It’s no longer enough for brands to simply experiment with new platforms and insert themselves into cultural moments. In order to be supremely relevant, marketers must go as far as relinquishing some creative control and even waiting until the last minute as real world events unfold if their ultimate goal truly is creative content that will engage users.
Brands that are truly connecting with consumers are those moving at their pace and attempting to understand them in unique ways. That’s according to Laura Desmond, global CEO of Starcom Mediavest Group, who spoke recently at the Ad Age Digital Conference.
Further, Desmond said the so-called “age of empowerment” is driving consumers to expect much more of content, distribution channels and of the media and advertising system overall. And one way that plays out is through how consumers use devices, which is always ahead of brands’ and marketers’ ability to capture the activity, she said. And that means brands and marketers must play a game of catch-up. But marketing technology and data can help.
For his part, David Christopher, CMO of AT&T Mobility, notes consumers simply want content where and when they want it.
“We as marketers have to think differently,” he said. “It fundamentally changed how our brand deals with getting our message out. We just went through the NCAA tournament and had a large ad campaign around [players like Christian Laettner, Clyde Drexler, Shaquille O’Neal and Julius Erving] and shot all of the content not knowing exactly where to go. We prepared it as real-time responses as the tournament unfolded.”
Per Christopher, the college basketball tournament is a good example of an event playing out before the brand “and we don’t know how it will unfold, but content will live on all these different places. We may emphasize Twitter at some point, etc., but being prepared to do this takes an investment in systems.”
Similarly, Beats CMO Omar Johnson said the brand is working on creative with basketball players for the NBA Playoffs, but must also play a waiting game.
“We don’t want to shoot with losers,” Johnson said. “We do something right before the moment in culture so as to be as relevant as possible.”
Another example of a branded content journey that began without a definite notion of where it would end is AT&T’s SnapperHero campaign, which Christopher calls a “first-of-its-kind branded series on Snapchat.”
The campaign kicked off in January as “an influencer-driven scripted series” targeting millennials “where real-time, immediate engagement meets a fun superhero universe,” the brand said.
AT&T tapped Snapchat, Vine, and YouTube influencers including Anna Akana, Freddie Wong, Harley Morenstein, Jasmeet Singh, Simone Shepherd and Shaun McBride. These influencers actually played a “hands-on role in shaping the creative direction of the show,” AT&T said.
“By sending a call to action to their massive followings, influencers will build the SnapperHero world around fan input on superhero identities, enemies, costumes, origin stories and plot lines,” the brand said. “The series will then roll out with 12 episodes over a four-week period beginning in early 2015 with all content living primarily on Snapchat.”
Action and visual effects video team Corridor Digital acted as series director.
“It was in the bucket of innovation, leadership and learning,” Christopher said. “We were trying to learn, iterate and get to scale. We didn’t know how it was going to go and put our trust in the creators.”
And that’s because in order for the content to be relevant to millennials, it had to be in the target audience’s voice, he added.
Further, George Strompolos, CEO of YouTube content creator and brand network Fullscreen, said in a press release, “Influencer-driven content like SnapperHero is just the beginning of what’s to come in the world of real-time content.”
At the end of the day, @SnapperHero gained about 400 followers on Twitter and 200 on Instagram.
“There’s a clear relevance threshold now,” Desmond said. “‘This brand gets me,’ ‘That campaign was great. It spoke to me.’ ‘It’s so cool they tried that.’ The relevance threshold is starting to drive the haves and have nots in marketing.”
Brands that are truly connecting with consumers are those moving at their pace and understanding them in unique ways.
“The data and the alchemy of marketing proves that when they are connected and relevant, good things happen,” Desmond said.
The “have nots” are the disconnected brands that are “not moving or evolving at the pace of their consumers,” she said. “When you get too far away, you’re not as relevant. That’s death. You’re not going to have a chance to continue to ride that wave of growth.”
Further, marketers shouldn’t try too hard with a “shiny new toy” simply because it’s new.
“Smart marketers and agencies see the new and they know how to connect the new to the brand equity to the purpose to the consumer challenge and if it’s seamless, it can work,” Desmond said. “If it’s just chasing new things, it’s won’t work.”
In addition, as the Internet of Things starts to take hold, marketers will have to think about watches and other devices “that will help us understand the world view of what consumers are doing,” Desmond added.
When marketers and agencies invest in their own data management systems to get a look at devices, screens and business data, publishers and content providers can be incredibly relevant, Desmond said.
“I think some of the content publishers really understand the people they’re reaching in unique ways,” she said. “Refinery29 is a good example. So is BuzzFeed. It is incumbent upon us to have more data at our fingertips.”
What do you think about brands relinquishing creative control to connect with younger audiences?