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Past, Present and Future: Some Thoughts About Advertising and Media. Presented By Professor Neal M. Burns The University of Texas at Austin at Escuela de Ciencias de la Comunicaci ó n Universidad de Costa Rica 15 Febrero 2008. Advertising Agencies; Their Practice and Belief.
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Past, Present and Future: Some Thoughts About Advertising and Media Presented By Professor Neal M. Burns The University of Texas at Austin at Escuela de Ciencias de la Comunicación Universidad de Costa Rica 15 Febrero 2008
Advertising Agencies; Their Practice and Belief • Some observations from a recovering advertising man - and don’t tell them I spoke with you and discussed these secrets or they’ll drum me out of the corps.
None of us Remember This . . . But we know it’s old (1920?). Most ads have short shelf lives.
Magritte . . . And Bernbach • It’s not a pipe - it’s a picture of a pipe; it’s not about sunny-side up eggs - • they both ask the viewer to work it out, to interact.
Feel Good Nothing is more endearing Than kittens -- and Animal Care keeps Diners Club Customers.
And The Ads Said What? • Generally talked about lifestyle more than product • Talked to the user - more personal relevancy and generally less emphasis on product features • Less (constructed) reality - disposed to irony and quite cynical - especially of advertising - filled with expectancy & surprise • Emphasis on building the brand • Social and cause related work appeared • Often entertained more than informed & Fought the clutter
Consider Advertising As a Cultural Expression - And As a Knowledge Producing Industry. • Advertising reflects contemporary values • It utilizes the imagery and sounds of the time • It can stimulate behavioral change • It gives things meaning
How Did The Contemporary Look in Advertising Come About? • Think Postmodernism • The Bernbach “Revolution” • Being noticed amidst growing clutter • Market/segment likes changed • Agencies grew to be financially capable
In 1984 the Relationship Between Postmodernism and Advertising Was Made Forcefully and Unforgettably. • The developing philosophy was against the established order - against shirts and ties, against the lack of minority representation - even against the 8 note octave as the 3 B’s knew it -- and lots more.
What Were The Big Changes In Ad Agencies From The Past? • Moving from commission based compensation to fee structure • Establishing client centered teams • Becoming brand builders • Establishing the creative strategy as their purview.
Let’s Look a Bit Closely At The Way Current Advertising Agencies Function
Agencies Developed A Process - With Great Similarity Across Agencies • The professional agency employee is almost an itinerant worker • Word and “secrets” spread • The work is widely celebrated • Agencies offered the promise of managing the “creative process”
So, Why Does This Stuff Work? • It is culturally resonant - it is part of our time. • It speaks to what the brand delivers. • Because it is relevant to the target(s). • Intelligence is paralleled in product’s voice and respect for the customer. • It reinforces the character of the Brand building off leverageable equity.
The Old Agency Business Model • Initially gave away the creative and lived off the media commission • Hourly rates established, contract • Monthly fee based on the scope of the project. (Clients feel costs are better controlled - agencies enjoy security of fixed monthly income) • The idea RULES ! • Agency does brand building cross platforms (print, TV, online, events and experiential) • Agency
A New Agency Business Model • Hourly rates seem passe’ • Monthly fee based on the scope of the project. (Clients feel costs are better controlled - agencies enjoy security of fixed monthly income) • The idea RULES ! • Agency does brand building cross platforms (print, TV, online, events and experiential) • Agency asks for an equity stake and a percentage of sales
Within the Agency The Traditional Management Pyramid Got Squashed and New Roles Established
Why Must The Agency Business Model Change? • There is a disconnect between believing in award winning creative, and a comprehensive brand strategy . . . and managing multiple communication channels (not to mention the insertion of consumer generated content) in a financially rewarding fashion.
The Network TV Ratings Decline • In 1988 networks had 67% of all TV viewers. • In the early 90s, Network cume share dropped to 53 percent. • In 2003, 38 percent and a network needed a minimum rating of 12 to keep a show on the air. • In 2008 a major network wins the primetime ratings war with an 8 rating (~17 mil. viewers). WHY
One Reason:Consumer Generated Content • User Generated Video (UGV) growing rapidly: YearViews • 2005 3,250,000,000 • 2006 13,156,655,241 • 2007 22,368,960,636 • 2008 34,000,681,857 (est.) Source: AccuStream iMedia Research, January 2009
Cultural/Societal Impact ? • We have little understanding or intuition for the cultural impact that will occur when the top 40% of US households (based on income) have half a dozen computers, all of them connected to the Net, all of them with "instant on." They just don’t know how important a part of our daily life the online world will be! • Jeff Bezos interview with Chip Bayers, Business 2.0 September, 2002
Another Reason:Retail Practice on Internet • Increased effectiveness integrating message across multiple channels • Multi-channel marketing strategy became the rule • Permission marketing and the Internet works -- very well • Social networks are but one manifestation
Some Possible “Whys” ??? • Video gaming is preferred equally by males age 8-34 to TV • Older males play video games at expense of TV viewing • Developments like Wii change “purpose” of the TV set • Consumer generated content is preferred by many as opposed to client generated material
Perhaps Another Reason: Blogs • Weblog users rate blogs as highly credible. • In tests blogs are rated almost 3X ads. • A higher level of trust exists for User Generated Content (UGC) . . . Blogs. • 39 Million Europeans report not buying product or services based upon advice from blogs!
And So . . . • The advent and access broadband presents and the rising importance of mobile and in-place digital communication are major changes in message delivery. • The language of media – CPM, CPP, CPI and the rest - needs to be modified to embrace the new delivery systems currently in place and those being developed. • Revisions in our thinking about cost and effectiveness of media delivery are needed. • And, in a muti-channel, media agnostic environment -- the rule of break-through creative has ended and a new agency model is already here.