Facebook announced Graph Search, a new feature to search within the users’ Social Graph. Another development in the rise of the Interest Graph technologies that advertisers need to understand.
60% of the UK’s 10m Twitter users watch TV as they tweet, from the Twitter TV book, an in depth study in to this new form of media multitasking.
20% of Digital auto sales leads are coming from mobile devices.
Cool Stuff:
*Wearable Technology is shaping up to become a significant trend in 2013. We can expect to see all sorts of new gadgets measuring what we do, consume and even think.
Happy New Year and welcome to 2013. Our friends across the group and globe have been pulling together a summary of predicted trends for the year ahead. January always brings a rush of these, but we wanted to share them as there are some good points to kee[p in mind...
For starters one can hardly miss the signs of media convergence today. Mob scenes erupt with each new iPhone launch, sales of tablet devices have skyrocketed, and Twitter hashtags have cropped up with increased frequency on both TV commercials and programming. Second screens became a dominant force in 2012, and will continue to reign in the coming year.
In turn, the culture quake driven by the Millennials, presents a challenge for marketers. These modern marketers must adapt and merge the ads they buy, the content they own and the media coverage they earn into a converged strategy that’s fast and fluid enough to keep up with the multiplatform now.
Here are 10 of the major trends in media and marketing for 2013:
Mobile Focus: With the increasing penetration of smartphones in both developed and emerging markets, new users are more likely to first come online via mobile today. Effective marketers will shift their focus from advertising and sponsorships to developing new and interesting tools embedded in the phone (think geo-location and gyroscope) to attract and engage mobile users. Increasingly, brands and agencies will depend on mobile technology experts for multiplatform success.
Social TV: The blossoming of the second screen/social TV space will continue to evolve as users discover and interact with their favorite shows and commercials by responding to on-air polls, coupon and contest offers via their handheld devices. Brand marketers will turn to technologies such as Shazam and the newly-launched iSpot.tv to mine second-screen engagement through big screen content.
Commercial-tainment: A recent Edelman study found that 80% of Millennials want to be entertained by advertising. Brands like Macy’s, Juicy Couture and ASOS began to merge commercials and entertainment last year with short, engaging shopping videos. This year, expect brands to expand that model to capture even more second-screeners by incorporating contests, sweepstakes, coupons and exclusive content.
Viral Strategies: The speed with which information travels via social media presents a high-risk, huge-reward opportunity for brands aiming to become this year’s marketing equivalent of PSY’s “Gangnam Style” or Invisible Children’s Kony 2012 campaign.
Visual Interest: One picture is worth a dozen tweets to social media users who went picture crazy in 2012, thanks to visual sharing sites Instagram and Pinterest. Expect major brands to jump heavily onto the visual bandwagon with apps, photo sharing and Pinterest-like mosaic interfaces.
Ad Versioning: Gone are the days when TV advertising involved merely matching the right ads with the right media. In 2013, advertisers will increasingly rely on technology that tweaks both the creative and the copy in real time to “version” it automatically. Expect these “smart” algorithms to also execute version testing and adapt each ad to its environment.
TV 2.0: Despite predictions of TV’s imminent demise, the growth of second-screen users has actually bolstered its popularity while at the same time diverting millions of eyes from the big screen. How will advertisers respond? Expect some to experiment this year with the creative use of sound to get their message across in much the same way as radio.
Data Planning: Advertisers who were overwhelmed by consumer data last year will reap its benefit this year, now that they’ve identified the sophisticated systems necessary to make sense of the information. Expect more effective multiplatform marketing plans as a result.
YouTube: YouTube, with its eclectic mix of DIY and commercial video content, will continue to grow in popularity, especially among Millennials. Advertisers will watch closely for opportunities as YouTube settles into its new Los Angeles production studio this year and forms partnerships to expand its content to movie theaters, home entertainment systems and digital storefronts.
Voice Recognition: Granted, Siri and Google Now didn’t catch fire the way some had expected, but the fault lay more in the execution of voice recognition than in the concept. That’s likely to change in 2013 as SRI, the maker of Siri, courts vendors to build on the Siri framework. Expect VR to make your voice heard on the websites in the coming year.
A big thank you to Jen Razor for pulling this together.
Vox pops, night vision, people jumping out of seats: these are now the new norms of horror marketing. If you show them being scared enough then the film must be scary, right? But no film has have ever actually measured the fear factor. Until now…
For the launch of the new film Sinister from the makers of Paranormal Activity and Insidious, M2M and Drum teamed up with Professor Brendan Walker of The Thrill Laboratory to measure and record the authentic, sheer fear generated by the film.
To establish Sinister’s ‘Fear Factor’, subjects were placed in a cinema theatre with 400 members of the public and hooked up to instruments measuring their heart rate, skin temperature, and perspiration.
The results of the experiment concluded that the subjects were in a genuine state of fear for an incredible 41% of the film. The peak heart rate was 237 beats per minute, a frightening 177 bpm above normal, matching the top heart rate people reach on some of the world’s most intense rollercoasters.
In the content released as a 6o” spot on Saturday 29th September (longer online only version is running as an exclusive today on Orange) Professor Brendan Walker from the Thrill Laboratory relays back to one subject: “You were having a very extreme experience. You actually broke our heart rate monitor”. Even the bravest contestant amongst them was in a state of fear for 34% of the film.
The experiment sits alongside a partnership with Bauer to showcase content from the experiment on their TV channels, along with advertorials and spots that track the journey from subject recruitment through to results in Zoo and Kerang, Kiss and Kerrang radio. All are set to drive people to www.sinisterfilm.co.uk.
Building on this M2M are currently ramping up the fear across TV, radio, outdoor and press as the 5th October release date approaches, all posing one simple question:
Qualcomm is attempting to crowd-source a portable medical diagnostic device based on the Tricorder from Star Trek (really).
Where to find more:
‘The future of Real Time Buying’ according to Microsoft, is characterized by accelerated growth blended with the challenges of scale, working with current buying systems and planning models.
IfThisThenThat is one of the web’s most interesting startups and they tell us a lot about where ever more connected technology is taking us (lots of automated services connected together to make everyday life a little easier).
How technology is changing the restaurant industry. An interesting analysis that illustrates how technology impacts every part of the value chain.
Whether you are a golf fan or not this weekend was nothing short of awesome to watch. Just exactly how did Europe not just win, but escape what looked like a thorough beating?
Well, while Paddy Power can't claim full credit, we do however hope that the audacious and brave activity we worked on with Paddy Power helped.
Here's a little context...
Ahead of the Ryder Cup American Captain Davis Love III stoked the flames for a fiery confrontation, stirring up U.S fans to deliver the loudest frenzy ever seen at the tournament. With the tournament to be played at Medinah in Chicago, the European's knew they were going to be up against it.
With this in mind, Paddy Power, in conjunction with the team here at M2M and Crispin Porter + Bogusky embarked on an audacious plan to redress the balance for Team Europe. As the second day's play began, a fleet or acrobatic planes were utilised to create the worlds highest and largest tweets printed in the sky above the course. Visible from over 20 miles the tweets were designed to rival any ground-level heckles.
On Saturday Paddy Power’s twitter feed (@paddypower) called on European supporters to submit messages with the hashtag ‘#GoEurope'. Working across the weekend the team at M2M used a promoted trend and tweets to extend the reach of the idea. Ryder Cup editorial in national press ads asked viewers to “Help a Yank to Shank” and to submit their messages via the #Go Europe hashtag. TV advertising began in the Ryder Cup coverage with a similar message.
During the process the Paddy Power twitter page was overrun with tweets and over 55 messages were ‘sky-written’ by stunt pilots flying at 10,000ft above Medinah in the world's first Twitter campaign of its kind. These included “Spirit of Seve”, “Mrs Duffner is hot” and “Rory’s Gonna Getcha” which saw Rory himself taking photos and exclaiming “I love that!”. A video of him watching the Skytweets has even just been put on his Youtube channel here.
Live on air the European team Captain Jose Maria Olazabel was clearly excited about the tweets and said the team were trying to find out who was behind them. One of the sky tweets '#GoEurope' was adopted wholesale by fans (including Gary Lineker and Austin Healey) and additional TV advertising was placed in the Sunday coverage of The Ryder Cup as the tension mounted to get people involvbed and fired up all the more.
To help push Team Europe to a stunning victory the campaign finished with the world's biggest ever sky-written message. The message was made up from all of the twelve European players’ names - listing Seve as the 13th man to make it a record-breaker delivered to tie in with the start of the team’s dramatic and nail-biting comeback. The full text took up approximately 70million sq ft of sky. With each letter bigger that Shard in London, it was designed to break the current record by at least 10million sq ft.
This incredible campaign was the latest iteration of the ‘We Hear You’ campaign in which Paddy Power have been listening to what punters are saying and responding to them in over the top fashion. To get a full 360 degree panormaic view of some of the tweets in action have a look at the link below:
While we are in the process of reviewing the whole campaign, from an initital media results perspective the promoted trend on Twitter delivered 18 million impressions (2.5 x the Twitter norm) over the Saturday and Sunday (a 21% engagement rate). The promoted tweets on Twitter delivered 171k impressions and combined nearly 30k clicks (8.9%) and #GoEurope received 65.5k mentions, including the ones from Gary Lineker and Austin Healy.
In short, it was one awesome and emotional weekend that nearly even bought Colin Montgomerie to tears. The American's fielded an incredible team that for two days looked like they were going to take the Europeans down comfortably. While effectiveness is rarely measured in Ryder Cup vistory terms and Paddy Power could certainly not claim the full motivational credit, we certainly hope the sky tweets played a small part in creating what has to go down as the greatest Ryder Cup comeback victory of all time - one we hope Seve would have been proud of.
- Sam (with big thanks to all the Paddy Power team)
Consumers have very different relationships with their multiple screens; from the everyman to the sage to the lover. ‘Meet the screens’ from Omnicom and MSN illustrates how we should approach each screen’s creative use.
Cool stuff
Chrome web lab is coming to London’s Science Museum it is cutting edge ‘experiential Digital creativity’.
‘We need a fundamentally different way of creating a brand’ this memo from CP+B CEO Andrew Keller sums up the challenges facing brands in a world of infinite Digital content.
Google’s Larry Page at Zeitgeist – we should take advantage of the amazing opportunities modern technology provides and with more ambitious goals we can double the rate of human progress