Digital Strategy Paying Off for Publicis !

PARIS — When Microsoft this month awarded a big chunk of its North American advertising account to Publicis Groupe, the Paris-based marketing company, the news felt like vindication for the chief executive of Publicis, Maurice Lévy.

In the tradition-bound advertising industry, Mr. Lévy has been one of the strongest advocates of new digital forms of marketing, and he has backed up his words by writing big checks. Five years ago, he spent $1.3 billion of Publicis shareholders’ money to buy Digitas, an Internet advertising agency, prompting rivals and some analysts to sneer that he had paid too much. Yet Mr. Lévy pushed ahead, adding other digital agencies, including Razorfish for $530 million in 2009. Now, as the advertising industry recovers more strongly than expected from a deep downturn, with digital advertising leading the way, Mr. Lévy is not shy about saying “I told you so.” The company’s growth has outpaced the market, he noted during an interview, and the digital skills it has acquired are helping it with technology-conscious clients like Microsoft, for which Publicis will manage more than $600 million in North American ad spending.

“We looked at digital and we invested in digital early on,” he said. “We then decided that the shift would be huge, so we invested massively. It happens that we were right.”

After a 2009 that many people in the advertising industry would like to forget, Publicis, which owns agencies like Saatchi & Saatchi and Leo Burnett, reported last month an 8 percent increase in its revenue for 2010, after adjustments for currency fluctuations and other factors, and a 30 percent gain in earnings. The recovery, in which other advertising companies have shared, has prompted a sigh of relief across the ad industry. So much for the idea, in vogue not long ago, that the combined effects of the digital revolution and the recession would hasten the obsolescence of paid-for advertising, as well as the media that rely on it for financial support. Instead of killing the ad industry, the digital revolution has proved to be one of its primary drivers of growth.

ZenithOptimedia, a media buying agency owned by Publicis, predicts that overall ad spending will rise about 5 percent a year worldwide over the next three years. Internet spending will rise a total of 48 percent during that period, the agency says. Mr. Lévy said he expected digital ads to account for a fifth of global spending within the next seven years, up from about 13 percent now.

“Advertising came out of the downturn much more strongly than expected,” Mr. Lévy said. “Can it continue to grow? My contention is yes.”

Digital business accounted for 28 percent of revenue at Publicis last year, putting it neck and neck with WPP Group, the world’s biggest advertising company. While WPP also invested in digital advertising, it did so less aggressively. But it too is reaping the benefits of the recovery, reporting solid gains in revenue and profit for last year.

“What we have seen since the beginning of 2010 — it was almost like somebody turning on a light switch,” said Martin Sorrell, chief executive of WPP, during a Deutsche BankSecurities conference in Palm Beach, Florida, this month.

Nevertheless, the advertising turnaround has been uneven. While some traditional media, like print, continue to lag behind, spending has bounced back strongly on television. And emerging markets, which barely stumbled during the crisis, continue to push ahead. Not everyone in the ad industry is convinced that big acquisitions are the right way to prepare for the digital future. Omnicom Group, the second-largest advertising company, has shied away from large-scale deals after overspending on digital agencies during the dot-com boom. John D. Wren, the chief executive of Omnicom, which is based in New York, has said it was unwise for ad agencies to commit large amounts of shareholders’ money on deals that turn them into technology wannabes, while Internet companies like Google and Facebookretain the real expertise. Despite a smaller exposure to digital business, Omnicom was not far behind Publicis last year in revenue growth, and ahead of some other industry leaders. Yet as the market improves, other advertising companies are redoubling their efforts to expand their digital capabilities. Havas, which like Publicis is based in Paris, recently announced plans to spend €750 million on acquisitions, with Internet advertising a main area of focus. Analysts say that even if agencies are playing catch-up with technology giants, it is important for them to appear up to speed with the latest technological developments.

“It’s becoming much more of a determining factor in terms of who wins the new business,” said Conor O’Shea, an analyst at Kepler Capital Markets in Paris. Of Publicis, he added: “Their strategy certainly looks like it’s working at the moment, though they did have to pay for it.”

For Mr. Lévy, there is a fringe benefit to the investments that Publicis has made in its digital business. They have bolstered his image as an expert on new media in France — despite being, at 69, well past the ordinary retirement age.

President Nicolas Sarkozy recently asked Mr. Lévy to help organize a gathering of policy makers and Internet company executives in connection with the Group of 8 summit meeting that is set for Deauville, France, in May. The first-of-its-kind meeting, dubbed “G-8 du Web,” is set to discuss issues like digital piracy, privacy and security.

There is also still work to do internally before Mr. Lévy retires — something he had planned to do at the end of this year, before the board asked him to stay for an indefinite period. Mr. Lévy acknowledged that Publicis was still working on breaking down “silos” and integrating digital specialists into the broader marketing mix, which includes agencies specializing in areas like advertising creation, media buying, public relations and market research.

Publicis also remains weaker than rivals like WPP in the other fast-growing area of advertising: the emerging markets of Asia, especially China.

Mr. Lévy said the proximity of Publicis to Internet companies could help with one of the next big challenges for the technology and advertising industries alike: how to harness the enormous popularity of social networking for marketing purposes. Even with more than 500 million users worldwide, for example, Facebook generated less than $2 billion in ad revenue last year, according to eMarketer, a research firm.

“I am pretty sure there is a business model that has yet to be invented that will generate a lot of revenue for the social networks,” Mr. Lévy said. “I don’t know if it will be as successful as people are expecting, or as successful as Google with search.” The unexpected strength of the advertising turnaround has bolstered the cash position of Publicis, and analysts wonder whether Mr. Lévy might be planning to make another big purchase. There has long been speculation, for example, that he was interested in a bid forInterpublic Group, the fourth-biggest advertising company worldwide, which is based in New York and has a strong digital business in the United States. While stopping short of ruling out such a deal, he questioned the logic at a time when Publicis was already enjoying the upswing in its fortunes.

For the moment, he said, the company was focusing on smaller, “targeted” deals. Since the beginning of the year, for example, Publicis has acquired four small agencies in Britain, each of which brings a specific area of expertise.

“Some acquisitions are interesting to look at because of the scale they would bring to Publicis,” he said. “But it would be problematic to spend two or three years just building scale.”

By Eric Pfanner via http://www.nytimes.com/

The 2011 CMO's Guide To The Social Landscape

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While social media’s acceptance by and importance to the consumer has ramped up rather quickly, those who believed it had relevance to digital marketing were thought to be making a mountain out of a molehill. Well, that molehill has turned out to be more like Everest. A social-media strategy has clearly become a marketing must-have. These days, marketing channels, platforms, and tools that lack a social component--some way for consumers to actively engage with your brand--are probably doomed to failure. But what worked this time last year might not work today, for this is a rapidly shifting landscape that must be mapped out regularly. With this in mind, CMO.com decided that our wildly popular "2010 CMO's Guide To The Social Landscape” needed a fresh look and up-to-date analysis. We turned, once again, to 97th Floor, the SEO and social media firm that developed last year’s chart, to help you determine which social media tools and channels are your best bet in terms of customer communication, brand exposure, traffic, and SEO. The result? Our second annual guide for 2011.


via : http://www.cmo.com/

The Web Passes Newspapers in Ad Spending For First Time ! YES!

Advertisers will spend more on internet ads in 2010 than newspaper ads for the first time, according to new estimates by eMarketer.

Online ad spending will grow 13.9% to $25.8 billion for the full year in 2010, while advertisers are expected to spend just $22.78 billion on print newspaper ads this year, down 8.2% from 2009, eMarketer estimates.

Total newspaper ad revenues from print and online ads are expected to hit $25.7 billion this year, still shy of the $25.8 billion advertisers will spend on internet ads. “Marketers are devoting bigger shares of their budgets to digital media as they see more customers shifting time toward the web,” said Geoff Ramsey, CEO of eMarketer. “It’s something we’ve seen coming for a long time, but this is a tipping point.”

Increased consumer use of the Web isn’t the only reason marketers are putting more dollars online, he added.

“The bad economy has actually accelerated the shift to digital advertising,” Mr. Ramsey said. “Online ads˜especially search ads˜are increasingly seen by many marketers as a more reliable bet than print ads, which are are often difficult to tie to a measurable financial result.” While total ad spending in the US is expected to bounce back for the full year, growing 3% in 2010 to $168.5 billion, newspaper spending is expected to continue its decline next year. eMarketer estimates that print newspaper ad spending will slide to $21.4 billion in 2011, down 6% from 2010. On the other hand, online ad spending is expected to grow 10.5% in 2011 to reach $28.5 billion. eMarketer benchmarks its US newspaper ad spending projections against data from the Newspaper Association of America (NAA), for which the last full year measured was 2009.

Apple Launches First IAd for IPad, for Disney's 'Tron Legacy !

NEW YORK (AdAge.com) -- The first iAd for iPad will launch this afternoon for the upcoming Disney blockbuster "Tron Legacy." This is a preview of what Apple's mobile ad format will look like on the iPad, and the only iAd planned for Apple's tablet for this year, an Apple spokesman told Advertising Age.

The format, designed to maximize the ad potential of Apple's tablet computer, will be launched widely in early 2011 when other ads start flowing onto the platform.

Like its iPhone and iPod Touch predecessors, the first iPad iAd is chock-full of the rich graphics, touch navigation and video native to apps. The full-screen "Tron" ad, which will run in iPad apps such as TV Guide, includes close to 10 minutes of video, images from the movie, a theater locator with showtimes, and a preview of the movie soundtrack with the option to purchase on iTunes without leaving the ad. For the first time in any iAd, users will also be able to send email straight from within the ad.

Apple's mobile ads have previously only run on iPhones and iPhone Touch devices. The new format for iPad comes just as the tablet is expected to be the "it" gift this holiday season, especially since the product recently went on sale at major retailers like Walmart and Target for the first time. There are so far more than 7.5 million iPads worldwide, though when iAd for the iPad launches early next year, the ads will only be seen in the U.S.

While Apple has not released the total iAd audience, there are more than 125 million of the company's mobile devices worldwide, though the iAd audience is only a fraction of that figure: iAds on iPhones are only available in the U.S., U.K. and France, though they're coming to Germany and Japan in 2011.

"Disney and Apple are excited to debut the 'Tron Legacy' iAd today as a special preview of iAd for iPad, which launches next year," said the companies in a statement for Ad Age. "iAd brings 'Tron's' pulsing energy and vivid graphic style to iPad's stunning display, creating a truly immersive ad experience."

Apple launched iAd--and threw the iconic computer maker into the advertising business--in April, after the company acquired mobile ad network Quattro Wireless early this year. While some marketers and agencies have become frustrated with Apple's control of the iAd production process -- and its expense -- others, such as Nissan are coming back for repeat campaigns.

Earlier this year, Apple told marketers that iAd would roll out on the iPad in November, but marketers have noted that the production of the ads, managed by Apple, is a time-consuming process, though an Apple spokesman says many of the early hitches have been ironed out. This is the second time that Apple has used a Disney film to demonstrate a new ad format. Disney's "Toy Story 3" was part of the initial launch of the iAd on iPhones and iPods in April. Mr. Jobs is Disney's largest single shareholder and serves on its board of directors. Research firm IDC projects iAd will close the year with more than 8% U.S. mobile ad market share, to Google's nearly 60%.

Which ads were most talked about in social media?

A campaign for Unilever's Axe brand for men generated the most online "buzz" this year, according to Zeta Interactive, which tracks comments on blogs, Twitter, message boards and other social sites. Nike's "Rise" spot with LeBron James placed second, and its "Human Chain" came in sixth, while Google's "Parisian Love" spot placed third.

The end of the year is bringing the usual looks back on Madison Avenue at the high and low points of the last 12 months. Now, with social media increasingly important as a marketing tool, those year-end lists are expanding to include assessments of the conversations consumers had in 2010 about ads they liked and disliked. Zeta Interactive, which mines blogs, comments on Twitter, message boards and posts in social media, has compiled its list of the ads of the year with the most “buzz.” (The company calls the online media mining technology it uses Zeta Buzz, hence its penchant for that word to describe the digital chatter.)

The Zeta top 10 for 2010 was completely different from the list from last year, with one exception: Snickers. The Mars candy was the only brand to turn up on both lists. Snickers was in first place in 2009, for its “Snacklish” campaign, and in seventh place this year, for its campaign featuring Betty White and Abe Vigoda that began with a commercial on Super Bowl XLIV. One brand, Nike, turned up twice in the top 10 for 2010, Zeta reported, after not making the top 10 last year. The Nike commercial about and with LeBron James, “Rise,” came in No. 2 and the Nike commercial called “Human Chain,” which was introduced as the Winter Olympics began in Vancouver, finished in sixth place. Footwear brands made a strong showing in the top 10, Zeta reported, taking 4 of the 10 slots. In addition to Nike’s two, a spot for Adidas, called “Fast Don’t Lie,” finished in ninth, and a commercial for K-Swiss, called “Tubes,” came in No. 10.

The brand that finished No. 1 on the Zeta list for 2010 is Axe, the men’s grooming brand sold by Unilever. Axe won for a typically irreverent campaign that urges men to clean themselves all over when they shower. The campaign is focused on a specific part of the male anatomy that has a nickname, which is represented in the ads by athletic equipment. The double entendre, alas, cannot be repeated in a family blog.

“Talk about something that’s gone viral quickly,” said Al DiGuido, chief executive at Zeta, referring to the Axe campaign. A principal reason for that, he added, is the fact the campaign is “pushing the envelope big-time in terms of innuendo.” Among the terms that turned up the most often in the online chatter about the Axe campaign, Zeta reported, were “funny,” “hilarious,” “online” and “viral.” The rest of the Zeta top 10 for this year is, in descending order: No. 3, Google, for “Parisian Love,” a spot that made its debut during Super Bowl XLIV; No. 4, “Smell Like a Man, Man,” the humorous campaign for Old Spice, sold by Procter & Gamble; No. 5, “Making It Right” for Domino’s Pizza, part of a campaign that apologized for the products that Domino’s previously sold; and No. 8, Red Bull, for a commercial titled “Way Back Home.”

via: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/

Is Social Media Marketing Integration Years Away?

Many social media marketers are working with the ultimate goal of integrating social into their company’s overall marketing efforts and gaining the experience to conduct the best social campaigns. But according to research fromSmartBrief conducted by Summus, they could have a long wait. The June 2010 survey found that, while a few companies at each stage of experience with social media marketing did have a fully integrated strategy, it wasn’t until companies had been working in social media for at least two years that even a quarter of respondents had fully integrated their programs into their business model. And integration was more common than more basic coordination only among companies that had used social media for at least three years.

Social Media Strategy Used According to US Companies, by Length of Experience, June 2010 (% of respondents)

Most companies using social media, however, have nowhere near that level of experience, according to the survey. Just 5.4% have been doing social media marketing for more than three years, and another 7.5% have been doing it for two to three years. Nearly half of companies (47.6%) have less than a year of experience, meaning it’s much more common for social media marketers not to be integrated or coordinated as part of the larger marketing picture.

Length of Time US Companies Have Used Social Media, June 2010 (% of respondents)

In its report, SmartBrief noted that its sample was self-selected and likely to be more familiar than average with social media, more interested and engaged with the channel, and also more proficient. This suggests that among the larger population of companies, integration efforts could be even further from complete.