Cross-Platform Finally Taking Shape
What were the challenges preventing execution? And what exactly were the benefits?
The challenges, it seemed, were aplenty. Agencies weren't yet built or suited to plan, purchase, or create for online and offline. This presented a major hurdle for the media companies able to offer cross-platform marketing. But the landscape has changed dramatically in recent years. Since the AOL Time Warner merger and those integration promises of yesteryear, more level-one marketers have digital or interactive experiences. Agencies and clients alike have people from all sides of media represented at the table. And the consumer has changed dramatically: They have ubiquitously adopted broadband, allowing for an always-on, ever-increasing dependency on the Web for information and communication.
The goals of many campaigns have changed, too. More clients are looking for consumer engagement with their Web sites; advertisers have begun to showcase their products and services in engaging ways. It's generally recognized that an incredible amount of value is placed on consumer interaction with products and services online. The capabilities we enjoy today were hardly possible 10 years ago, and the values that are so widely realized today were barely even recognized just five years ago!
Back then, if it wasn't an account or a sale, then the user was viewed as someone who simply came and went from their site. Today there is a much greater value attached to a plethora of measurement capabilities, like view-through, time spent, profiling, follow-ups, information gathered, or even interaction within the advertising unit. Web ad units have made great advancements, offering far more interactive and measurable features; Pointroll has built a whole company around just that capability. Over the years, all of the educational and evangelical efforts made from all sides of our industrial hexagon are really starting to take shape, and the payoff has become dramatic for everyone involved.
During the last couple of years, barely a conference keynote goes by without an acknowledgement of the fragmented media marketplace. These professionals consistently cite how complex the advertising world is and how difficult it is to get their message out through all the clutter.
Similarly, clients are publicly asking for great ideas, and agencies and publishers are quickly responding with great ideas that often work across multiple media platforms. I have to point out that simply including attractive pricing for these multiple media within a company's stable of offerings isn't the solution to the integration puzzle.
The industry needs to learn to build an idea or concept, tie the client's objectives from medium to medium, and then execute the plan. It may sound simple to some, but it's no small task. For example, the newly formed CBS Digital Media group recognizes the importance and sensitive nature of this task; they have dedicated personnel specifically to link sales force efforts between digital media and network television.
It's true that the marketing mix is a complex one today, but when the messages are woven together among the various media and appropriate target audiences, the clutter becomes a message that resonates with the consumer. Often by using the broad-mass reach of television coupled with the laser-like and highly relevant online impressions, today's marketers can achieve their goals in a one-, two-, or three-step plan.
Integrated media is finally alive, well, and answering the call for smart, innovative, and effective media planning. All you have to do is follow the plan.
Recent Online Media Daily Articles
-
FTC's Ohlhausen Questions Privacy Recommendations May 21, 6:05 p.m.
The Federal Trade Commission's 2012 privacy recommendations could unintentionally disadvantage smaller online ad companies, Commissioner Maureen ...
-
Subway's Comedy Promotes Brand, Content Strategy May 21, 2:43 p.m.
Setting a new bar for brands and their programming aspirations, Subway’s scripted comedy series, "The 4 ...
-
Study: Future of Social, Digital Shops In Doubt May 21, 1:48 p.m.
Companies talk a lot about fully integrated marketing strategies. One result may be the demise of ...
-
Google+ Needs Android To Climb Out Of Experimental Phase May 20, 9:24 p.m.
Marketers continue to view Google+ as a fledgling network requiring experimentation, although the company released a ...
-
AOL, Support.Com Settle Scareware Lawsuit For $8.5 Million May 20, 5:20 p.m.
Web company AOL and software vendor Support.com will pay $8.5 million to settle a lawsuit brought ...
-
Gmail Hangouts Disable Google Voice May 20, 3:23 p.m.
Google's new version of Hangouts for Gmail eliminates Google Voice features. The move is frustrating heavy ...
-
Digital Boost: Ziff Davis Acquires NetShelter May 20, 3:19 p.m.
Ziff Davis on Monday announced the acquisition of content network NetShelter from ad platform inPowered. Financial ...
-
LikeableAds.com Launches, With Focus On Social Media Ads May 20, 3:04 p.m.
To keep up with growing demand from Madison Avenue, the social marketing consultants at Likeable Media ...
-
Yahoo To Ramp 'Native' Ads On Tumblr May 20, 1:37 p.m.
With its $1.1 billion acquisition of Tumblr, Yahoo on Monday made clear that it plans to ...
-
Gigya Improves Marketing, Adds 21 Social, Tech Partners May 20, 9:15 a.m.
Social services startup Gigya on Monday is expected to announce the addition of 21 social and ...


Be the first to comment on "Cross-Platform Finally Taking Shape"
Leave a Comment