Blog Ad Network by Six Apart helps monetization of smaller blogs
|
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
| 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 |
| 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 |
| 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 |
| 29 | 30 |
|
Currently attending a great presentation by P&G's Michel Lambert who is telling us about challenges and achievements in interactive and digital marketing. With an experience of 20 years in marketing 9 of which at pan-European level, a strong background in direct marketing, having gone through the great school called P&G and basically a combination of analytical capability and common sense, he's got a contribution to make.
In fact I was lucky to meet him yesterday and I was impressed with the stuff he told me about how P&G is clearly putting a great emphasis on interactive and digital factors throughout their organization, not only in the field of marketing. He clearly gets the transformative power of information technologies in the field of communication as well as in all the processes of any company that wants to be successful in the coming century. Michel does have a good and no-nonsense grasp of the ways in which organizations need to transforms their structure, practices, approaches, ways of assessing success versus failure, recruiting, building relationships... In fact it's quite impressive. While I prefer to respect a degree of confidentiality, I think the presentation of today reflects very well the state of play at P&G's end and this presentation certainly looked like a call to agencies to finally start offering stuff that make business sense rather than just surfing on the latest online fad and fashion.
Michel has a non nonsense approach: "is my brand prospect and brand customer online? Sure. But what do they actually do there? how can I understand them better?". His take is that the consumer, the person that is potentially a customer, the complex individual should be at the center of every single thought people have about interactive and digital marketing. Platforms, tools, communities, practices, plugins, widgets... will proliferate and they are not really relevant if one does not understand the consumer.
Here are some of the very interesting things Michel shared with the audience today:
Michel also mentioned education of people inside P&G as being a major area of focus today because marketers need to reassess many of the practices they used to consider as world-class. Furthermore the relative differences between markets makes it necessary to have a decentralized approach and in that respect the world is very far from being as flat as Friedman tends to suggest. The world has changed in a major way.
While doing some research I cam across a test that will help you determine who you would be in The Matrix. It's fun and it does remind me of more or less weird exercises often used in branding and communications workshops to facilitate the emergence and definition of a brand personality. That's based on patterns that we humans seem to have more or less hardwired into our systems. Carl Jung called them archetypes. Here's my result for what it's worth with a link to the site where you too can discover who your Martix character would be.

Quizilla |
Join
| Make A Quiz | More Quizzes | Grab Code
Here's a great interview from Kevin Roberts' the iconic CEO of Saatchi& Saatchi and influential creator of the concept of lovemark. Roberts' intelligent insights show that established agencies have caught up on the core issues of today's marketing and communications, something that will increasingly be a true competitive challenge to the new palyers who emerged during the past 5-8 years. In fact, these new players emerged as a result of radical change in the business environment and for many of them success was predicated on their ability to get to the future first. That was easy because they had no legacy practices, but that is no longer the case and hence their survival is entirely dependent on their ability to reach critical mass or to remain on the "bleeding edge" of innovation in marketing and communications.
Some highlights:
Roberts' also made a point about access to information and knowledge no longer being limited to the chosen few and therefore access alone is not a competitive edge as it used to be. To me, this means that the life of service providers like big name consulting companies, well-known agencies and other advisors has become considerably more complex. Their success hinges more on how they'll use knowledge rather than on how much access they have to it. That does create an interesting world.
There's been quite some noise when Gladwell published "Tipping Point" and it's a well written book with an interesting theory about Salesmen, Mavens and Connectors. But does the theory really work? Are there always Salesmen, Mavens and Connectors in all fields of human activity? Can the process be "artificially" triggered and guided to help someone deliver a targeted message to a given audience or achieve a specific kind of behavior in a population (e.g. buy something)?
Considering the vast and increasing sums of money invested by marketeers these past few years one would think that yes is the answer to all of the above questions. Maybe not quite... no make that "definitely not". So argues Duncan Watts who challenges the very idea that influence can be "remote controlled" by creative types working for ad agencies. He makes the case that influence is in essence a chaotic process such that anyone could in fact and perhaps unbeknown to themselves, exert influence. He goes even further to claim that influence happens by accident more often than not. So according to Watts, my cat could very well be a VIP, i.e. a Very Influential Person (yes, my cat is a Person)! The article of Fast Company is worth reading. Interestingly, Watts speaks of a chaotic process and argues that influence happens mainly by accident (see graph below scanned for Fast Company). he seems to have reached that conclusion by programming artificial populations with hundreds of different combinations of parameters in the models of "influence" or transmission he used. There was no conclusive evidence as to the existence of influential individuals who are supposed to be able to trigger the spread of a message of behavior across a large proportion of a population.
Now, the very concept of "influentials" is something that drives me nuts because there is a hell of a lot of talk about them in all sorts of campaigns, yet nobody seems capable of giving a rigorous definition of what that new animal is, nor how to characterize and measure the phenomenon. Bottom line: there is considerable lack of precision and quite some BS in the stuff being told to people attending seminars and to advertisers who are so desperate to actually make an impact that they are willing to trade the unmeasurable means they know for supposedly better means that will deliver better ROI. And in fact the early adopters have been quite successful, but as the number of "influence marketing" operations increases, the impact of each of those campaigns will become lower and lower. So unless online marketing professionals actually tackle the imprecision regarding the very concept of "influence" I have hard time seeing this business become sustainable in the long run.
If I were in that business, I would invest some research money into building a minimalistic model of the influence phenomenon based on a model coming from the field of complex adaptive systems and I would relentlessly test and refine it to reach a point where entire campaigns could be structured in a more scientific way with the end objective to be able to identify fields in which campaigns can actually rely on "influence" and if so to make those campaigns as efficient as possible.
Here's a piece I think is a shining example of user generated content and a strong indication that open online platforms give real power and influence to the people. Now sure whether that validates Gladwell's tipping point, but it does show that the people can wield some influence. Now the question is whether this influence will be stronger than that of insiders of a system, in this case the US political establishment. Something interesting to watch for marketeers and communication pros.
Currently attending a panel with Lance Maerov, the SVP Corporate Development (read M&A) for WPP and Trevor Kaufman, the CEO of Schematic, a company they bought last year as part of their string of nearly a hundred acquisitions and investments in 2007. They're talking about how traditional agencies are acquiring and investing to stay relevant in the years ahead. I have a short excerpt in the video below, but here is a summary of interesting points:
OnMedia_NewNewAgency
Video sent by alexpapa
Just got to the OnMedia conference and glad to be here for a new edition meeting friendly faces from previous events. Same posh location and already a couple of very striking facts for the marketing & communication industry or at least stuff I found quite interesting and worth commenting:
Interesting trends don't you think? Of course as a friend of mine keeps saying surveys can be twisted to convey the desired message, so they have to be taken with a pinch of salt, but nevertheless the field is ripe for some momentous changes, all of which may not necessarily be in favor of Google. For example I doubt AdWords will be successful in its current form in the long run... but that's for another post :-)
Since I am in Canada these days and since I am most interested in the momentous changes that have been going on in the field of marketing for the past couple of years, I 'd like to comment a beautiful advertising campaign. It's the Molson campaign that was released many years ago and which plays very well on the existence of stereotypes commonly held by Americans about (did I say a-boot?) Canadians. Quite clearly this is an ad that captures human attention mainly because it's fun and light. See for yourself:
But there are other aspects to it that are interesting amongst which is the fact that it lends itself to sequels and to further exploitation of the dominants stereotypes. Here's a second film that illustrates this:
On the same theme, a couple of friends told me about (a-boot?) somebody who produced a derivative version of the Molson ad that makes huge fun of the cultural divide between French speaking and English speaking Canadians.
Perhaps a good way to bring sterile debates to a fairer proportion than politicians would like to and perhaps a good inspiration for somebody to do something analogous in Belgium because the people of that country deserve a much better political leadership IMHO.
So, what makes a commercial powerful (i.e. capable of seizing human attention in a world of content overload)? What makes it last and get a second life in a radically transformed media environment? I wonder whether there are other ads from past years that could be exploited by modern day communication agencies in the interactive space as shaped by the Internet to deliver high impact campaigns...
Coke and Mentos experiments by Eepy Bird had been a great buzz with one movie having been watched over 5 million times just on Revver in the 5-6 weeks following May, 31st 2006, while Grobe and Voltz, the creators, appeared on TV shows like "The Late Show with David Letterman" and NBC's "Today". Interestingly a couple of guys are trying to piggy-back on the success of the Coke and Mentos stint to generate some buzz for Carlsberg.
Tad James & David Shephard: Presenting Magically: Transforming Your Stage Presence with NLP
Joseph Campbell: The Hero with a Thousand Faces (Bollingen Series (General))
Richard Tanner Pascale: Surfing the Edge of Chaos: The Laws of Nature and the New Laws of Business
Randy Komisar: The Monk and the Riddle: The Art of Creating a Life While Making a Living