Gravity Integrated Marketing

Quicker, Leaner, Smarter

http://www.gravitythinking.com/

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Giving good presentation

According to the winner of last year's "World's best presentation contest " on Slideshare "25% of Chinese population with highest IQ's is greater than population of North America" and "China will soon become the number 1 English speaking country in the World" which means that "shift happens" (that was SHIFT). There are plenty ofother intersting facts manipulated from different ways of looking at figures and lots of fans (635k plus views and over 60k downloads) and cynics commenting on their take on the presentation but I think what makes the contest and the past winners and current entries more interesting is to observe what make a great presentation.
Agencies often moan about having to send over presentations or talking them through over the phone and this is often completely legitimate as they want the chance to say their piece and passionately sell their work but it is a great discipline to get into when you must make the presentation sell itself using words, pictures and designs and a lot of these presentations do it fantastically (see meet Henry)
I think far too many agencies have great intentions when it comes to planning big presentations or pitches and fall back on lame Powerpoint (see Death by Powerpoint ) and this contest proves that a lot can be communicated with "a good story well told".
Although when it comes on to the actual presentation we must always remember the rest of Mark Twain's quote "....that is the reason I am sometimes forced to tell them myself"

Thursday, July 10, 2008

How can agencies be better at social media ?

The Wah Report by Jared Roy is always an intersting read and I was particularly interested in an article publshed recently titled Social media demands a reinvented agency the premise of which was that agencies are simply not set up to deliver effective social media campaigns becuase they think and act in campaigns rather than a longer term committment and also in straightforward creative rather than iterative creative development.
He concludes:
"An agency's new role in social media will be to maintain a brand's presence and extract various benefits that a brand should receive from making a social media commitment. To do this will require redefining the media agency's role. It will be far more consultative. It will interface with more facets of a client's organization. Tapping into all the ways an effective social media agency can deliver value to marketers, will set apart this new breed of agency. The skills required to coordinate effective social media management will command the margins required to support Madison Avenue.I see some shops moving in this direction. Do you? Who is the closest? If you are an agency or a brand that feels you are moving towards this type of relationship, tell us!"
A lot of what he says makes sense but I think he lets the Clients off the hook - yes agencies are set up to deliver campaigns and creativity usually on an ad hoc basis because they have to make money to pay the executives salaries and keep the network behemoth happy BUT that is also the way Clients want to work with most agencies and social media seems to be a barrier they cannot overcome and therfore dismiss out of hand withour proper consideration.
In my experience it is best approached as being integrated as part of another campaign, properly tracked and assessed and then based on success it can be viewed seperately in future activity to both be part of an run alongside all future campaigns.
However maybe the main barrier is that agencies are not prepared to rock the boat ....or do not know how to !

Monday, July 7, 2008

Social Media in Plain English

I found this interesting film the other day which simply and clearly outlines "Social media in plain English" - it is well put together my only cynical thought at the end was what he did not show was how Big Ice Cream Co got their act together and bought Jarrett's ice cream shop and reduced their prices to the point where the local residents could not make it profitably and then sue everyone who tries to make their own new flavours that are too close to their flavours !

Seriously though the more worrying point is that the Big Ice Cream company’s of this world do not always get involved in social media at all and I think this is due in large part to their agencies who are not willing to get involved because they have developed an organisation that does not support the proper activation of social media for brands.

An agency's new role in social media will be to maintain a brand's presence online and extract various benefits that a brand should receive from making a social media commitment. To do this will require redefining the agency's role into a far more consultative process interfacing with more parts of a client's organization over a longer period of time. Tapping into all the ways an effective social media agency can deliver value to marketers will set apart this new breed of agency.

The question is, can the current agencies adapt or will the new breed of agencies currently working effectively in this area take over the vacuum of effective social media campaigns? Evolution or revolution?