
How do you feel about your TV, your desktop and your mobile screens? No, how do you really feel?
At Cannes this
week, during the 58th Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, BBDO and Microsoft introduced new research that tries to get under our skins, into our heads, and behind even our emotions
about our multi-screen lives. The multi-national survey of 15,000 consumers in five countries tries to find how we connect emotionally to TV, Web and mobile.
In broad strokes, and accounting
for some important national differences, the BBDO/Microsoft study (using Ipsos) came up with a range of screen relationships. Advertisers need to understand these connections in order to leverage most
effectively the respective relationships we have to them. To wit:
We relate to TV generally as we do an "old friend." It is not so much a "boob tube" anymore than it is an "everyman" in the
living room that we regard as a passive occupant. The study warns, however, that this trust and comfort is variable according to nation. In more repressive regimes such as Russia and China, where TV
was a state-owned propaganda tool, the aura of distrust is there. The power of TV advertising to entertain and move is still there, but now can be transported across to Web and set top boxes,
Microsoft says.
The desktop Web and PC vehicle is seen like an older brother or sister, someone who teaches and we sometimes compete with. In repressive countries, users show much more trust
to the PC and Internet than they do TV. The BBDO/Microsoft team says that the Web is especially effective in advertising to younger audiences who like to share and show off their knowledge. Microsoft,
the maker of Xbox and Games for Windows, of course also emphasized the competitive edge of the platform and suggests advertising on this medium should also challenge and appeal to the competitive
streak in users.
Not surprisingly, we regard the mobile device most intimately. Users feel a kinship and closeness to this device. But because it is new in most regions and across most age
groups, the relationship is more uniform across demographics and regions. Mobile messaging has to acknowledge the personal nature of the platform. The creative and offers need to be relevant and
useful. "They also have to be intimate, surprising, unobtrusive, help the user fit in and belong," the researchers say. When it comes to tablets, the attributes of the other two screens tend to mix
in, so the advertiser has to be sensitive to which use case or mode of use the tablet owner is in.
The research, presented in Cannes by Microsoft's Marc Bressel, VP, Global Marketing and BBDO
North America's CMO Simon Bond, was designed to offer creative in advertising in an easy and accessible way to understand the "archetypes" of viewing different screens in order for them to adjust the
messaging accordingly. "When advertising is optimized for all of these screens, it could have the potential to attract ' the next billion customers,' especially when you look at places like India
where there are more than 100 million PC users or in China where there are three times as many mobile users," said Bond.