AdLogic

AdLogic Marketing and Advertising Diary

To discuss business related terms with students as AdsLogic believe that social and virtual teaching can be more effective way of learning as students are more into social media. This page also represents the organization that has been started to bring a change in marketing and Advertising world of Pakistan.

02/11/2018

19/12/2017

WHY EVERYONE KNOWS TV IS DYING, YET MARKETING LEADERS OVER-SPEND ON TV

Why Everyone Knows TV is Dying, Yet Marketing Leaders Over-spend on TV
The trend toward the death of broadcast TV as we’ve known it keeps moving forward. This trend may not happen as fast as the death of desktop computers, but it is a lot faster than glacier melting.

This television season (through October) Magna Global has reported that even the oldest viewers (the TV Generation 55-64) watched 3% less TV. Those 35-54 watched 5% less. Gen Xers (25-34) watched 8% less, and Millenials (18-24) watched a whopping 14% less TV. Live sports viewing is not even able to maintain its TV audience, with NFL viewership across all networks down 10-19%.

Everyone knows what is happening. People are turning to downloaded entertainment, mostly on their mobile devices. With a trend this obvious, you’d think everyone in the media/TV and consumer goods industries would be rethinking strategy and retooling for a new future.

But, you would be wrong. Because despite the obviousness of the trend, emotional ties to hoping the old business sticks around are stronger than logic when it comes to forecasting.

screen shot 2013-01-31 at 10.42.21 am

CBS predicted at the beginning of 2014 TV ad revenue would grow 4%. Oops. Now CBS’s lead forecaster is admitting he was way off, and adjusted revenues were down 1% for the year. But, despite the trend in viewer behavior and ad expenditures in 2014, he now predicts a growth of 2% for 2015.

That, my young friends, is how “hockey stick” forecasts are created. A lot of old assumptions, combined with a willingness to hope trends will be delayed, and you can ignore real data while promising people that the future will indeed look like the past – even when it defies common sense.

To compensate for fewer ads the networks have raised prices on all ads. But how long can that continue? This requires a really committed buyer (read more about CMO weaknesses below) who simply refuses to acknowledge the market has shifted and the dollars need to shift with it. That cannot last forever.

Meanwhile, us old folks can remember the days when Nielsen ratings determined what was programmed on TV, as well as what advertisers paid. Nielsen had a lock on measuring TV audience viewing, and wielded tremendous power in the media and CPG world.

But now AC Nielsen is struggling to remain relevant. With TV viewership down, time shifting of shows common and streaming growing like the proverbial w**d Nielsen has no idea what entertainment the public watches. They don’t know what, nor when, nor where. Unwilling to move quickly to develop tools for catching all the second screen viewing, Nielsen has no plan for telling advertisers what the market really looks like – and the company looks to become a victim of changing markets.

Which then takes us to looking at those folks who actually buy ads that drive media companies. The Chief Marketing Officers (CMOs) of CPG companies. Surely these titans of industry are on top of these trends, and rapidly shifting their spending to catch the viewers with the most ads placed for the lowest cost.

You would wish.

Unfortunately, because these senior executives are in the oldest age groups, they are a victim of their own behavior. They still watch TV, so assume others must as well. If there is cyber-data saying they are wrong, well they simply discount that data. The Nielsen’s aren’t accurate, but these execs still watch the ratings “because it’s the best info we have” – a blatant untruth by the way. But Nielsen does conveniently reinforce their built in assumptions, and their hope that they won’t have to change their media spend plans any time soon.

Further, very few of these CMOs actually use social media. The vast majority watch their children, grandchildren and young employees use mobile devices constantly – and they bemoan all the activity on YouTube, Facebook, Instagram and Twitter – or for the most part even Linked-in. But they don’t actually USE these products. They don’t post information. They don’t set up and follow channels. They don’t connect with people, share information, exchange photos or tell stories on social media. Truthfully, they ignore these trends in their own lives. Which leaves them woefully inept at figuring out how to change their company marketing so it can be more relevant.

The trend is obvious. The answer, equally so. Any modern marketer should be an avid user of social media. Most network heads and media leaders are farther removed from social media than the Pope! They don’t constantly download entertainment, and exchanging with others on all the platforms. They can’t manage the use of these channels when they don’t have a clue how they work, or how other people use them, or understand why they are actually really valuable tools.

Are you using these modern tools? Are you actually living, breathing, participating in the trends? Or are you, like these outdated execs, biding your time wasting money on old programs while you look forward to retirement? And likely killing your company.

When trends emerge it is imperative we become part of that trend. You can’t simply observe it, because your biases will lead you to hope the trend reverts as you continue doing more of the same. A leader has to adopt the trend as a leader, be a practicing participant, and learn how that trend will make a substantial difference in the business. And then apply some vision to remain relevant and successful.

http://adamhartung.com/why-everyone-knows-tv-is-dying-yet-marketing-leaders-over-spend-on-tv/

19/12/2017

Do ads with facts work better than ads that appeal through emotion and aspiration?

Team AdLogic wishes you all a very happy Eid
02/09/2017

Team AdLogic wishes you all a very happy Eid

Advertise na kiya tou phir kiya jiya
10/05/2017

Advertise na kiya tou phir kiya jiya

That's What Advertising is capable of.***AdLogic
09/05/2017

That's What Advertising is capable of.

***AdLogic

We bet there couldn't be any better ad than this one. You don't even need to write a single word.
27/01/2017

We bet there couldn't be any better ad than this one. You don't even need to write a single word.

BRANDING STRATEGY: DOES YOUR STAFF UNDERSTANDS WHAT YOU HAVE JUST DESIGNEDNearly every branding consultant has some mode...
25/01/2017

BRANDING STRATEGY: DOES YOUR STAFF UNDERSTANDS WHAT YOU HAVE JUST DESIGNED

Nearly every branding consultant has some model that represents their philosophy, whether they call it a brand pyramid, brand architecture, brand keys, brand DNA or a “brand butterfly.”

“Many brand architectures are full of insider marketing lingo that make them seem ridiculous. A brand model is most valuable when its easily understood by everyone on the team. It should pass the ‘Teller Test,’ meaning that frontline branch staff should be able to understand the brand from reading it.”

***TARGET MARKET: EVERYONE***"Are you making the same mistake while defining target market for your product?".Everyone’s...
25/01/2017

***TARGET MARKET: EVERYONE***
"Are you making the same mistake while defining target market for your product?".

Everyone’s heard the expression, “You can’t be all things to all people.” Or as ad legend David Ogilvy put it, “Try to appeal to everyone, and you will end up appealing to no one.”

But ask a financial institution to define its target audience and you will often hear something like, “All people ages 18-55.” They might say it “skews slightly towards women.” This is essentially the same thing as saying, “We’re targeting everyone with money and a pulse.” That isn’t a targeted market segmentation strategy. When you define your target audience too broadly, you’ve committed a major error in branding.

Insight from Tom Fishburne (Marketoonist) on Target Marketing: “A target market is not the same as anyone who could conceivably buy you product. It’s not a catch-all classification. A target market is deliberately exclusive — that’s what gives it teeth. It is what compels consumers to identify with your brand. It is what gives you insight to speak to them so clearly.”

This is what we mean by Creativity.One of our team member referred to it as "Mona Lisa of the Print Ads". What is your t...
24/01/2017

This is what we mean by Creativity.
One of our team member referred to it as "Mona Lisa of the Print Ads". What is your take on this?

***NOKIA 6 Gone in 60 Seconds***Nokia 6 sold out in a minute during first flash saleAfter all these years of disappointm...
20/01/2017

***NOKIA 6 Gone in 60 Seconds***
Nokia 6 sold out in a minute during first flash sale
After all these years of disappointment and dismay, Nokia fans are seen once again flocking to buy the resurrected brand’s new phone - the Nokia 6. At the first flash sale carried out by Chinese e-commerce site JD.com, the device went out of stock in just one minute. We assume this was bound to happen, considering over 1 million people had registered for a chance to buy one. Of course there's no word on how many units were actually in stock to begin with.

Think 100 times before you take a decision, but once the decision is taken, standby it as a man.HAPPY QUAID DAY
25/12/2016

Think 100 times before you take a decision, but once the decision is taken, standby it as a man.
HAPPY QUAID DAY

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