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M&M’s Blog goes behind the headlines to offer a running commentary on the business dynamics within the international media and marketing industry. The M&M editorial team joins forces with industry experts and local market heroes to balance a bird’s eye view of global trends with the importance of local insight.

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  • The FMCG landscape: an infographic

    27 April 2012

    Ever get confused and/or baffled by the FMCG landscape? The who's who and the what's what? Well we were alerted to this infographic that gives an overall view of the landscape and explains just that...

    Click here for a bigger image

    Comments (1) | Permalink

    Posted by: Jenni Baker

    Tags: FMCG

  • It’s personal: mobile marketing and the radically changing face of consumer interaction

    27 April 2012

    The mobile market isn’t just growing; it’s drastically changing in nature. Last year saw great developments in the mobile sphere; Gartner, for example, found that 428 million mobile communication devices were sold worldwide in Q1 of 2011 while, according to IDC, this same timeframe saw the global mobile phone market grow by 19.8%. Today there are roughly 4.6 billion mobile users, many of whom are purchasing goods via their devices. What’s more, comprehensive 3G and the proliferation of quality Wi-Fi is improving the user experience – providing better connectivity than ever before. The result is a golden opportunity: businesses and brands can tap into a new audience that has grown up with mobile technology and has a day-to-day dependency on it.    

    Creating new marketing opportunities

    There are several key factors driving this change and truly impacting the mobile industry. Smartphone technology, for example, has taken off rapidly, while it is predicted that global tablet shipments will increase from 16.1 million units in 2010 to 147.2 million units in 2015 (Infinite Research). The proliferation of smartphones and tablets is providing new data and new functionality to those on the move, allowing the consumer to carry out more tasks with greater ease and efficiency and brands to interact on a personal level that’s unprecedented in advertising.

    Location Based Services (LBS) is one feature that these new capabilities are enabling on a wider scale. There’s now a whole host of device information (battery life, access to Wi-Fi, signal strength) that can be used to ensure that engagement only takes place when the situation is exactly right for the consumer. Imagine having an offer appear on your mobile for 50% off a latte at your favourite coffee house, just down the road from where you happen to be at a given moment. From a marketing perspective it’s a hugely exciting opportunity: a brand, once it has full permission to connect with a consumer via their mobile, can deliver services and offerings tailored to individual preferences and anticipated behaviour in a way never previously possible. 

    A rapidly changing environment

    In order to make the most of the increasing capabilities of mobile technology, an awareness of some of the challenges is needed. LBS, for example, offer the potential for smart, location-based promotions and offers tailored for customers as they pass their favourite stores. However, with unreliable GPS, a user travelling via the underground could arrive at their destination in central London with an out of synch device that still registers their location as further afield, at the start of their journey. The end result is that the consumer will likely miss out on great deals because the device hasn’t updated and kept up with his/her movements, although new advancements such as mobile content caching are starting to address these limitations.

    Another area to be wary of is in the translation of websites to mobile phones. Poor mobile web implementations can result in compatibility problems and declining levels of service and satisfaction, causing consumers to take their business elsewhere. Reassuringly, advancements in technology, such as HTML5, are enabling developers to make websites more compatible with the mobile format with greater ease – delivering a higher quality, consistent user experience across these devices.

    New opportunities, new responsibilities

    Mobile engagement enables a new level of connection between the brand and the consumer, and this requires a greater level of responsibility on behalf of the brand.  Just because a consumer has arrived at a particular area and has a location-enabled device that can receive content, doesn’t mean they want to be bombarded with offers. Many consumers have not yet become accustomed to receiving brand updates and offers on their personal devices. Offering an “opt in” option, where the customer grants permission for a business to obtain and use their transaction and location information, is crucial. What’s more, new privacy legislation in the EU and US may require consumers to opt-in. This could result in companies that have not actively requested permission from the user having to remove these customers from their database and start fresh, which could prove to be very costly. Getting this right is essential in delivering a modern mobile strategy, one that helps establish a brand’s reputation in a tough market where consumers rarely allow second chances. 

    Eyes wide open

    For companies approaching the mobile opportunity with their eyes open to the possible challenges, the revenue potential is exciting. These tailored, granular levels of interaction are solely enabled by mobile, driving an entirely new form of marketing and means of business. With an understanding of the ethical and legal concerns of interacting with users on their personal devices, combined with intelligent, targeted marketing strategies and the right technology to build services and applications better and quicker, the mobile opportunity is out there for companies to grasp in 2012. Once these elements are in place, there’s no reason why businesses and brands can’t capitalize on the  movement towards offering a truly personal and relevant purchasing experience being enabled by the ongoing mobile revolution.  This is an exciting time in this space, and savvy businesses will be keeping a very close eye on the developments we’ll see throughout 2012.

    By Michele Turner, chief marketing officer at mBlox

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Bloggers' Gallery

    Tags: Mobile, Marketing

  • Rise of the video ad: an infographic

    23 April 2012

    You know how fond we are of an infographic on the M&M Global team, and when the good people over at Adform [display marketing specialists] sent across this infographic mapping the rise of video ads in Europe, I just had to share it...

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Jenni Baker

    Tags: Online, Video

  • Festival of Media Global 2012 Day 2: Tweets roundup

    18 April 2012

    If you’re not with the leaders of the media and marketing world in Montreux, M&M Global gives you a random selection of some of the tweets from those of you who are!

    @charliecrowe1 Salman Amin proves that business leaders must now be media experts. PepsiCo's CMO is impressive. Perfect start to day 2!

    @gifernando  “@CasparSch: Don't bring me media plans, bring me story plans - Pepsico CMO plea to the media world” Yes!!

    @albinoriotman 90% of all internet will be video by 2015. Prediction by Salman Amin, PepsiCo.

    @liamplowman If you've hired a private detective following your wife, the relationship is probably beyond repair. Transparency debate at #fomg12

    @evoluzzo Transparency debate at #fomg12: If you allow your doctor to become a pharmacist, maybe you never needed the advice?

    @jonbarrowman Hot potato of agency rebates. Yes, clients need transparency. But how do agencies invest ahead of curve when procurement's driving?

    @LindseyClay UM Wave research: no matter how many different devices in the household, TV viewing is maintained

    @liamplowman Will facebook suffer death by 1000 cuts as players emerge from long tail with offering competency + value in specific functions?

    @scottaeast @pblackshaw Loved today's quote "Advertising will always follow good data" at #fomg12 

    @saymediainc Very impressed by the presentations and panels @ #FOMG12 Great to be here to hear from global media leaders

    @jkellonsmith Richard Seymour Of seymourpowell "It's all the product." Amen from the product people in the back of the room.

    @LindseyClay Nigel Burton of Colgate-Palmolive says don't react to the latest thing as though it's the only thing. Good advice generally.

    @JonAxelN Brilliant! RT“@VivaKi: If you lie you die, because now the public can shout back as loud as a $9 million campaign.

    @mshaw Watch more - learn more (and always have 3 men in your pocket) Seymour @ #fomg12

    You can follow the Festival of Media Global 2012 as it winds down using the #fomg12 hashtag on Twitter or keep an eye on our special festival coverage page.

    You can also see a round up of day one's tweets here.

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Bloggers' Gallery

  • Yahoo, Mofilm and RTL Interactive battle it out to impress Nestlé at FOMG

    17 April 2012

    Outgoing Yahoo EMEA senior vice-president and managing director Rich Riley managed to impress Nestlé head of digital and social media Pete Blackshaw, following a head-to-head battle against RTL Interactive managing director Marc Schröder and Mofilm president and co-founder Andy Baker to ‘woo’ him with their advertising solutions.

    In a unique session on the second day of the Festival of Media Global, the three media owners were pitted against each other as they took part in a session entitled ‘What happens when TV isn’t the only screen?’ The aim of the game was to each take it in turns to convince Nestlé that their platform was the future of the TV advertising budget.

    Yahoo emerged victorious after Riley presented Yahoo’s offering to the client. Blackshaw said he was particularly impressed with Yahoo’s TV companion service ‘Into_Now’, that creates a content and social community around TV shows, in addition to its full-page takeover option that ran in Brazil.

    During his pitch, Riley said that “TV is huge and may stay huge” but “the tablet changes the game”. He continued: “Multiscreen and second screen will be big and advertisers have a huge opportunity to leverage the second screen.”

    RTL Interactive’s Schröder argued the case that traditional TV wins in the digital world. He recognised that “digitisation is a challenge, but also an opportunity” to extend the reach of traditional television.

    “Television is the most evolving and most social as it is often consumed with more than one person,” says Schröder. “Digitisation means more messages in more channels but it’s still about three things: objective, message and medium. It’s all about combining the strengths.”

    Mofilm’s Baker pitched his case around “quality, price and speed”. He alluded to the Guardian’s ‘Three Little Pigs’ campaign, and posed the question, “Why can’t we do this with content?”

    When making his final decision, Blackshaw spoke about a brand building framework where there are meaningful cross-platform synergies. “All advertising buying needs to be thoughtful of the paid, owned and earned model,” he says. “Would Nestlé pay for premium relevance? Absolutely!"

    You can keep up-to-date with all the action from the Festival of Media Global 2012 by following #FOMG12 or check out our dedicated Festival page.

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Jenni Baker

    Tags: Connected TV, TV, Video, Festival of Media Global

  • Three lessons in tactical agility

    17 April 2012

    Speaking at the Festival of Media Global in Montreux this morning, OMD chief executive worldwide Mainardo de Nardis offered three lessons in tactical agility:

    Always asking – be ready, don’t stop and find out what consumers are really asking for

    Always thinking – where are the opportunities?

    Always doing – have confidence and conviction
     
    You can keep up-to-date with all the action from the Festival of Media Global 2012 by following #FOMG12 or check out our dedicated Festival page.

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Jenni Baker

  • Festival of Media Global 2012 Day 1: Tweets roundup

    17 April 2012

    If you’re not with the leaders of the media and marketing world in Montreux, M&M Global gives you a random selection of some of the tweets from those of you who are!

    @bmacrow Rocking the silent panel session

    @Werner this is fun, the marketeers at #fomg12 use Bezos' definition of Brand: "A brand is what people say about you when you are not in the room"

    @LindseyClay Big respect to all the agency CEOs for participating with such grace under fire in terrifying "Agency Jeopardy".

    @Rory Stirling Completely disagree out of home ads drive mobile commerce. Suspect that QR code conversion is non existent and AR isn't mainstream

    @SonooSingh Two-thirds of clients disagree with the statement that 1 media agency same as the other. Agency chiefs look surprised.

    @liamplowman Consumers no longer want brands to tell them how great they are. Consumers want brands to entertain them (cue Old Spice guy slide)

    @camyuill Aaron Fetters from @kelloggs says it is in all our interests - brands, publishers, networks - to improve viewability

    @LGasking Would love to hear how the size and makeup of the Comscore panel impacts these results

    @Daria it's not about channels. it's about delivering the relevant content to the right consumers

    @Daria data can also kill any spark of creativity and inspiration - that's how i feel after comescore, bbc & starcom session

    @SMG_London 50 percent of online shoppers search and make purchase in 30 days. Shoppers on mobile buy within a week,

    @ziesmannmedia if this 35% of advertisers would understand their media contract, they would think like the other 65%.

     You can follow the Festival of Media Global 2012 using the #fomg12 hashtag on Twitter or keep an eye on M&M Global's special festival coverage page.

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Bloggers' Gallery

    Tags: Festival of Media Global

  • Clouds & Crowds

    16 April 2012

     Vogels

    “If your company isn’t measuring deeply the interaction with customers and using the data, you are missing out,” Amazon.com chief technology officer Werner Vogels warned delegates on stage at the Festival of Media Global in Montreux today.

    Speaking passionately about the importance of data, Vogels said that learning is the biggest accomplishment so you must “measure relentlessly.”

    He urged companies to adopt three steps when launching new products/initiatives:

    Experiment
    Measure
    Iterate or pivot

    According to Vogel, the best organisations designed to deliver new products under conditions of extreme uncertainty are starts-ups due to their ability to be reactionary. He urged companies to have a different approach to building their products and to get them in the hands of customers as early as possible.

    You can keep up-to-date with all the action from the Festival of Media Global 2012 by following #FOMG12 or check out our dedicated Festival page.

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Jenni Baker

    Tags: Digital, E-commerce, Advertising, Marketing, Measurement, ROI & effectiveness, Festival of Media Global

  • Seven pieces of advice for marketers

    16 April 2012

     

    Barclays head of brand, reputation and citizenship David Wheldon unleashed seven golden rules for marketers at FOM Global. Take note:


    1. There’s no such thing as a lead agency
    2. Collaborate
    3. T-shaped people – the industry needs more open, ego-free and sharing people
    4. The conductor of the orchestra is the client – pay attention to what’s happening around you all the time
    5. Freedom within a framework - but you still need a framework in place
    6. Hire and inspire curious individuals – those who are passionate are keen to learn will undoubtedly succeed
    7. Remember there are two types of people – the artist and the scientist – those who make life easier and those who make it harder

    You can keep up-to-date with all the action from the Festival of Media Global 2012 by following #FOMG12 or check out our dedicated Festival page.

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Jenni Baker

    Tags: Marketing, Festival of Media Global

  • Branded content or product placement?

    03 April 2012

    The lack of branded content in the marketing mix can be attributed to a dated media planning process, according to Ogilvy & Mathers EAME chief digital officer Patou Nuytemans, who was speaking as a part of MIPTV's Branded Entertainment conference series.

    Patou, who was joined on stage by Nestlé, MEC Entertainment and Independent Film Channel, argued that the traditional media planning process is holding up the shift of dollars to branded content due to the fact that there is no new budget to allocate towards it and brands are still lacking the confidence to invest in the area. MEC Entertainment's US managing partner Chet Fenster concurred adding that they were still having a hard time moving brands into the space due to return-on-investment demands and the perception of brands that it is more expensive than other executions.

    However, perhaps the real issue here is a clear understanding of what branded content really is. The advertiser on the panel was prompted to offer insight on how it uses branded content and proceeded to talk about a fluffy bear it previously put on its packaging and it is thinking of reviving after 40 years. When she was asked what her thoughts were on using the bear in the future for branded content such as a cartoon or an online game her response was less than promising "not for another two years at least, creative people have lots of ideas and we have to think long term" - and that was the end of the discussion. Not very promising if this is suppose to be the platform for branded content to shine.

    Even less promising was when the panel started to talk about examples of "great branded content" and there were mentions of Dulux ‘Let’s Colour’ campaign, which saw the brand renovate and paint rundown buildings throughout the world and Europocar's 'Crush Hour'. However, there were also examples of product placement which were being incorrectly labelled as branded content. Such as, Steven Spielberg's E.T being hailed by one of the panelists as being the first piece of "really great branded content" due to the use of Reese's pieces in the film. Shame that this would be considered product placement and not branded content.

    If the industry folks who are suppose to champion spending in new ways are getting muddled on what it is how can they expect advertisers to be bold enough to spend money on branded content in a major way?

    Comments (0) | Permalink

    Posted by: Martina Lacey

    Tags: Advertising, branded content