to listen. These guys think long and hard about the issues to cut straight through the hype. I know because I did it for Unilever. I worked directly with Unilever digital teams to help them understand the real value of digital media to their business. So, what was the basic message emanating from P&G? Well it’s that social media is not “media” and there’s no point in advertising around “someone breaking up with their girlfriend”.

I disagree slightly with the first part of this criticism. Social media is a form of media because it is space which carries content and delivers an audience that can be traded for money. From an advertising perspective these are the core characteristics of a “medium”. The big question comes when we try to explore what type of medium social media actually is.

In reality social media is not social media, it’s personal media. Social media is really comprised of groups of individuals sharing their personal communications. These social media communications are online versions of personal phone calls, text messages or letters. And whilst in some cases individuals may be prepared to publish these communications, it doesn’t follow that advertising placed in them will be effective. Such advertising is the equivalent of a radio ad in a phone call.

Advertising media planning is no longer about reach (and sites like Facebook certainly deliver reach). Twenty-first century media planning is about going deeper than reach, it’s about delivering mindsets, engagement and involvement. And it’s a fact that whilst an individual is deeply involved in a personal communication, like dumping their girlfriend, they are unlikely to engage with advertising in or around that communication. This notion was encapsulated by David Ogilvy who once observed that you’re more likely to get the best direct response from an ad placed in the afternoon movie repeat than in the latest episode of Dallas (The big hit drama of the day). In other words, advertising can’t win when competing with high value content.

A few months ago on I wrote “Advertising on social networks is a Web 1.0 technique in a Web 2.0 world. It may be the case that carrying ads is not a sustainable route for these networks or for advertisers.” I think this remains the case. It’s a problem for the likes of Facebook though, because if they cannot monetize their inventory their value will fall. So how might sites like Facebook monetize their inventory? I think their answer is to monetize the relationships they have with their users. But this isn’t an ad model. It’s something more akin to Seth Godin’s permission marketing and value exchange. Facebook has a brand franchise. It needs to provide added value to its users by teaming up with partners and offering deals to its users. Social media should be an enabler which allows companies and individuals to exchange value.

September 27th, 2008

Dairy Milk gets the gorilla, but Galaxy gets the growth

dg
So, Dairy Milk with its Drumming Gorilla TV ad campaign has posted a sluggish 2% market share growth whilst ‘run of the mill’ Galaxy has romped home with a 12% growth. Research has shown that the Gorilla ad is more memorable than Galaxy activity, but clearly this success in recall does not seem to have translated into success in sales. Quite rightly, this result immediately ignites a discussion about the sales value of creativity. You can get into some of that here.

Not entirely unconnected to this is the debate that took place on the 4th August at the IPA - “Who makes better planners? Planners or creatives?” Veteran creative Dave Trott and planning sophistocrat David Golding battled it out with Trott arguing that it’s time planners got back to building sales rather than using advertising “to provide a window on a brand’s soul and to build the brand’s ‘equity’ in people’s minds”. Golding defended the principle of using the brand as a source of insight, and quite valiantly by all reports.

I’ve worked on projects with both of these characters, with David Golding on an existing client account at WCRS and Dave Trott on a creative pitch at WTCS (as was). Dave Trott worked in an interesting way. He did his own planning in his own mind, based on very considerable experience. His approach was intuitive - he visualised the target audience as people he knew (in this case his mother and her friends) and asked himself what type of message would engage her. Then he wrote those messages down and turned them into a visualized campaign for TV and press. Trott’s campaign was a distillation of the communication problem, solved, simplified and then visualised. Dave Golding on the other hand was measured, considerate, analytical and logical. He’d be as likely to base a campaign on what his mother thought as a judge would be to discuss a legal technicality with a courtroom security guard. The work that resulted was memorable and strong. So here’s the question - if the insight for the Dairy Milk Gorilla campaign were to have originated from the grey matter of either Golding or Trott, which would it be?

June 9th, 2008

What is Web 2.0?

Requests for a definition of Web 2.0 are still made by clients - for some this is still a new subject. Here’s a summary of the points I recently used to describe Web 2.0 to an FMCG advertiser.

Web 2.0 is an inclusive phrase that covers the new web based networking, customisation and data management functionalities that have emerged since 2000. 2000 is a significant start point because it played host to two important events in the gestation of Web 2.0. First, 2000 was the year of the dotcom crash which, in an almost Darwinian sense, extinguished poor performing technologies and ideas and created the intellectual, technological and financial ‘space’ for something new. And second, 2000 was the year that Google began real take-off after receiving $25m of venture capital in 1999. This investment paved the way for Google to expand globally and redefine the way web information is catalogued, ordered and retrieved worldwide.

It’s important to note that the web as a technology platform remains largely unchanged, but in Web 2.0, the way that platform is being used has changed dramatically. Web 2.0 is about moving web content from being information on a news stand to being customised information solutions for individual needs. This individual customisation is the essence of Web 2.0. The guys who coined the phrase Web 2.0* cite a number of examples to illustrate how Web 2.0 is an evolution from Web 1.0. Here are two examples that really sum it up:

1) Encyclopaedia Britannica versus Wikipedia

Britannica was - and remains - an online encyclopedia written and researched by the Britannica editorial team. It’s a huge compendium of information, but it remains under the tight control of Britannica. Wikipedia on the other hand is open to editorial contributions from almost anyone at any time. It is therefore never the same across any two days. That makes it a living and evolving entity. Where Britannica is ice, Wikipedia is water. Britannica is Web 1.0 and Wikipedia is Web 2.0.

2) Personal Website versus Blogs

Personal websites are generally static and non-interactive. Content is uploaded, pages are then fixed and remain unaltered unless the webmaster decides to make changes. Change is cumbersome, requiring changes in HTML source code. Blogs on the other hand are a platform designed to have content updated frequently. New content can be posted every minute and uploaded from PCs or mobile phones. Readers can air their views by posting comments. Content can be emailed to others. Blogs can be “claimed” at Technocrati where all registered blogs are brought together in a searchable blog universe or blogosphere. Personal Web sites are 1.0 and blogs are Web 2.0.

Other ways of defining Web 2.0

There are other ways of defining Web 2.0. Think of drinking in a highly social pub rather than having a glass of wine at home alone. Think of videoconferencing rather than watching the TV. Think of CB radio with its network of “breakers on the side” rather than a one to one linear telephone call. Think in terms of the Internet versus the printing press or conventional TV versus You Tube. Web 2.0 is Facebook where 1.0 is a printed membership directory. Web 1.0 is one dimensional, non-network based, comparatively static and delivered to “mass” online audiences. But Web 2.0 is about being multi-dimensional, connected, highly dynamic and delivered on a customised one to one basis.

What are Web 2.0’s component parts?

Web 2.0 is many things and the list is potentially endless – there are already about 9m references to it in Google. Even the guys who defined Web 2.0 had to say “Web 2.0 doesn’t have a hard boundary, but rather, a gravitational core”. Here are some of our examples:

Blogs / Blogosphere
Broadband
Comments
Communities
Content
Databases
Democracy of information
Facebook
Google
Google Adwords and Adsense
i-Tunes and i-Pods
LinkedIn
Networking
Tags
The “People who bought this, also bought this” feature in Amazon (A web 1.0 survivor)
Technocrati
User Generated Content
Widgets
Wikipedia

These examples are component parts of a totally new media age. It’s a new form of media (indeed media may no longer be the right word) with a new set of rules, a new language, a new functionality and it’s a world that puts the consumer, as the scheduler, at its core.

* O’Reilly Media and MediaLive International