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Monday, October 28, 2013

(SALES) Digital is DEAD!

10-23-2013

Procter & Gamble?s global brand building officer Marc Pritchard proclaimed digital marketing to be ?DEAD."

Pritchard urges marketers to look beyond the pipes and plumbing of digital and social media to what really matters: engaging people with creative campaigns. In his recent speech, Pritchard said to marketers, ?Try and resist thinking about digital in terms of the tools, platforms, or QR codes, and all of the technology coming next. Instead, the future lies in building brands with campaigns that matter, make people think, feel, and laugh. We have the chance to do all of those things now in a way that is so much more exciting than we did before."

Frequently, when I?m talking to business owners and the topic of marketing comes up, someone will say, ?We really need to create a better digital strategy. Many radio and TV stations are trying to ?maximize. their digital selling efforts.

This is likely to be unpopular, but my question to both is, ?WHY?" Please don?t misunderstand; I?m an early adopter. I think the digital world is fascinating, engaging, and distracting all at the same time. It can delight the senses, engage the audience, and go viral in a hurry. The problem, as I see it, is that it?s not the PLATFORM that is doing the engaging, it?s the message.

In my work as a brand strategist, I always start with the message, and the message always starts with the consumer or end user. After identifying the consumer, you analyze the competitive landscape to find your point of differentiation. Once you have created a brand marketing strategy, then and only then can you start to explore where to execute the strategy.

Digital is a ?platform. The cool thing about digital platforms is they are ?user controlled.  This is also the ugly side of digital platforms; all the control is in the hands or fingers of the user. So if you aren?t grabbing their attention and engaging them in the first few seconds, they?re gone. With traditional media -- television, radio, and newspaper -- they?re more likely to "sit through" the commercials. As an example, consider the gateway videos that play on certain websites or YouTube. So fickle is the audience that the producer of the content has to put a ?skip this ad" banner at the bottom. After five seconds, you can skip right to the content you want. Ninety-nine percent of the time I skip. That?s the ugly side of digital as platform -- you have five whole seconds to get my attention and keep it, or I?m gone. That?s a brutal reality and substantiates my theory that it?s not about the platform, it?s about the message and the strategy.

Pritchard talked about a recent campaign strategy for Braun electric shavers that initially ran only online. Pritchard says of the success, ?It wasn?t the digital component. It was the campaign.

Do you think consumers know the difference between a digital ad and a traditional ad?  That?s lingo only marketing people use. My dad, for instance, doesn?t distinguish an email blast, a Facebook gutter, or column ad from the radio ads he hears listening to the Detroit Red Wings. I?ve never had a discussion with him about the digital strategy of a company. He?s the first to tell me, though, when he finds an ad in poor taste or offensive. It was comical to hear him complain about the first time he got a ?porn pop-up. I still get a good laugh at that.

Here?s the big idea. You don?t need to worry about platforms, delivery methods, or digital, unless and until you have an outstanding brand strategy in place. Unless you start with the brand strategy, you will be chasing your tail after the latest shiny thing to come on the market in the form of another advertising tool.

Don?t be the tool. Be the craftsman/woman. Create your message; identify your core values, your point of differentiation in the marketplace, and your desired outcome. Determine how you are going to dramatize that and what you want your customers to do as a result of the message. Then determine what tools best fit within your budget.

Digital as a platform is not dead. Digital as THE strategy was dead on arrival. Many who tried to create a strategy around the platform saw an ugly and perhaps expensive death of their campaign.

Some companies have done amazing things with digital execution of a carefully created brand strategy. Starbucks, United Airlines, and Walgreens -- just to name a few -- have maximized brand strategy using digital. I know this because I have their digital products in my ?Passbook" on my iPhone. The caution is this: it?s not the cool app that matters to me, it?s that I can go to Starbucks or Walgreens, flip out my phone, and have them scan it for payment. That?s convenience. Book a flight, check flight status, board the plane, and get email or text alerts of delays . . . all part of a digital platform being used properly to maximize brand strategy and for MY benefit.

Strategy is and always will be KING. The platforms are just the vehicles that carry the king around. A car without a driver may look nice, but it goes nowhere. A platform without a strategy is cool . . . until someone with a driver and a cooler vehicle goes zooming by.

I?ll be at the DASH conference in Detroit this week. (http://www.dashconference.com) I?m looking forward to learning some amazing things about radio?s impact in the dash. Let?s find each other and talk about digital, technology, or anything else.

Think Big, Make Big Things Happen!

Jeff Schmidt is EVP and Partner with Chris Lytle at Sparque, Inc.You can reach him at, Jeff.Schmidt@Sparque.biz, follow him on Twitter @JeffreyASchmidt, or connect via LinkedIn 

(10/23/2013 3:04:23 PM)
Even as many radio listeners have scarred knuckles from banging out of stations during interminable spot-phusters, I like the part about radio listeners (bless their little hearts) tending to stick around, anyway, in so many cases.

Yes, we still have a shot.

Now, can we please get down to the presentations ("process") of the content? Huh? Aw, c'mon. Can we....?

(10/23/2013 12:09:28 PM)
Thank you for putting this so succinctly! You are focusing on what has always mattered...the right message, the right audience, and the right place. As a sales consultant on multiple platforms, I have been preaching this for years but it is challenging to keep clients focused when there are so many shiny things distracting them.
(10/23/2013 9:39:20 AM)
THANK YOU! I couldn't have said it better. The internet is just a delivery system--nothing more. It's the man or woman behind the keyboard--or the microphone, that matters.

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