All content provided by Adrants and MarketingVOX
ad:tech blog ARCHIVES

The Five Big Ideas

Not all ideas are created equal. The biggest idea at AD:TECH is freeing the brand. Consumers are already talking about you. They are manipulating your brand and if you are doing a good job they are making it their own. The world has gone beyond brand loyalty to use of a brand as an identifier in personal expression. This has an authenticity that cannot be imposed or created inorganically.



The number of blogs has doubled in the last nine months, and Tony Conrad asks the question, "What are you doing to empower your customers to express your brand?"

He suggested that advertisers make their song, logo and content available for fans to manipulate and extend. He showed two commercials - one created by the agency and one created by a fan - and the fan one rang true. User creativity in new media cannot be stopped. In the digital world, it is all available to everyone. And for the most part people do great things with it.

Advertises that proactively engage with the consumer put a human face to their brand. Conrad recommends that they "Get in front of it and trust." It is still stunning to ad folks that people enjoy creating materials about and discussing products. But it has been my belief that it's more fun to create culture than to consume it. NIN has allowed anyone to remix their latest tracks. My old high school English teacher, Mr. Retman, said that the thirty second commercial was the sonnet of the Twentieth Century. The limits of the form dictated the creativity. The desire for free form content is the desire to cast off those restrictions.

The dichotomy of freeform and relevance is not as much of a stretch as one might think. Consumers are creating content and in doing so self-selecting into groups. The ability to reach these groups effectively is the next step in targeting.

Panelists thought search will be dominated by the big three. There was a prediction that buying words has flat-lined and cannot be taken much further. The interesting areas have to do with reaching smaller more specific audiences. The marketplace seems to have a cautious buzz. Marketplaces controlled by the consumer in these self-selected groups are interesting.



for more stories on related topics:
SF 05, Track 1 (3 stories)
MarketingVOX|News TOP STORIES

Subscribe to MarketingVOX|News

Your Name
Your Email
Adrants Headlines

Subscribe to Adrants

Your Email
MarketingVOX Sponsor

Email this Story to a Friend


Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):
ad:tech home
ad:tech schedule
ad:tech speakers
contact ad:tech




View Larger Map


Archives

the chair speaks

miami 08 conference info
miami 08 sessions
miami 08 keynotes
miami 08 exhibit hall
miami 08 parties

sf 08 conference info
sf 08 sessions
sf 08 keynotes
sf 08 exhibit hall
sf 08 parties

new york 07 conference info
new york 07 sessions
new york 07 keynotes
new york 07 exhibit hall
new york 07 parties

chicago 07 conference info
chicago 07 sessions
chicago 07 keynotes
chicago 07 exhibit hall
chicago 07 parties

miami 07 conference info
miami 07 sessions
miami 07 keynotes
miami 07 exhibit hall
miami 07 parties

sf 07 conference info
sf 07 sessions
sf 07 speakers
sf 07 exhibit hall
sf 07 parties

ny 06 conference info
ny 06 sessions
ny 06 keynotes
ny 06 exhibit hall
ny 06 parties


ch 06 conference info
ch 06 sessions
ch 06 keynotes
ch 06 exhibit hall
ch 06 parties


sf 06 conference info
sf 06 sessions
sf 06 keynotes
sf 06 exhibit hall
sf 06 parties

impact series

all archives

ad:tech rss feeds


about this site

dmg world media owns ad:techblog and has contracted MarketingVOX and Adrants to produce the content. MarketingVOX and Adrants maintain complete editorial independence and assume full responsibility for editorial and advertising content.