Media consumption of the modern viewer looks very different than it did just a few short years ago. The COVID-19 pandemic, along with the preferences of both millennial and Gen Z cohorts, have accelerated a fundamental shift to digital streaming. Most young adults under 29 have never subscribed to a traditional cable package, and they likely never will.
What’s more, many of the new digital TV platforms are completely ad-free, and nearly half of the total streaming market is ad-free, according to Nielsen’s new Gauge streaming study. Among consumers aged 18-29, 6-in-10 consume the majority of their TV content via Netflix, Disney+, Hulu, Prime Video, and other streaming platforms. These stats reveal a sobering reality for advertisers, that up to 40% of total TV consumption for the 18-29 demographic is completely ad-free. This necessitates new ways for brands to reach consumers outside of traditional advertising.
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Brand integration, defined as the strategic placement or alignment of brands within entertainment, has emerged as one of the most useful tools for marketers to reach audiences today. Over half of brands planned to increase their spend on creator or brand integrations in the last year.
Brands looking to enter the space need a strategy to take full advantage of the plethora of opportunities available through brand integration. While one-off integrations can deliver massive reach and engagement, a holistic ongoing integration strategy, as part of a brand’s larger marketing mix, yields lasting entertainment relationships, more opportunities, and outsized results. Brand integration is further customized by the several tactical methods brands and agencies alike can use to execute an effective brand integration campaign.
The flow chart below outlines the varying tactics a brand can take to execute an integration strategy.
Outlining Tactics Brands Can Use to Integrate into Content:
A holistic strategy, employing various tactics above can provide brands big wins and cultural relevancy.
With the release of new video and collaboration tools, Cisco vetted each opportunity to match technological relevance with the narrative from each entertainment property. In television, the brand participated in technology-heavy shows like "Casualty," "Line of Duty," and "Behind Her Eyes." The brand also supported production companies such as Reese Witherspoon’s "Hello Sunshine" when the world went remote, helping them transition to a remote workspace. Each integration features Cisco’s logo on the technology or on viewers’ screen to reinforce the awareness of the brand and product.
Heineken too has employed many of these tactics to become Hollywood’s favorite beer. The brand saw integrations as a critical component to meet ad-free audiences where they were. The strategy included both proactive propping and paid, above-the-line deals to secure integrations across streaming, TV, digital content, and feature films. Main characters like Bobby Axelrod, from Showtime’s hit show "Billions," reach for a Heineken during pivotal moments in an episode, thus building further brand awareness, equity, and association. The campaign pays off, generating multi-million dollars of media value against hard-to-reach audiences who tend to avoid advertising.
Brand integration has become an essential component of every modern brand’s marketing mix. The brands that build holistic campaigns, utilizing every available brand integration strategy, reap the most benefits. Whether the goal is to raise awareness, build consideration, or launch new products, the deft use of brand integration allows marketers to tap pop-culture moments to build brand relevance.
Meilani, while I agree with most of what you are suggesting the reasons for going in these alternative directions are not so much that if you don't you can't reach young adults using TV but, rather, because many of the alternatives make sense in their own right and should be seriously considered. It was always true that 18-29s were vastly underdelivered by the TV networks and stations in terms of frequency relative to older consumers. So this is nothing new. Currently, this traditionally light viewing group has reduced its consumption of "linear TV" to a greater degree than most, but this does not mean that you can't reach them at all. It means that you will reach many of them rather infrequently and this situation may call for a special effort to build a brand's presence in the minds of such consumers and motivate them to buy via other means. Frankly, I think that the same point may apply to adults aged 40 or 55 or even 70.