Why Your Brand Needs a Media Philosophy
Published in Nov-Dec 2022
I was watching T20 cricket between Pakistan and England recently when, suddenly, the commentators started parroting advertising slogans. They told me about a “Sensodyne sensitive free moment” and, shortly after, felt compelled (by their contracts with the broadcaster no doubt) to tell viewers about “a Tapal tea moment.” It felt a bit uncomfortable.
Huge increases in media volumes over the past 20 years are a great temptation for brands because there are many more targeting opportunities. Now, being ubiquitous in the media is not wrong as it creates a sense that a brand is popular, widely used and is therefore a safe choice. Behaviour scientists call this the “law of social proof.” But it is also very expensive and therefore an option open to only a few brands. The rest of us have to think harder about how we use media.
More communication is not necessarily better communication. It is a bit irritating to be tracked with messages across the apps on your smartphone. With TV ads there was always a kind of unwritten contract with the viewers – ads are confined to ad breaks so you can pop out for a nice cup of that Tapal tea if you wish. The T20 broadcasters had forced ads on me (whether I liked it or not) by enlisting ill-atease commentators to do their dirty work.
This is ‘offensive’ marketing. Marketing that is ‘done to’ people. You find it expressed in the language of war often used by media planners, who talk about ‘target audiences’ and ‘campaigns’ as if they are later-day Napoleons of media, ‘stimulating people’ into action with ‘messages’.
What is needed instead is a different language that includes people not as ‘targets’ but as sentient beings as part of a two-way relationship. I am going to call this ‘a media philosophy’ which describes how a brand will connect with people through media so that those people want to do or feel something.
Here is a thought experiment for you. Think about the brands you admire and like. Mostly they will have worked out when and where they mainly communicate with you and those will be moments when you are receptive to what they have to offer.
Effectiveness and efficiency are greater if you reach people in the right frame of mind and at the right moment. In The Long and the Short of it, Les Binet and Peter Field, reviewing learning from the IPA Effectiveness Awards, wrote: “We should choose brand-building channels according to their ability to emotionally engage as many target consumers as possible and choose activation channels according to their ability to prompt and facilitate immediate purchase by imminent category buyers.”
That is one media philosophy that works. Here are some others for brands that have found just the right way to communicate with me:
Exciting New Designs
Displayed in Temples of Desire
This is both Apple’s and Nike’s
media philosophy. Ads showcase
exciting new products/features.
Retail is not just about selling,
but a place of desire where you
can meet friendly, well-informed
staff and get your hands on those
lovely new things. (And if I can’t
touch them I can watch them
being unboxed on YouTube.)
Increasingly, physical experiences
are an antidote to an atomised life
lived through a screen.
Just a Click Away
This is how booking.com has
built its global brand. Travellers
looking for accommodation
don’t search for brands;
they search for information
about destinations. Google a
destination and you will almost
always find booking.com near
the top of search rankings. It
is an expensive but effective
strategy and booking.com
have invested heavily in search
advertising to achieve it. The aim
is not emotional engagement
but rather to achieve the status
of a reliable utility – on hand
whenever you need it.
Intriguing Entertainment
That You Can’t Help Getting
Involved With
Interactive social media have
opened up new ways for people
to get involved and share their
thoughts, something which has
particularly supercharged media
and entertainment brands. These
days, programmes like Married
at First Sight (my daughter
forced me to watch it and I was
gripped) or The Apprentice are
also entertaining social media
storms. Who should stay? Who
should go? Who is the snake
and who is the nice guy? Who is
going to get voted out and who
at the end of it all should win
the prize or contract? It is total
interactive entertainment and
now anyone can be a part of it.
Join Our Community of LikeMinded Souls:
This model has been used most
recently by new podcast brands.
I have confessed to being a
history nerd to Aurora readers
before. Podcasts have boomed
(especially during the pandemic)
and the ones I come back
to time and again have used
social media to create a feeling
of belonging. I can also get in
touch with the creators of The
Rest is History directly through
dedicated community platforms
and Twitter. I feel a part of their
world. They even give me their
attention by responding to my
questions and observations.
Beautifully Told and Moving
Stories That Make You Want to
Buy the Product
This TV advertising-led model
predates the digital revolution.
Against all predictions by futurists,
it has not gone out of fashion. Film
is still a great way to tell moving
human stories (often featuring cute
animals in the UK) especially when
just the right music is laid as the
soundtrack. In the UK we associate
this with John Lewis. On my last
visit to Pakistan, I found plenty of
brands “doing a John Lewis” as
part of the 70th anniversary of
foundation celebrations.
In finding your own media philosophy, much will depend on your attitude to creativity. Do you think of the digital revolution mainly as a massive cost-effective targeting opportunity, or as a much richer canvas of possibilities for your brand to be engaging? Think instead about where your brand should paint its pictures, tell its stories and be available to its customers. Instead of the language of war, think about enticement, pleasure, intrigue, desire and, last but not least, make it very easy for people to find the information and act when they want to.
Julian Saunders was CEO, Red Cell advertising (a WPP company). He was also Planning Director, Ogilvy, Executive Planning Director, McCann-Erickson and in The Zoo at Google. julians@joinedupcompany.com
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