Posts Tagged ‘Advertising’

Congratulations CP+B!

11 June, 2009

…for convincing Daddy to sell their agency. And congratulations Daddy I guess, since they’re getting paid a handsome amount for doing so.

Crispin Porter + Bogusky is recognized as the world’s best agency, being the creators of classics such as Whopper Freakout, Whopper Sacrifice and Subservient Chicken (yes, it seems as BK has been a good client). And now they’re venturing into Europe by purchasing Daddy, with the objective of creating an innovation powerhouse in Gothenburg, Sweden, of all places.

This is naturally exciting stuff, mostly because I’m happy for all the founders/partners at Daddy, but also since I’ll get the chance to see how the industry’s best and brightest are working up close. I attended CP+B’s Digital Peep Show in NYC last week and I was extremely impressed by how they approach things!

Again. Congrats Björn, Jonas, Gustav and the rest. You deserve it!

Talking the talk

24 May, 2009

Yay! Two new speaking engagements coming up:

Creative Summit, Sweden (17-18 june)
I’ll be speaking strictly on Burt’s products, the business case for why online advertising needs a creative injection and what our plans are for this year. It takes place waaaay up north in Sweden and includes speakers form Coke and Disney so most likely it’ll be totally awesome.

Webdagene, Norway (10-11 sep)
This will be a talk on constrained creativity, remix as an innovative process and how technology will revolutionize online advertising. Yup, big words. Looking forward to meeting Paul Annet from Clearleft, one of my heroes when it comes to web UX.

Both events look like they have rock solid organisation so I’ll probably post videos of both!

Another day, another advertising post mortem

22 March, 2009

It’s not easy being in advertising these days. Not only does our industry consist of professionals with an exceptionally high level of existential anxiety – being paid to sell out to the highest bidder will do that to you ;) – but we’re also under constant attack from people in other parts of the value chain. Not that this is anything new, advertising has been under siege both from the inside out for the last fifty years.

This time, it’s Jorge over at Spectator Bytes asking “Will Advertising Spending Be Another Victim of the Digital Media Transformation?“. More specifically, Jorge brings up the idea that many Internet services have reached broad adoption with little or no ad spend and asks:

What if this formula of success extended beyond Web products into other types of businesses (e.g., autos, food, appliances, toys, hardware devices, etc.).

It’s a interesting notion, which I suppose could be killed off just by pointing out that a web company’s capital and operations management is a tad easier than that of a say, electronics manufacturer. A web site can increase the “product inventory” by adding a new server (or just launching a new instance on EC2), an electronic manufacturer have to build a new server. And this is a luxury problem of course, since this implies that demand overshoots supply. The Internet industry learned the hard way how bad things can get if we have the inverse situation, that supply overshoots demand… capacity planning is a bitch, anyone from the dot-com-crash will tell you that. And the rest of the world still don’t have commodity hardware, VPS hosting, cloud computing etc. to decrease the risk of scale. But they do have advertising, that decrease the risk of scale by ensuring that demand meets supply. And that’s worth a lot.

But let’s say that open source hardware, just-in-time production, 3d-printing or whatever solves this dilemma, so that every industry have the same elasticity in scale that we do. We could kill the whole notion of “advertising is no longer needed since we have cracked the WOM-formula” by pointing out that Apple – the most buzzed up company on the entire planet – spent about 500MUSD on advertising last year. On a sidenote, this is (roughly) on par with what Microsoft normally spends in a fiscal year (in relation to revenues). But that would be somewhat unfair and I do think that Jose has a point. Relying on a blanket of ads clearly isn’t the most efficient go-to-market strategy for launching new products, or – even more so – new brands and companies. Using a PR- and WOM-driven strategy is.

Relying on PR and WOM in the initial stages of a launch makes sense from a trust perspective – the new ideas (products, brands, companies etc.) are coming from someone you “know” – but also they make complete sense from the perspective of allocating scarce resources. When an idea is new, there is a natural “story” to sell to press/bloggers and for people to talk about. It’s an opportunity that you only have when your idea is new. So naturally, resources should be allocated to leverage that “newness”. The problem starts when you’re not new any more. And with the velocity of media attention and social objects these days, this is a matter of days, or hours. And this is where advertising comes in.

Advertising leverages and accelerates the initial platform of awareness and trust that we’ve created thru PR and WOM.

But sure, for advertising to be really effective, it needs that initial platform. And to create that platform we need to have a product that walks the talk. It needs to be really, really good. But the increased pressure on product quality that information transparency has brought upon us doesn’t mean that the corporate budget will shift to product development and customer service – for the most part they already have a large chunk of the budget. Advertising actually accounts for quite a small part of the corporate budget in comparison to what it’s supposed to accomplish (sell a lot for a high price).

So it’s not a matter of advertising OR product, it’s advertising AND product. My guess is that if someone is going to get squeezed it’s the product guys: “we’re spending so much money with you, and this is all you have to show?”. So instead of advertising becoming more like product development – the in-meme right now – maybe it’s a matter of product development becoming more like advertising?

Death by advertising, according to the Economist

20 March, 2009

So the Economist has an interesting article up on how many large consumer web sites are having problems monetizing their audience’s usage. The point being that advertising isn’t ramping up enough revenues so these services now have to start charging for their services, which is difficult since barriers to entry are low and the user’s will then flee to some copycat service providing the exact same service but for free. And this service will do this for a while and then they will have to start charging and people will flee to another service, etc. etc. etc.

The article is somewhat ironic considering that it’s available for free, on a page surrounded by ads ;) Put that aside, I think that the article misses the mark somewhat since it assumes that Google AdSense is the the be-all-end-all approach to online advertising. And if that didn’t work, nothing will.

But AdSense only caters to the part of the marketing budget that is focused on channeling existing demand, and most advertisers (regardless of the economic climate) still want to invest the majority of their budget into creating new demand, driving new behaviors etc. And we still have no AdSense for that. But for whatever reason, there has been very little innovation in terms of ad technology since AdSense was launched, and most VCs and startups have been focusing on increasing usage, not improving technologies to better monetize that usage. The “solution” lies in enabling a more creatively driven approach to advertising, making it easier for agencies to leverage all that technology that we’ve created over the last few years. Much like what we’re trying to do with Burt.

My guess is that this downturn will lead to a surge in companies that focus on how to better monetize usage. And that the end-result for driving revenues will be a hybrid model, that charge money from both end-users and advertisers. Hum… where have we heard that before?

For the millionth time: Display vs. Search

14 December, 2008

So, Fred Wilson wrote a post on new data comparing search and display advertising. The main point is that display is actually pretty good, and used together with search, it’s even better. I wrote this as a comment to his post, but it ended up being so worked thru I figured it deserved to be posted here as well ;) Here we go:

Back in 50s and early 60s the pinnacle of great advertising was considered to be historically proven methods, pre-testing and analysis. Create, measure, evaluate and adjust. Rinse and repeat. Sound familiar?

This was, naturally, before advertising had it’s “creative revolution”, when Bill Bernbach and others showed the world the power in allowing ad creatives to seize power from statisticians and MBA’s, showing that intuition and imagination, not pre-testing and proven methods, could create quant leaps in great advertising.

Over forty years has passed and once again, we’re living in a metric driven, cost-per-click world, where the Internet, despite all it’s creative promise, is increasingly becoming a channel primary for direct-response marketing. “Demand fulfillment”, not “demand creation”. Sure, the Internet is the most precise marketing vehicle ever created, but can you even remember when the last time was you saw a really great web ad?

The Internet has yet to experience it’s creative revolution, which is partly due to ad agencies’ lack of tech knowledge. When we presented at TC50, Marc Andreesen pointed out that ad agencies are “notoriously technology averse”. I live in Sweden, so I’m not sure if this reflects the feeling of the majority of the technology community “over there”, but I get the sense that it might.

However, I think it’s unreasonable for us tech people to expect agencies to keep up with the pace of change for all channels they utilize. They’re focused on communication, not technology, and as long as we expect them to work with tools and interfaces designed for completely different skill sets and lead times (apps and sites), my guess is that we’ll continue to see print and TV ideas adaptations, complemented by a “click now” button ;)

So. It’s up to the people that read blogs like this to create products that decrease the gap between creativity and technology, so that ad creatives can make full use of what our medium has to offer. There are many companies that have promising ideas for improved advertising, specially those working on semantic tech and real-time “data smart” ads. But having looked how they’re packaging their products it’s clear to me that they, like most tech companies with a very rational developer view of the world, have very little knowledge of the workflow in creative advertising agencies.

The NYT said it very well the other day:

“There’s no doubt that there will be a lot of data that can be collected that could be applied to the creative process [but] that’s not necessarily an easy discussion to have with great art directors.”

Coders and copywriters think very differently. And unless we acknowledge this, and start creating products that reflect how “demand creating” advertising works, we’re destined have the search vs. display debate for another two years, continuing to miss the opportunity to trigger version 2.0 of the creative revolution, so that digital media will see the same explosion of advertising ideas, when TV saw the light of day in the 60s.

Analyzing web analytics

21 November, 2008

Couple of days ago I finished the last of this season’s speech and seminar tour. As usual, it’s been a whole lot of fun, but I’m glad I can finally get back to focusing on actually doing stuff.

So, for the first time in a while, I managed to get some reading done and scoured thru a couple of web analytics books that has been in the pipeline for a while. Best one, by far, was “Actionable Web Analytics“, which was the only book focusing on why we should analyze and what to actually do with the numbers, compared to just describing the mechanics how we set up GA or Omniture to output some stuff.

What surprises me the most is how I can’t find a single decent approach to analyzing advertising campaigns that aren’t driven by click-thru. This still seems to be a blind spot, despite the fact that everyone is a metric evangelist these days.

It’s all very web site centric, although GA announced support for distributed apps thru their Flash tracker the other day. Also, the customer analytics vendors have in mind are clearly advertisers or publishers, possibly media agencies, but definitely not creative agencies.

There are simpy no decent tools for creative agencies to use to actually improve the quality of their work. Throwing stuff like KPIs or OKRs at creatives just don’t do it.

So sure, we need our creative briefs to become more data driven, but where are the tools to make us do that? Campaign analytics tools are mostly tied to ad serving vendors, making it very difficult for agencies to learn stuff cross-clients since the data is siloed. And what’s up with the CTR, especially using it as a measure of success for banners with a simple message, such as “This is an ad for diet coke, please buy it”… sheesh. Just because CTR can be measured doesn’t mean it’s relevant.

And also, how difficult can it be for ad serving vendors add plug and play tracking for exposure time, hover, non-CTR events etc etc.? And how come there’s no dead easy way to get insights on what frequencies, media context or individual characteristics (geodemo or psychographics) what seems to trigger different types of responses?

Gah, do I have to create everything myself? ;)

Upcoming keynote on Infusion (Amsterdam, NL) – on remixing and reactive ads

5 November, 2008

I’m going to Amsterdam next week to deliver a keynote on the Infusion conference, on how we can create more entertaining, clever and persuasive marketing by applying lessons from electronica music, gaming, social media, web mashups and advertising from the late 60s.

Naturally, I will focus to some extent on reactive ads, but mostly I’ll put reactive ads in context of the larger trend of the remix culture, drawing parallels between punk music and intellectual property pirates etc. It’ll be a hoot. If you happen to be there, don’t miss it or at least, e-mail (vonsydow AT byburt.com) or tweet me and we’ll grab coffee!

Gustav and Gustav – Reactive advertising, Web 2.0 Berlin

24 October, 2008

Came home yesterday from Web 2.0 Europe after delivering the first of a series of speeches on the topic of “Reactive advertising”, which is mine and Gustav Martners idea on how to improve the ad model for brand marketing online and better monetize the social media space in one big swoop.

Case you happened to not be there, here are the slides from “Reactive advertising”!

(stupid wordpress.com won’t let me embed them right in the blog)

Copybox by Burt, TechCrunch50 and reactive ads

8 September, 2008

So I’m in San Francisco for the week, and we’re on Techcrunch50 about to present Copybox, the “Photoshop for copywriters” that’s our first product to officially launch from Burt.

The ideas that are created in Copybox are built around the concept of “reactive advertising”. Reactive ads represents a shift from focusing onwho gets shown what (content, ads etc.), to how stuff is presented when it’s shown… reactive ads are thus shaped by the circumstances for each exposure.

Reactive ads leverage the same pool of mined data that’s currently being used for ad targeting, recommendation engines, mash-ups etc. and hits the advertising sweet spot by enabling publishers to better monetize their data and ad inventory, and at the same time responding to advertisers’ urgent need for increased visibility and impact of their digital campaigns.

I’ll get back to a more complete post on this subject, once I get some feedback from this week, which will be a huge leap forward in making this type of ads come true all over the web.

More posts from me on the subject of reactive ads:

Reactive advertising – a meme is born
Quality of social networking ads
Reactive ads and the Web 2.0 expo

Wish me luck!

New Facebook UI: a better architecture for participation

21 July, 2008

After a few delays Facebook is set to launch their updated UI on monday, though anyone with an FB account can already access the new look and feel on http://www.new.facebook.com/.

I find it kind of funny that people are nagging about the delayed launch. It’s about a week late… which is quite decent considering the rule for most pre-announced updates/launches in the software business seem to be a year or two past the original date (if they’re ever launched).

Anyhow. I think it looks quite nice. They’ve got rid of the bulky, cluttered three column layout, in which both the outer columns were almost always wasted. The feed itself is very friendfeedesque, though I think it’s fair to say that Facebook was doing the whole activity stream before the Friendfeed guys quit Google ;) Calls to action in terms of participation are everywhere, pushing the user to add updates, photos, notes etc., but I think they’ve done a solid job in balancing the number of calls for participation on each screen.

Their aim is obvious: make people talk. Their strategy for this is creating more reasons to talk and making it easier to do so. Or in pseudo-Internet-social-psychology-babble: they’re increasing the number of social objects on the site and lowering the threshold for participation.

Conversations equals stickiness equals more conversation equals more stickiness etc.

Overall it’s a job very well done. The layout is a lot more flexible and easier on the eyes, and the navigation is more contextually relevant and much less invasive. And most interesting of all: the new layout and uncluttered interface makes the site a whole more interesting for advertising. Maybe they can finally push their RPU above 5 dollars/year? ;)