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Presenting SMG Inspiration Series With Bauer Media Group

Steve Parkinson, MD for Bauer Radio London hosts the Bauer Media Group panel at the SMG Inspired Guest Speaker Series and reveals the ambitions and dispels the myths of the vibrant global media business.

Parkinson reveals the true reach of the business for the first time explaining how Bauer publishes and broadcasts to 200 million consumers across the year, in 17 countries with 570 brands globally. In the UK Bauer has 53 magazines, 43 radio stations and 7 music TV channels alone.

Parkinson was joined on stage, in front of a packed SMG audience, by a star-studded panel including Ric Blaxill, music and content director of Bauer Radio, Dave Young, Box TV programming director, Lucie Cave, heat editor and Kiss Breakfast Show presenters Rickie and Melvin.

The company is going through a major evolution, Parkinson said and is now less about brands and platforms and much more about audiences first, closely followed by content.

Bringing together out of home and mobile

Steve Smith's picture

Starcom MediaVest London’s CEO, Stewart Easterbrook, took part in a panel at a MediaTel event this morning, ‘The union of out of home and mobile’

The research shows that out of home experiences that explicitly incorporate and leverage mobile are likely to increase purchase funnel actions, conversations across communities, and brand equity.

Over half of UK adults now own a smartphone, and around 86% of smartphone owners regularly go online via their phones (Ofcom 2013). This, together with the fact that out of home has the second highest monthly reach behind TV, means that 16% of adults report using their mobiles to search the web partly as a result of out of home ads in the last month (Outdoor Media Centre). Clearly, search and brand sites need to be mobile optimised.

Searches resulting from out of home can also result in purchases. Thirteen percent of adults have bought because influenced by OOH advertising in the last month (OMC). Brands should look to see how they can increase likelihood of purchase through search, for example by showing local stockists and local deals, and through couponing.

Bringing mobile and out of home together also provides an opportunity to engage higher value customers. Young, mobile, affluent, connected and urban individuals are most likely to buy because of out of home. Forty four percent of 16-24s report having made purchases because they have been influenced by out of home media (OMC).

However, mobile activities should not be just about enquiry and purchase. Brand owners need to look to see how they can extend brand experiences through mobile, for example by using mobile to continue a story started on out of home. A partnership between Bing and Jay-Z to promote his autobiography is a good example of how this can be done.

Emotion is one of the biggest drivers to brand funnel and further media actions, and brand owners need to create out of home and mobile content that are likely to have emotional impacts. Fifty six percent of adults have had a positive emotional response to an out of home ad in the last month, closely followed by TV (OMC). Recommendation is the most common action by these people, followed by increases in brand equity.

Brand owners should also use mobile and out of home to drive talk and social media conversations. Ten percent of adults share (online or offline) something about an OOH experience per month (OMC). According to our Community Igniter research, 18% of people use out of home as a media source for at least one of their conversations.

Until recently, out of home advertising has been off limits to mobile phone activities on the London Underground. However, opportunities to engage people at some popular underground stations are now opening up due to Virgin Media, Vodafone and O2 opening up Wi-Fi hotspots in them. These provide the chance to target and engage higher value people, but connecting needs to be simple and easy. As with other locations, content needs to be compelling and people need to be given relevant reasons to undertake further activities on mobile.

QR codes and near field communications have had a lot of coverage in the media. However, QR codes show little sign of success in most campaigns, and people are more likely to manually search on their phones instead, due to high barriers to using QR codes. More phones now have NFC chips, but they don’t have scale, there aren’t many opportunities for people to use them, and research shows that most people see no or only little value in them.

Instead of QR codes and NFC, brand owners need to look at simpler ways of engaging people. I really like the partnership between Boots pharmacy and Weetabix. Weetabix recently ran a TV ad that encouraged people to take a photo of the ad and then go into a Boots store to get a discount.

Some apps are available that can extend a brand experience such as Aurasma, through which people can download additional content when a person points it at an image, such as an out of home ad. However, it has a small user base and it is not always simple to use.

Google Now is an emerging technology. This tracks people to give them ‘the right information at the right time’. There may be opportunities around out of home, for example tracking people who pass posters for particular ads that can then be used for better targeting and tracking of subsequent online behaviours.

Why brands should embrace multi-screening

Steve Smith's picture

Nearly half of smartphone owners (48%) and well over three quarters of tablet owners (80%) regularly use their devices whilst watching TV (InMobile and Mobext 2012).

These figures are considerable and even worrying to some brand owners. Yet it is easy to forget that television viewers have always given themselves to different tasks whilst the television is on, from going out to the kitchen to make a cup of tea during the ad break, to talking on the phone or even grannies doing the knitting whilst watching Coronation Street.

Unlike these activities, additional screen behaviours provide brands with further opportunities to create engagements with people. One of these is around facilitating complementary behaviours. Just over one fifth (22%) of simultaneous usage is complementary to the TV content or ads being shown (Google 2012), and up to 40% of tweets in the UK during peak TV times are about TV (Second Sync/Twitter 2013).

Still, this one fifth of simultaneous usage leaves a considerable amount of multiple screen activities unrelated to content on the TV. Yet rather than seeing this as a threat to advertising brands, brand owners should grasp the opportunity to provide compelling reasons for these people to talk about them and undertake advocacy, enquiry and purchase behaviours.

To do this, brand owners need to understand and facilitate people’s motives for doing complementary activities. These include interacting with or influencing content, seeking additional information about content and ads, wanting to analyse content further, and connecting with other viewers (Google 2012).

In terms of enquiry, online search is an obvious activity. During September 2012, SMG, London, ran a TV ad for a client, that included a search based call to action. The following chart shows the spike in the search term during the ad. Interestingly, over half of all searches came from mobile.

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Twitter is a key medium some people use for discussing content. By adding social elements to TV ads, brand owners are able to stimulate people to discuss ads online, steer conversations, and quantitatively measure interactions.

One of the key challenges Twitter throws up is around how likely is your content to lead to conversations? Twitter underscores the demand that brands and advertisers create relevant and meaningful TV content that people therefore want to talk about. For this reason, Twitter is one tool advertisers should use for gauging the currency of their content (caveats around Twitter users accepted). If you look at your TV content and think a Twitter hash tag isn’t justified, or if you use a hashtag that results in few uses, it is more likely that you need to rethink that content rather than rethink Twitter. Unfortunately however, when some brands have seen very little use of their hashtags on Twitter, they have either dismissed Twitter or said that it is only useful for particular brands or brand categories.

Another mistake is when brands have attached a Twitter hashtag to an ad almost as an afterthought, without really thinking about what they want to achieve. On the other hand, brands that have developed a strategy behind using Twitter are more likely to achieve success. For example, Audi has achieved high engagement through the hashtag #ProgressIs, which it has used in its ads since the Super Bowl 2011. By encouraging people to complete the slogan, it underlies the value of having a call to action that people find compelling.

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Mercedes created deeper engagement by asking viewers to vote for the next stage of a TV ad storyline on Twitter. The brand saw a greater lift in brand metrics compared with a similar Mercedes ad that had no voting interaction – up to 44% higher (ITV and Essential Research 2012). Strategically placing the ad during X-Factor - in which people vote for contestants - drew upon people’s already existing frame of mind for participation in a social event.

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An argument to come from some brands is that Twitter users don’t currently form part of their target market, and so they don’t use it. For example, average ages of premium car brand owners such as Audi and BMW are well over 40 years old, whereas Twitter users are on average much younger.

However, TV ads for considered brands such as cars are likely to be the first touch points for many Twitter users. With Twitter integrated into them, there is the chance that some people will start a longstanding relationship with a brand that will result in a purchase. Twitter integration into TV ads for such brands may also result in new aspirational fans who will become brand advocates. In such cases, it is important that brands use Twitter as one element in an ecology of touch points through which they continue to uncover the brand story.

For less considered brand categories such as food and household products, opportunities are most often around driving purchase. A soap powder brand’s sponsorship of The Only Way is Essex saw a higher purchase intent among people who tweeted about the show and who were exposed to the brand’s sponsored tweets, than people who were not exposed (ITV and Essential Research 2012).

Brands have also used TV ads to drive competitions on Twitter. During late March and into April, Argos ran a TV ad that was primarily about click and collect, but also incorporated a competition. People who used the hashtag #WinDadsCamera had a chance of winning a new camera.

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Competitions such as these can be good at raising brand awareness. But although they may achieve headlines among marketers, they often do little to engage people in deeper interactions with the brand or to stimulate people to converse about it. In fact, our own social media research shows that running straightforward competitions like this is one of the lowest value actions a brand can do. A more engaging competition might have been for Argos to ask people to upload a badly taken photo to show why they need a new camera.

In summary, these are six recommendations about using Twitter on the back of TV ads:

  1. Use Twitter as a tool for gauging the currency of ad content to viewers
  2. Have a strongly developed strategy for integrating Twitter into TV ads. What do you want to achieve?
  3. Understand the characteristics and needs of your intended audience, and their motives for second screening
  4. Calls to action in ads should prompt conversations, interactions, or actions that require more involvement than mere re-tweeting
  5. Considered brands should see Twitter as an opportunity to engage people as part of a much longer purchase funnel than for less considered brands, and use Twitter help create aspirational brand advocates even among non-brand purchasers
  6. Use Twitter as one component among different media to tell connected brand stories

We originally wrote this article for Media Tel's Connected Consumer

Unlocking The Commercial Potential of Facebook Home

Facebook's release of its new software 'Home' allows Android phone users to access their friends’ posts, photos and notifications from the second they check their phones. No longer will they need to go into the Facebook app to access these updates. Users will also be able to continue to chat with their friends on Facebook even when they are using other applications.

Facebook Home prioritises friends and people over applications, like allowing the Facebook news feed on the lock screen of your phone, or Chat Heads whilst using other applications. Facebook Home is not an operating system, nor is it the much anticipated Facebook phone; it is a skin that sits on top of the android operating system. It will be downloadable for a select number of Android handsets and as standard on the HTC First in the US on the 12th April, although there is no international date set at the time of writing.

Facebook currently has 33.7 million activity users in the UK; 4.9 million of whom only access Facebook via mobile and 20.8 million that access via both desktop and mobile.

However, globally two-thirds of the world’s population have never accessed a computer or smartphone. Facebook hopes that when as anticipated, these users gain access, friends and connections will be centric to the experience with Facebook Home playing a central role.

Facebook is going beyond a mobile first mentality to one of "mobile best." The company said today it wants to make mobile the best way to experience the social network, which must mean serving customers more richly in this space.

Jan Dawson, chief telecoms analyst at Ovum, says “the biggest challenge will be that it can’t replicate this experience on iOS, Windows Phone or BlackBerry, the three other main platforms.” The success on Android will be crucial to opening up on other platforms and increasing dominance further.

Facebook Home currently does not support ads but when Mark Zuckerberg was asked about this during the launch he said '"I am sure at some point there will be". We see our lock screen on our phones many times a day and with Facebook Home, there is a potential to delivered an advert straight to your home screen every time.

The future for Facebook Home looks promising, one where there are endless advertising possibilities on mobile that bridge the best of Facebook with its’ rich content and endless targeting capabilities, with the best of mobile advertising and real time IP served adverts. The potential for location based promotions is amazing.

A family shopping at 12.30 on a Saturday afternoon at Westfield could be served a localised Pizza Hut advert, offering free children’s meals. Likewise, Heineken adverts could be served every time someone sets foot in a pub or bar, anywhere in the country. As always with Facebook, we will soon see.

Earth Hour 2013: Global reach, live streams and one last Harlem shake...

If you were puzzled as to why Buckingham Palace, the Houses of Parliament, the Royal Albert Hall and the BFI IMAX were all in the dark this Saturday night, wonder no longer. It wasn't down to a very selective power-cut, but a voluntary switch-off in aid of WWF's Earth Hour. The hour (which takes place at 8.30pm worldwide) sees people all over the world switching off their lights to raise awareness about energy use and climate change.

It was set to be a big year, with 8 new joiners bumping the participating country count up to 152. Taking a look at the Twitter activity around the day, it's interesting to see that the tweet peak of 2048 didn't hit on the actual day of Earth Hour at all. The big push actually centered around anticipation for the next day's events as opposed to the event itself, which suggests more people may have been in support of the event than actually intended to participate.

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As Earth Hour is held at 8.30pm in each country, we're able to attribute tweet spikes to time zones to give us an idea about which geographic regions were the most engaged. The highest spike of 710 tweets hit from the timezone incorporating China, Singapore and the Philippines, followed by another one of 510 we can attribute to Indonesia and Vietnam (amongst others). Interestingly founder country Australia, along with Canada (crowned Earth Hour "Capital" this year) delivered low volumes despite usually commanding high levels of participation.

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Maybe this is suggestive of the way users chose to participate. There is an argument to be made that using your mobile during Earth Hour is counter-intuitive to the overall goal (which also explains the high push the day before) - so low online activity may in this instance be a positive indicator.

Celebs and split campaigns

The UK is one of the Earth Hour hubs that doesn't have a dedicated Twitter account (unlike Earth Hour Indonesia, which boasts over 30,000 followers). Most of the UK activity is driven via Facebook where they've amassed an impressive 83,140 likes. Getting involved were pop favourites McFly who helped live this year's campaign slogan, "Do it in the Dark" by performing a live gig in the dark as well as creating some hype with their own Panda Harlem Shake mashup, which hit only 209,000 views.

It's interesting that WWF included this hashtag on their Facebook header without any clear push to the Twitter page, which was also promoting the live gig with the hashtag #earthhourlive. From the 23rd to the 25th #doitinthedark pulled in just under 8,000 tweets with #earthhourlive just under 3,000 - not bad considering the WWF account consists of 21,532 followers to push from, and especially impressive when compared to the 2184 likes from the live stream announcement on their Facebook page.

It might be that the social power of your celebrity advocate can go a long way to spreading the word for a cause. McFly don't command anywhere near the Twitter followings of chart faves One Direction who cause a Twitter storm across everything from pancakes to performances - and recently lent a hand in this year's Comic Relief. Across the pond Diet Coke have snapped up Taylor Swift for their new advert; whether or not her 25 million followers was a factor is up for debate, but it would seem that the klout of your ambassador is becoming a consideration for smart marketers.

How effective is it all?

Celeb backing or no, the effectiveness of Earth Hour is difficult to measure. searchterms.PNGCharting searches around the event and terms it wants to raise interest about, it's worrying to see not only that searches in Earth Hour are waning over time (although this year's data is not yet available), but that there's no distinct correlation in terms around saving energy and the event. However the one term there is a lift around is "climate change", indicating that there is an increase in awareness. Whether or not that goes on to change behavior is unclear.

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Social St Patrick's: Ireland Shouts Loudest

The glorious mix of booze, music and more booze that is St Patrick's Day fell on a Sunday this year, which we hope isn't taking its toll on SMGers speaking at Ad Week Europe.

Using social listening platform Sysomos we looked at how many mentions popular Irish brews stacked up across the UK, Ireland and the US. Brands included were Guinness, Baileys, Bulmers, Magners and Jameson. Total mentions of all brands are below.

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No surprises that Guinness was the runaway favourite, dwarfing its competition in terms of mentions. A relatively low volume hailed from Ireland, although initially we attributed this to the smaller population size.

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But, sure that the Irish would be just as patriotic online as off, we took a look to explore if the smaller percentage of tweets equated to less engagement. When you take into account the online population and Twitter visitors of each country (via Comscore data), the Irish actually come head and shoulders above all others, boasting over 7 tweets per thousand users. A useful reminder that high tweet volumes may not equal high engagement.

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It's interesting that UK tweeters delivered the highest total amount of brand mentions around Guinness in spite of the greater cultural focus and celebration around the day in east-coast US, however how many of these can be attributed to the "One Direction Effect", we can't say for sure.

For brands other than Guinness it would seem that the US brings the highest tweet total, with next highest mentions going to Jameson and then Baileys (note that Magners and Bulmers are not distributed as heavily in the US). Magners' and Bulmers' year-round popularity in the UK could mean that they are not a novelty sale on Paddy's day, which would account for the smaller volume of mentions. UK revellers chose Irish-brewed Magners over British Bulmers to celebrate the day, whereas those on the Emerald Isle favourited their Irish-brewed Bulmers.

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Jameson Live

The peak we see for Jameson could in fact be due to their promotional activity around Jameson Live, a live-stream of Bombay Bicycle Club performing from Dublin last night. Although one video has reached over 16,000 views since its upload, the hashtag brought in only 176 tweets worldwide since the 16th March. The only one of the brands to launch promo activity around Paddy's day, the link with music seems like a sensible choice.

However, the choice to include the hashtag #Jamesonlive on promotional videos and their website is a little confusing when you account for the fact that (along with all brands mentioned in this study), the vast majority of their social media following is concentrated on Facebook (51,293 Facebook vs 5950 Twitter). Perhaps a bigger push from Facebook would have bumped page views, although perhaps the live element wasn't the biggest draw for Jameson. The beauty of this sponsorship is that (given Bombay Bicycle Club's following) these videos will circulate displaying the Jameson brand long after Paddy's day is over.

Who's suffering most?

The amount of UK tweets mentioning hangovers ( 19,563) is suspiciously just 7% shy of those mentioning Guinness (21,106). The Irish were the hardiest of the bunch, with just 3,082 tweets mentioning hangovers, while the Americans suffered the most, with 21,040 taking to Twitter to let the world know how they felt.

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On the rise of couch commerce

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Once upon a time, if we wanted to shop at home we had to browse through product catalogues, choose what we wanted then send our order through the post. A week to ten days later, our new kettle or pair of trousers would arrive. By then we had forgotten we had ordered it in the first place.

Now we have a plethora of shopping options we can access to through our smartphones and tablets, greatly facilitated through Wi-Fi.

Such is our love of using our mobile devices in front of the TV that tablet use peaks in the evenings, and even overtakes smartphone use at the weekends (Touchpoints 2012). Eighty percent of tablet owners regularly use them whilst watching TV, and just under half of smartphone owners do so (InMobile 2012).

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The impact of TV on couch commerce shouldn’t be underestimated. A quarter of people who regularly search on their smartphones have done so in the last two weeks because of a TV ad. And just in case you are concerned that couch commerce impacts TV ads, research shows that people using tablets are more likely to stay for ad breaks than people not using a device, and there is no significant difference in ad recall (Thinkbox 2012).

To take advantage of couch commerce, brand need to make sure they include calls to action in their ads, such as what terms to search for and even incentives for doing so there and then.They should also look to encourage social media interactions. SMG London Research shows how supermarkets’ Christmas TV ads led to significant uplifts in Facebook engagement. Research by Twitter shows Twitter integration can increase brand equity by up to 44%, and promoted Tweets can drive purchase intent significantly.

Promoted Tweets help drive brand metrics

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Twitter has just released initial findings about the impacts of advertisers' Promoted Tweet campaigns on brand metrics.

Results from the study show that people viewing Promoted Tweets leads to increases in message association, brand favourability and purchase intent. For example, people exposed to a Promoted Tweet show a 22% average increase in message association than those not exposed. Thus even when viewers do not ‘engage’ e.g. click on a link within the tweet, there is still a benefit. This is despite Promoted Tweets being priced on a cost-per-engagement basis.

Other measures show that brand favourability among people who engage increases by 30%, whilst people exposed to multiple Promoted Tweets increase their brand favourability by a further 10%. Among those who engage, 53% show a lift in purchase intent.

This last statistic will be of most interest to many brands, particularly from the FMCG category. It contrasts with our own Social Media Behaviour Index (SMBI) which shows that on average, 73% of people who post a positive comment on a brand’s Facebook page intend to purchase from the brand. In all, our SMBI looks at five measures across the purchase funnel, and five measures around advocacy, across six brand categories.

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Hugh Mobilises Twitter Troops in Fish Fight Success

Just three weeks ago the EU recommended that the law around fishing discards be reformed. We imagine that Hugh Fearnley-Wittingstall will be particularly chuffed, after his "Fish Fight" campaign (aired on Channel Four last year) brought the issue the public eye. Hugh is back with a new series, with yesterday night's episode encouraging viewers who shopped at Tesco, Co-op and Morrisons to tweet their supermarket clarifying where farmed prawns' food was sourced from.

We estimate that an impressive 4% of viewers followed the show's call-to-action, with Tesco shoppers apparently the most concerned as the supermarket garnered notably more tweets than competitors Co-op or Morrisons.

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Whether this higher volume is due to their larger customer base, or elevated concerns around transparency in the food sourcing chain (as the below tweet highlights) is up for speculation.

The retailer have yet to issue an offical response at the time of writing, although they did state that they are working towards improvement in a tweet. Morrisons, whose brand image actually improved in light of the horsemeat scandal have offered an offical response on their website also pledging improvement, while Co-Op have actually changed their policy to ensure supplies in spring/summer will be from accredited sources.

Not bad for a handful of tweets on a Thursday night.