what's hot june
TRANSCRIPT
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
1/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
The future of
advertisingAnonymity
chic
The value of
advertising: a
view from
Cannes
Aligning all
screens
TV trackinglooks towards
VoD
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
2/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
The future of advertising
William Bernbach, one of the kingpins of American advertising in its heyday of the 1960, famously said,
Advertising is fundamentally persuasion, and persuasion happens to be not a science, but an art. As classic as
this statement is, we are now in a different era one proliferated by smartphones, smart TVs and Google
glasses. As technology rattles on at such an exponential speed, lets look at what science can now add to this art.Human nature dictates that few decisions are purely rational, and emotions play an important role in any
consumers decision making process by guiding their attention, enhancing their memories and ultimately
influencing their behaviour. Consumer research will always yield insight based on claimed feelings and opinions,but to really understand the subconscious responses that an ad stimulates, we can now turn to science for some
answers. Biometrics , the study of measurable biological characteristics, is a field of neuroscience that enables
researchers to assess physical responses, such as changes in heart rate and breathing, that are triggered by
emotional reactions to a given stimulus. By incorporating biometrics into ad testing, advertisers can assess
whether, when and for how long their ad has engaged emotionally with the viewer.
Biometrics has now moved beyond research groups behind closed doors and has started to infiltrate the media
landscape. Outdoor media owners have been using facial recognition and eye tracking technology for a while
already. Recent research by outdoor specialist Kinetic using these methods found that a digital poster is twice as
likely to be looked at than a static 6 sheet and also viewed for 60% longer. Some advertisers are now integrating
this technology into their ads to enable them to deliver highly targeted messaging. Examples include Plan
Internationals Because I Am A Girl campaign and Macmillans Not Alone campaign, both of which usedgender recognition technology to determine what creative to show based on who was looking at the ad.
The digital landscape is the media channel to have embraced the potential of biometrics the most. Earlier this
month Be On, AOLs global branded content business, announced a partnership with Realeyes, an emotional
testing platform to measures how people feel and react when they view their branded content videos. AOL will
be tracking this by getting people to watch videos on their own PCs and tracking their responses via their
webcams. Reassuringly, this is only possible with volunteers who have opted in, but still marks a futuristic shift
in digital ad capabilities. Elsewhere, Apple, Samsung and Google have all patented various facial recognition and
eye tracking technologies, including an intuitive gaze detection function, which aim to create more seamless
interactions between consumers and their mobiles.
Beyond online ads, biometrics is transitioning into the high street too. An app called Facedeals allowsadvertisers to track consumers offline as much as they do online. The company installs cameras at the entrance
of brick-and-mortar retailer which scans customers' faces as they enter. If said customer opts into the app on
Facebook and verifies his or her photograph, then Facedeals texts them exclusive deals available in store.
As technology advances, its important to keep an eye on advertising because, more and more, it will be keeping
an eye on you.
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
3/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
Anonymity chic
Fashion designer Phoebe Philo recently proclaimed that, The chicest thing is when you dont exist on
Google. Following revelations that a number of technology giants cooperated in Prism a top-secret
system at the US National Security Agency that collects emails, documents, photos and other material
for secret service agents to review, there have been heightened concerns regarding the security of
personal information stored online (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, blogs and so forth). Has the time
come for internet users across the globe to revert to a self-imposed state of integrity?
It could be claimed that Prince pre-empted the trend for online anonymity by using a symbol instead
of a name over two decades ago, rendering himself unsearchable. Over the past few years, the
impetus has gradually become more widespread: recent examples include an album title spelt out
with / and \ by British recording artist MIA, not to mention a New York-based band called !!! (known
verbally as chick chick chick or bang bang bang). But are the masses of liquid moderns (a term
coined by Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman) ready to forgo the sense of belonging provided by
social media? Ask yourself this: would you be willing to surrender the security provided by online
exhibitionism solely to be free of the virtual hothouse?
The constant clamour for attention online leads some to dream of deleting their Facebook profile,
cancelling their broadband package and relocating to the woods.. Nevertheless, whether users are
ultimately willing to sacrifice their carefully constructed online sociability in order to regain a sense of
private identity is very much an issue for debate. As Guardian technology columnist Stuart Jeffries
points out, the current fight for individualism is at odds with our totalitarian vision of the internet
Google can well be described as a construct of the 1930s, the eventual realisation of HG Wells world
brain.
Whilst previously the more overbearing your online presence ,the higher your status, current thinking
has concluded that oversupply of yourself results in a reduced market value. Laughably, however,
nobody yet seems to have addressed the fundamental philosophical paradox underlying Philos claim
if to be chic is to be anonymous, how will anyone know whether or not youre chic? Absolute
anonymity may thus be more accurately described as the unobtainable goal.
So what does this trend mean for advertisers? Brands will inevitably be forced to employ smarter
tactics to keep consumers interacting with them online to avoid a downturn in market penetration in
social environments. Customisation is key, and personality must also prevail; effective targeting will
become ever more important, and content must engage and therefore entice individuals to
divulge their closely guarded personal details to the world wide web.
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
4/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
TV tracking looks towards VoD
It has been announced again that for the first time ever BARB will be able to track VoD content, yet this
time it would appear that the wheels are finally fully in motion. Broadcasters' Audience Research Board
(BARB) has appointment Kantar Spring to collect census data for TV viewing through all services, including
4oD, BBC iPlayer, Demand 5, ITV Player and Sky Go. Though it has been in the pipeline for quite a while,
from Autumn 2013, BARB will measure IP delivered TV services as well as over the air transmissions, which
still represent the majority of television viewing in the UKs 26 million TV households.
This is much welcomed news for TV buyers everywhere. Richard Brooke, BARB board member and SeniorCommunications and Buying Manager at Unilever UK and Ireland, is quoted as saying: This is a positive
step forward towards measurement of this tremendously complex area. We are optimistic that blending
census data with more comprehensive behaviour tracking in the BARB panel is the right way forward.
Given the shift in viewing habits there has been a certain inevitability to this new means of measurement.
VoD has become a standard inclusion in the majority of TV plans as a vital means of catching light TV
viewers and increasing reach. The market also reflects this with this digital video advertising spends
increasing by 46% in 2012, according to the latest digital ad spend report produced by PwC on behalf of the
IAB.
The technology to track the data has been made possible by the pledge of UK broadcasters to embedmetadata tags into their programme content and these new sources of measurement will combine to
produce a TV Player Report at the end of year.
Further down the line other portable devices will also be included in such measurement. BARB are
currently testing an app this Summer which should lead to a solution of measuring the BARB panellists
viewing on a tablet and smartphone by the end of this year.
This decision also reflects a necessary trend of combining online and TV measurement of media campaigns.
This week it has been announced that Unilever and Mondelez are the first brand owners to measure multi-
screen reach via a new Nielsen product (Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings) that claims to measure
combined TV and online ad audiences.
These new means of measurement will also tell us more about viewing habits and patterns ,rather than just
total viewing volume across platforms. Ultimately this will lead to greater insight allowing for smarter
planning and the delivery of richer broadcast campaigns. This will enable brands to reach their target
audience while watching, regardless of viewing platform, with minimum wastage.
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
5/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
The value of advertising: A view from Cannes
Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is I don't know which half.
Said about a century ago by US department store merchant, John Wanamaker, this famous quote is about as
relevant today as it was back then. Despite this , every year for the last 60 years the sunny south of France hosts
the world's biggest get-together of people interested in creative communications, all of whom gather in
celebration of the 1 or so per cent best of the best ads that may (or may not) work. So the question is, is it
worth it?
As an independent media person stepping out onto la Croisette of Cannes, the first impression can only be that
it certainly is. This year across the stretch, media owner after media owner had stepped up their presence, and
the conference was jam packed with the global herds of creatives, producers, planners, corporates and, this
year more than ever, celebrities too. But, ironically, it was also an occasion for some of the biggest challenges to
advertisings value, made by some of the very people that have benefited from it, or succeeded without it.
Music mogul P. Diddy in announcing his hew media launch Revolt TV proclaimed on stage, I hate watching TV
commercials, just like everyone else. The truth will set you free, and I'm here to tell the truth. The founders of
messaging app WhatsApp published a blog piece titled Why we dont sell Ads with acute timing also,
proclaiming: We wanted to spend our time building a service people wanted to use because it worked and
saved them money and made their lives better in a small way. We knew that we could charge people directly if
we could do all those things. We knew we could do what most people aim to do every day: avoid ads. AndGoogle didnt show us the driverless car, or let us wear their glasses, but they did make it known that they
existed, and as yet had no interest in advertising or advertisers on those products.
All this is true. However we must remember that advertising in its purest most relevant form is never considered
advertising. Our recent Daft Punk Get Lucky 100 commercial recorded 21% more impacts that the ad break
average it actually prompted people to rewind the ad and view it more than once. The reality is that this
wasnt an advert; it was a relevant tasty piece of content, fed to an audience that wanted to see it. It was so not
an advert that Clearcast made us stamp the words This is an advert right over the top of it, yet people still
watched it. A lot.
And here lies the challenge to advertising. Creativity has never been so ubiquitous, yet its acceptance, value
and appreciation is almost entirely dictated by the audience, context and time in which its presented within.When advertising agencies think about the media, they win awards, but surely its time for media agencies to
start thinking (and get more of a say on) the advert that will do the media justice.
We can only agree with the celebrities, and those that gather to celebrate the 1% of advertising that works.
However lets also raise a glass to the brands that think beyond the spot and aim to deliver 100% relevant
communications, in whatever form that may be.
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
6/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
Aligning all screens
When planning any TV campaign, dual screening has been a supplementary consideration for quite a while now. But
in the fast paced world of modern technology, nothing stands still for too long. We felt it timely to have a quick
update on how both the social media landscape and the wider industry are adapting to embrace this phenomena, and
how dual-screening is now looking at much bigger screens too.
Last month, Twitter unveiled a suite of new ad targeting tools that it claims will allow advertisers to enhance their TV
campaigns and capitalise fully on the potential offered by dual-screening. Via a new TV ad dashboard, an advertiser
can now target users tweeting about specific television shows and then serve them a branded promoted tweet or
Vine. Another new functionality Twitter Amplify offers the opportunity to sponsor real-time, dual-screen specificvideo clips that are tweeted by broadcasters. For example, a brand could now potentially sponsor an instant replay
of a sporting moment that is played within a broadcasters Twitter feed, and then insert a link to their own site or
content. These developments allow brands to move away from being a bog standard 30 ad, and move one step
closer towards weaving themselves into relevant content that their target audience are actively consuming.
In recognition of the increasing overlap of TV and digital consumption, industry bodies are collaborating to gain a true
understanding of this consumer behaviour and the potential synergy it creates for advertisers. This week saw Nielsen,
the global information and measurement company, announce a 'major step forward' for multi -platform advertising
measurement in the UK, with the commencement of beta trials for its Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings
service. Integrating TV viewership data from BARB, Nielsen Cross-Platform Campaign Ratings will, for the first time,
combine the commercial exposures from a brands TV ads with its online ads and report on the combined audience
for the campaign. The report will detail how many people saw the ad, whether the ads were seen on TV, online, orboth and the results will be delivered in terms of reach, frequency, Gross Rating Points, unique audience and
impressions. As soon as testing is complete and this service is ready to be rolled out, we will have a strong grasp of
how best to activate media campaigns to make sure that all screens are talking to one another seamlessly, and enable
brands to land their messaging in the most suitable manner.
Having seen the relationship between TV and mobile flourish, cinema media owners are now looking to deal
themselves in on a piece of the dual-screening action. As the channel that claims the lowest ad avoidance of all
media, cinema is hoping to leverage consumers focus on the big screen and use this to draw some attention to the
little screen. DCM, who represents chains including Odeon, Cineworld and Vue, has just launched cinime an app that
enables cinemagoers to use their mobiles to get more from the big screen. The app harnesses image recognition and
bespoke audio watermarking technologies that will be triggered by the ad playing out on screen, to deliver and unlock
brand and film-related content on smartphones. From a user point of view, it enables cinemagoers to opt-in to
receive bonus content while, from an advertiser point of view, it is just one more opportunity to engage with their
target audience in a relevant and timely way.
As more developments occur and the lines between different screens continue to blur, the consistent theme here is
that, while each device serves a different purpose, any brand looking to deliver a strong campaign should no longer
consider TV, cinema, online, mobile or tablet as distinct verticals, but instead as complementary windows into the
lives of the target audience they want to reach.
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
7/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
HOTLINE
the stories that lit up our media world this month
The BBC is gearing up for its biggest
weekend of digital coverage since the
Olympics as it is set to deliver 360 hours of
content this weekend, including coverage
from Glastonbury, Wimbledon and the
Formula 1 British Grand Prix.
Apple has retained its place as the UK's
most desirable brand, but Google suffered
a 38% decline in desirability as the ongoingtax avoidance scandal impacted its brand
perception.
Rupert Murdoch's News International,
parent company of the Times, Sunday
Times and the Sun, has rebranded as News
UK as it seeks to move on from the phone-
hacking scandal..
The Office of Fair Trading (OFT) has today
cleared the local newspaper joint venture
known as Local World, which brings
together over 180 local and regional
newspapers and 60 local news websites.
Sony Mobile is taking aim at Samsung and
Apple with the launch of a hybrid mobile
and tablet device it is positioning as "the
world's slimmest HD smartphone with the
world's largest screen", as well as
introducing a new "smartwatch".
Instagram has launched a video-sharing
tool in a move that will place the Facebook-
owned company in direct competition with
Vine, the Twitter-backed video app.
-
7/28/2019 What's HOT June
8/8
the7starsI Whats Hot I June 2013
Mud & rain
George Osbornes burger
Nadal & Federer
Lions injuries
Festival season
The Returned en franais
Djokovic & Murray
Holly Willoughbys dress
Whats HOT and Whats NOT