Can social media save the TV ad?

Post on 21-Oct-2014

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How big-budget advertisers are learning to embrace conversation.

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Originally presented at

BlogWorld New York 2012

@Griner

About Luckie• Digitally focused agency,

founded in 1953

• Clients include AT&T, Regions Bank & Little Debbie

• Offices in Birmingham, San Antonio and Atlanta

@LuckieAndCo

About AdFreak• Adweek’s daily blog of advertising, media, marketing and design

• Founded in 2004

• 1 million+ unique viewers monthly

@AdFreak

First off, do TV ads even need saving?

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166.8 million peoplewatched the Super Bowl this year.

Only 66 million peoplehave watched the most popular ad on YouTube (which would be the trailer for Angry Birds).

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The average American watches five hours of video per day.

98% of that videois seen on a television.

Source: Nielsenvia The New York Times, “Nielsen reports a decline in television viewing,” May 2012 @Griner

Source: Nielsen, via The New York Times, “Nielsen reports a decline in television viewing,” May 2012Photo credit: Oblivious Dude on Flickr.

But in the past two years, America has lost

2 million TV households.

A “TV household,” per Nielsen, is one with at least one television and access to cable, satellite or antenna.

Those 2 million “lost homes” probably still have TVs — just not traditional access to networks.

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Advertisingis in a transitional state.

TV has the reach. Digital has the depth.Their merger is inevitable and under way.

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Today, social media isn’t saving TV ads from extinction.

Social media is saving TV ads from themselves.

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On the whole, TV ads remain gutless and self-obsessed.

They take very few risks, including the risk of starting conversation.

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“Awareness”is the metric advertisers usewhen they don’t want to be held accountable for success.

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Today’s real advertising effectiveness is measured in engagement.

TV should be a launchpad, not the whole mission.

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Awareness Engagement Segmentation CRM

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So how do you create asocially successful ad campaign?

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Well, you can buy your way in.

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Supplementing a TV buy with online has consistently proven more successful than doing one without the other.

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In Christmas 2011, Nutella included Facebook in its holiday media mix with TV.

Result: Facebook accounted for 15% of holiday promo sales and reached 30% of all Germans.

Source: ClickZ.com, “Nutella says Facebook ads outperformed TV”, May 2012@Griner

62% of advertisers say online video ads should be a complement to TV ads. That’s up from 56% in 2011.

Only 10% say online video ads should replace TV ads.

Sources: Adap.tv and Digiday, via:eMarketer.com, “Marketers Attempt to Align Online Video and TV Campaigns.” May 2012 @Griner

Another survey found that TV ad campaigns have a 50% reach.

The number bumped up to 57% when online video ads were added to the mix.

Sources: Nielsen and YuMe, via:eMarketer.com, “Marketers Attempt to Align Online Video and TV Campaigns.” May 2012 @Griner

But simply buying into the online space doesn’t create social buzz.

Is it about tactics?

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Let’s talk

hashtags.

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#TrumpRoastUsed more than 27,000 times during Comedy Central’s 2011 Roast of Donald Trump,helping make it make it the network’s most-watched Tuesday in history.

Soon, hashtags were a staple of TV programming.

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The Voice leveraged Twitter to generate

200,000 tweets per episode

(That’s five times the social engagement of American Idol).

Source: Bluefin, via Mass Relevance, “NBC’s The Voice Drives Real-Time Engagement”

TV content creators have learned that hashtags focus conversation.

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A well phrased and clearly communicated hashtag makes it easy for viewers to talk about you.

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But most brands struggle with hashtags. Why?

Because ads and social media remain too disconnected.

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#McDStoriesTo raise awareness of its new supplier-centric ads, McDonald’s paid to promote the hashtag.

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The brand’s Twitter feed only used the hashtag twice.

But consumers (mostly critics) used it 1,600 times in the first two hours, after which the promotion was pulled.

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The hashtag ended up generating negative publicity instead of supporting the brand’s new (and quite good) TV ads.

So what was wrong with #McDStories?

Too vague, too detached from the point of the ads.

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Wendy’s has also been struggling with hashtags.

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#HeresTheBeef #UpgradeYourMeal #DefiningMoment #BetterLater

So who is doing it right?

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Audi was early to the scene in 2011,running the Super Bowl’s first ad hashtag.

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Audi’s ability to harness the buzz and convert it into relationships drew instant praise.

“Audi is a perfect model for what it means to be a prestige brand on Twitter.” –L2 Think Tank

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Why not a URL?

“For us, this was never a discussion. It was always the hashtag. The SuperBowl is conversation.”

— Andy White, Senior Social Media Manager, Audi

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#SoLongVampires

The 2012 hashtag mostly just served as a “social nudge” that would accelerate the spot’s reach and buzz.

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#SoLongVampires became the most-tweeted ad hashtag of the Super Bowl

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“This may be a viewer's first-ever touchpoint with Audi. We treat that first touchpoint as just one step on a very long purchase funnel that may result in a car purchase — or it may result in a new aspirational fan, one that will take our future messaging and run with it to their own social graphs. Both of these goals are our social holy grails.” — Andy White

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In addition, the #WantAnR8 hashtag effort has been called Twitter’s most successful campaign of all time.

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Audi’s efforts have put it neck and neck with Lexus in a race to be the No. 1 luxury automaker on Twitter.

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Lexus

Audi

Mercedes

Porsche

BMW

Lamborghini

Aston Martin

Cadillac

Acura

0 75,000 150,000 225,000 300,000

Followers

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But the most truly social TV ad campaigndoesn’t have a hashtag.

And hasn’t really needed one.

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@Griner

The Most Interesting Man in the World is the perfect ad campaign for the social media era.

The campaign for Dos Equis beer is pithy, funny and easy to embrace.

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Results:• Doubled U.S. sales of Dos Equis in 5 years• Grew to the No. 6 imported beer in the U.S.• 15.4% growth in 2011, compared to industry average of 2.7%

Source: Ad Age, “On the Set with The Most Interesting Man In the World,” March 2012 @Griner

Source: Facebook, June 2012

Beer Brand Facebook Likes

Bud Light(No. 1 beer in America) 2.6 million

Dos Equis 2 million

Corona (No. 1 imported beer) 1.1 million

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So how can more ads duplicate this success?

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1. Give audiences a conversation starter, not a flat product statement.

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2. Spend time analyzing what motivates your specific audience.

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3. Make hashtags and other calls to action as clear and direct as possible.

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4. Create a plan for harnessing short-term buzz into long-term engagement.

A reply isn’t a relationship.

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Thank you for your time.

David GrinerVP/Digital Content, Luckie & Co.Luckie.com@Griner on Twitter