August 5, 2024

The digital Emperor is only partially dressed

In response to the social post that dives into Nike’s overall problems from a former Nike Sr. Director making the rounds in the last few days, I responded on X of all places to someone who wrote about that Nike post, that it “depicts direct response marketing as being in diametric opposition to brand building, which it isn’t.” I responded in a longer way, but basically wrote, “You are 100% wrong.” That was the first time I responded to anything posted on X in a long time. Normally I just let others do the shouting and responding. But the more I thought about it, I realized how strongly I feel about this. The person posting on X is wrong. The author of the Nike post is spot-on. Why? Direct response and brand building are in opposition. At least, when you hit the now clearly defined infliction point Nike just defined for the rest of us.

You can build a Direct-To-Consumer business from the ground up using the democratized tools that are now available in a way you could never have before, using the direct response digital ecosystem as the foundation. Or you can decide you want to sell differently to your current and future consumers because it is in theory easier, cheaper and more effective (i.e., Nike). But here’s the thing we just learned. There is a finite number you can build to. 

I am going to call it 30%. While there is likely going to be a good amount of discussion about the actual percentage, I am putting a stake in the ground at 30%. You can build a total of 30% of a brand’s possible consumer base through this direct response ecosystem. That’s the number. That’s it. It can’t get bigger than that if you hope to be a brand that sticks around for the long term. That means you will still miss 70% of your audience.

There are many reasons, but the first and most obvious is Nike just gamed-out the system and found the last level where it was revealed the wizard wasn’t hiding behind the curtain. It was a server. To the chagrin of everyone who has a vested interest to never finding out the answer to this question, Nike just proved there is a clear limit.

Put another way, no matter how much money you throw into the system, there is a clear point where it can no longer deliver new customers or sales. If it did not have limits, there not only wouldn’t be a need for this post, Nike (and other companies of that size) would have an endless supply of sales simply by putting more and money into the machine. It would be good money invested with a clear return repeatedly until the end of time. This did not happen. And on top of that, Nike found out something more important for all of us – i.e. the limit of this direct response system. Even if it was a very painful and costly exercise to go through.

Why is this such a big deal? Because of the false promise that data was going to solve the question that every brand marketer wanted to answer, and still wants to answer–does my advertising/marketing work? Can you make the math make sense. The ecosystem promised it can not only do this, but it can also do it more effectively than any other system that came before it. All while building your brand. So, the promise was made. The ecosystem was built. The money followed. Lots and lots and lots of money followed. To the tune of billions if not trillions of dollars when you consider all the different players with a vested interest in this direct response ecosystem. And what was promised is not true. The system, like every other system that came before it, has its limits.

So, the controversy is the digital emperor only has 30% of his clothes. That has been confirmed by Nike. And once you hit this 30% threshold, direct response and brand building are in fact in complete opposition. You cannot simultaneously race to the bottom with your advertising to sell someone a product as quickly as possible inside a media channel–while also getting them to pause, think, internalize, enjoy, and start connecting with your brand. The other 70% needs to come from actual top-of-the-funnel brand building anchored in human truths and shared through emotional storytelling. Human truths that engage and move consumers to care about not only what your brand is, what it stands for, and what it sells, but to care more about it than the competition that sells similar products. 

This is in my opinion why that person on X was so adamant that you can build brand using direct response. Because they really need it to do both things. To deliver on this promise. Otherwise, the glaring limits of the system will become clearer and clearer, to a wider and wider audience. Which…it now has.

As for where you should put your budget to capture the other 70% of your audience, that is another post, for another day. Spoiler alert: It can be a lot of different things, but a lot of them are not digital.

September 10, 2024

In defense of creativity.

In my earlier post on Brand and Direct Response, I finished up by letting you know where I felt you needed to find the other 70% of your customers once you’ve found and exhausted the first 30% of your customers, or 100% of your possible direct response audience. I started to write that post, and it turned into this post. Apparently, I have something I need to talk about before.

Let’s start with this question: Why did so much noise and money go to the direct response/digital/ programmatic/social ecosystem in the first place? Because you could make money finding and selling to your customers using this approach. This is a very true statement. But it turns out just not as much as you thought you could.

The direct response/digital ecosystem that was propping up the DTC narrative is the real canary in the coal mine. Going back to the Nike example in my earlier post (Link HERE), Nike is just the company that believed in data so much it took the red pill (performance marketing) and threw out the blue pill (brand building or Demand Creation in Nike-speak), only to realize they really need the blue pill more than the red pill. You can only shop a digital catalogue for so long before you get bored by looking at the pictures and the pricing. Without brand, performance marketing will crush a company if you have enough blind belief in the purity of data, don’t value genuine human connection as a driver of value, and are given enough time to see the painful realizations of your decisions. Brand always needs to be at the center of a thriving business.

Let’s talk about broadcast TV advertising. Why? Because TV advertising remains the literal backbone of the entire advertising/marketing industry. TV advertising was supposed by dead or well on its way to being dead by now. But not only isn’t, it’s thriving in pockets. The biggest pocket is live sports and entertainment. There is nothing like it in America to get a very large audience of people across states, time zones, beliefs, religion, to come together and have the same shared experience. This is missing from American society and live TV programming absolutely fills that void – Olympics, Super Bowl, NBA Final, Women’s NCAA Final Four, Emmy’s, Oscars, Presidential debates, etc. That is why sports and entertainment media rights keep going up and up. You are about to tell me it’s not the broadcast TV rights that are driving the price up, it’s the digital and social pieces that are. I hear you, and respond with, the Broadcast TV rights piece is definitely not going down. And group shared experiences are essential to being human. We need to remember fundamental truths of human behavior when looking at what works and doesn’t work. Advertising and marketing are no different.

What does this all mean for a brand, if you want to be taken seriously as a brand? It means that you need to do whatever you can to be on those shared experience broadcasts. And when you show up on those broadcasts, you cannot show up with unmemorable advertising that is forgotten 30 seconds after you saw it. But that is happening way too much now. Where is the humor? Where is the jingle? Where is the doing something different? How many ads can you remember from growing up? If you do, I can assure you it either had humor, a jingle, or moved you emotionally (even if it angered your neighbor). Remembrance and emotion drive sales.

In my opinion brand leaders have lost the belief in why they are making ads. Belief can often be hard. Especially when you are the contrarian in the room. To see your belief through you must stay true to a vision that you can clearly see, even when others cannot or do not want to see it. Now is the time to believe in what built the entire advertising and marketing industry in the first place: creative talent and their ideas. Why will it work again? For the exact reason it worked before. Talent in any creative business IS the differentiator. Hard stop. Nothing is different this time around except the creative talent and their ideas are now pushing against the direct response/digital/ programmatic/social ecosystem and all the money that was poured into it.

What is the fix? By doing what the advertising business did in the first place, to make this business what it is. As uncomfortable as this might make some brand leaders feel, like all great art, you need to put the artist first. We need to put the creatives back in the driver seat. Right now, most brands have pushed their creative counterparts (advertising agency or in-house) not just to the back seat, but to the third row. Behind the growth marketers and the data analysts. Let them back in the driver’s seat! Even if the car goes left, then right, then back to where it started, then left again, straight for a while, then right again, all before it goes straight again. Let it. Let the creative process be the creative process. It is an uncomfortable, messy, unpredictable, confusing and sometimes strange process. What it isn’t, is a straight line. And this is normal. Very normal. The great creatives will park the car exactly where they should, at the exact time they need to, even if it felt that much of the time from briefing until finished asset that there is no way it was going to happen. It’s just how the whole thing goes. As advertisers and marketers, there needs to be a much bigger embrace of getting more comfortable with the idea of being uncomfortable. Greatness is in the uncomfortable.

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