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HOME • MANAGE SUBSCRIPTIONS • MEDIA KIT
When Multiple Personalities Threaten The Common Thread
by Chris Copeland, Friday, June 13, 2008, 9:46 AM

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Last month, I wrote about the apparent lack of a common thread in most advertising. Suddenly media properties are selling bundled solutions through a single salesperson. And while this checks the box for economies of scale, it provides little incremental value unless media efforts are bound together by something more substantial from the communications plan.

But what happens when the ties that bind are sliced apart by consumers?

I think advertisers have two challenges. First, there is clearly a persona problem in advertising today that must be addressed. During a conversation I was having last month with a leader from a search engine, we were discussing how search will act very differently in the future based on the device being utilized. He contended, and I agreed, that the experience one wants when searching on the desktop is very different from his or her mobile needs -- and again different from the experience one wants through TV. Therefore, the types of communication we provide should be different.

But what if the device used to search signals a shift in my interests, a shift based on the persona I'm in at a given time? For example, I am a father, husband, advertising executive, sports nut, pop culture junkie, borderline gambling addict and closet Bee Gees and Culture Club fan, amongst other things. I'll stop the list there before getting any more awkward.

On any given day, I will engage with the ESPN properties on every screen. From Sportscenter to ESPN.com to checking baseball scores on my cell phone, I am the perfect target guy for their advertising base. I am certain that I've been hit with advertising on all three screens from a single advertiser. What I am less certain of, is whether any advertiser has cracked the code on how to adjust to the modes -- or personality -- I am in at different times. It occurs to me that what I've likely seen are campaigns that are the same in consistency of offer and look, but are not consistent with my mindset or behavior when using those channels.

When you run retail search programs, you learn very quickly that Monday will always be a big day. Despite the increased broadband penetration in homes, the reality is people shop on Monday when they come back to work after being out in the stores and online over the weekend. Clearly, advertisers have an opportunity to adjust to this with promotion or advertisement. Yet rarely, if ever, outside of the holiday season, do you see companies shift their marketing to match consumer trends. Every trend about the consumer says a huge opportunity exists to encourage this behavior, and no one appears to be reading the signs.

We talk a lot about behavioral targeting and personalization, but what if, as the consumer, my persona is the red herring in the mix? I've told you through my behavior that I want products that can help me be a better golfer or channel my inner Gibb brother, yet those are two very different mes. I think the answer ultimately will be around better sequence understanding. When and where do I come into contact with your brand, and how many measurable touch points can you create with me?

Everyone frets over personal data -- and for good reason. Yet, if trust can be established and there's value in the exchange, most people will find a way to exchange data for personal gain. If you can watch a segment of your audience and understand the steps that get them down the funnel, can you as an advertiser be better positioned to create threads that solve your business challenges by harnessing that behavior?

Advertisers buy Thursday night TV for movies to get that last bit of mind space. However, studies by Google indicate that search behavior six weeks out can be a shockingly accurate predictor of box-office success. And still no major studio is approaching the medium differently based on how consumers are determining if they will show up at the box office or not on a given Friday night -- long before that Thursday night TV blitz.

And that's really the second and potentially damning problem when it comes to the thread. Consumers are giving off tells left and right, and yet advertisers have a set sequence for talking to people. You get your print and TV schedules, a bit of radio, and then support through digital and search. But clearly, consumer behavior in retail says "offer me incentive to shop with you come Monday," and searching tells us that movie consideration happens earlier now than ever before.

One of the most frequent questions asked of men in their roles as husband and father is, "Are you listening?" That's a fair question for the industry today.

Meet Chris Copeland at Search Insider Summit Utah!
Chris Copeland will be there giving a keynote entitled "The Interplay of Search and Social" on December 05 at 9:00 AM. Top executives will be there. Will you?
Register today and save.

5 comments on "When Multiple Personalities Threaten The Common Thread"

  1. Todd Follansbee from Web Marketing Resources LLC
    commented on: June 20, 2008 at 4:42 PM
    And how about the impact of Learning Styles as a profiling tool. Better understand that as well. It doesn't change in the same way a persona does but it is an interesting and valuable tool I use. Happy to talk more anytime. todd@webmarketingresources.net

  2. Michelle Cubas from Positive Potentials LLC
    commented on: June 19, 2008 at 5:22 PM
    Sounds like we must define our target audience in whatever audience you happen to be in at the time. Rather than attempting to mind read who might be there, the targeted audience is the group you join when you show up. I think we're making all this too complex. The impulse will drive people's needs at the moment wherever they are.

  3. Dave Kohl from First In Promotions
    commented on: June 13, 2008 at 3:27 PM
    Some great points, Chris. But using your ESPN outlet comments as an example, I would say that an advertiser shouldn't have to gauge the changing mood of its potential consumers. Just like conventional media, the advertising impression is still the king. The same advertiser can get in your face at various times of the week and via multiple channels, and in the ESPN instance, under the same umbrella. There is a primary beer sponsor on Monday Night Football - yet the majority of beer sales aren't until Thursday and Friday. As long as the advertiser has and continues the brand recognition, they can successfully reach their potential audience. If you start going to a varied campaign for the same product or service, it could actually reduce the recognition among the target audience.

  4. Paula Lynn from Who Else Unlimited; hollywood5459@verizon.net
    commented on: June 13, 2008 at 10:47 AM
    You are not different people at different times. If you get that wrong, then predictions will also be wrong. You are one persona with varied interests which overlap. And no, not only do your interests not sound off the wall from one end to another, but other folk are pretty much the same. Base line - premise rocky. By the way, years ago, I was poking Mondays to clients.

    Plus, you are then dispelling another major narrowscaping behavior targeting. Will you be buying diapers when you are checking sport scores? Really now.

  5. Martin Edic from Techrigy, Inc.
    commented on: June 13, 2008 at 10:14 AM
    Where can we find those Google behavior studies? Links in these posts please.

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CHRIS COPELAND
  • Chris Copeland is CEO of GroupM Search -- The Americas, a division of GroupM. GroupM Search is a global integrated search marketing specialist that includes Outrider, MEC Interaction, MindShare Search and MediaCom Search. Follow Chris on Twitter: @SearchBoss. Contact him here.


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