Wednesday, February 28, 2007

co-creation at the crossroads


A lot of agencies are turning their backs on co-creation. Frankly, their belief is that they can do a better job of creating compelling communications, more artfully produced, than consumers can. They have a pretty good point. As Leo Burnett once said, “the most beautiful thing in the world is a good ad”.

However, consumers are pesky. They have time and the tools to interact with, mash-up, or plain butcher your content, whether you like it or not. They have access to channels that rival TV networks for reach and impact. And I suspect their favourite targets are either those toe-curlingly awful, so-bad-they-re-dreadful, content. Or the best ideas and artfully produced stuff that captures their imagination, or belongs to their kind of brand.

And marketers go and get in the way too. Low volume production techniques, long-tail niches and easy e-commerce make it simple to tailor or customise your very own product. Mini boast that not 2 cars in 100,000 are alike. So there’s real content creation going on with the actual stuff we’re selling and it seems wise and right to be aware that it’s all happening and to try and influence it all for the better. I like one current analogy for planning, which could easily be extended to the whole of communications agencies – brand gardeners. In this world, we’re looking to tend and nurture the loose associations and audiences that are attracted to brands and their content (just do a Flickr search for Baileys and see how many dog pictures you get). We want to help the brand branch off into wild and interesting new spaces, to keep it interesting and organic. And we need to help our customers do some of that for us. Brands only exist in the minds of their customers. Fruitstock only exists because real people (and lots of them) go there. So the more we enable peoples’ willing participation, the better the brand’s health, interestingness, and the richer the brand’s world of communication will be.

Of course, they’re going to cotton on pretty soon and want to start getting paid for it. Fancy a salary cut, anyone?

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Valentines special



For valentines day we stepped on the Free Hugs bandwagon. It seemed sort of right, given the name of the agency, and a lot of our material features pictures of people hugging things. I think this is some of Nathan's best work. I know about the orginal free hugs film, but didn't realise there's quite a global meme behind it already. Nathan got around 50 hugs, and quite a few people pulled out at the last minute. So there must be some deep seated need for people to connect in the real world. Second Life is doomed?

Friday, February 02, 2007

50


Very happy that we've just signed up the 50th (and 51st) member of Planning Eye. It's the Flickr group for planners around the world to share (steal / borrow) photos of stuff they find interesting. Use the shots in presentations, CV's, or just to show off.

UPDATE: we're up to 54 members now - I think we're mentioned on the Plannersphere wiki, which is excellent. And Hioakie had a great idea for a challenge. We're taking shots of Street Technology as there seems to be more of it about. For one client, we're looking at something like the CPB Mini stuff where there's an RFID in your keyfob which triggers personalised billboard messages when you drive past.