Tag: David Tiltman

  • Big benefits for brands from VR & AR: WARC

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    Developments in Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR) will offer viable ways for brands to engage emotionally with consumers in 2017, according to Warc, the global marketing intelligence service.

     

    VR, which immerses consumers in a 360-degree digital environment, most commonly experienced via a headset, and AR, the integration of the real-world environment with computer-generated digital information, have been identified in Warc’s Toolkit 2017, produced in association with Deloitte Digital, as key marketing trends which marketers will be looking to in the coming year.

     

    David Tiltman, Warc’s Head of Content, says, “VR and AR are not new technologies – but 2016 saw them really emerge as marketing platforms. A lot of money is now going towards VR in particular as brands seek fresh ways to engage consumers. As the advertising marketplace becomes more cluttered and many people opt out of receiving marketing messages, brand experiences that can cut through are increasingly valuable.”

     

    Jason Warnes, Digital Marketing Partner of Deloitte Digital adds, “Disruptive digital technologies, such as VR and AR, are being used to define, develop and rapidly deploy new experiences to improve the customer journey. Despite a limited adaptation of some of these technologies, they should be seen as new opportunities to interact with customers and understand more about their behaviours and preferences.”

     

    The value of VR and AR is predicted to hit $150bn by 2020. As VR and AR grow hand-in-hand to create mixed-reality experiences for consumers by creating immersive personalised content, key insights identified where VR and AR are expected to impact the marketing industry in 2017 are:

     

    1. Retail and travel brands have been early adopters of VR:

    Virtual reality could revolutionise the e-commerce sector, leading to a decrease in product returns, and it has significant potential in the travel, hospitality, design, education, engineering and healthcare industries. In the travel sector, the technology gives would-be travellers a taste of their possible destinations, hotel facilities and rooms. Whilst shopping could become one of VR’s top applications, allowing connected consumers to experience a full retail environment from their own home.

     

    2. VR can be more than a showroom; it is a vehicle for storytelling and high-end experiences:

    Two factors have driven VR into the mainstream: more devices have arrived on the market and the prevalence of smartphones puts a high-power display into a large proportion of the global population. As the technology develops, forward-thinking brands are sharing immersive experiences with customers that provide a sensory overload and block out all distractions from TV, websites, and apps.

     

    3. Early research confirms VR’s potential for emotional engagement:

    A study by ad tech firm YuMe and research firm Nielsen using neuroscience techniques found that VR elicited 27% higher emotional engagement than in a 2D environment and 17% higher emotional engagement than a 360-degree video on a flat screen. Additionally, VR viewers were emotionally engaged 34% longer than when they viewed the same content in 2D and 16% longer than when they watched it in 360-degree video on a flat screen.

     

    4. VR adds an extra dimension to brand tie-ups with celebrities or influencers:

    Brands can leverage virtual reality to engage with consumers as well as test and explore new business models. In June 2016, Absolut Vodka unveiled a mobile app that used VR to successfully drive its mission of delivering unique nightlife experiences.

     

    5. Many brands have reconsidered AR in the wake of Pokémon GO:

    The phenomenal rise of Pokémon GO was heralded as a tipping point for AR. Launched in July 2016, Pokémon GO’s downloads reached 50 million installations before the end of the month. Looking ahead, marketers face two opportunities around AR: First, piggyback on AR properties that are popular with their audience, like Pokémon Go, as more AR-based games and applications emerge. Second, formulate bespoke, branded experiences. Fashion and beauty firms, for example, can let people digitally ‘try on’ clothes and cosmetics.

     

    6. AR augments the product trial process:

    Beauty group L’Oréal, has been exploring a number of technologies to offer greater utility and personalisation. Perhaps its most popular foray into this space to date is Makeup Genius, a mobile app that turns smartphone cameras into virtual mirrors enabling consumers to digitally ‘apply’ L’Oréal Paris products scanned in a store. The app has been downloaded more than 16 million times.

     

    7. AR offers greater scope for consumers to engage with campaigns:

    AR via mobile devices is likely to be significant for many marketers because it offers great scope for how, when and where consumers can engage with campaigns, branded collateral, packaging and product. It also opens the door to technology such as visual search. AR also relies on existing mobile behaviours that users are comfortable with, such as using the camera.

     

    8. Virtual ethnography offers a new insight tool:

    VR has significant potential as a research tool, particularly in the field of ethnography. Simplot, an Australian food manufacturer, combined VR with ethnography to inform product development and communications. The research approach adopted was to place 360-degree VR cameras in consumers’ kitchens; key stakeholders could then ‘walk into’ their customers’ homes and observe their preparation and interaction with food, just using a simple overlay on their smartphones.

     

    Virtual and Augmented Reality are one of six key trends featured in Warc’s Toolkit 2017. The annual report, produced in association with Deloitte Digital, brings together the best of Warc’s content over the past year – the latest ideas, research and examples.

     

     

  • Why & How AI will have greater impact than social media

     

    Warc, the global marketing intelligence service, concludes that Artificial Intelligence (AI), defined as the ability of computers to take on tasks that have previously required human intelligence to complete – such as speech recognition or interpreting data – will have a major impact on the marketing industry next year. More than the impact of the social media.

     

    Said David Tiltman, Warc’s Head of Content: “2017 looks set to be the year that many brands take their first steps in artificial intelligence. Machine learning is already being applied to programmatic trading – and we’ve seen brands like Aviva in the UK improve their media efficiencies as a result. The next major application looks set to be chatbots, as marketers look to respond to a consumers’ take-up of messaging apps.”

     

    The key insights identified where AI is expected to impact the marketing industry in 2017 are:

     

    1.    Immediate opportunities include advanced data analysis:

    Data mining and analysis that is normally done manually may be done quicker and better using AI. This can span business and consumer data, with AI potentially providing more informed outcomes.

    2.    Global CMOs are already planning their AI strategies:

    According to a survey by PR agency Weber Shandwick in association with KRC Research, nearly six in 10 (58%) global CMOs believe that, within the next five years, companies will need to compete in the AI space to succeed, and around seven in 10 (68%) say their organisations are already using or planning for business in the AI era.

    More than half (55%) of global CMOs expect AI to have a greater impact on marketing  and communications than social media ever had.

    3.    Chatbots will become key touchpoints for service brands:

    Chatbots are software programs designed to automate customer-to-company conversations. They use machine learning to help determine what the consumer’s question is, source a relevant answer and form a reply.

    4.    Marketers must consider the tone of voice of ‘branded conversations’:

    Brands will be keen to express their identities via chatbot technology. Language nuances, sentiment and the ability to hold conversations are the next short term nuances to be addressed.

    5.    Virtual assistants will change path-to-purchase strategies:

    ‘Programmatic consumption’ is the automation of brand choices. Rather than a consumer spend the time and effort selecting a product and placing an order, these are partially or fully automated – in other words, purchase decisions will increasingly be made by computers, rather than by consumers standing in shops.

    6.    Machine learning is being applied to automated trading:

    Machine learning is already used within certain areas of programmatic media trading, and this is expected to be a major growth area. For example, machine learning might help optimise campaigns based on what is working, or adapt campaign creative based on new information.

     

    Artificial Intelligence is one of six key trends featured in Warc’s Toolkit 2017. The report, produced in association with Deloitte Digital, brings together the best of Warc’s content over the past year – the latest ideas, research and examples. The result is a guide to current thinking in each area, and the implications for marketers. For more information and insights on Toolkit 2017, visit www.warc.com 

     

  • 6 key Marketing Trends for 2017

     

    By A Correspondent

     

    Warc, the global marketing intelligence service, has released Toolkit 2017, an annual examination of forthcoming challenges faced by marketers around the world. Produced in association with Deloitte Digital, the report identifies six topics which marketers will be looking to in the coming year.

     

    “We’ve reviewed the best of Warc’s content over the past year – the latest ideas, research and examples. The result is a comprehensive guide to current thinking and the implications for marketers going forward into 2017,” SAID David Tiltman, Head of Content at Warc.

     

    The six key marketing trends identified are:
    :: Tech: The marketing applications of Artificial Intelligence (AI)
    Data mining and analysis that is normally done manually, may be done faster, quicker and better using AI. As such, AI is predicted to have a major impact on the marketing industry with key areas being insight generation, chatbots, personal assistants and optimisation of media buying. Whilst the technology is still emerging, one study found that 55% of global CMOs expect AI to have a greater impact on marketing and communications than social media.

     

    :: Brand Experience: The emerging roles of Virtual Reality (VR) and Augmented Reality (AR)

    As the advertising marketplace becomes more cluttered and young consumers opt out of receiving marketing messages, brand experiences that cut through, such as VR and AR, are increasingly valuable. After years of promise, VR is becoming a viable mainstream marketing tool which focuses on experience and emotional engagement.

    In the wake of Pokémon Go, there are a number of emerging opportunities in AR in particular around product trial and utility.

     

    :: Content: How video is transforming social

    Social video is experiencing massive growth as a content marketing format and is turning social platforms into broadcast media. Brands are finding success with approaches that prioritise quality over quantity, consider emotional and social motivations for content engagement, and focus on a three-second window of opportunity to grab consumers’ attention. A growing number of brands are also experimenting with live video for content that is exclusive, newsworthy or requires live audience involvement. But video measurement will be a major challenge in 2017.

     

    :: Social: The rise of ‘Dark Social’ and messaging apps

    The rise of chat or mobile-focused messenger apps such as WhatsApp, Facebook Messenger or WeChat is fuelling the rise of ‘dark social’ – conversations that are not trackable by marketers. This has two implications: brands may be missing out on insights into their brand or category, and chat apps are moving social marketing towards conversations.

     

    :: E-Commerce: The direct-to-consumer opportunity

    Low-cost startups have disrupted established business models with customer-centric, online businesses. Innovative apps, subscription services and engaging branded social platforms have encouraged impulse purchases and trials with seamless transactions and personalised experiences. The challenge for established brands is responding to these new models as they look to increase direct-to-consumer opportunities. The coming year is likely to be an area of considerable experimentation.

     

    :: ROI: Effectiveness in the digital age

    Major FMCG advertisers are beginning to focus more on mass reach using traditional media to drive sales growth versus close targeting via digital channels. In addition, fresh research this year has suggested that brands are overinvesting in short-term ‘activation’ media, undermining the impact of creativity and harming long-term effectiveness. Meanwhile, media platforms are racing to prove the effectiveness of their channel. With budgets under ongoing pressure, more studies of this sort can be expected in 2017.

     

    Summing up, Jason Warnes, Digital Marketing Partner of Deloitte Digital, said: “As the pressure to improve marketing performance continues, the three key challenges I see for 2017 are: how clients will optimise their marketing experience; how can they use marketing technology to automate and personalise their customer experience; and how can they use disruption to define, develop and rapidly deploy new services and experiences to improve customer experience.”

     

    The Toolkit 2017 executive summary by Warc in association with Deloitte Digital, is now available on warc.com.