Posts Tagged ‘Research’

Advertising Agencies Must Own the Consumer to Survive

Author: CMA on behalf of Tony Altilia

Why have advertising agencies been relegated to purveyors of ideas only? Why are they perceived to be "creative" shops first and foremost?

It's because they relinquished their ownership of the consumer.

At one time ad agencies had vast consumer research departments. Leo Burnett Chicago housed a 40 person research group and another 10 person insights group in the mid-1990's. They also had a fully-integrated media department. Since those days most agencies have spun off media departments to create distinct media companies. This was driven by holding company profit goals and not what was necessarily right for clients.

Media departments and now these media companies have access to vast amounts of consumer data the "creative agencies" do not. And virtually no multi-national agency in Canada has a fully staffed research group. They abdicated research to the client, to the media companies, to research companies and now digital agencies. Agency researchers have been replaced by planners. Planners are necessary. But they should be in addition to, not a replacement for research. Information is power. By relinquishing research agencies have relinquished a degree of power now being assumed by their media companies, digital agencies and PR agencies

Tony Altilia

In advance of the CMA’s Social Media Conference (June 23, 2011), we asked one of our speakers, Joseph Carrabis, Chief Research Officer and Founder of NextStage Evolution, a few questions about social media and sentiment analysis. NextStage Chief Operating Officer Susan Carrabis also weighs in.

Q. CMA: Is social media good for business?

Joseph Carrabis (JC): One could consider that question flawed. However, the flaw is unrecognized and is the source of a problem in the current “social media” environment.

The question as stated implies a "one size fits all" response, something like "Yes, social media is good for business" and that's not correct (me thinks).

Q. CMA: Mea culpa. I was expecting you might say “It depends”. What are better questions, helpful questions?

JC: The better questions are:
1) "What types of social (whatever) are good for what types of businesses?"
2) "What types of social (whatever) are good for what types of business goals?"
And other questions in a similar, more specific vein.

This re-questioning allows for a logical development and implementation process with a self-creating evidentiary trail.

Should things go sour, one knows where, when, how, why and for accountability* purposes, who. Hence things are more easily fixable.

Right now we're seeing a one-size-fits-all methodology even though consultants and companies are "tailoring" the solutions. This methodology shows up in "best practice" manifestos that are either completely general (hence useless) or so siloed that nothing works outside that vertical. If "social media was good for business" then a solution in the automotive vertical would work perfectly well in the sportswear vertical, in the gourmet food vertical, ... and this isn’t true.

To use social media correctly as a marketing tool, you need to be able to use the tools to create truly specific solutions. Right now the "state of the art" is the equivalent of "if all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail" and that's sad.

People aren't spending much time understanding their audience (at least in the terms I consider "understanding their audience") and the results are starting to show up as mass exoduses from various social platforms.

Understand your audience and you’ll know how to trigger loyalty responses rather than simple recency (with no offense intended to recency advocates. It's a reasonable metric that doesn't quite go far enough, in my opinion).

Q. CMA: If gaining audience understanding is so critical, but difficult, do you have any suggestions improvement?

Susan Carrabis (SC): Social Media, if used incorrectly, without understanding the audience and other Joseph words, is a dangerous tool. And please get away from one-size-fits-all.

We do a training based on the experiences of working with companies for seven years, a training based on how we actually work with clients. The whole focus of the training is to create marketing material that exactly targets your audience. You don't need NextStage tools or technology to do this but we learned how to do this by using our tools and technology. By the end of the day students are inside their consumers’ heads in ways they can’t get from just reading a book (except Joseph’s, of course). They look at material the way their audience looks at material, respond as their audience responds, see what their audience sees… It can be either fun or scary and we go for fun.

Q. CMA: So rather than seminars, is practical roll-your-sleeves-up, put your brain-to-work training part of understanding what’s needed?

JC: Seminars are (by my understanding) overview or summary in nature. We are true believers in "Understand the theory and you can apply it anywhere" and the best way to teach this is “Teach Application to Theory to Application”. This means take the student from the familiar to the new so that the new becomes familiar, start with something they’re doing in the real world, explain/demonstrate what’s going on, extract the key elements/principles, then have them apply those elements/principles to their current and similar problems. We taught the class mentioned above to about thirty marketing managers and they were blown away. They all knew the stuff, they simply hadn't 1) thought of it in the way we presented it or 2) performed their practice the way we were suggesting.

Part of that training is to develop a real-world campaign during the class. They were all doing social media campaigns -- the techniques will work for any kind of marketing (radio, tv, video, gaming, web, kiosk, print, down, up or sideload, ...) -- and it was exciting how many things were becoming obvious to them as opposed to their standard methods for campaign development. Not only understanding aspects of consumer psychology and how to reach consumers that they'd never considered, but which channels and media to use when.

This was a very rewarding experience. For us, and when we asked, for them, as well.
So for us it all comes back to knowing the correct question to ask.

Everybody knows I collect quotes and one I use is "It is perfectly useless to know the answer to the wrong question." Right now the majority of businesses are (in my opinion) asking the wrong question. I'll be sharing what I consider the correct question -- and answering it, or at least demonstrating ways to answer it -- in my CMA presentation.

CMA: Joseph, you’ve said that ‘sentiment’ is an exhausted term and the word has been so bastardized and mis-used such that it no longer has any real meaning. How do you define sentiment?

JC: There are lots of good psych and related definitions, all close and few metricable (ie. meaning they are reliably and repeatably measurable).

Following in the steps of Attention, Engagement and Trust: The Internet Trinity and Websites and Meet Online Engagement's Little Friend, Satisfaction and after a day’s research, "Sentiment" is the measure of emotional versus cognitive activity demonstrated by an individual when their attention is focused. This translates loosely to:

"Sentiment is demonstrated by behaviors that are caused more by emotion than they are caused by logic."

This is a definition that is a) accurate, b) metricable, c) teachable to any self-learning, social interaction system (Evolution Technology, for example) and d) repeatably metricable via that system within a reasonable +/- distribution.

This Sentiment definition can determine a visitor's sentiment in real-time while they're navigating your site. It won't matter if they write anything, post anything, comment or whatever. It won't even matter if they bounce. I now know what to have ET look for and we can make a tool that determines a) if sentiment exists, b) if it's positive or negative and c) the degree of that sentiment (companies interested in using such a tool should contact Susan).

Q. CMA: Has sentiment analysis evolved to the point that it can be relied upon? Do we have precision or accuracy, both or neither?

JC: I cannot comment on other company's tools or definitions of sentiment analysis because I only know about them from hearsay.

However, one of my favorite quotes is from a C level person at a major Canadian social media monitoring/analysis firm, "All we need to do is to score a handful of words and then assign polarity. It doesn't matter that different audiences use words differently."

This same individual and company arbitrarily (my opinion) decided that they could standardize their dictionary, meaning that words don't change meaning over time and within groups. I'm sure this company doesn't have any linguists or psycholinguists working for them because such a concept would drive them nuts.

But when that's what vendors are saying behind closed doors, how can what they offer be relied upon?

Take the "sentiment" metric I defined above.

NextStage has (at this point) twenty years of data we can look back on when we create a tool or test a definition.

We know, for example, whether or not people acted favorably or unfavorably -- had positive or negative sentiment -- to something going back twenty years, so when we come up with a possible definition we can test it against lots of historical information to determine its accuracy. When vendors knock on our door with referrals and references we ask for historical demonstrations of accuracy or ability. That’s when they go away.

I don’t know how a business can rely on tools without knowing how they came about, how they're tested, their accuracy and so on.

I also know that our clients -- all of whom want to test our suggestions via A/B and like testing in the beginning -- eventually stop testing and just start doing. There's also the aspect that many of our tools (our Sentiment Analysis tool being one) provide suggestions for better audience targeting. There's nothing quite like holding up a bullseye and saying "Here. Test this" to demonstrate confidence.

As for precision and accuracy, no comment about other tools because all I know of others is based on hearsay. If anything, I’ll go back to the bullseye concept. If anybody’s tool is either making or saving you money, it’s a useful tool. If it’s not doing either, why are you using it? There may be lots of other reasons, and that’s fine, just stop telling yourself you’re using a tool because it’s providing a business ROI.

Joseph Carrabis is speaking on "Measuring Emotional Response - Attaching Dollars to Sentiment Analysis" on June 23 at CMA’s Social Media Conference. During the afternoon “social media monitoring roundtable” session, attendees can ask Joseph directly about social media tools.

Mining Generational Gaps: Shopper Marketing Through the Ages

Author: CMA on behalf of Jason Dubroy

Many media agencies in Canada are struggling with the increased asks of their clients to plan media around the “path to purchase,” rather than through established consumption habits.

AC Nielsen has published some very intriguing data on how mining the differences between the generation gaps can provide specific insight that can be applied to everything from ad planning to promotional assortment: This could be the next generation (no pun intended) of shopper marketing.

How a 60 year old and a 20 year old prepare for -and execute- their retail shopping trip is quite different, however they still may buy the exact same soda, soup, and sandwich bread once they get to the store. Their interactions with the brands to get there may be different, but the end goal of the individual marketing activity remains the same: to help people make better purchase decisions along the way.

The brands that people love, the shoppers that buy them, and the retailers that provide the environment (either physical or virtual) to sell them are all beginning to embrace the opportunities that generational analytics can provide.

Brands
With the growing focus many brands have on activating the path to purchase, there has been an enormous amount of consideration put on the common traits shared by their target shoppers. We are seeing a tremendous amount of innovation in things like packaging in this respect. Some products targeting the 55+ set are changing theirs to specifically address vision impairment, so their products show up more easily on shelf. Other products are putting QR codes or augmented reality markers on their products in order to allow a completely different level of interaction and engagement with the brand at retail. Some brand media plans are being reconstructed to better align with shopping habits, with focus moving from TV to retailer web, from outdoor to on-shelf communication, going where the generational target can have their purchase consideration most affected.

Shoppers
The faster marketers can adapt to the shopping habits of their targets, the better they will be able to optimize the messaging that will generate awareness and purchase intent. It is curious to note that even though shoppers of the “greatest generation” are the ones who most rate shopping as a ‘chore’, they are also the most likely to spend time walking the entire store – leaving them open to incremental signage and opportunities for impulse purchase. On the flip side, Millennials – who shop the least of any segment- actually love shopping, but research first so as not to spend as much time on the actual store floor. They key with them is pre-shop activities via SEO, social, WOM, and electronic couponing. The fundamental truth to engaging shoppers is the understanding that the act of shopping is not just a behavior, but also a generational mindset.

Retailers
You can read articles over and over regarding the impending arrival of US mega retailer Target and what they will do to the general merchandise landscape in Canada. The Nielsen article rightfully describes how Target has created a niche by catering to the Gen X and Millennial segments through trippy advertising, with fully designed shopper marketing executions and promotion of “now” celeb tie-ins like Todd Oldham and Giada De Laurentiis. Those of you who have made the trip past our southern border to pay them a visit may find the advertising and shopper executions around Loblaws new Everyday Essentials lineup rings a little familiar. Loblaw however, has done some fantastic work merging their segmentation research and shopper marketing executions on the grocery side, parlaying it into four massively supported Insiders Report executions around their core generational constituencies (Back to School, Summer BBQ, Holiday Entertaining, and Health and Wellness). Both the retailer and manufacturer communities are taking notice. It’s also notable that retailers like Shoppers Drug Mart are adopting a generational shopper approach for their promotional planning, where diverse tactics like social media, solution-set orientation, loyalty programming, and seniors days are being employed (and integrated) to cater to the interests of their shopper continuum from 18-68 years and beyond.

The Nielson article reference is for US data… Feel free to share any great examples of generational marketing delivering innovative shopper experiences in Canada!

Jason Dubroy

Interest-based marketing is a huge step forward from traditional mass-media advertising on TV and radio. I have posted previously on this blog about the merits of interest-based over demographic-based marketing.

However, interest-based marketing still has two important limits of which you need to be aware.

Why are you interested?

The expression of a customer’s interest is usually done in 1-3 words. That is pretty concise. I don’t know about you, but I would have a lot of trouble explaining my interests in so few words. Therein lies the problem – people may share the keywords but still view their interests in a very different way.

Imagine people with an interest in blogging. They could:
? Read celebrity gossip blogs or financial analysis blogs
? Read blogs only or write their own blog
? Read multiple blogs every day or read one every few weeks
? Write a personal blog as a hobby or write a professional blog to earn a living

As you can see, the nature of someone’s interest in ‘blogging’ can vary immensely and you can’t tell the difference based on one or two words on their Facebook profile.
Interest-based marketing is doing better than traditional channels, but still needs some work to get to the level of detail and accuracy that would be most effective.

Are you sure those are your interests?

Any market researcher will tell you that what people say and what people do can be quite different. The ability to accurately articulate what you are interested in is a skill that surprisingly few people actually have.

These inaccuracies can lead you to market to the wrong people and/or miss the right people.

What is a brand to do?

Don’t get me wrong, interest-based marketing is a significant improvement but we are far from the Holy Grail. As a marketer, you need to continually test different target segments to make sure you are reaching the right people, don’t simply take their word for it!

Ben Wise

Interest-based marketing is a huge step forward from traditional mass-media advertising on TV and radio. I have posted previously on this blog about the merits of interest-based over demographic-based marketing.

However, interest-based marketing still has two important limits of which you need to be aware.

Why are you interested?

The expression of a customer’s interest is usually done in 1-3 words. That is pretty concise. I don’t know about you, but I would have a lot of trouble explaining my interests in so few words. Therein lies the problem – people may share the keywords but still view their interests in a very different way.

Imagine people with an interest in blogging. They could:

  • Read celebrity gossip blogs or financial analysis blogs
  • Read blogs only or write their own blog
  • Read multiple blogs every day or read one every few weeks
  • Write a personal blog as a hobby or write a professional blog to earn a living

As you can see, the nature of someone’s interest in ‘blogging’ can vary immensely and you can’t tell the difference based on one or two words on their Facebook profile.
Interest-based marketing is doing better than traditional channels, but still needs some work to get to the level of detail and accuracy that would be most effective.

Are you sure those are your interests?

Any market researcher will tell you that what people say and what people do can be quite different. The ability to accurately articulate what you are interested in is a skill that surprisingly few people actually have.

These inaccuracies can lead you to market to the wrong people and/or miss the right people.

What is a brand to do?

Don’t get me wrong, interest-based marketing is a significant improvement but we are far from the Holy Grail. As a marketer, you need to continually test different target segments to make sure you are reaching the right people, don’t simply take their word for it!

Ben Wise