Promo - March 2008 - (Page 22) guest commentary John Hilbrich Misusing Targeted Media Don’t apply mass, wasteful standards Anxious marketing managers sense the danger. They know in their bones that the traditional ground of mass advertising has become a less friendly place to stand. But they panic at their view of the alternatives: an abrupt descent from the frying pan into the world of fire sales, centsoff coupons, and all the other short-term brand-aids commonly lumped together as “promotions.” These brand guardians have good reason to be scared. They’re entirely right to think a careless short-term burn will engulf their brand and destroy it. The good news is that there is a real escape from this dilemma. For the first time it’s safe to make the leap away from dependence on traditional brand TV and print. junk; e-mail inboxes inundated with spam; trucks cruising the streets with billboards; commercials shoved in front of captive movie theater audiences; ads literally underfoot in the supermarket. It’s an avalanche, and only a fool would expect the public to lovingly examine each particle of the mud. PARALYSIS BY ANALYSIS When all the evidence screams for a new way of marketing, why do brand managers keep plunging head first into the inferno of mass media orthodoxy? In many companies, it’s because brand managers are forced to look not at the marketing evidence, but fearfully over their shoulder at their own company’s executive suite. This excessive caution, in effect, is “risk-free” suicide. No matter how many total exposures you get, becoming part of the blur—a pixel or two in every American’s audio-visual wallpaper—is not an efficient use of your marketing dollars. MASS SATURATION For years, we’ve all heard the doomsday predictions about the declining effectiveness of mass media advertising. What’s changed is that this apocalyptic scenario has now made the fateful transition from “forecast” to “fact.” Check out these alarming numbers: • Compared to the early 1960s, we now have 14 times more TV channels in the average home. Three times the radio stations. And oh yes, one more Internet—with 25,000 streaming broadcast stations and 4.4 billion Google-indexed pages (based on outdated 2004 numbers; the real figures are even higher). • Real ad spending on prime-time broadcast TV has increased in the last decade by about 40%, according to a recent McKinsey Report, even as the number of viewers has dropped nearly 50% – a crash of nearly two-thirds in eyeballs reached per dollar. • What’s worse, those eyeballs aren’t even paying attention to you anymore. Fully 68% of TV-viewing consumers—over twothirds of the remaining number who watch—are also using other media while “watching” the tube. • In 2005, only one in 10 U.S. households had a TiVo or other DVR to skip commercials. Their owners say they fast-forward through 92% of the commercials they receive. Now it’s one in five. Within three years, Forrester Research predicts it will be one out of two. It’s a self-defeating course of misusing targeted media as if was mass resulting in ugliness: mailboxes stuffed full of It’s an avalanche, and only a fool would expect the public to lovingly examine each particle of the mud. In today’s game, he who spends the most total dollars doesn’t always win. Certainly, money is still a must to play the game. But the winners are the ones who seek out a more intimate understanding of their best customers—geographic, demographic and psychographic—then invest selectively to reach them where they live, with a message that’s of interest to them. When brand managers and their agencies act on these principles, the blur magically clears. Today, the line that separates success from failure is the one between expenditures that hit your audience and those that wastefully miss. This all-important distinction—not the purchase of a traditional media mix through unthinking force of habit—is dictating both the placement and the content of today’s most successful campaigns. l P John Hilbrich is president, global agency services of The Marketing Store. 22 March 2008 / WWW.PROMOMAGAZINE.COM / Promo http://www.promomagazine.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Promo - March 2008 Promo - March 2008 Editor's Note Girls' Club New Eco Regs? They're Not Going Anywhere Spreads Easily RFID Ramp-Up From Backyard to Broadcast Commentary VROOOM! Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet Q&A: Measuring Up Free Ink The Agency Center Resource Center Promotions 2.0 Index of Advertisers Promo - March 2008 Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page Cover1) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page Cover2) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page 3) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page 4) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page 5) Promo - March 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Promo - March 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Promo - March 2008 - Girls' Club (Page 8) Promo - March 2008 - Girls' Club (Page 9) Promo - March 2008 - New Eco Regs? (Page 10) Promo - March 2008 - New Eco Regs? (Page 11) Promo - March 2008 - They're Not Going Anywhere (Page 12) Promo - March 2008 - Spreads Easily (Page 13) Promo - March 2008 - RFID Ramp-Up (Page 14) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 15) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 16) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 17) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 18) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 19) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 20) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 21) Promo - March 2008 - Commentary (Page 22) Promo - March 2008 - Commentary (Page 23) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 24) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 25) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 26) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 27) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 28) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 29) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 30) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 31) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 32) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 33) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 34) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 35) Promo - March 2008 - Q&A: Measuring Up (Page 36) Promo - March 2008 - Q&A: Measuring Up (Page 37) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 38) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 39) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 40) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 41) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 42) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 43) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 44) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 45) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 46) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 47) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 48) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 49) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 50) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 51) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 52) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 53) Promo - March 2008 - Promotions 2.0 (Page 54) Promo - March 2008 - Promotions 2.0 (Page 55) Promo - March 2008 - Promotions 2.0 (Page 56) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 57) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 58) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover3) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover4)
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