Archive for the ‘Marketing’ Category

Reframing saves lives

14th December 2010

Reading “Eating the Big Fish“, a book on planning and how small brands can compete with market leaders, I came across a great story about changing the world through reframing the problem.

Road safety campaigning in Britain in the ’80s wasn’t high on anyone’s radar. Most people were complacent about it and politicians felt they were doing enough. Road deaths were at around 6,000 a year, a figure in line with other countries.

When a group of BBC journalists were brainstorming possible television programmes, they challenged Nick Ross to make a boring subject interesting. You guessed it: road safety.

How did he do this?

Firstly, he reframed the concept of road safety from a statistic to an epidemic (the programme was called “The biggest epidemic of our times”). You can’t do much about a statistic, but an epidemic is a threat to the community that we can all face up to and fight.

Second, he realised he needed to bring the numbers to life. What does 6,000 people a year really mean? So, for the opening of the documentary, he asked the population of a typical British town with a population of 6,000 people to lie down, as if dead. “Every year”, he began, “a town the size of Wallingford dies on British roads”. He went from talking about an abstract number to talking about something that was completely unacceptable.

Thirdly, he changed the language. He shocked the authorities by no longer talking about “saving lives” but instead about “killing”: instead of 6,000, they should aim to only kill 4,000 a year.

He became Chairman of the National Road Safety Committee and in that position eventually managed to get his revised targets accepted. Tighter legislation and greater investment led to the number of deaths to come down to 3,500 at the turn of the milennnium. The momentum has been maintained with deaths down to 2,500.

The UK is now among the leaders in the world for road safety and as a direct consequence British mortality rates to the age of 50 are among the lowest in the world.

I think this demonstrates that understanding human behaviour is a great asset for communicators.

Movember at 3Sixty

1st December 2010

With only a small amount of persuasion Jon, Nick, Pete and myself decided to do Movember this year. Movember involves donating your face to raise awareness (and money!) for prostrate cancer. The four of us committed to growing a Mo(ustache) for the entire month of November – starting from clean shaven.

Start of Movember

After 4 weeks of careful cultivation each of us managed to grow a mo, and raise a grand total of £1,100!

Captain MainWaring's Moustache

Nick's growth

Iwein's tache

Pete's Mo

We even made it onto Bristol Culture Best Movember Efforts 2010. Ok, that wasn’t very hard, I just sent in some pictures.

So what have we learnt?

  • We made more money then I ever imagined, mainly thanks to Nick’s dad’s efforts.
  • Those of us who were married before are still married (as far as I know). I think our other halves secretly liked it and are looking forward to next year already.
  • The secret to raising money is pictures. This is all about making a fool of yourself, so pictures work.
  • Nothing works as well at raising money as a personal email to friends and family. I only did this a couple of days before the end. In hindsight, I should have done this earlier. I think the email worked better for all the pictures I had been posting on Facebook regularly(ish) before.
  • We did not communicate this to our clients effectively. At least that’s the conclusion I draw from not receiving any donations from our clients. There is one exception at Cofunds – he was growing a mo too and we saw him a few times during November. We used our company Twitter stream as the main – if not the only – channel to communicate this to our clients. In hindsight, we should have dedicated at least one company newsletter to this. I don’t know for sure, but I think this would have generated more donations.

The value of a good story

30th November 2010

I really enjoyed this slideshare on storytelling and advertising. This was presented by James Mitchell of BBH at the APG Battle of Big Thinking.

He’s only 24 – What have I been doing all my life?!

Utility: it’s the new creativity

15th October 2010

Ten years ago my business partner and I were pitching against each other. Chris and I weren’t partners then, we were competitors.

The clients liked my creative approach, (‘elegant simplicity’ they said). But they were equally impressed by Chris’s commercial thinking. So, in what is still an unusual display of client insight, they suggested awarding the job to both of us, provided we could work together.

We’ve been business partners ever since and the same logic of our respective approaches has prevailed: elegant simplicity allied to commercial thinking. In fact the combination has become stronger.

Over the last ten years, digital has evolved, as has our thinking, but the fundamentals of design simplicity have become even more salient. The world is more technologically complicated now than ever before and as a result people appreciate designs that make their life simpler. The menu structure on my television baffles me. Why? We all want technology, we all understand that it can help, but we’re often frustrated by the time and emotional investment in dealing with it.

The effect of simplicity is to make things look effortless or inevitable. What irony, then, to discover how hard it is to achieve. But let’s not confuse simplicity with arbitrarily removing stuff or minimalism. Giles Colborne’s Simple and Usable (recommended reading by the way) sums it up with a quote:

“Simplicity does not mean want or poverty. It does not mean the absence of any decor, or absolute nudity. It only means that the decor should belong intimately to the design proper, and that anything foreign to it should be taken away.”
Paul Jacques Grillo, Form, Function and Design

Digital tools or apps are (or, at least, should be) the inevitable consequence of a world dominated by complexity. Complexity creates only confusion or, worse, anxiety. There are expert users to whom such complexity appeals, but most people crave simplicity.

Apps force brands to focus on the utility aspect of their marketing. How easy is it for the customer to use? It’s revealing that people who experience brands in this way demonstrate a clear preference for them. You were useful, you helped them solve a problem. You were part of the solution, instead of the problem. That works better than just communicating a simple (simplistic) message.

When starting a digital project, we often invite a broad team of people with different skills to ruminate upon the brief. People from disciplines such as information architecture, user experience, user interface and graphic design, copywriting, back end and front end code, search, data, to name just a few. Everyone looks at the problem through an individual lens. It surprises me how frequently one very important consideration is omitted.

‘What’s the point?’

I’m not trying to be existential, just clear. What do we want the user to do or get out of the experience?

Let me give you a couple of examples:

Google
Remember search engines before Google? They called them portals and you could check weather, stocks, shares… all stuff THEY wanted you to do or see. Then Google came along with a solitary search box. That was it. They got it. That was as much choice as a person could need. Where the web offers way too much choice, Google understood the power of simple utility.

Apple
Their user interface (UI) design is so intuitive you barely need a manual. The iPhone is a wonderful example of industrial design. The actual object only has four physical buttons. The real beauty of its design lies in the UI.

You might be thinking ‘yeah, but that’s not creativity.’ I disagree. Both these examples have something in common. Simplicity and utility. Google and Apple understood the point of the project, what people wanted from it; then they designed something innovative, removing anything that didn’t contribute to its primary function. The result is creative – even, in the eyes of most users, beautiful.

Don’t get me wrong, pure play, passive enjoyment or entertaining stuff can stir emotions, a powerful marketing tool for sure but, ultimately, they’re transient. Providing utility connects a brand in an emotional way because you are helping someone achieve something, contributing to lives in a constructive way and removing some of the burden of increasingly complex lives. What an irresistible association for a brand.

For me, the really creative, hardworking and profitable digital work is based on a useful idea, simply executed.

Consumers want purpose-inspired brands, claims Publicis Worldwide COO

13th October 2010

Richard Pinder makes a really good point about consumers in his article in Campaignlive:
“A world where we think it’s just about producing stuff and selling stuff is a world that will rapidly find the wheels coming off as the next generation comes through and says ‘I don’t need more handbags, more this, more that, I don’t aspire to having double what my parents had because they have too much anyway’.”

Pinder added that in articulating their clients’ messages agencies need to focus on the idea of utility to the consumer.

“You really have to be looking at how we are going to build content that people are going to want to interact with and not just feel is disposable and transient, forgettable.
How many ads have you seen that are forgettable in the last 24 hours?

“Anything that is transient and here today gone tomorrow is rejected by the consumer these days. They don’t want to know. They want to know what’s behind what you’re doing.

“If we want customers to care about our ads and our communications we’ve got to make them have utility.”

Personally, I think this is a man 3Sixty could or should work with. Chapeau sir.

Word of mouth

27th September 2010

This morning I had a conversation with my physio.
These are getting more frequent as I get older!
He said it had been a tough couple of years.
Despite being the most well known and respected in the area.

I asked him
‘Where do you advertise’?

He said most of his competition had stopped using Yellow Pages and that he was doing the basics online.
His site had cost him a couple of grand and he wasn’t interested in PPC or search unless it was free.

He said ‘most of my business is word of mouth’
Attending local functions. He is known in circles like rugby, football. Etc.

It occurred to me that he was having conversations with people that already know him.
He was preaching to the converted.
The large untapped audience that don’t know him, probably never will.
He wasn’t using word of mouth online.

A half descent social media strategy would mean he was having conversations with bigger audiences.
An audience that have chosen to look for information about physiotherapy and are probably in need of one.

He’d mistaken social media as something complex and costly, that other; younger people do.
Instead of seeing it as a natural extension to his strategy of word of mouth.

So consequently it is something other people are doing.
I suspect the toughest years may lie ahead.
I hope not. I need him now more than ever!

What will make peoples lives just a little bit better?

24th August 2010

Found this post on Hugh Garys’ site (which I really like). The idea that little things make a big difference chimes nicely with how we feel at 3Sixty.

Time magazine reinvents the magazine

11th June 2010

The already impressive TIme magazine designed for tablets is improving. If I were a magazine editor I’d be very excited right now.

Begrudging the hype

10th June 2010

At 3Sixty, we’ve each been taking turns to bring one of the new iPads home and put it through its paces. What’s apparent, from my evening with the new Apple device, is the hype is – rather annoyingly – entirely worthwhile.

Eloise (7), Thom (3) and Emily (5) get their first look at the iPad.

My children tried it first and were captivated by the huge screen and tactile interface. Tilting the unit to steer around a race track in 3D, or flicking licorice torpedoes about for the dodo and his friends in Atomic Antelope’s Alice in Wonderland. In short, they adored it, and it was difficult to finally pack them off to bed after half-an-hour’s exploration and discovery.

The other people I really wanted to try the iPad were my 60+ in-laws, who live just… next… door…

Anyway! Being “the only geek in the village,” so to speak, means you get lumbered with tech support for the entire family and surrounding area. Now, my in-laws are pretty good with a computer, all things considered, but they certainly don’t enjoy the process of using one. (You can probably guess the operating system…)

Not so with the iPad — something I fully expected as soon as the rumours about Apple’s planned “iSlate” began circulating many months ago. I have never seen either of my in-laws smile when using a piece of technology, but they were equally as smitten with the iPad as my kids.

They loved the huge, pin-sharp screen, as well as the way the device feels in your hands; not a single utterance of “heavier than I expected” was heard.

However it’s also worth pointing out that my in-laws very quickly recognised the iPad isn’t an all-singing, all-dancing replacement for their current laptop; quite far from it, in fact. They can’t load their photos onto it easily, nor their music. They can’t watch films on it without a lot of manual faffing around on a separate machine before-hand — not likely to happen with two people enjoying their retirement.

Let’s be honest; the process of having to plug things into other things, make sure they’re talking to each other by whatever mystical, opaque process is necessary, then find and literally drag a long list of serial numbered files across this connection still isn’t as easy as it should be, regardless of how highly Apple thinks of its iTunes software.

But the fact remains that the iPad has really captured the imagination of the whole gamut of computer users. Would I have one? No. But then I already have a desktop, a laptop, a netbook, an Xbox 360, a Wii, an iPod nano and an excellent Android phone to keep me connected and entertained whenever and wherever I want.

Would my in-laws want one, though? Yes, I think they might.  And I’m still certain it would be an excellent fit, once they get used to the media-related shenanigans.

3Sixty creative day

21st April 2010

We’re running a bit of an experiment today at 3Sixty….our first ‘creative day’ run by Patrick Collister (who has been working with Jon as a mentor since last summer).

Back in November 2009 Jermey Bullmore wrote in Cmapaign:

The successful agencies will be those that recognise that departments remain necessary for recruitment, training and craft morale; but that great campaigns are never created by a process of baton-passing between departments, but emerge from small groups of clever and inventive people who respect each other almost as much as they respect themselves.

At 3Sixty we do our level best to follow Jeremy’s advice and where possible get everyone – including the developers! – involved in the generation of ideas for our clients.

The thinking behind today is to get better at working as a creative team across disciplines.

The plan is to split into two teams and work on two or three briefs, with the day interspersed with some inspiration from Patrick on creative thinking. At the end of the day the teams will present back their ideas.


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