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2008 Marketing Trends - December 2007 |
Trends to Watch in 2008
Plus Micro Trends That Will Affect America in 2008
By
Bob Liodice
Published: December 17, 2007
See also: 10 (More) Trends for 2008
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MARKETERS HIT A ROUGH PATCH
2008 will be about the
economy and politics. Growth is slowing, fuel prices are high and
credit is tight. That's a difficult mix for marketers to face as
consumers will continue to pull in the reins as disposable income
tightens dramatically. With caution flags waving, marketers will keep
expectations and spending plans modest. Combined with lots of political
"tax-raising" rhetoric , there will be plenty of room for nervousness.
But political ad spending will more than make up for sluggish
brand-marketing investments.
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INNOVATION AND CREATIVITY RULE
Marketers' ingenuity
will continue to expand as the competitive marketplace challenges
brands to devise ways to reach their audiences online and via other
"out-of-the-box" avenues. Targeting consumers using unconventional
methods in creative places will be the gold standard for outstanding
creative. Marketers won't run away from traditional media -- but will
leverage technology and new media to accentuate message delivery to
consumers and customers. There is no turning back -- and creativity
will rule.
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GET SERIOUS ABOUT ACCOUNTABILITY
In ANA's 2007 marketing
accountability study, it was startling to find that, despite enormous
efforts, 42% of marketers were dissatisfied with ROI measurements and
metrics. In about half of the companies, marketing and finance don't
speak with one voice or share common metrics. Enough! Recognizing the
critical importance of accountability, companies will appoint a czar --
the chief accountability officer -- to lead a disciplined, internally
consistent approach to marketing measurements, metrics and
productivity.
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DIGITAL, DIGITAL, DIGITAL (AND PORTABLE TOO)
As Steve Ballmer
proclaimed at the 2007 ANA Annual Conference, all media ultimately will
be created and delivered digitally. Can anyone legitimately argue with
that? Naahhh. And the beat goes on in 2008. Digital offers richness in
information management, communication delivery, metrics -- and
portability. Simply look at the iPhone and similar devices to know
consumers will have all forms of media at their fingertips 24/7. The
challenge: Are marketers skilled enough to take advantage of this
rapidly changing landscape?
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THE 'BRAND SWARM'
Marketers will move
decidedly in the direction of DDB CEO Chuck Brymer's "swarm theory" --
the notion that people and their opinions coalesce to form critical
forces that massively influence marketplace ideas and concepts. "Swarm
theory" will elevate social networking to new levels, confirming the
immense impact that consumers have on each another. Marketers that
embrace this trend can form consumer brand "advocates" and drive brand
loyalty and trust to new heights -- if done responsibly.
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GETTING COMPENSATION RIGHT (PLEASE)
Compensation models
will evolve in 2008. Agencies and clients will work together to create
mutually fair value- and incentive-based approaches. The ANA 2007
Trends in Agency Compensation study showed that only 25% of respondents
were very satisfied with their compensation models. Marketers will pay
well for great ideas and superb media management. The key is to get
expectations right between agency and client. Perhaps Procter &
Gamble's just-announced compensation model is a blueprint of things to
come.
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NEUROLOGICAL MARKET RESEARCH
Going beyond
traditional focus groups and consumer surveys, market research will
embrace scientific approaches that literally tap consumers' brains to
learn how they neurologically respond to commercial messages and make
brand choices. The Four A's and ARF have begun researching this topic
in earnest with an intensive study, "On the Road to a New Effectiveness
Model." In 2008 we will start to see practical applications of these
insights as advertisers and shops begin to truly understand engagement.
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EMERGENCE OF THE 'RENAISSANCE MARKETER'
A new breed of
marketing professional is emerging -- individuals with a holistic view
of the world and extraordinary observational powers. These "renaissance
marketers" will be part humanist, part psychologist, part
anthropologist and part technologist. Cookie-cutter marketing will no
longer survive as marketers must take a broader view of the consumer
and customer. This includes the need to be socially responsible and to
embrace key trends such as green.
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THE POWER OF STRATEGIC ALIGNMENT
Marketers succeed when
brand messages are fully integrated and synchronized across all media
channels. That requires strategic alignment -- leadership that ties
everything together -- particularly when the forces of change can
potentially pull them apart. Strategic alignment is one of the most
important roles of the chief marketing officer, and In 2008 more CMOs
will ensure organizations are strategically aligned. Lead agencies will
be appointed to make sure all supporting agencies carry out the same
brand message.
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PRIVACY, PRIVACY, PRIVACY
In 2008, marketers will
become increasingly sensitive to privacy issues. With
"digital-intrusion" and identity-theft issues as paramount consumer
concerns, marketers must be extraordinarily careful to respect worries
of access to private information. This tug of war between consumer
privacy and information access will require marketers to work hard to
explain and justify the lifestyle benefits of highly individualized,
personalized commercial communications.
Source: www.adage.com
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