Life after the 30-second advertising
spot
In response to ad-skipping technology,
advertisers are turning ads into a storytelling
medium.
LOS ANGELES – Network television has always used its shows
to sell the sponsor's soap. But as audiences find more
ways to zap those commercial messages (think TiVo) and
spend less time watching TV overall, networks are
scrambling to find new ways to make shows sing for their
supper.
In a recent episode of
CBS's "CSI: New York," a cellphone rings with the song
"Talk" by Coldplay, which the characters discuss. At the
next commercial break, the audience is invited to
download the ringtone for $2.49. Over on NBC's "Las
Vegas," sports fans en route to the Winter Olympics join
the story line. The episode, which aired just prior to
the Turin Games, then follows the group to Italy.
Welcome to life after the
30-second TV spot. These examples are a tiny glimpse of
what one media pundit calls "desperation marketing" -
advertisers going beyond simple product placement to
capture the hearts and wallets of increasingly ad-wary
consumers who are spending more time online and on
cellphones and less watching TV.
While the traditional commercial is not
extinct quite yet, it's on the endangered list. "That
ship has sailed," says Joseph Jaffe, author of the book,
"Life After the 30-Second Spot."
Dollars spent on TV advertising have been
declining since 2004, when revenue hit $9 billion.
"We've witnessed the peaking of TV," says Mr. Jaffe.
"We're incrementally dissipating that spending on TV as
the number of viable alternatives and substitutions
continue to proliferate."
The average American spends more than 15
percent of his media time online, as opposed to
virtually zero 15 years ago, says Steven King, senior
adviser for the Institute for the Future, a nonprofit
research group in Palo Alto, Calif. But it's not just
the outlets that are changing, says Mr. King; so is the
consumer. Americans, he says, have long prided
themselves on being nobody's fool, but customers are now
pickier than ever.
Today's consumer, especially the under-35
generation raised on computers and cellphones, demand
interaction with a product and prefer to do their own
research prior to purchase. Advertisers are scrambling
to adapt. "All of these things are an attempt to sneak
by the commercial sniffer in the average consumer," says
King. As a result, the line between content and ads will
continue to blur, producing what he calls "deeply
commercial" entertainment.
The online "digisodes" for Snickers candy
bars are one example of that phenomenon. A series of
digital films about hip-hop factory workers who gain
superpowers after eating Snickers bars was created by ad
agency BBDO, targeting the teen market. The series
launched in June ( InstantDef.com) and is meant to be
watched like videos, not commercials. "This is a good
example of the ad as a story line," says Jimmy Smith,
who created the campaign. BBDO chose the hip-hop music
and comic-book style to reach teens who get most of
their information online, he says. "It's the kind of
entertainment and product help that our product's target
audience will enjoy," he says.
Cellphones are also being mined for their
ability to leverage a consumer's lifestyle. A surfer on
his way to the beach in Malibu can now use his phone to
check wave activity. As he does, he logs into an online
surfing community run by a local retailer, Beach Bum
Surf Shop, and supported by AirG, a mobile service
provider. He swaps tips with fellow surfers and, more
important, maybe buys a board and hat during the call.
Up in Palo Alto, a new company named Mozes has made it
possible for phones to be used "almost like a remote
control," says CEO Dorrian Porter. Users can save and
retrieve a TV show or any other digital information from
businesses that partner with Mozes.
Ads designed for commercial breaks are
being retooled as well. A company named 1800GotJunk
recently launched a national campaign for its
junk-removal services. But it was not particularly
successful. That's because it was driven by what ad
maven Simon Sinek calls legacy-thinking. "It was full of
information about their services, but nobody really
cared about big shiny trucks and junk removal. They
didn't understand what that meant for them," Mr. Sinek
says.
Sinek worked with the company to create a
campaign from the consumer's perspective. Instead of a
standard "informational" ad, he turned it into a
lifestyle question and came up with what Sinek calls the
"nagging" campaign. "We had to re-create the spouse
saying, 'Get that junk out of here,' " says Sinek, who
teaches marketing at Columbia University in New York.
Four single-screen, five-second ads said simply, "Did
you clean the attic yet?" Each popped up once throughout
a standard commercial break, concluding with a fifth
screen that simply said, "Just Get it Done," with the
1-800-GotJunk phone number.
But while consumers may be getting savvier
about skipping the 30-second spot, "smart targeting" and
the saturation of commercial messages comes at a price,
say some observers. "We're living in a prechewed world,"
says Matt Felling, media director of Center for Media
and Public Affairs in New York. In the fight for our
dollars and eyeballs, he says, the media has turned us
into commodities. Mr. Felling says we're all being
categorized and then directed toward thinking that
reflects our own. "Don't know what to think about the
world? Just turn on cable news," he says. "Americans are
being called upon to fight for their own independent
thought. We need to get back to kicking tires on
everything."
New network, new
ads
The CW, a merger of the soon-to-be-defunct
networks The WB and UPN, kicks off on Sept. 20 with a
two-hour special episode of "America's New Top Model,"
introducing what executives call the next wave in TV
ads: "content wraps," which are sponsored minimovies
that both tell a story and push the sponsor's
product.
The "cw's," as entertainment president
Dawn Ostroff calls them, will replace the regular
30-second spot and appear sequentially so that viewers
must stay tuned to the end of the hour to get the whole
story.
"We've had a great response from the
advertisers," says Ms. Ostroff. "They're always looking
for new ways to engage viewers and get their messages
across."
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MINI
ADS: 1-800-Got-Junk uses five-second
commercial spots to grab viewers'
attention. COURTESY OF
1-800-GOT-JUNK
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