Tag: Graeme Newell

  • The importance of Emotions

     

    It’s not enough to find a message that resonates with your customer, or tap into universal feelings and experiences to sell something. If your product isn’t good enough or competitively priced, the message will never hit home. That’s what Graeme Newell, President of 602 Communications and a customer loyalty expert who shows organisations how to build deeper, more passionate relationships with their customers, tells Anuka Roy, on the sidelines of recent PromaxBDA conference in Mumbai.

     

    So what exactly is emotional marketing?

    Emotional Marketing is moving beyond mere product features, and attributing those products with a deeper emotional resonance that really touches something that is in all people. Those universal emotions which all of us feel, for ourselves and each other, those are the most powerful drivers. The instinctual things that were built thousands of years ago — when we cared for each other, when we were bold and adventurous — those are the things that help a species survive. By being able to tap into those natural things that we all feel, we can give very standard products deep emotional meaning. It is also almost like turning a product in to a person.

     

    You are an expert on customer loyalty and your advice to organisations is deeper emotional connect with customers. But isn’t that what marketing is all about?

    It is, and it is about taking it to the next level. My company researches very specific customer groups and on the network side, we get the best loyal and new customers they hope to grab. We do not ask them how they like the network, but we ask them about how they feel about themselves, the things they worry about and hope for, and then we build the programming — the shows, the marketing, promotions and advertising around those deeply resonant things that those audiences are predisposed to feeling about themselves. If we can make that average content into something that has deep emotional resonance, people will come to our channel first. For me, when HBO comes out with a new series, because I have a deep attachment to HBO, I am totally ready to give that show a try. It is because of the experience and emotional feeling.

     

    How important are emotions in modern marketing, when people have no time?

    It’s a balance because you have to make sure you have good product features. In any category — whether cars, soaps or shows — if you have bad programming, no matter how emotional you are, you will not watch bad shows. I have a good product and I have to make sure that is there. And if you do not have that, then you have to work on it. It’s an idea that we call warmth and competence. You’ve got to have competence when you come in. In the television category, there are a tremendous number of competent networks. There are a million choices for dramas, comedies, sports and such. The only way I am going to give another network a try is if they, first, have proven that they have got basic competence. But aside from that, once you achieve that level, it goes to the next level, which is about affinity to that product, the idea that ‘I truly believe this network gets me’.

     

    Would you say that with the advent of social media and a digitally-driven society, the work of emotional marketers has become easier?

    It has. What that has enabled us to do is have a direct connection with our customers like never before, prove to them that we are listening to them, and get two-way feedback. But I think a lot of marketers misunderstand social media and are still treating it as advertising platform. It is an amazing opportunity to show what we stand for. It is a delicate mix and we have to make sure that we use social media responsibly, but it has never been easier or more powerful than it is now. Getting people, particularly loyalists, to hang with us, provides amazing opportunities for us to hyper-serve those loyalists.

     

    You mentioned the fact that people name-drop brands to impress others. How much of that is prevalent in a place like India where people are sensitive to prices?

    It does not matter how emotional you are if you do not have a good price point or a good product. Apple is trying hard to get into India right now, and it’s having a hard time because of its price point. What they are trying to do is to get that price point down by selling used phones and allowing people to have much better prices. It is always going to be a combination of that. Again, it is that warmth and competence idea. If you’ve got a high-priced product, I do not care how nice you are, I am not buying it. It really comes down to whether people have more time or money. In India, it is much more about time. People are willing to watch a few more commercials if they are able to save a few rupees.

     

    How far does emotional marketing work in the Indian context?

    You are an incredibly passionate community here. I think more than any other country in the world, the opportunity here is endless. But the concept of emotional marketing has really not been explored here. That is the next step. So much of what we have done so far has been proving basic competence. We have got good shows, line-ups, new dramas. The quality of programming is progressing rapidly here. There is an amazing, new number of networks, shows, and just introducing people to this is a pretty big job. The plot — that has to come first. Emotional marketing tends to work best on more mature products, and you have got a lot of young and a very upstart products that have a lot of explaining to do about just what they are. The first step would be to build a base around those product features. That is a solid plan where you clearly understand what the emotional derivers are for your audiences. Some networks still do not do that. My company does that as a first step. Typically, networks come in, get a programming and head out and then they figure out the emotional part of it, quite late. So, most of the time, we end up guessing what that emotion is. We do not have quality research or data that backs it up. This is what I call the ‘golden gut’ marketing. The idea that ‘I know my audience better than anybody and I know what they want’, as opposed to talking to them in a very real way. It is really about listening to your audience.

     

    This interview first appeared in dna of brands on May 16, 2016

     

  • PromaxBDA India conference begins!

     

    By Anuka Roy

     

    The annual PromaxBDA India conference started yesterday (May 11) at the Indian School of Design and Innovation (ISDI) in Mumbai. It was not just the regular conference with speakers airing their views. The event is divided into Day 1 devoted to Boot Camp sessions with parallel workshops conducted on branding and promo producing and the second day devoted to Master Class sessions and the awards.

     

    Graeme Newell, President of 602 Communications, conducted the Branding workshop about ‘Best practices for recruiting new viewers’. It was an examples-packed workshop, where Newell, an emotional marketing specialist showed the attendees the strategies behind some of television’s most successful viewer expansions. He also spoke about how to showcase a brand within daily promotions. Newell explained how most people take the cliché route for promos and gave a presentation on some of the most common mistakes that producers make. He even showed some of the most creative work done by the Advertising industry. Speaking to MxMIndia about the branding scenario in India, Newell said, “What we have to do a better job here is, internationally, we got to be able to show those values that work here and in other countries as well. So, often what I think we have a tendency to do here is sort of take care of ourselves. But, if we brand with more archetypal emotions- big bold emotions- that are used by biggest advertisers, we will be able to have international appeal. Regardless of what country you are in, that will resonate well”. His afternoon session was about ‘News Marketing: What’s working, what’s not and why’. Here he showed a research study done on the effectiveness of news marketing. It was an in-depth analysis of thousands of promos created by news organisations all over the world. He also made it interactive by asking the people about why people are attached to a certain brand and what would they do to keep the audience loyal to their organisation. “Engagement is the key. You are renting your audience’s attention, make it worth their time,” he said.

     

    “Being a promo producer is an awesome thing.  Promo producers are artists, they do everything. They are the most important but underappreciated people in the world of television,” said Rob Middleton, Vice President at Astro’s Network Presentation Content Group. Middleton conducted the Promo workshop, ‘What the hell am I doing?’.  His session dealt with mainly what exactly should be done and how it is done. Promos are the medium through which the word about something new is spread to inform the audiences. They are the first sneak peak that an audience gets of the new product or show, so the promo has to be engaging. The success of the company to some extent depends on the quality and the impact of the promo. “India is the most creative, expressive and incredible places I have ever seen promotions from. Honest to God, in all of Asia, some of the best works I have seen comes from here. I am a little embarrassed that I am the one, as a foreigner, is coming in and telling everyone how to do their jobs better. When I take Indian work and show it to people in the United States, they cannot believe how great it is, and not because of the special effect or style but because of the idea, script and the way it is done,”  Middleton said about Indian promos.

     

    Post-lunch, workshops were conducted on Marketing and Animation. The marketing workshop on ‘Marketing and Technology – the birth of a new age in media’ was taken by Fiona King, Marketing Director/Consultant, Grazia, Grace Publishing Australia. Today, marketers are challenged to develop brand creative and content stories that cut through, she said. But what they now have in addition is technology, offering exciting opportunities for personalisation, targeting unique audiences and creating communities around content. King, through various case studies tried to highlight the leading marketing campaigns and the use of technology available to us. The process of developing a brand campaign which can be perceived as complex technology in to simple communication was touched upon. Digital marketing and social channel for engagement were also some of the key highlights. “In every country it is a work-in-progress because digital channels change so much. As a marketer you just have to evolve. There is no set formula. It comes back to focusing on the consumer and understanding where the consumer is at in any point of time. It is about moving from traditional to digital marketing. The economy has changed from information economy to a connection economy to a sharing economy,” said King about the combination of marketing and technology.

     

    The animation workshop on ‘Get shorty: snackableanimation’ was about short-form animation. It was conducted by Yoshiya Ayugai, Executive Producer, Animation, Turner International Asia Pacific. “Animation, because it is not a human person it relates to a wider audience or may be makes it easier to like than actual human being,” said Ayugai on animation being used for marketing. But shorter content is never easy to translate. Telling a complete story in just a minute or two and grabbing attention can be challenging. He highlighted the whole development process- from concept to script to screen. A few exercises were also done to help aspiring animators to understand the process.

     

    The day ended with anticipation for the second day and the awards, both scheduled at the the Westin hotel in Mumbai.