None of that has happened! Let's look at the world as it really is today:
The myth of TV’s death:
- Actually, TV viewing hours are continuing to increase.
- People today spend more on their TV’s than on any other consumer electronics product – and have on average one TV more than the number of people in the house.
Among young people, TV is even more than ever the dominant media. Youth TV viewing hours continue to increase. The
Time online has remained constant at an average 20 minutes/day/household between 2000 and 2005.
The REAL revolution is in our consumption of CUMULATIVE media.
In 1945 – 4.4 hours/day.
In 2005 – 8.8 hours/day.
- a simple trip to Best Buy will show that electronic devices simply do not interface with each other and manufacturers have no interest in moving towards compatibility,
- consumers neither want nor trust bundled providers,
- over 50% of the 200 million + VCR’s in the US are right now flashing “12:00” – because people won’t spend more than max 10 minutes to figure something out before they give up and move on – and simple, seamless universality is not even being worked on yet.
WE HAVE YET TO DISCOVER WHICH MEDIA ARE BEST AT ADDRESSING WHICH COMMUNICATIONS ISSUES.
There are only two forms of media which really are declining.
If we agree that today’s empowered consumer ‘chooses’ to allow the brand into their lives and chooses what messages they allow in, we also must allow that increasingly the relationship is moving away from being passive to being an active choice – indeed, choice in a layered environment is paramount (as the music industry has reluctantly learned) and the era of bundled services at fixed prices is ending – the era of choice in unbundled services, at yet to be determined market prices is fast approaching.
The "A La Carte" era - the era of choice, and the era of layered consumption.
How does a marketing communicator break through? With a hammer?
No. Today's consumers aren't what our parents were - relatively trusting of authority, corporations and television as well as media in general. They believed what they heard on TV and read in the papers - and they believed the words of authority figures who they generally aligned themselves with.
If there really is a revolution in media today, it's not in the vehicles themselves - it's in the hearts of the recipients, who are armed with instant information, instant feedback from peers and trusted sources, instant comparative information, and more competitive sources than at any point in history. They have hugely effective bullshit meters with a low tolerance for messages that aren't believable, lack validity or try to manipulate them - and they can punish brands that let them down.
This, combined with the fact that today's consumers of simultaneous media will only choose to tune in to messages that (a) they directly ask for or (b) they allow to reach them because they connect emotionally or in terms of identity means that create demand through blitz advertising - we need to dig deeper - to engage.
1 comment:
I think you should revisit this topic as things have obviously changed drastically.
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