Marketing Newsletter
June 2007
Industry Insights
Copernican Exploration  
Discovery of the Month
What We're Reading Now
Coming Attractions
Industry Insights

Making Our Way Through the Media Muddle:
Latest Findings from the Frontlines of Television Advertising


According to a 2006 ANA survey of its members, 86% of respondents were "very interested" in having commercial ratings—similar to Nielsen's TV program ratings, a measure of how many viewers in America watched a TV commercial when it aired—available, while 13% said they were "somewhat interested." When asked if members would like to see commercial ratings become the currency by which TV time is bought and sold, 44% were very interested and 40% were somewhat interested. Thankfully for these advertisers who aren't so willing to go on spending $70 billion annually on TV advertising unless they know, at the very least, people are watching the ad, a new day is dawning....albeit pretty slowly.

Nielsen recently rolled out a weekly report of average commercial ratings, which show how many households participating in the Nielsen panel on average stay tuned in minute-to-minute during an advertising break during a particular program whether it was viewed live or via a DVR up to a week after the original broadcast. Advertisers, their agencies, and broadcast networks had been tapping their feet—or in the case of broadcast networks, pacing the floors—holding back on TV buys for the coming 2007-2008 TV season, sniping over how to count TiVo and other post-live show views, engagement metrics, and more, all in anticipation of the big Nielsen release day.

Unfortunately, for many, if not most, advertisers, Nielsen's much-anticipated average commercial ratings turned out to be more like getting underwear and socks for Christmas—kind of disappointing. "This is a step in the right direction, but we're not quite there," lamented Steve Kalb, the director of broadcast media at MediaHub, the media buying arm of ad agency Mullen. What did marketers really want to find under the tree? "Measurements of how audiences view TV programs and ads on a second-by-second basis," according to Ad Age. "While the step towards providing an average rating for all commercials in a television program is helpful, advertisers want even more granular data," explains a white paper from the ANA. "They want brand-specific commercial ratings that can answer the question, 'How many people actually had the opportunity to see my spot?'"

Of course, Nielsen isn't the only game in town. There's also that whole engagement thing—that ubiquitous and as yet undefined hot advertising topic—that, at least when it comes to TV, has become a sort of proxy for how many people actually pay attention to commercials. As Steve Tipps, senior vice president at Copernicus, explains, "If programs are unequal in providing viewers who stay tuned to embedded ads, then a measure capturing that performance difference is essential to accurately assessing the value of placing advertising in a given program." In TVland, "engagement" and "involvement" are used interchangeably and as yet, there's no universally accepted tool for measuring its effects on TV advertising response.

To be sure, there are a growing number of tools on the market. For example, IAG Research offers program AND commercial ratings based on "engagement" scores. The company has folks come into its headquarters every night to watch everything—programs and commercials—on the broadcast networks and shows on 20 different cable networks. These folks then pull together a detailed "quiz" that tests how much someone paid attention that's given to an online panel of 5,500 people the next day. Media industry pundit Jack Myers also offers "Myers Emotional Connections" research which assesses the performance of broadcast and cable networks and programming in terms of "viewer engagement" and "advertising impact." According to Marketing Evaluations, creators of the Q ratings for TV programs, some of Nielsen's highest rated shows are much less engaging than their ratings would indicate. The company found programs such as Desperate Housewives, a top-ranked show by Nielsen standards, may not be all that engaging. Though these tools and others have received a fair share of positive attention—IAG in particular—they've also encountered a good share of criticism, primarily that they don't offer firm evidence that the way they calculate engagement/involvement actually measures it or is related to advertising response.

As our readers might imagine, we've been hard at work looking for the best performing measure and have made some interesting discoveries in the process. Drawing from past academic studies, our own research in this area, and our understanding of current media industry practices for measuring involvement/engagement, we looked at many potential indicators of involvement. The indicators fell into three broad categories:

  1. Behavioral (e.g., number of people in the room; type and size of TV/monitor; level and number of distractions during viewing; I watch the program every week; I always plan to watch the program; I record the program if I am going to miss it)
  2. Attitudinal (e.g., the extent to which a program provides entertainment value and is enjoyable; provides new relevant information; includes recognizable characters with whom viewers identify; reflect viewers' personal beliefs and values)
  3. Summary (e.g., poor to excellent rating; comparison to previous episodes; likelihood to view again or recommend; overall, I paid very close attention to the commercials during this program)

We found the best measure of involvement included a mix of all three types of indicators and confirmed that viewers highly involved in a program are far more likely to recall the advertising.

We also discovered that, in addition to influencing the attention paid to an ad, involvement had a halo effect on the attitudes and behavior towards a brand. If a viewer was aware of an ad, the more involved he or she was with a program, the stronger the perception of the advertised brand as superior, a good value, and overall positive impression. Importantly, highly involved, ad aware viewers were also more likely to purchase the brand the next time they were in the market for a product or service in the category. Our analysis took into consideration the possible effects of demographics and product usage on perceptions, but found only microscopic levels of influence from these potentially mitigating factors. In other words, program involvement is driving the bus here.

TV shows, as one might expect, differ in their mix of low and high involvement buyers and that difference is indicative of likely advertising performance. More popular shows (a.k.a., shows ranked highly on the Nielsen program rating scale) are not necessarily more involving, nor are lower ranked shows indicative of a high concentration of disinterested viewers. We confirmed that involvement is not a function of age, gender, income, or some other demographic factor—the concentration of high/low involved viewers for a particular program was not influenced by demographics. We also discovered that, in contrast to the prevailing conventional wisdom among media buyers, involvement is not a function of day part when it comes to "niche" programs—i.e., programs with less than a 1% show rating, barely a blip on the Nielsen scale. As it turns out, viewers watch programs with just as much interest and vigor any time of day, not just during prime time. What this means for advertisers and their agencies is if they rely on Nielsen ratings and conventional wisdom alone, they could be passing up some very good TV buys.

Just how critical is involvement to advertising performance? According to our findings, the vehicle influences effectiveness at least as much as the commercial itself. Program involvement accounts for half of the attention paid to an ad and, as we mentioned before, casts a long, positive shadow on persuasion among those aware of the ad. The other half is explained by a combination of the ad creative and the extent to which the characteristics of an intended user of the advertised product/service correspond to the characteristics of viewers of a particular program.

As for Nielsen's program rating scale....when compared to the predictive ability of different measures of involvement—ours and others—Nielsen is woefully lacking. While it certainly reflects the total numbers of viewers of a particular program, it is an inaccurate predictor of the total number of viewers who can recall an ad. In fact, our analysis revealed Nielsen ratings account for only about 60% of the difference in ad aware viewers across different programs. Evaluating ad rates according to a Nielsen-based cost per thousand (CPM) basis will not yield the most lucrative media buys.

Now, Google has partnered with Echostar, the #2 US direct broadcast satellite TV provider and owner of DISH Networks, offering the in-demand second-by-second commercial ratings for buys made on 120 cable TV networks through Google's ad auction system, an important—and inherently limiting—caveat. But clearly a brand-specific (as opposed to a program average) second-by-second measure is getting closer to reality. Until then, a program-involvement adjusted version of Nielsen ratings and CPMIs, cost per thousand involved, instead of CPMs is a far more economically effective and efficient means with which to purchase TV airtime. Second-by-second ratings are still an imperfect system; like the existing Nielsen programs ratings, advertisers will know how many viewers had the TV set on when a specific commercial aired, but they'll still be left wondering how many actually paid attention. The long and the short of this is that involvement measures will remain as equally important and relevant predictor of ad recall and persuasion as it is today.

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Copernican Exploration
 

Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head:
An Interview with Copernicus' Peter Krieg on the Promise of Fact-Based Marketing


Malcolm Gladwell's Blink: The Power of Thinking Without Thinking has unequivocally struck a cord with Corporate America and beyond. It's sold at least 1.3 million hardcover copies in North America alone and rumor has it Gladwell sold the film rights—you read that right, the film rights—to Universal Pictures for $1 million with Leonardo DiCaprio set to portray the author. Even two years after the book was published, Gladwell is still a "hot" speaker on the circuit, earning a reported $40K a pop.

For all the sales and media attention, however, the "power of thinking without thinking" has not proven particularly beneficial to businesses. In their new book, Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head: How Disciplined, Fact-Based Marketing Can Drive Extraordinary Growth and Profits, Kevin Clancy and Peter Krieg take Blink to task for enabling the reliance on intuition and judgment which has proven particularly problematic to marketing performance. We sat down with Peter Krieg, president and chief operating officer of Copernicus, to talk about his new book and the alternative to making decisions with the gut. Here's what he had to say:

Mzine: Tell us about the inspiration for Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head.

Krieg: We first had the idea for the book after reading two Fast Company articles a couple years ago. One proclaimed "Acting on Intuition" as the number one trend that "will change the way we work and live in 2005." It went on to predict Malcolm Gladwell's new book Blink and its exploration of the "power" of intuitive decision making would sweep corporate America. Boy, they nailed that one! A month later, Fast Company referred to Gladwell as "a 21st-century Peter Drucker."

Now, we loved reading his book—he's an incredible writer. Yet when it comes to putting forth breakthrough ideas and new ways of thinking about business that will move companies forward, he's no Peter Drucker. The way business decision-makers seemed to—rightly or wrongly—embrace Blink as if it were a sign from God that it's OK to rely solely on their instincts to make critical choices about the direction of their business made us—the biggest proponents for balancing intuition with research and modeling tools to make decisions out there—cringe.

While Blink was getting all this play, big changes were happening in marketing. "Accountability" became the watch-word for the industry. CEOs and CFOs started asking for hard-numbers that demonstrate marketing efforts are making a positive contribution to the bottom-line. Companies were talking more and more about becoming "marketing driven"—it became the politically correct thing to say. Expectations for what marketing can and should be doing increased. While we couldn't have been happier about these developments, we just didn't see how marketers could ever hope to deliver on these heighten expectations if they make decisions about what customers to go after, how to talk to them, what product or service to sell to them in a blink, based more or less on their own sense of what will work. We felt compelled to say something and Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head is the end-result.

Mzine: In your book, you make the statement that "nothing is more important that marketing." But you and your co-author Kevin Clancy frequently talk about the fact that the majority of the marketing efforts out there do not have any sort of impact on the business. Is there a disconnect here?

Krieg: When we say marketing, we're talking about solving people's—whether it's a B2B buyer's or an Average Joe consumer's—problems with products and services at a profit. As we say in the book, if there are no customers, then there's no business. The only business function that's charged with getting customers for business is marketing.

It's true that most companies are not getting great returns on their marketing programs. These days, getting a dollar back in sales for every dollar spent on marketing is considered cause for celebration. This low level of impact has nothing to do with the role of marketing in growing the business and everything to do with the way marketing decisions are made.

Mzine: What's wrong with the way marketing decisions are made?

Krieg: The problem is more marketing decisions are made with guts than brains. We did a study among 256 U.S. marketing executives, asking them a series of questions about their decision-making habits [see More Than Words: Marketing Decisions Still Made With Guts Than Brains below]. Sixty-six percent of marketers agreed with the statement, "I feel very confident making marketing decisions based on my own sense of what our customers will respond to" and 62% say, "generally speaking, I tend to make decisions quickly based on my judgment and experience."

Most big companies today—and a fair number of mid-sized and even smaller companies—do use research and even decision-making tools. So there's very often a sincere attempt to bring facts into the picture. A number of things seem to happen along the way though, that limits research's role in the ultimate choice a marketer makes. Sometimes, research is done without taking into consideration the needs and objectives of all the folks who might be using it. We see this happening on a regular basis with segmentation and targeting research, for instance. The end-result is the research is unusable to the very people it was supposed to be helping, and intuition, experience, competitive activity step in to fill the information void.

Other times, the weight placed on the findings from a particular piece of research far exceeds the scientific merits of the research methodology used to gather the findings in the first place. Ethnographic research, for instance, is "hot" these days, but the results are not always useful to solving the problem at hand, not to mention they are unstable because they're based on small non-projectable samples and highly subjective observations of behavior. Ethnography can be helpful, entry-level research—something you do at the start of project—yet it's being used to make CEO-level decisions.

Mzine: Speaking of hot topics, a burning issue in marketing these days is getting the sales folks to play nice with marketing. What's at the root of the conflict between marketing and sales?

Krieg: It's all in the means to the end. The ultimate objectives of the marketing and sales departments align pretty closely. Both want to find and keep customers. But where the sales department tends to focus on tactical activities, and often those are trade-related, marketing generally has a more media-related focus intended to drive the brand forward. Sales can be more short-term focused; marketing is more long-term. Sales has hard measures in terms of dollars in the bank; marketing, much softer, in terms of brand equity, buyer perceptions, and awareness.

It's more the exception than the rule that sales and marketing speak on a regular basis. Sales gets paid for making a sale, yet marketing wants them to make the "right" sale in the "right" way without sacrificing the brand. The odds are stacked against the nature of the relationship being anything but conflicted.

This situation creates a drag on the performance of the business, however. When marketing produces research, collateral material, and sales training that the sales people cannot or will not use, it's a waste of resources. If sales people talk to anyone and everyone that walks through the door instead of focusing most of their time and energy on the buyers who are likely the most profitable to the company—usually something that's determined by marketing—profit suffers.

As we talk about in the book, to eliminate the drag, marketing needs to view sales as a client. Go out and spend some time in the trenches with sales. Find out what they know. If nothing else, this will make marketing programs more usable in the field.

Mzine: If you had the ear of every CEO and CMO around the world for five minutes, what would you say to them about marketing?

Krieg: First, you need to read our book. Second—and in all seriousness—as my co-author Kevin Clancy's mother used to say, "If all you do is what you've done, then all you get is what you've got." If your sales and profits aren't growing as fast as you want them to—or aren't growing at all—don't look for a nearby merger or acquisition, look at your marketing programs. How are you making the underlying strategy decisions on which those programs are based? If there's not much fact guiding the marketing choices your firm is making, you've got a pretty good indication of what's standing between you and the numbers you're looking to hit.

You can reach Peter at peter.krieg@copernicusmarketing.com and find out more about the book at www.useyourheadnow.com.

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Discovery of the Month
 

More Than Words:
Marketing Decisions Still Made With More Guts Than Brains


We are always intrigued by the decision-making habits of marketing executives. What kind of process, for instance, led to Wal-Mart's decision to move upscale when its positioning for years had been "Always Low Prices?" Or what were the inputs as marketers at VW concluded they should switch the advertising strategy for the brand for the FOURTH time in 18-months? OK, we're going a bit negative here, so how about the flip side to these, in our minds, more questionable marketing moves. What kind of process led grocery store chains like Kroeger and A&P to decide, instead of trying to copy Wal-Mart's price-centric strategy, to differentiate themselves with a better shopping experience, product selection, and convenience? How did Constellation Wines, the largest wine business in the world, arrive at the decision to grow their market share and move more product by providing their B2B customers—liquor stores, restaurants, and bars—with richly detailed profiles of different wine consumer segments, including how to market to them to maximize sales? Is there something—a particular style, an approach, a mentality, a tool, a person—that seemed to make the difference between moving the firm closer to, rather than further away from, its sales and profit growth goals?

Over the years, we've come across studies that report on the decision-making habits and capacities of businesses in general. Bain & Company, for instance, in a survey of 350 global organizations found that nary 15% of companies practice effective decision making. But we wanted to know about marketing executives specifically, so posed a series of questions about decision-making habits to 256 of them. We asked about two basic decision-making approaches: using personal experience, intuition, and judgment vs. data and research to make a decision. The results were, in three words, kind of confusing.

A clear majority agreed that they have "confidence making marketing decisions based on my own sense of what customers will respond to" (66%) and 62% said they "tend to make decisions quickly based on my judgment and experience. Half say they "agree with Malcolm Gladwell in his book Blink when he argues that senior marketing managers should rely more on intuition and judgment in making major decisions and avoid becoming mired in data." At the same time, 81% of marketers also said they approach decision-making "deliberately, examining available data before making a decision." Sixty-seven percent agreed that "although large scale quantitative studies take a lot of time and money, they really improve decision-making." More than half nodded their heads, yes, absolutely, "we need to conduct more quantitative research studies" than is currently the case at their company (58%).

A surprising (to us) 39% concurred, "for every major marketing decision that needs to be made, there are tens, sometimes thousands of alternatives. Hard data—not intuition—is required to identify the ones forecast to be the most profitable." While a minority (27%) reported that "rigorous analysis of unimpeachable data is what leads to marketing success," a minority (41%) also say they "rely more heavily on intuition and judgment than research and science."

Our interpretation of this kind of mixed-message results? Marketers seem to be on to the fact that they need to adapt to the demands of CEOs and CFOs for proof of performance. Traditionally, marketers have resisted conforming to the analytic, fact-based approach to decision-making that is standard practice in virtually every other critical strategic business function—from finance to information technology to operations. Their resistance is understandable—there is a creative element to marketing and the concern that numbers and data might overwhelm the creative process is certainly valid. Perhaps marketers are a bit uncertain how to integrate research into the decision-making process—it's not always crystal clear how to make information actionable for a business. Or perhaps old habits just die hard—the prevailing mentality still seems to be "there is risk and intuition and gut involved in this [marketing] business. You can't fight it. Everybody wants to test everything—but the thing is you're talking about creativity and what will move someone. You've gotta have guts," as David Lubars, the new chairman and chief creative officer of BBDO North America, summed up on National Public Radio.

While we hear more about companies doing some level of research as part of a strategy development process—a good thing—it's still routinely celebrated when a marketer proudly announces he or she went with their gut, research be damned, and happily met with success. It's not described as reckless, unnecessarily risky, just plain bad, or dumb luck that it was successful—it's no gut, no glory. We certainly don't hear of too many marketers who run a background check on their hunches on a regular basis or see much evidence that marketers are putting their money where their mouth is when it comes to actually spending on all the research they say they want and need to do.

Take sponsorships and event marketing as an example. According to the IEG Sponsorship report, North American companies plan to spend $14.9 billion on sponsorships in 2007, an increase of more than 10% from the year prior and outpacing growth in spending on traditional media. With all this spending, you'd think companies would have in-depth knowledge of the effect of sponsorships on sales and brand equity. Yet according a different IEG study—the Performance Research Sponsorship Decision-Makers Survey—"sponsor spending on research to determine the impact of partnerships lagged behind the lip service typically paid to wanting to measure ROI." In fact, only one-quarter of marketers spend more than one percent of their rights fees on research. A startling 81% did not have a dedicated budget for either evaluating opportunities or measuring results. In other words, they can't say for certain that it worked any better than the :30 second TV commercials or print ads that it likely replaced.

Taking a more fact-based approach has to be more than words if marketers have a chance of meeting CEO expectations for performance and accountability.

For more insightful marketing discoveries, visit http://www.copernicusmarketing.com/discover/index.htm

Have a hot discovery for our next release? Contact us at info@copernicusmarketing.com

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What We're Reading Now
 

At the Top of Our Reading List....


Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head
By Kevin Clancy and Peter Krieg (Wiley, April 2007)


Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head paves the way for anyone in business—Fortune 500 CMO, mid-cap company CEO, or small business owner alike—to make better, more profitable marketing decisions. Intuition and creativity certainly have their place in marketing just as they do in any other business decision area. But marketing programs that return 20% or more on investment come from a careful balance of intuition and fact.

Listen to Kevin Clancy talk about Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head and how fact-based marketing leads to better performance.

Look for more on Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head on www.useyourheadnow.com or visit Amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com, 800CEORead.com for order information.

Watch This Listen Up Click Here: Inside the 300 Billion Dollar Business Behind the Media You Constantly Consume
By David Verklin and Bernice Kanner (Wiley and Sons 2007)


This collaborative effort from the head of Carat, the largest independently-owned media buying firm in the world, and a well-respected business and marketing writer offers a lively take on the rapidly changing media world along with the trends that are or will soon impact the way companies deliver messages to potential buyers. Both overview of the industry and prognostication of things to come, Watch This Listen Up Click Here provides anyone with even a casual interest in the media-side of marketing communications a little history, some good insights, and some interesting stories of what companies are doing to break through the clutter to grab your attention.

Look for more on www.watchlistenclick.com.


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Coming Attractions  
 

Fresh Thinking Starts at Brand ManageCamp 2007


Join the best and brightest minds in brand management and marketing as they deliver the actionable insights and tools you need to become a stronger marketer and a more dynamic leader able to create and grow winning brands at Brand ManageCamp 2007. The conference will take place on September 25-26, 2007, at the Westin Michigan Avenue in Chicago, IL, and will cover a breadth of topics including innovation, creativity, advertising, strategy, design, and marketing ROI.

Speakers include well-known authors such as Dan Heath, Made To Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive And Others Die; Dr. Peter Sealey, Simplicity Marketing: End Brand Complexity, Clutter and Confusion; Barry Schwartz, The Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less; Fred Senn, Juicing the Orange: How to Turn Creativity Into a Powerful Business Advantage; and Copernicus' own Kevin Clancy, Your Gut Is Still Not Smarter Than Your Head. Leading practitioners on the agenda include Robin Harper of Linden Labs, the creators of THE media story of the year, Second Life; and John Hlinko, an early leader of moveon.org.

As a special offer to Copernicus Mzine subscribers, Brand ManageCamp will take 20% of the cost of registration. Simply visit http://www.managecamp.com/bmc2007/register/ and use the promotion code bmc07clancy to receive the discount.

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Copernicus-Marketing Consulting and Research  
 

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Copernicus is in the business of transforming companies. We offer state-of-the-science consulting, research, and modeling tools to help clients develop, plan, and implement the kind of marketing strategies that change brand trajectories, career paths, even entire companies and industries. For more about Copernicus, visit our award-winning website, www.copernicusmarketing.com.