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Jul 09

How has media consumption has changed over the past 5-10 years? And how does this impact on your marketing requirements today?!

Let’s start by looking at the overall picture of advertising expenditure in NZ, from last year. Print publications receive the lion’s share of advertising spend at 31%.  Television advertising accounts for 28% of the expenditure we’re looking at, and radio and online are about equal around 11-12%.

In an average day, do you spend more time on the internet, or watching TV?  Do you spend more time reading newspapers and magazines than you do listening to the radio?  What about your customers?

The research says that in an average day we spend about 6 hours a day interacting with mainstream media.  And of that, only about half an hour a day is with print media.  But we spend over 2 and a half hours watching TV, and an average of 1 and a quarter hours on the internet, each day. Compare that to the media spend data and you’ll see quite a difference!

Newspaper readership levels are on a decline, but not as much as some would have you believe.  What has hurt newspapers is the movement of classified advertising – employment, real estate, cars for sale… – into the online space.  Consumers are using the online medium to find the property, job or car they want… could they be looking for your products online too?

Television viewing levels are, despite the dirge of good stuff to watch, as high as they have been in 12 years. But you can no longer count on a few TV spots to reach most of the people, all of the time.  The proliferation of new channels means that peoples’ viewing is now spread wider than ever before, and no single channel commands more than a quarter of all viewing.

The same is true for radio, with up to 20 stations competing for the hundred minutes we spend listening each day.  That means potentially having to pay for advertising on lots of stations to ensure you reach all of your potential customers.

Effective use of media for advertising placements now comes down to targeting the right people at the right time, or times, rather than putting an ad out for all to see, safe in the knowledge that some of those who see it would be potential customers.

10 years ago, no one had heard of Google, WiFi or Trademe.

5 years ago, no one had heard of Twitter, iPhones or Facebook.

The fact is, a period of immense change is upon us, and at its core is information.  Well, entertainment, and information.  10 years ago less than half of New Zealanders had internet access at home.  Today it’s close to three quarters of the population, over half of whom have broadband.  In fact, over four-fifths of us can and do use the net, when you include those who access from work, schools, universities and libraries.

As internet access becomes more widespread, we are seeing a growth in the awareness of the opportunities the web provides for consumers, and more and more people are spending more and more time, on the internet.

This means access to a whole new range of media properties, which all provide opportunities for marketers and advertisers such as yourselves.  And consumers are embracing those new properties!  90% of internet users say we use the internet to research purchases, and most of those searches start with Google.  If you want your brand or product to be seen by consumers, you have to make sure it can be seen on Google!

We’re watching TV on the internet.  Last week TVNZ streamed close to 350,000 individual programmes to viewers through TVNZ on Demand.  We’re reading our news on the internet – a third of us access online news sites regularly.  And we’re communicating more, with more people, than we ever have before.

Social media sites have proved to be the big success story of this millennium so far.  Nearly half of all New Zealanders are on Facebook now.  People share everything with each other: photos, news, their favourite videos, music or gossip, and even opinions on products and services they have purchased or encountered.

Forward thinking marketers have already grasped that here is a massive potential to monitor and communicate directly with their customers.  Do you know what your customers are saying about you?

And do you know where they are saying it from?  Are they Tweeting from their iPhone while standing in a queue, waiting for an obnoxious sales clerk to serve them?

Smart phones that can access the internet and manage multiple functions are growing in popularity, particularly as they come down in price.  TVNZ have a stated objective to be the preferred news source for New Zealand across all screens.  By that they mean your TV, your computer, your mobile phone, and whatever other screens may be produced in the future.  They know where their customers are, and where they will be.  Will you be with them?

These new devices also provide another aspect to consumer communications – they are instant.  Consider the speed with which reports and video footage of last year’s civil unrest in Iran reached mainstream media, despite official government censorship.

If people have something to say, they will say it, and the new technology means what they have to say can be broadcast around the world within minutes.  Imagine if that could happen for your advertising!?!

Consumers now want to have their media on tap, ready for them when they are ready for it.

Tivo and MySky deliver that.  TVNZ On Demand and YouTube deliver that.  Your customers are deciding where and when they get their information.  We all need to be ready to provide them with our information, in their time, in their way.

The thing with the internet, is it has provided an environment for like-minded people to congregate, share their stories and feel included.  Your brand can be included too!  Want to reach local mountain bikers?  There’s a website for that!  Want to reach Kiwis living overseas?  There are websites for that!  Want to reach pig hunters?  Check out the website!

There are immense opportunities for online advertising to reach tightly identified niche audiences, as well as supporting mass market campaigns.

The internet and other digital media give you the opportunity to be alongside and communicating with your customers all the way through their purchase cycle.  Traditionally “advertising budgets” have been used to generate awareness, and everything else was up to the people on the shop floor.  Now, you have the chance to interact with and influence your potential customers all the way through the purchase cycle, and beyond.

All it takes is a commitment to change.  Get thy brand online!  If you can’t, hire someone who can.

In the words of Bill Gates: “The Internet is becoming the town square for the global village of tomorrow”. Will your business be on the main street?

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Jun 14

Have you used a Google service today?  Whether it’s the search engine, G-Mail, maps, books, youtube, ad networks, picasa, mobile software or the chrome browser, chances are that you have.  Since the brand became a verb, Google has continued to grow, acquire competitors and push the boundaries of what is possible, and acceptable, in terms of online marketing.  Their unofficial motto is “Don’t be evil”, which given the amount of information they now have about search habits, web and mail usage, is a pretty low benchmark to achieve in terms of protecting users’ privacy.

Now Google has admitted that when they were driving their Street View camera cars around, they were also collecting information about wireless internet usage from the houses (and presumably businesses) they were photographing.  Authorities see this as a potential serious invasion of privacy, and Google hasn’t yet said what information they collected or, more importantly, what they intend to do with it.  Google isn’t a stranger to court cases, and I’m sure this won’t spell the end of Google Inc, but it may seriously dent the trust that users have in using their services.

Meanwhile, Google is continuing to innovate, entertain and engage with their audiences.  The search home page currently includes a link to Google’s World Cup section.  They have also run a Google Doodle competition to support the World Cup (NZ finalists here and our winner here).  Ensuring warm fuzzies around the Google brand.  If those warm fuzzies get you wanting to be closer to the brand, here’s your opportunity, with everything from Google cricket sets to Google pens to Google lava lamps available for purchase.  And apparently, due to caffeine, Google’s search powers are greater than ever.  Is that why coffee prices are rising so much?!?

Tune in next week for more Google news. Same Google time, same Google channel.

Cheers

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Mar 01

As we March on through the year (geddit?) I realise there’s a need for entertainment as well as education in these posts.  So here goes.           I hope there’s something in here that tickles your… well, whatever you like to have tickled. Careful though, you might learn something!

Email marketing: how to ensure your message gets read.  The Marketing Association show they know how to utilise word of mouth.

Are you on Twitter?  Are you going to be away from home?  Probably not a good idea to post that information until you’re back, with sites like this one around.  It’s supposed to be raising awareness of the issue, but isn’t it doing that by inciting crime?!?

Some helpful advice from Stuff.co.nz on Facebook etiquette.  I initially thought this was a dumb idea for a news story, but in fact it raises interesting questions, especially within small industries in a small country like NZ!

For our design friends… Photoshop has just celebrated its 20th birthday.  See their reminisces and celebrations here!

The AXIS Awards… CAANZs’s’ celebration of those who are willing to pay to enter and pay to attend a back-slapping ceremony (no cynicism here).  They have however created one of the most addictive online games I’ve seen in a long time, to help generate agency enthusiasm for the event.  I just wonder if it’s original??

Amongst the media maelstrom that is the Olympic Games, I came across this Facebook Fan page.  Apparently Facebook took it down because it wasn’t actually a product, organisation or charity.  But under pressure they’ve put it back up.  Love those pants!!

And finally, can anyone tell me why cultural groups (and the NZRFU) may have been offended by this Coke ad from Japan?

Cheers,

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Feb 12

Welcome to another Four Eyes Friday!  Today I’m attempting to show what might happen to media consumption in NZ in the near future, following trends in the US and taking into account the plethora of developments happening at Google.  It might look like I’m a Google-freak, but Google are at the forefront of a lot of technology and if they’re not, well they’ll just but the company that is!

First up though, internet on the TV.  It’s been talked about for a long time, and the new TiVO offering in NZ allows subscribers some online access, but nothing like what HDTV can now do in well-connected countries like the USA – as evidenced by this ad for a Vizio TV (screened during the Superbowl).  And from this news of Tetris being available through satellite TV, it may not be long until you’ll be able to do on your TV, everything you now do on your PC (or Mac!).

So, what’s Google up to? First up, this week they launched BUZZ - a social networking application attached to G-Mail.  In essence it looks very similar to Facebook, as it allows users to share status updates, photos, videos, etc.  The main difference from Facebook is that it integrates directly with G-Mail (setting up friends lists from a G-Mail contacts list) and draws in content from other (Google-owned or affiliated) social sites – Flickr, Picasa, Twitter and more.  And of course, there’s a mobile app too!

Official Google introduction video (scroll down).  Detailed rundown on the launch.

So what’s coming next?  Google’s recent patent filings indicate that software to improve ad targeting (geographic, content-based and behavioural) and delivery across multiple media will be a big part of Google’s plans.  It sounds like Street View could be used as a virtual mall, with retailers paying for ads on their own buildings.  Google loves patents.  Last year they even managed to patent their (admittedly iconic) homepage design!

Google are also talking about technology that automatically translates phone calls between two people speaking different languages.  Sounds great, but translation can be a tricky business, as Google themselves have found in the past.

And to finish, if you’d like to picture yourself skidding down an Olympic ski-run Google has even made that easier, with StreetView imaging of the Winter Olympics venues. Quite cool!

Googled out?  I think I am.  I’ll catch you next week!

Google = New World Order?

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Feb 12

This year’s Superbowl Sunday, when the New Orleans Saints won their first ever NFL title, garnered the highest average audience for any television programme ever in America.  Within about 3.5 hours of game time, there were nearly 48 minutes of ads, which went for around $3million per 30-second spot.

You can see all of the ads here, thanks to YouTube aggregating them all together (superbowl ads are potentially talked about more than the game itself). This may even have been a deal with the broadcast network CBS, as you’ll see their programme promos also feature within YouTube’s selection. Direct links to the most popular ads:

Snickers Doritos Bud Light Budweiser And my favourite   Google

But it’s not all about TV ads this week, and it’s not all about America either.  Here are three examples of taking a campaign idea and extending it, to take advantage of the media environment and generate true consumer interaction.

We start with a simple, but striking, billboard execution from Kenya.  We have seen this before, carrying a billboard execution outside the boundaries of the 6×3 to make it fit with its environment/placement.  High concept but not high cost!

This (high concept, high cost) tactical project for Nokia in the UK takes billboard advertising to the next level.  I’ll let the video tell the story!

Another video, this time explaining how DDB put together an interactive (TV, radio, web) campaign for NZ Coastguard.  I’m not entirely sure if it reached the core target audience of irresponsible boaties, but hopefully the coverage will have resulted in a bit of financial support for the Coastguard.

I hope you’ve enjoyed this (and not wasted too much time or bandwith!!).  Would you like to see more creative ad executions from Four Eyes?  Do you have any favourite ads you’d like to share? Let me know with a comment below.

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Feb 03

OK this might be a bit late, but better late than never, eh?!  To those of you that have been hanging out since Friday, eagerly awaiting your weekly fix of Internet Information, I sincerely apologise.  Apologies, though, are a little harder to come by in the world of advertising and social media.  Over the last couple of weeks I’ve heard about a few instances where an apology could be in order…

Not content with just posting a comment on Twitter, a “jilted mistress” paid what must have been tens of thousands of dollars to place huge billboards across the US telling everyone about their affair.  Probably not the sort of publicity the guy is after, since he’s co-president of Oracle and is on Barack Obama’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board!

And in “watch what you say online – you never know who is watching” news:

A comment on a Yahoo community message board was picked up by mainstream media, and turned into a scandal! The community had a bit to say about it too

And see how this social media fail got picked up by Stoppress marketing website, generating a whole new lot of comments for Waiwera Water.  Not many of them positive!  Learning: honesty in social media is fine, arrogance is not. Nice to see that Waiwera did say sorry in the end though!

It all goes to show that there is no such thing as privacy on the mighty interweb.  The amount of information being shared, often without users’ explicit consent, is causing governments to look at whether privacy laws are being violated, potentially opening up a whole new can of worms for social media operators.  However in Australia, the reverse is happening.  The government is preparing to control what their population can access online.  How will this impact on user privacy?  And freedom of speech, freedom of expression, freedom of belief?

According to a SMH Online Poll, Australian internet users aren’t keen:

Internet censorship : What do you think of Senator Conroy’s plan to filter the internet?

Yes, I think it’s a good idea – 2%
No, it impinges on my freedom – 96%
Not sure, it sounds good in theory – 2%
I don’ t understand it – 1%

So that was a pretty serious Four Eyes!  Tune in later this week (should be back on track for Friday!) for more of your favourite news, gossip and speculation.  Coming up in the next issue… the iPad.  Hot or not?  And what about the name?!?

Catch ya then!

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Jan 22

happy-new-yearWELCOME to the first Four Eyes for 2010.

It’s a pleasure to still be here and a pleasure to continue to bring you, my loyal readers, more of the ins and outs of the media and online world.

It’s gonna be a big year, so let’s crack straight into it!

Since it’s the holiday season, let’s take a look at what’s happening in the Tourism Industry… It is clear that just running ads isn’t enough to truly engage with today’s highly involved and highly connected holidaymakers.  Word of mouth has always been a powerful tool for promoting holiday destinations (how many best kept secrets can one country have?!) but with Social Media, word of mouth recommendations can come from complete strangers.

As Jasons Travel Media recently found out, 91% of holidaymakers research their destination online, and 65% read NZpureonline reviews of accommodation and activities.  So how will our regions spend the money the Government has allocated to regional tourism marketing?  A one-week, broad-reach, everything-to-everyone ad campaign, or an ongoing campaign of engagement and interaction with qualified prospects?

Here are a couple of examples of NZ towns taking promotions to the next level… you have probably seen the Tourism Paeroa campaign (so tongue in cheek I’m surprised they can talk at all), but have you heard about the promotion coming out of Cambridge, raising the profile of the Waipa district and raising funds for a new community centre?  Giving away a million dollar house is always effective!

For those of you who haven’t been able to have a holiday, remember you can visit almost anywhere in the world – virtually – with Google Earth, Maps and StreetView.  Some people have too much time on their hands, and have found the unfindable… Top Gear’s “The Stig” (seen in a BBC building) and yes… Wally!  That’s where he was!

technical_difficultiesFinally, this “technical problem” shows that even in the age of Web 3.0, broadband cellphones and live streaming HDTV, things can still go wrong.  Can anyone tell me what that thing is, that Mr Bowden is frantically pressing buttons on?

Iain’s Interesting Internet Information wishes you a nice weekend!

foureyes

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Dec 04

WHAT?!?!? December??? Can you believe it?! You couldn’t tell from the weather, but hopefully these bytes of interesting internet information will sunny up your day!

Newsantm-13

NZHerald has made a few changes to their website lately, with a new article layout and a new shopping section that is very similar to Telecom’s failed Ferrit.  See the shopping section here, and read comments from StopPress here.

America’s Next Top Model is coming to New Zealand!  If you see any of the contestants, please give them a sandwich!

SKY TV are going back online, with plans to Live Stream of Winter Olympics planned.  They’re going to test this with a live stream of the 3rd Cricket Test NZ v Pakistan, which happens to be at McLean Park from next Friday.  So you won’t need to skive off work to watch – you’ll be able to do it from the comfort of your desk!

Despite the advertising downturn experienced recently, online advertising in NZ continues to grow, with a 16% increase in online ad spend for Q3 2009 over 2008.  Good news for online publishers, and good news for agencies with digital abilities!

We can also now promote YouTube content with text&image promo links, much like Google Adwords.  YouTube is the biggest repository of online video IN THE WORLD.

Warnings warning1234289448

If you’re on leave for “Health” reasons, don’t post party pictures of yourself on Facebook!

Don’t go keying any cars if it looks like there might be cameras around.  This is the man behind the newspaper that recently put together a 12-page advertiser-funded supplement for Farmlands’ new store opening in Cambridge.  They did a good job of that.   (I had to say that in case my car gets keyed too!)

Don’t go crashing your car at 2:30am if you’re the most famous golfer IN THE WORLD.  Someone will make a movie about it!  Subtitled in Taiwanese but I’m pretty sure you’ll understand!  What she said happened vs what we think happened.

Cool stuffCool-Kids

How much does it cost to buy all of the presents listed in The 12 Days of Christmas?

What have been the most searched terms on Google this year?  In NZ?

Winter Olympics 2010 social media effort: challenge the athletes.

Microsoft Bing’s social media effort.  It’s an application on Facebook so they get to collect all sorts of data from everyone who participates.  Good thinking Microsoft.

Happy sunny weekend!

foureyes



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Nov 27

Phew!  Next week it will be December.  Christmas is coming, the sun is shining and we’re all busy as really busy things, so I’ll keep this short and sweet.

In fact, I’m going to keep this post clear of any “hard” news.  Nothing Googley, nothing statisticy, this is pure entertainment.  But be warned – you may learn something too!

In New Zealand…

Did you know that some courier companies are offering advertising on their fleet vehicles?  As they have dozens of cars doing hundreds of kilometres around urban centres, TelstraClear saw this as an opportunity to promote their Business Network in Auckland.

Want to know what’s going to be on TV in March 2010?  TVNZ have released their New Season 2010 programming and schedules – all the links are here.

Want to know what TV people have been complaining about in 2009?  It’s all here.

Around the World…

How to integrate outdoor, PR, online and viral activity to sell 337% more chowder.  Clever, well executed and successful!

According to Guiness World Records, this is the most viewed online ad in the world.  Cute eh?

Sorry, I couldn’t do it.  Again!  I couldn’t do a whole post without a reference to Google Almighty. Sometimes their algorithms throw up results they’re not proud of, and they have to apologise.  However when I read this article and clicked on the “see the search results here” link I didn’t see the image in question, BUT Google kindly suggested a separate search for me!  And then they’ll apologise for it!

That’s the weird world wide web wrapped up for another week.  Have a good one!

foureyes

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Nov 13

friday-the-13th-titleSince it is Friday the 13th and we’re all petrified of black cats walking under our ladders and stepping on the cracks with their umbrellas up, I thought I’d keep this issue of 4Eyes fairly light.

But of course you can’t escape the Google Monster!  This week they’re in the news because they have completed StreetView mapping of all 50 US states, and are now ready to go off-road.  And in case Twitter, Facebook, Yammer et al aren’t enough to keep up to date with your friends, Google can now help find them in real life.  Also in the news is the newest iPhone feature “Monocle” which allows users to point their camera at a location and see real-time data about it, like restaurant reviews, movie times, sale items… the potential here is great!  iphone_homeNo real Facebook news this week, but in a vote of confidence in the social network, major games producer Electronic Arts has bought Playfish for $400million.  Playfish make some of those annoyingly addictive Facebook games, but is not even the biggest player in that market.

Smart Wired

Kiwibank has launched its own social media site to connect young people in NZ (and connect them with Kiwibank by offering cool and relevant prizes a-plenty).

TVNZ are happy with their first foray into interactive web telly Reservoir Hill.

I enjoyed this site where you can mock up your own moustache (and see yourself morph really strangely), brought to you by Schick and GetFrank for Movember.

Weird Wired

hastings logos

Hastings new slogan/logo.  Contentious?  Check out the comments below the main article!

Tweeter lands book deal, sitcom.  Goes to show if you can create the content, someone else will market it for you!  Having looked at the twitter stream Shit My Dad Says (caution: explicit language) it could be funny…

The new Wii made especially for women (again, some content may offend…)

And with that, I leave you to your weekend.  Have a good one!

foureyes

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