Transcript Slide 1

Industry View 2010
Everything you need to know about the media
industry
A work.report
Date: February 2010
The roadmap
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The process
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Overview – the top 10 things you should know
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Getting to know them
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How they see you and the world
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Getting it right with agencies
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How best to communicate with them
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Key recommendations
The process
Who we spoke to
20 planners
10 MD+
10 Marketers
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Food & Drink
Alcohol
Insurance
Public Sector
Telecoms
Health and
Beauty
• Directory
Services
Overview
The 10 things you should know
1.Increasing short-termism
1. Increasing short-termism
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Media planning and buying became more short term in 2009 and looks set to stay
that way
“we all know that late deals are out there”
– Agency driven; looking for value, tactical over strategic, trading comes to the fore
– Client driven; uncertainty over budgets and performance, risk averse
“clients held onto budgets into well into the year to see what was going to happen”
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This impacted upon channel planning ;
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The main winner was digital as clients increasingly ‘got what digital was about’
TV and Outdoor felt to perform well in the recession and offer great value
Cinema had much hyped success
Radio and Print the losers as ‘2nd place’ media fell by the wayside
2. Accountability in pole position
2. Accountability in pole position
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Commercial pressures led to increased client demands for accountability
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Econometric modelling on the increase ; although many increasingly feel uneasy
about over reliance on black box tests
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ROI modelling evident ; meaning those channels with clear and transparent
measurement tools strengthened their position on the plan
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Overall, the plan now needs to be proven, before it gets sign-off ; likely to stay this
way from now on
3. All work and no play
3. All work and no play
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All agency staff talked about increased work loads ; several contributing factors:
– Freeze on graduate employment ; fewer junior staff picking up administrative
tasks
– Large scale redundancies at all levels ; little job security
– Short-term month by month approach is harder ; accounts require constant
attention
– Constantly having to deliver added value
“we were having to deliver a constant stream of proposals to prove we were active, even
though you knew there was no chance of them getting signed off”
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Exacerbated by fewer ‘rewards’ ; fewer kick backs, fewer parties, fewer grats
4. Precarious business model
4. Precarious business model
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Several factors have led to increased business pressures:
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Commission based income is down due to lower overall spends and cheaper deals
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Kick backs and Fees are all down as agencies get squeezed at both ends (media
owners and clients)
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‘Ridiculous’ deals were put in place to win what little new business there was
– And / or to keep existing clients on board
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Consequently, struggling to fulfil these
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Digital is a bigger beast to service yet margins remain low
– Search, affiliates, display, mobile, etc.
5. Clients were more risk averse
5. Clients are more risk averse
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Overall, clients appear to have ‘stuck with what they know’
– Looking for ‘proven’ delivery of audiences
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Consequently, TV remained on the plan but 2nd stream media lost out
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Digital continued to rise as clients increasingly understand (and can account for) its
contribution
– Helped by its flexibility and low entry level costs
6. Integration, integration, integration
6. Integration, integration, integration
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Continues to be the big ‘buzz word’ across the industry
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Theoretically, there is still a debate about what it is and how to deliver it
– Ask 10 different people and you get 10 different answers
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In reality, clients are driving the agenda
– they want to deliver one brief and manage a joined up approach through as few
contacts as possible
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The result is that agencies are battling it out amongst themselves for their slice of the
budget
– PR, DRM, Experiential, Digital, etc.
7. Leaders and Followers
7. Leaders and Followers
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The recession has separated the ‘wheat from the chaff’
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There are 3 perceived leaders at the moment
– MEC, Mediacom and OMD
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The rest follow behind with little differentiation
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And there are rumours of some key players being in trouble
8. The future’s bright(er)
8. The future’s bright(er)
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Clearly, the last 18-24 months have seen a huge readjustment
– Generally accepted that this is now the norm
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Trading will still be tough but there is less uncertainty about what will happen
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Consequently, coping mechanisms are in place
– Agencies are leaner
– Processes have been streamlined
– Client servicing has increased focus
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Now more positive about 2010, albeit less about an increase in business and more
about simply being better prepared for whatever comes along
9. A new way of thinking
9. A new way of thinking
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The traditional tools are viewed with increased scepticism
– TGI, Econometrics
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The behavioural sciences are now being delved into by the more future-facing
planners
– Behavioural economics gaining increased traction
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More importantly, planners are increasingly bringing various data strands together to
provide a more holistic view of their target - ‘data integration’
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Many are now getting to grips to social media, although there are still few examples
of it working really effectively
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Mobile is on the radar but it remains a tentative part of any discussion
10. Changing agency models
10. Changing agency models
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A growing view emerges that media agencies will move in two opposing directions
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Gravitate more towards media owners
– A brokering house between client and media
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Gravitate more towards clients
– Building the bridge between consumer insight and media consumption
– Tackling ‘bigger picture’ briefs
– Iris, Kindred, Engine, COI – already operating in this area
Getting to know them
STRATEGY
Ideas
advice
CREATIVE
Sponsorship,
beyond media
PLANNING
INVESTMENT
Broadcast, Press, Outdoor
Budgetary
advice
DIGITAL
Display, search,
SEO, Affiliates,
Mobile
Agencies have become more integrated
Agencies have become more integrated
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Two years ago, agencies were in the throes of change
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Planners were happy!
• Incorporating digital skills and knowledge into their roles
• Waving goodbye to ‘creativity’
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Bosses were unhappy!
• How do you structure the new agency offering
• Digital in – digital out – Superplanners ???
Now we have a more consistent model – and a more integrated offering
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Digital has become ‘another specialist unit’
Superplanners understand digital media and cut up the total media pie, on and off line
Superplanners
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Day to day planners now control all inter-media budget allocation
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Intra-media budget allocation is left to the specialists
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Outdoor, can be a fairly distanced implementation
TV has always been handed over for execution and contact with the TV buyer is critical to
joined up planning and buying
Press, Radio, Cinema are watched more closely by the planners (they know more and have
a closer idea of what they want and expect)
Online is very distant
• So fragmented that they acknowledge their blind spots
• Or ‘coded’ and lost in translation (esp Search)
Tools and systems
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Agencies have gradually moved away from black boxes and systems as everyday planning tools
– On the whole they are rolled out for pitches and special occasions
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Why?
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Digital planning created a new set of data and requirements that econometric databases
couldn’t cope with (or which needed very costly updating)
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Clients shifted mindset from ‘comms planning’ to on and off line planning and buying
So what is next?
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The big ideas in communications such as Behavioural Economics are creating a new
approach to insight (theoretical, academic, observational)
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Decision making and customer journey research is easier to put at the heart of agency
thinking (PHD and MESH, Starcom and SPRING)
Planners are magpies
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They are info hungry
– Using a wide range of sources
– Storytelling approach, picking nuggets to build their case
– A balance between rigorous strategic work and salesmanship
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They use a wide variety of information sources
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Media info
Consumer info
Case studies
Internal experts
All framed by their, easy to follow planning process
Online is a planning and buying business
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Sources of info have widened to help justify plans: audience insight is increasingly
desired to help find niche audiences
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Have seen significant change; clients now ‘get’ digital
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The fragmentation of sites does result in more selective screening
– no time to consider everything therefore individuals have a personal top 10 that
they always screen first
– Portals dominate as they deliver large / wide audiences
– Recency is everything – and gets you on plans!
Sponsorship is a ‘dark art’
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There is a ‘black market’ approach which dominates (and it’s TV biased)
– It’s all about who you know ; a ‘nod and a wink’ about what’s coming up
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People contact and good relationships will always supersede other sources of
information
Can you believe that there are
still some key questions that
However, still require answers to some basic FAQs:
we just haven’t got answers to
– like does sponsorship
– does sponsorship work/sell?
work?!
– why spend on sponsorship rather than other parts of the media mix?
– can you launch new products with sponsorship?
Task based planning
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Media planning has always been based on three questions:
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Which media are most appropriate for
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An emerging theme is that planners start with an objective and begin their media thinking there
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The audience
The brand / message
The task
Ie. it’s a launch, that means TV at the heart with some digital support
And therefore some media generalities are emerging which replace the old ones
TV for stature, Print for detail, Radio for frequency, Outdoor for reach, Cinema for environment
Task based planning
BRAND
SALES
LAUNCH
REPOSITIONING
TV
Outdoor
Online display
Search
TV
Print
Outdoor
Sponsorship
RESPONSE
SALES
SUPPORT
Online
Radio
TV
Print
Online
Print
Radio
Outdoor
INFLUENCE
Sponsorship
Experiential
Social
BRAND
BUILDING
TV
Sponsorship
Outdoor
Print
Radio
Research /
Insight
Insight team
Online
Marketing
Department
Consumer
Marketing
Brand 1
Marketing Directors
Brand 2 etc.
Brand / Marketing
Managers
Online
Brand / Marketing
Assistants
The typical client model
Customer
Marketing (trade)
Communications
PR, CSR,
Corporate, etc.
The life of the client
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VERY time poor
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Live life one project at a time
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An unending series of meetings
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Obsessed with their own sector – often refuse to see the wood for the trees
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Agencies constantly having to deliver added value – being very heavily
serviced
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Typically in role for no more than 18 months – very short term focused
Media info: needs
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What they’re looking for is:
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Perspective on the latest media trends
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Future gazing on what’s coming up
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Fresh insight into their sector and consumer target
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Competitive info – what have others done that was really effective
Media owners
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Most clients aren’t being approached by media owners
– Referred to media agencies when it does happen
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Some marketers have had no experience of media owners at all
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Those that had met media owners were often more senior and/or leading on high value
projects
– Specific partnership projects
– High value sponsorship
– Or a personal interest (looking for tickets to the World Cup!)
But bear in mind, all media deals get referred to the media agency in the end
Key Learning
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The way to a planner’s heart is with fresh insight into consumers and sectors
– Fresh research given credibility through endorsement / partnerships
– A new take on something beyond your traditional field of expertise
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Dialogue with clients more likely with bigger (known) players but still expect mediation
through the agency
– Offer training seminars to junior marketers – “everything you need to know
about...”
– Get in front of senior marketers with fresh thinking (as above) on their sector
rather than another sales pitch about your medium
How best to communicate with them
Communications
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Agency staff have differing attitudes to communication from media owners;
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Planners; see less of media owners (in general) and expect more from them
– Reps that come to the meeting with something to share
– Examples of cool stuff that’s been done
– Insightful presentations bought to ‘agency mornings’
– Access to top people
Communications
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Typically, clients will request info from the agency
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They are receptive to getting ‘bespoke’ presentations / think pieces that can demonstrate
something new and interesting
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Most importantly, how it fits with their plan and how it can deliver ROI
Contact is (admittedly) difficult
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Likely to push calls away – referral to media agency
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Email is a better route in
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Very senior, or junior staff are likely to be more receptive
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Don’t forget the insight department also
Key recommendations
Recommendations
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Go Junior
– Tomorrow’s people (and they are easier to get to)
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Research a sector
– Every agency has a range of sectors and you can be the expert
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Research with a partner
– It softens the agenda and they can provide an ‘alternative source of authority’
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Recency is everything
– Find a way to keep in touch with interesting snippets (work your website)
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Cross pollenate
– They all want to know about ‘the cool stuff’ you can do