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  • Nov
  • 1

Which Media Deliver the Best RoI?

Which_Media_Delivers_the_best_RoINo sooner had we reported recent research from ThinkBox which claimed that TV was the medium which delivered the greatest return on investment than that research is contradicted by a new study.

ThinkBox’s research, which analysed campaigns over a 5 year period, found that TV returned £1.70 in profit for every £1 spent, compared to £1.48 for radio, £1.40 for press, £1.06 for online static display and £0.45 for outdoor.

In addition,the study found that TV was the best medium for delivering sales uplift – 2.5 times more effective than it’s nearest rival, press.

However, the results of GfK’s Media Efficiency Panel, released last week, drew very different conclusions.

Their research tracked customer response to 8 major cross-media advertising campaigns from FMCG brands that ran in the last year, across a panel of 7,500 consumers. Sales uplift was measured in the 2-4 week period after the campaigns had finished.

Their findings contrasted sharply with those of Thinkbox’s study. In this case, TV delivered the worst RoI of the media measured – just 43p for every £1 spent.  The best performer was online activity, which delivered an average 75p for every £1 spent, following by press at 66p and Outdoor at 53p.

Online was also found to deliver the best sales uplift – 9% on average as compared to print’s 8%, TV’s 7% and outdoor’s 6%.

So how can 2 seemingly thorough pieces of research draw such widely differing conclusions? The differing scopes and methodologies offer some clues.

For example, ThinkBox’s research incorporated only static display: GfK’s included more effective formats like online video advertising and search, which would have boosted effectiveness scores. GfK’s research only measured short term RoI, measured over 2-4 weeks, something which is going to favour more responsive ad formats such as search and online display. In addition, GfK’s study focused on FMCG only, a sector which already heavily invests – and perhaps over-invests as the research would suggest – in TV. And finally, one could cynically suggest that one survey was sponsored by a body responsible for promoting commercial TV advertising and the other study was conducted in association with Google, a body with a vested interest in online marketing, so the results are compromised by their sponsors.

In truth, arguments about the absolute effectiveness of any medium are rather too general and largely unhelpful. Campaigns rarely happen in one medium, and it’s exceptionally difficult to isolate the impact of any particular medium when all media will be playing differing, but mutually supportive, roles in the purchase process. Understanding how media can work together to optimum effect is the question that most marketers should be striving to find the answers to, and it’s here that GfK’s research does unearth some interesting insights. 

For example, their findings did demonstrate that online activity can deliver substantial reach – in this case, 34% of their panel.  This doesn’t rival TV, with a 73% reach, but it is close to that delivered by press (39%) and exceeds that delivered by outdoor (29%).

But perhaps the most interesting finding was the incremental reach that online delivered. Between 25% and 63% of individuals exposed to at least one online ad were never exposed to the respective TV advertising and 46% of people exposed to YouTube and other online videos ads had no contact with the corresponding TV ads for that campaign.

In this case, online activity was not only found to play its traditional ’sharp end of the purchase funnel’ role of turning interest into action, but to expand the reach of campaigns into hard-to-reach, particularly younger, audiences who tend to escape traditional media activity.

The lesson from these findings is to think digital at the very earliest stages of planning – to understand how it can enhance and extend the reach of your campaign to audiences who may well not see any other channel executions – and not see it as purely a support for traditional media.

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By: Graham Painter

  • Oct
  • 17

Who’s Spending What and Where? Latest Media Spend Trends

It’s the conundrum facing all marketers, and it’s one that’s becoming ever more pressing as marketing becomes increasingly results focused – how should I be proportioning my marketing spend to achieve maximum return on investment?

Of course, the answer is different for every product and brand, but one useful input into this process is ‘what is everybody else doing?’ and it’s here that Ofcom’s recently released Communication Report for 2011 can help.

The report, produced annually, examines a wide range of communication trends from media consumption habits to smartphone adoption. It also includes figures from a wide range of sources which analyse advertising spend by media from 2005 to 2010. Here are the key findings:

- Spend on internet advertising, including search, display and classified, has more than trebled proportionally since 2005, from 8% of overall spend to 26% in 2010.

In the first year of the recession, between 2008 and 2009, it was the only spend category which grew in absolute terms, overtaking TV to become the largest single spend category in 2009 – a position it retained (but only just) in 2010.

Throughout the 5 year period, most of the growth has been driven by increased search spend, which has not only grown in absolute terms each year between 2005 and 2010 but has also grown as a proportion of overall online spend – from 56% in 2005 to 61% in 2009.

Internet_Advertising_Spend_by_Category

Expenditure on search advertising grew yet again between 2009 and 2010, by 9%, but for the first time its share of internet ad spending fell – from 61% to 57%. This proportional fall was driven by the phenomenal growth of online display advertising. In 2010, online display ad revenues increased by 33%, driven entirely by the growth in Facebook advertising. Facebook accounted for over 41% of all online display advertising in 2010. Online advertising expenditure across other media actually fell by 3%. 

- So which sectors have been losing out as marketers shift their budgets online?

Well, it’s not TV, which has proven to be exceedingly resilient. TV advertising revenues enjoyed their best year last year since 2005, buoyed by the World Cup, and TV still commands 26% of overall spend (compared to 25% in 2005).

The main losers have been newspaper and magazine advertising. The former is down from 30% of overall spend in 2005 to 21% in 2010 and the latter down from 12% to 7% in the same period.

UK_Advertising_Expenditure_by_Category

Given the sharp falls in circulations seen by newspapers in particular, these falls in spend are hardly surprising. What is frustrating for the publishing industry is that they haven’t been able to reap the full benefit of the growth in online display advertising as Facebook has stolen their thunder. It’s no wonder that the advent of the tablet computer is seen by many in the industry as a means to claw back not only subscription revenues but ad revenues too.

- So are mobile ad revenues growing as fast as publishers would like them to? Well, they’re growing rapidly, but from a very small base.

Mobile advertising revenues almost doubled in 2010 from £36.7m to £83m but the mobile advertising market ended the year only 2% of the size of the overall internet ad market.

Search based advertising drove most of this growth from a volume perspective, growing by 172% in 2010 and growing its share of overall mobile marketing from 54% to 66%.

Mobile display advertising may be losing share, probably due to the limitations of screen size when viewing advertising on mobile phones in particular, although ads do dominate more page real estate than their PC-viewed competitors.  The growth of the tablet market, both through the established market leading iPad and new entrants such as the Kindle Fire may do something to redress the balance.

The other interesting fact about mobile advertising is that its client base is becoming broader. A discipline dominated by the entertainment and media sector, accounting for 66% of spend in 2009, is now much more diversified with sectors such as Finance, Consumer Goods and Automotive seeing significantly increased spends.

Top_5_Mobile_Advertising_Sectors

In general, Ofcom’s report shows that brands are still probably more wedded to ‘old media’ than perhaps they should be, particularly premium and luxury brands whose affluent consumers are more likely than the mass of the population to be consuming their media online, be it via their PC or mobile device. Progressive brands such as Burberry are reported to be as spending as much as 60% of their on digital – well above the average.

But offline media still has a role to play in delivering impact, tangibility and in being ‘interruptive’ in a way that consumers are accustomed to and comfortable with.

It’s not all about conversion at the bottom end of the purchase funnel – offline media can play a vital and very effective role in driving prospects into the funnel in the first place. The key is to understand your audience, what media they consume and how, understand your product and the best environment in which to showcase it and understand exactly what your competitors are doing. Of course, collecting data on what is driving sales is key – but as you’re likely to be recording only what is happening at the sharp end of the purchase funnel it’s just one of the factors you should be taking into account.

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By: Graham Painter

  • Oct
  • 17

TV Delivers Greater RoI Than Any Other Media

TV_Advertising_Delivers_Greatest_RoINew research published last week claims that TV advertising delivers a greater return on investment than radio, press, online static display or outdoor.

The study, commissioned by Thinkbox, the marketing body for commercial TV in the UK, found that TV advertising returned £1.70 in profit for every £1 spent compared to £1.48 for radio, £1.40 for press, £1.06 for online static display and just 45p for outdoor.

Despite the recession, TV advertising’s RoI was found to be 22% higher than it was 5 years ago, due to the fact that its effectiveness had remained unchanged during a period in which its prices had fallen. 

When it came to generating sales uplift, the study found TV advertising even further ahead of the pack – 2.5 times more effective than its nearest rival. Press advertising was found to generate just 37% of the sales uplift of TV, radio 19%, online static display 15% and outdoor 9%. 

In addition, the research found that TV advertising also increased the effectiveness of other media – radio effectiveness was observed to increase by up to 100% if booked with TV, and branded search effectiveness increased by up to 35%. 

So what should premium and luxury marketers make of these findings?

Well, there are some specific anomalies in the research which raise questions marks. Why was only ‘online static display’ analysed, rather than the much more effective interactive versions?  And why was outdoor advertising analysed in isolation when, often, it’s main role is to support campaigns in other media? 

It’s also a little frustrating that the research, despite analysing over 3,000 campaigns across 9 advertising sectors, has only resulted in consolidated results, and that the findings have not been split out by sector. 

And, of course, a slight scepticism always has to be applied when an industry body’s commissioned research miraculously, and unsurprisingly, discovers that its form of advertising is highly effective. 

But despite such suspicions, many of ThinkBox’s findings make sense.

Ofcom’s recent Communication Report found that despite the plethora of competing media activities, people are now watching more TV than they did 5 years ago – perhaps driven by social budgets being trimmed in the recession. During the same period, radio consumption has remained largely static and press consumption has declined marketedly.  As a result, it’s likely that TV advertising effectiveness has increased during a period when that of it’s rivals has at best remained static. 

However, for us, the key takeout from this is the role that offline advertising, be it in TV, radio, press or outdoor, still has to play in the media mix. 

The decision on which medium (or media) to chose for any given campaign will depend on a mix of factors dependent on audience, environment, product and message, but offline media is still the most effective way to take a brand’s message to mass audiences. 

And above the line media still has a vital role to play in driving prospects into the top of the purchase funnel, allowing other disciplines, such as search, to become more effective in converting that interest into actual purchases. 

In an era when marketers in all sectors are having to become increasingly RoI focused, disciplines which deliver easily observable return on investment are hoovering up ever greater proportions of marketing spends. The danger in this approach is that spend gets focused at the narrower ‘conversion’ end of the funnel because that’s where RoI can be best observed. The lack of above the line spend means that fewer prospects get driven into the funnel in the first place – RoI then drifts as that ’sharp end’ spend has to work ever harder to convert fewer prospects. 

Research such as that commissioned by ThinkBox is an invaluable tool in a marketer’s armoury when justifying spend others may deem to be frivilous but marketers know is playing a vital role in creating sales uplift and profitability.

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By: Graham Painter

  • Aug
  • 10

27% of UK Adults Own Smartphones, 2% Own Tablets and Other Useful Facts from Ofcom

Ofcom_Communications_Market_ReportOfcom have just published their latest Communications Market Report, a comprehensive survey of the UK population’s communication and media consumption habits.

Over the coming weeks, we’ll be discussing Ofcom’s key findings, specifically in terms of smartphone penetration and usage, trends in social media and the latest statistics on the split of advertising spends by channel, but initially we thought we’d focus on giving you the headline facts we’ve gleaned from the report’s 341 pages.

Smartphone Adoption and Mobile Internet Usage on the Rise

27% of adults in the UK now have a smartphone. Those that own one are most likely to be younger, male and from the ABC1 social grades.  Apple’s iPhone still has the largest market share but Blackberry handsets are more popular amongst younger users.

This growth in smartphone adoption is clearly driving increased mobile internet usage – in Q1 2011, 28% of adults claimed to have used their mobile phone for internet access, up from 22% on Q1 2010. Although the incremental growth of mobile web usage in the past 12 months is not dramatic, the increase in data usage observed by the mobile networks has been – trebling in the past 3 years. Those that own smartphones clearly like to make the most of the functionality they offer.

Regular App Downloading – a Niche Pursuit

Whilst many companies focus their mobile strategies around apps, Ofcom’s figures suggest that regular app downloading is a relatively niche pursuit.

Whilst 47% of adult smartphone users have downloaded an app, only 1 in 5 do so regularly.  This regular app downloading market is skewed towards males in the 25-34 age bracket.

Tablets and Ereaders – Low Penetrations But Potential to Grow

2% of the UK’s population own a tablet computer, with Apple’s iPad accounting for 95% of this market. Ofcom found that tablets have plenty of room for growth but at present are not as popular as ereaders, which are owned by 4% of the UK population.

Interestingly, the figures would suggest that ereaders could prove to have more universal appeal across age brackets – the adoption levels observed were fairly even across age groups and only fell away amongst the very oldest demographics.

The Online Dominance of  Google and Facebook Continues

Google is the most popular site in the UK by reach – 79% of active internet users have visited its homepage – but Facebook dominates time online, accounting for 169m hours in April 2011 or 2 1/2 hours for everyone in the UK. The site in 2nd place, eBay, accounts for 30m hours – less than 1/5 of Facebook’s total.

48% of the UK population now have a social networking profile. 1 in 5 hours spent on the internet in April was spent on  social networking sites and 90% of that time was spent on Facebook.

Google may have launched Google+, but it’s going to take a herculean effort to break Facebook’s stranglehold on the social networking market.

Groupon Drives Growth of Coupon and Reward Sector

Visitors to coupon and rewards sites have increased by 25% in the past year. In April 2011, 15m people in the UK visited them.

Much of this growth has been driven by the phenomenal success of Groupon, which in the 12 months to April has seen growth of almost 7000% in its unique audience. By April 2011, it was reaching 16% of all UK internet users.

But Despite All These Distractions, We Still Love Sitting in Front of the TV

Despite the plethora of media at our disposal, it seems that sitting in front of the TV is still as popular as it always was.  Adults in the UK spent 242 minutes daily watching TV on a TV set, up by 23 minutes on 2005.

Over the last 10 years, overall TV consumption has proven to remarkably resilient – actually showing modest growth in the period. And no decline is likely anytime soon – whilst 3D TVs are yet to take off (c1% of sales in 2010) internet-enabled TVs are proving to be popular with 1m sold (about 10% of the new TV market) in 2010.

New Communications Are Being Adopted Faster Than Ever

If you thought the pace of change was increasing in terms of adoption of new technology, you’d be right.  Ofcom found that the amount of time it took new technologies to reach the tipping point of 50% penetration was rapidly decreasing. So, mobile phones took 15 years to reach this point, Digital TV and Broadband 7 years but social media took only 4 years. Smartphones are expected to take only 5.

The challenge for marketers is to keep up with this rapid pace of change, to understand which technologies are relevant for their audience and brand and to explore ways in which they can enhance the delivery of their message.

If you’d like to read Ofcom’s Communications Market Report for yourself, it’s available to download here.

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By: Graham Painter

  • May
  • 8

Product Placement – Exciting Opportunity or Waste of Money?

Channel 4 Announces Product Placement Deal with New Look

Channel 4 Announces Product Placement Deal with New Look

On 28th February, Nestle became the first brand to benefit from the new rules on paid-for product placement on British TV when its Dolce Gusto Coffee Machine appeared on ITV’s This Morning.

But over the past couple of months, annoucements of further product placement deals have been few and far between.  TRESemme have signed up with Sky’s Next Top Model and New Look with T4’s new Fashion Show, but both deals involve a combination of programme sponsorship and product placement. 

In addition, a recent YouGov poll on the subject shows TV audiences at best indifferent and at worst openly hostile to the thought of product placement in British shows.

Does this underwhelming response from brands and consumers mean that product placement isn’t as attractive an opportunity for brands as some thought?

Probably not.  The slow pace of progress is most likely down to a number of factors.

Firstly, there is a limited universe for product placement deals in the UK.  Of course, it has to be British produced, which means that broadcasters such as Channel 4 and 5, which rely to a significant degree on imports for their content, offer only limited opportunities.  In addition, children’s programming, news, current affairs, religious and consumer advice shows cannot participate. The same applies to the biggest producer of homegrown programming, the BBC.

In addition, many of the brands that drive the product placement channel in markets like the US and Australia are prohibited by Ofcom rules - including food brands high in fat, salt or sugar. Drinks and tobacco brands are also prohibitted.

But the small number of confirmed placements is most likely a reflection of the caution of producers, broadcasters and advertisers faced with a possible backlash from audiences if they get things wrong, and from the lead times involved in the production of much original programming. Much of this caution may be misplaced considering that UK audiences are already familiar with product placement in the large number of US imports currently screened by UK channels.

So is product placement a viable strategy for premium and luxury brands? Yes – the brands scrambling for even a fleeting association with the James Bond franchise shows the power the right association can have.

And while British TV doesn’t necessarily have characters of the same profile and power as Bond, product placement can be highly cost effective – Nestle’s initial This Morning experiment delivered up to £500,000 worth of coverage value for an outlay of less than £100,000.

With audiences increasingly able to avoid TV advertising, product placement offers a cost effective way to reach mass audiences, increase brand awareness and, via an association with a programme, character or personality much-loved by its audience, increase brand affinity.

But Ofcom’s rules are tight – placements mustn’t be given undue prominence and must be editorially justified. Hence, brand’s are best to consider additional ways to leverage their product placement – like New Look and TRESemme have done – rather than rely on it to deliver significant value unsupported.

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By: Graham Painter