Archive for the 'Advertising' Category

Thinking outside the channel

We’ve recently been involved in a lot of work across the entire building (with BBDO, Proximity and NetX all involved), that have been great ideas for our clients that aren’t just about focusing on specific or traditional channels. The result is great ideas for our clients that weren’t born out of channel-driven thinking, but rather a great solution that works in whatever channels we need it to.

So this got us thinking, how relevant is the channel model of thinking in an effectively integrated agency (or group of agencies)?

Going back to basics first. Why do brands need agencies? I’m sure Bill Bernbach or David Ogilvie have some deep and insightful answer to this question, but at a basic level brands need agencies because:

  • We are experts in communicating clearly with consumers
  • They are experts at creating products.

This was a simple concept to grasp in the past. There was a clear delineation between the brand creating a product, and that product being marketed to the consumer. Advertising often bent the truth; ads appeared mostly in broadcast media; finite broadcast space meant there were a small number of brands that could be successful and recognisable globally; and the consumer had no way to talk back. It was a one-way street, one that we’ve now obviously done a sharp left from, to enter a multi-lane freeway.

We need to rethink why a brand needs an advertising agency, and then we can start talking about integration and better process. The result of this, is that channels are no longer as relevant.

Advertising has evolved beyond communicating product benefits to consumers in clever and memorable ways. We have become the custodians of the brands. And if we want to survive, we need to actually have the capabilities in place to achieve this. A brand extends out through myriad ways to reach the consumer. We used to work only in the channels of broadcast, DM, outdoor, print and in-store, in relatively short lived campaigns. If we want to become custodians of the brand we need to have a long-term brand strategy, and then take ownership of shaping that brand, particularly in the digital space.

Once we move beyond the campaign and channel mentality we can be going out and listening to consumers, responding to them, and working with our clients to actually respond to consumers and grow amazing brands. That does, admittedly, sound like marketing rhetoric, but the truth is that it is now possible for any brand to become amazing. Where before broadcast channels limited ‘amazing’ brands to the Marlboros, Cokes, Fords and Nikes, the digital world now means any brand can become a legend in their own market.

Customised NYT

NYT

The New York Times have partnered up with Linkedin to offer people a more personalised front page of the paper’s website. Stories are presented based on your industry and network, and you even have the ability to easily send stories to anyone in your linkedin network. Very cool, and things like this and Facebook’s latest plans for world domination mean that advertising is just getting more and more and more personalised and personal. NYT/Linkedin detail is covered here in detail.

Seven Brains

The Clemenger Group wants the very best students knocking down its door. To do this the 
Seven Brains
graduate program came to life. The brain collector who lives deep in the bowels of the Clemenger building is on an obsessive search for the 7 best student brains to fill the 7 graduate spots for 2009. The website just recently launched is based around opening titles of a film. The navigation of the site is scattered throughout the video with rollover hot- spots giving the site a stark eery feeling to fit in with the overall idea of the brain collector.

Seven Brains

Get used to feeling posh.

posh1.png

For the launch of Premium Economy, Virgin Atlantic have decided to do something different and offer punters the chance to win a real title. But first they have to take a ‘poshness’ test at www.getusedtofeelingposh.com.au

Whilst online, users can also explore the new Premium Economy cabin and all it has to offer. To drive traffic to the site, NetX developed a big offline campaign, ‘poshing up’ Martin Place rail station and turning it into ‘Martin Palace’. Practically every poster site, along with floor and escalator media in the station has been usurped by Virgin Atlantic. And cabin crew handed out samples of a new fragrance, Le Cuir - the scent of real leather (seats).

With the promotion running throughout May, it won’t be long before we discover who will be the first Baron of Bondi. Or Marquis of Malvern.

A collaborative effort between our friends at One Green Bean and Mitchells and NetX.

Big Chicken 08

Forget Big Brother 08. Check out Big Chicken 08. A twisted version of the original with chooks replacing the err, adults (?) Eight Chickens. One Hen House. Only one winner will make it through to the flame grill. A gripping six part serial for Nando’s. Get online and get addicted. Find out which chook will be Australia’s favourite fowl. And whether there will be any turkey slapping. Vote for the bird that takes your fancy here: www.bigchicken.com.au

Big bold predictions for 2008

NetX has opinions on the coming digital developments. Some are about strategy, some about technology, some are about our mothers. If you want to read up on how the next year pans out, look no further than this post. To mimic the style of Twitter, one of the most talked-about micro-blogging tools of 2007, we limited the predictions to 140 characters each.

Twitter network visualization
Twitter network visualization by Nimages DR

Georgina
Context aware mobile communication in ad-hoc environments filter into our lives. Coupled with SNT’s = a powerful form of real time marketing.
Pascal:
2008 will be the beginning of the end of the predominance of email. It will be replaced by social network messaging on mobile devices.
Thomas:
Facebook will be released in hardback. Yahoo! will calm down. There will be a worldwide pixel shortage.
Tracey:
The world will end in one giant POKE!
Justin:
Al qaeda takes over facebook followed by myspace, forcing the internet to cease all social networking sites.
Kelvin:
The US will have its first female president. Web 3.0 will become a cliché. I will give too much of my money to Apple, IKEA & Threadless.
Janine:
I predict there will be no more mobile phones. Just iphones.
Allen:
Expect the social networking bubble to burst. Data rates continue to cripple true mobile internet in OZ. My mum will finally “get” email.
George:
Facebook gains its own consciousness and systematically hacks into the American stock exchange thus forcing a global panic devaluing stock.
Trina:
We adopt the Japanese advertising model of bombarding users with five second ads and epileptic flashing lights
James:
My skin consists of LCD pixels and each morning I download a new outfit from the internet.
Sam:
iPhone chip implant inside your ear: Tap temple twice to pick up, once to hang up, scroll your cheek for more options.

NetXmas “Give it to someone special”

Yes, it’s the silly season – and it doesn’t get much sillier than this.
For all your support and friendship during 2007, we’d like to express our sincere appreciation through song.

NetXmas - give it to someone special

We only ask for one small favour in return – your patience. There are megabytes of love coming your way, which could, depending on the size of your chimney, take a few minutes to download. So please, get comfortable, have a Merry NetXmas and give it to someone special:
Watch and listen to our NetXmas

For everybody who enjoys a look behind the scenes:Have a peek at our elaborate set and the no-expenses-spared filming. When you see it, it is hard to feel worried about Hollywood’s writers strike.

Heavy TXTed - SMS projection at AWARD 2007

Apparently some CDs didn’t see the funny side of being sledged by text (SMS) at the AWARD party at Sydney’s great arts venue Carriageworks on Friday. Guests could text comments with their mobiles that appeared in speech bubbles over pictures of the award winners.

Bob Mackintosh from HOST being sledged

Most of the comments were funny or in good spirits but as the night wore on and the alcohol kicked in the barbs became more poisonous.

Glynden being sledged at AWARD 2007

We knew this was an experiment and therefore going to be a bit risky (see a similar use at re:publica conference). And some people will always go too far. However we wanted to show that at events, technology and interactivity can come together in a very intuitive way. It was an opportunity for people to experience first hand how easy-to-understand and engaging an interactive idea can be.

Video of the projection at the AWARD 2007 party:

We set it up using a standard SMS gateway, drawing the incoming live data (text messages) into a flash file which constituted the projection of photos made a few moments earlier. This might have been the first time such technology has been used at an Australian event.

Technical set up of SMS gateway and projection

If you know of similar applications or would like to comment (sledge?), please drop us a line.

Update:
The SMS celebrated its 15th birthday two days after we invited to text to the AWARD screen. Of course, we hereby salute the engineers at Airwide for their brilliant addition to the world of communication.

Hold that thought! Tools for retaining creative knowledge in an advertising agency

The following is an article appearing in the next issue of CampaignBrief under “Future Watch”:
This is an honest plea for more permanent creative knowledge within an agency. This might not like a sexy thing to work on, after all, a messy creative haircut goes well with a messy creative process, right? But tell me if any of the following emails sound like they were plucked from your own email inbox. If so, your agency might want to change the way it creates and learns in order to retain (or even export) more of their intellectual property. This is not about adding more processes but giving Creatives more headspace for their thinking. After all, advertising isn’t getting any easier.

Feel like sending another redundant email?

From: Art Director
To: Studio
Subject: new hero shot for in-flight magazine?
“Guys, just got royally whacked by the CD for using outdated imagery, who knows where the new stuff is on the server? Who worked on it last and is that person still with us? C’mon help me out here…don’t want to look like a dud again.”

Here Mr. Royally-Whacked dreads poking around on the server. His email reflects the first escape route: ask a colleague. So maybe the file will turn up on the server, because it simply got misplaced in an obscure folder structure. But what if it rests on the hard drive or as an attachment in the inbox of a long-departed co-worker? Quite likely, this Art Director will transfer the problem to an account person and waste their time finding the resource.
Research shows that staff source between 50%-75% of information relevant to their work from other people. It also shows that more than 80% of an organisation’s digitised information resides on individual hard drives and inside personal files. This means that individuals - rather than the organisation - control the bulk of essential knowledge within an agency.

From: Creative Director
To: Traffic Manager
Subject: utter waste of time!!!
“Look, next time you dial me into all those reviews, make sure that “Director” and those “Creatives” over in Adelaide are up to speed with all the script changes we put in during our off-site. And what happened to those brilliant ideas for different online edits that I tossed at them last time?”

Our CD produces (naturally!) brilliant ideas in a break out session, on the go or during a telephone call. His creative team unfortunately fails to catch the spark due to their geo-spatial separation. Additionally, nobody bothers to gather all those scribbles and assemble the various threads and ideas in one common place. The pitch work that started so ambitiously scrambles to the finish line with creative directions that only narrowly answer the strategic goals set in the beginning.

From: MD
To: Digital Planner
Subject: facebook app?
“am @ Group Summit, got hit w/ requests for “social networking apps”. You got some numbers, haven’t you? Remember some links you sent around ages ago. need to follow up quickly. Pls add more hot trendy stuff and stick into a PPT, get CD in on some high-level creative if possible. Thx!”

Although this subject has been simmering for quite some time, knowledge about it hasn’t grown beyond the individual specialist. Links to benchmark campaigns or valuable data sources are spread widely across individual PCs or lost in those long streams of emails. When our digital planner gets poached by the next hot shop, our agency will be back at square one. Solution: hire the next digital gun for more money and hope he stays a bit longer.

Look at your inbox and feel interrupted already

These examples show how email is an unsuitable tool for gathering and retaining ideas and know-how. Emails are interruptive, difficult to keep in context and the older an email gets, the less valuable it becomes. Messages that scroll out of our preview window might as well not be there. Email doesn’t work well in distributed offices nor is it able to integrate outside parties in the collaboration – unless you call sending attachments back and forth an inspiring collaboration.

Email is failing us as a tool for gathering and retainign creative knowledge

Imagine cracking a brief with a team in two offices and several outside parties and freelancers, all information and assets are available to all parties, and comments and thoughts stay in context and accumulate continuously. Imagine searching across all projects based on over arching topics such as an industry or a channel and actually finding it quickly.
Digital support tools for this are already available, for example Delicious or Google Notebooks (collecting and commenting bookmarks), ConceptShare and Slideshare (annotating and discussing scribbles and presentations) and Socialtext or OpenTeams (collaboration). All of these tools allow adding meta data (descriptions), linking and attributing different access rights.
Most importantly though, this is a cultural change for how creatives work and has to be adopted and brought to life by the creative leadership first.

Tools for creative collaboration

The need for better knowledge management in creative processes is evident. Campaigns are becoming more and more sophisticated to succeed in a fragmented media environment. If agencies don’t learn from mistakes and successes, they can never be better than their current workforce allows them to be. And since any key person leaves an organization at some point, they take with them a wide spectrum of extremely valuable knowledge, including industry and target group insights, confidential data and relationships. If the agency’s creative knowledge then only consists of static files on servers, a bunch of emails and the rented brains of the current employees, it isn’t much more than a name with a reputation, a building and a fancy coffee machine.

Fancy a new coffee machine?
picture under CC by blmurch (photostream)

Is that a $US217b company in your pocket…? Google announces OpenSocial APIs

(chart from alleyinsider.com)

It seems like just a few years ago that Google was a cute little company with a funny name and logo. “Look! You can type something into the box and it brings back results so fast!. Goooooogle. Even saying it makes me smile”.

Ok - so that was only a few years ago. And while I don’t want to make this an “impending doom” post, there’s a couple of things lining up that are worth keeping an eye on. With AdSense, Google already monetizes a page better than anyone else. They have made scraping a page for context and serving up relevant ads a Web 1.0 cliche. But on November 6, Facebook will announce what many expect to be their ’social ads’ plan (ads based on profile and personal content). This will be the next generation of commercialising online activity, and given Facebook’s cohesive structure, and the trust consumers have shown in offering up their data, it will be extremely compelling. But even despite the site’s astronomical growth (in Australia up to 1.75m UVs) it only accounts a for small percentage of overall web usage. The rest of the web’s out there and still growing too.

Now back to GOOG. Yesterday this press release surfaced on John Battelle’s blog “Google Launches OpenSocial to Spread Social Applications Across the Web. Google has long been rumoured to be making a bigger social play (why not?) and thankfully they’re not simply making the ‘big in Brazil’ Orkut more international. Actually they are, but that’s a small component. Google have announced that they have developed APIs to connect a range of ’social hosts’ with core functions across profile information, friends information and personal content. At launch these hosts will include Linkedin, Hi5, Friendster, Plaxo, Ning and, of course Orkut. With these participating networks, developers can now reach a dispersed audience across a range of sites using common applications and functions. More soon on the kinds of things we can expect from developers when OpenSocial goes live soon.

So a united social profiling play, combined with a vast audience of advertisers in the AdSense platfrom clambering to reach you in a targeted way. That’s big. I wonder if there’s anything that AT&T (#4 above in the ‘biggest companies in the US’ chart) has planned of a similar scale. But to quote a famous keynoter: “there’s one more thing”. Mobile. Whether the Google Mobile OS comes out in two weeks or next year, things are becoming clearer.

Google could soon have another killer app. Search has been um.. reasonably good to them. But social networking digitally is now a mainstream lifestyle activity. For some it’s replacing email, for others it have become their trusted, always-on address book. But the mobile has been the predominant tool for communication, and mobile internet access (supported by unlimited data plans) is quickly becoming an everyday thing. So here’s a formula to ponder:

Google x (social + mobile + profile advertising) = y

Choose from:

a) y = a completely socially integrated location-based mobile address book that is aware when my friends available online or for a call, that knows if they know each other (and whether they like each other) and mutates automatically with their every move. The beginning of the inevitable migration of social networking from the confines of the PC to your pocket.

b) y = cheaper advertising-supported mobile access where flattening carrier revenues are propped up by the first killer mobile ad model that actually works. A defining moment for global carriers.

c) y = too much for consumers. the beginning of the great anti-Google backlash…

Update:
AdAge reports about consumer associations and activists such as the EFF starting to rally for a Do Not Track-List, allowing users to opt out (like a white list) of all behavioural targeting.