“We Need To Future-Proof Our Brands”
Published in Nov-Dec 2022
AURORA: What prompted you
to set up IG Square and what
makes it different from the
other media buying agencies
in Pakistan?
MUHAMMAD SARWAR
KHAN: IG Square is an acronym
for Imagine Growth Globally.
We set up in September 2020,
right in the middle of Covid-19
when it was already clear
that the market was changing
drastically and it was becoming
necessary to re-evaluate the
way we did things. Our main
purpose is to change the
conversation. I have been in the
advertising and media industry
for a long time, and we have
become used to doing things in
a certain way, a way that in my
opinion, is no longer relevant in
a post-Covid-19 world. We need
to re-image and broaden our
canvas. Specifically, at IG Square
we focus on three pillars: Data,
content and technology; three
pillars that will redefine the future.
It is no longer about the cheapest
ad spot; something we have
been focused on for years and
years. The cheapest spot is not
the solution, because audiences
are now so fragmented. The
focus has to be on data; on how
we collect and curate data and
make it meaningful. We live in
a data-driven, agile world and
everything we do, especially
media marketing, must reflect
this. Creativity for the sake of
creativity doesn’t mean anything.
To achieve growth for brands we
need defined growth matrices. It
is not about sales jumping from
one point to another. It is about
the way consumers are evolving
and how the macroeconomic
indicators are changing, not
only in Pakistan but globally.
With the right growth matrices
in place, we can look at all the
factors that affect a business
and set the direction for the right
creative strategy and then look
at expansion. A big problem
with our businesses is their
fear of expanding. If a business
is doing well, they are content
with that and we are trying to
address this mindset. We want to
educate local businesses about
the importance of expanding –
and even going global. We are
about reengineering the media
landscape.
A: How is the microeconomic
scenario changing?
MSK: For most FMCG brands,
the bullseye is typically a 20- or
21-year-old; a person who today
is about 16 – and name me
one 16- year-old who watches
TV today? (you don’t need data
to tell you this). If 16-year-olds
are not watching TV today, how
will you force them to do so five
years from now? The journey
has to start today because there
are so many different factors
at play. Internet penetration
is set to reach 75%, data and
devices are becoming cheaper
and platforms are evolving (a
recent example is Netflix starting
to take advertising). What is
clear is that audiences are now
exposed to the world, yet our
media and marketing plans are
too TV-specific. I am not saying
that TV is redundant, but TV has
become a connecting device
through which audiences can
log on and explore multiple
platforms. We need to keep pace
with audiences and this is why
data is important – how do we
collect and then curate data?
Because in the next couple of
years data will be hard to collect
due to privacy concerns. We
need a data strategy to address
this and most clients do not
have one. They are living in the
moment and not planning for the
future. Yet, they need to futureproof themselves against all the
changes that are happening.
We are not doing enough to
evolve ourselves as an industry;
our consumers continue to be
exposed to multiple platforms
but our media advertising
strategies are lopsided.
A: How easy is it going to be
to convince advertisers to
change strategy, especially
given the uncertainty of the
economic environment?
MSK: We are a two-year-old
company and our numbers have
doubled every year. Brands
are not shying away from
investing in advertising but the
question is, are they making
the right investments; are they
investing in the future? This
is why we need to change the
conversation. Fifteen or 20 years ago, a
TVC was produced, advertisers
got the results they hoped for,
job done. Today, we live in a
different world and we have
to change the mix. The global
tech platforms are evolving
very rapidly; this year they
will be spending close to $18
billion on content – content that
our consumers have access
to through multiple devices.
These platforms have both
massive and aggressive plans
for this region – how will our
media industry compete with
them? Consumers have options
and you cannot force them to
watch something they do not
want to on local media. Yet, a
major chunk of the advertising
is going in that direction. The
changes I am talking about may
not affect us today, but they will
five years from now, and five
years is nothing in a brand’s life.
We need to start that journey
today. We need to future-proof
our brands. Why is it that the
solution to every brand problem
is a TVC? When clients ask
for a media strategy, their brief
always includes a 30-second
TVC and a list of channels they
want to run it on. So how can
I give them a media strategy
when they are asking for a TV
spot list? And then there is this
whole discussion about what
discounts we can get – and this
has affected the TV networks.
Their only source of revenue
comes from advertisements
because they don’t get
subscriptions. So when it is
a question of the cheapest
spot, the networks do not earn
enough and the result is that
they do not invest in either
content or people – and this is a
vicious cycle. When audiences
are not served the right content,
they start exploring other
platforms. We have to accept
this reality and be bold enough
to change the conversation. If
we are to grow as an industry,
we need to grow together and
not at the expense of each other
– which was the case earlier;
everyone trying to extract
the maximum from the other
party. The result was a zerosum game. We need to move
forward and grow together
and to make this happen, we
need to start to ask the right
questions and start becoming
relevant to our audiences.
A: What is your solution?
What alternatives are you
proposing?
MSK: What I normally
recommend to clients is that
they do not have to abandon
what they are doing now, but
in parallel, they need to start
to plan for the future. At this
point, it is not about replacing
one medium with another. It is
about having a five-year plan.
There has to be a data strategy.
Google has announced that
by the end of next year, they
will do away with cookies; we
are essentially talking about
a cookie-less world and when
this happens, digital advertisers
will no longer be able to track
their consumers’ journey. This
is why a data strategy is so
important. Gathering data is a
lengthy process and then one
needs to curate it to make it
meaningful. This is why it is so
important that clients should, in
parallel with their conventional
planning, formulate a data
strategy. Secondly, they need
a content strategy. Because of
the different available platforms,
clients need to move from a
generic content approach to
a personalised one, based on
the target audience’s interests.
Thirdly, blockchain, AI and other
technological innovations will
play a significant part in the
way we market, and we need
to figure out how to use these
tools to make our marketing
more efficient. All this requires a
strategy because once you have
it, you have a clear pathway to
future-proofing your brands. A
lot of headwinds are coming
from the big tech platforms and
they are aggressively trying to
engage everybody.
A: Do we even have the HR
expertise to gather and curate
data into meaningful action
points?
MSK: So, the next step is
to get our talent right and,
unfortunately, as an industry,
we have not invested enough
in our HR. Advertising and the
media are not the first choices
for students coming out of
top-tier institutions. We need to
make our industry attractive to
talented data scientists and we
have to pay them well because
we can have the strategies but someone has to know how to
execute them. We also need to
figure out how to collaborate
with the start-ups out there;
rather than reinventing the
wheel, it is about finding the
right partners. The same goes
for the content space. We need
to find partners who know how
to use technology and can
develop personalised content for
different audiences.
A: How much of the total
media spend does TV
account for?
MSK: Seventy to 80%.
A: So still quite considerable?
MSK: It absolutely is. As of
today, 65 to 70% of my agency’s
investment goes to TV, but will
that be the case five years down
the line? I seriously doubt it.
A: What about digital?
MSK: About 15%, but growing
rapidly. To reach the same number
of people we were reaching
through TV five or 10 years ago,
we have to invest almost double
the amount. TV has an ageing
population, although people in the
TV world will not agree. People
in the 35+ age bracket are still
relevant to TV, but as for anyone
in the 16-year-old bracket, in a
few years, it will be very difficult
to target them through TV. We
say we need to catch them
young, but the younger lot are
not watching TV.
A: What is the ratio between
your local and international
clients?
MSK: Our clients are
predominantly local. However,
through our affiliation with
Universal McCann we recently
launched Spotify in Pakistan and
they are a global client and we
also recently acquired Emirates.
Both clients account for close to
one third of our billings.
A: Isn’t there a new breed of
local advertisers who tend
to prefer digital because it is
more cost effective?
MSK: The preferred advertising
platform for most new
advertisers is digital, although
because we cannot track digital
advertising in Pakistan, we don’t
know the true volumes. At the
moment, we are talking to at
least four to five potential clients
and they are going to be digital
first, because given the kind
of business they are in, digital
suits them best. With TV, there
is always the chance that there
will be some wastage, especially
if the product or service is not
available nationwide, and some
of the clients we are talking to
are starting small. Having said
this, they are ambitious young
entrepreneurs who believe in
advertising and marketing, and
digital gives them the advantage
of being very specific and
targeted. So absolutely, the new
breed of advertisers out there
are very open to being digital
first. However, unfortunately,
because we cannot track digital,
we don’t know the total volume
of what is happening out there.
A: Isn’t digital supposed to be
the most measurable medium?
MSK: For TV we have third
party companies that track
spots. We subscribe to their
data and this enables us to
make certain assumptions and
come up with a number in terms
of a particular brand’s spend.
With digital, although globally
there are third-party companies
that track digital advertising,
in Pakistan we don’t. So, if I
am working on a brand and I
want to know how much the
competition has spent on digital,
I don’t have access to the data I
need. Then there is the fact that
the Googles and Metas of this
world are talking to advertisers
directly and the result is that
there are now two streams
of business. One that goes
through the agencies and the
one that goes through the tech
companies, and I believe that
their volume of advertising is
as big or even bigger than what
is going through the agencies.
Unless we have third-party
tracking, we cannot really know
what the total volume of digital
spend is.
A: What does future-proofing
mean in concrete terms?
MSK: It is about first
understanding that given the
pace of change, something that
is relevant today may not be
tomorrow, so if your plans are
based on what is relevant today,
the chances are that they will
be disrupted. To future-proof
brands, we have identified
three key areas of focus. Firstly,
culture. How can a brand
become part of the culture? This
is about creating awareness
through the right mix of earned
media. Secondly, community.
How do you win hearts?
This means getting closer to
the community and creating
memorable experiences, and
where activations come in.
Third, commercial. How do you
win wallets? To future-proof
your brand, you need to have
a strategy for all three – and
there are different layers here.
You need the data strategy, the
content strategy and the tech
strategy (identifying the platform
you want to engage with). When
you have all three pieces of the
jigsaw coming together, you
start to see a plan that is much
more than a mere TV spot plan.
You have a plan that will help
get closer to your consumers
and create meaningful
relationships that will ultimately
future-proof your brand. We may
not have all the answers right
now, but the idea is to change
the conversation and start that
journey. We know that change is
happening and unless we keep
up with it, it will be too late.
Muhammad Sarwar Khan was in conversation with Mariam Ali Baig. For feedback: aurora@dawn.com
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