Posts Tagged Content is King

If Walmart sold creative services how much would it cost?

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I have yet to meet a client that truly knows the cost of good creative. Now hang on, notice I wrote cost, not value as I believe they grasp the concept of the “value” of good creative but sometimes they have trouble with justifying the final cost of it.  I really don’t blame them at times as the results seem to vary greatly no matter how much they pay.

 

Marketers will sometimes write off these situations to Client knowledge of creative process.  The creative process takes time and time is money.  Solutions may come in minutes, hours or days…it may come in a creative session or a week later in the shower!  I often answer the question of how long will it take for you to come up with an idea with someone asking an artist how long it took them to come up with the concept to do a particular piece of work (I can’t remember who said it but their answer was all their life).  But I think the problem may go further than Client education.

 

In dealing with Clients we normally layout a budget that spells out what we will spend on creative, managing, execution and media.  The client usually gets the allotted time/dollars for managing, execution and media but I have not worked in or with an agency that has not given more to the creative hours than was billed… So, what is going on? How can a client not see the value if they are getting more than they are being billed?

 

The client looks for proof in the pudding.  Was the product worth the cost? To me, creative should meet or exceed the client expectations for both cost and results. This means it should do what the client asks for and be within brand and budget expectations.  Should it win awards? The client is not paying us to win awards, they are paying us for results foremost and sometimes, when the stars are aligned right, you can achieve awards and I’m also not the first to say such.

 

It seems like a very simple task yet we still see failures.  Where is the process failing in such a simple process?  I believe the failure point comes when the creative team forgets (or doesn’t know any better) the core objectives; solving the Clients communications problems.  It’s quite common and used to be rampant.  There use to be a time when creative teams for larger brands (um, think beer) would do creative based on where they wanted to travel to that year OR what type of dinning room set would look great in their house.  Those days are mostly gone but it’s been replaced with ads done only because the creative team wanted to do that “style” of ad for their portfolio or just didn’t see the Clients problem worth their while to really think about.  In other words, the creative would have very little about being good for the Clients problem.

 

When I see creative that would be great in a portfolio or doesn’t look like anyone read the brief it pisses me off to no end!  Not that the ideas may not be great and could be award winning; it’s that they don’t solve the clients problems and I know I’m going to have to eat those creative costs.

 

I have worked with lots of creative people in this industry and have witnessed the difference in being creative and being able to come up with a “complete idea” that solves all the clients points.  The later will always be considering the clients problems (messaging) with every idea that floats through their head.  The former may have a good idea but fails to fully connect it to (or wrap it around) the Clients points.

 

If I was the client and received an idea that was only half the solution, I wouldn’t put much value on creative! I would start pushing for the lowest cost creative as possible as the solution is not unique to my problem and there are a lot of suppliers delivering the same quality…They use the Walmart strategy; if you can’t supply y for x then someone else will.

 

Here lies the dilemma.  Both suppliers bill out the same amounts for two totally different products and, even more challenging, one may have better looking portfolio than the other but can’t do the same quality of work. Hmmm…maybe it is Client education after all.

 

How do we solve the problem?

 

To be continued…..

 

Scott Westerlaken

With over 25 years of award winning experience in marketing, television commercials, film, video, communications, web, radio, print, and events, Scott has the ability to maintain focus on the big picture and offer a wide range of solutions appropriate to the clients message and budget. He has been recognized with dozens of awards in business, communications, and filmmaking from around the world. For the client, this means a truly unique balance of hands on technical knowledge and high level strategic experience that always leads to unique and creative solutions.

 

 

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The King is dead! Long live the King!

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I could never figure that line out as a kid growing up.  I forget what movie I heard the line in but I know I wasn’t watching the images at the time.  Had I been, I would have seen the old king take his last breath and the crown placed on the young prince.

When websites first started getting attention from marketers in the late 90’s the hot word was “content”.  Things changed after businesses found that content on the web alone didn’t make them money or drive their sales.  Interestingly in the last few years the word keeps popping up again.  “Content Is King”, and surprisingly in the same breath I hear the “Big Idea” is dead.  In fact I was just at a Canadian Marketing Association conference and heard it again.  Thankfully there were defenders of the “Big Idea” concept on the panel.  I’m always left puzzled by the “Content Is King” statements though.

The Internet is a communication medium and people use it to find information or entertainment of some sort (this is over simplified).  The information/entertainment on a website is considered its content. Generally the thinking is the more useful, fresh and interesting the content the website has, the more successful it will be. In theory this is because more people will want to visit it again and again, link to it, and generally talk about.  This is especially true if a website is constantly adding more and more content on a regular basis.  This could also be said about TV, Print and Radio and the strategy leaves a lot to chance.  You could be lost in the clutter!

In the past the “Big Idea” was the game changing concept in traditional marketing and advertising.  This was the “Where’s the beef?” idea.  If you had a good enough idea, theory said you could connect with the consumer, cut through the clutter and the product or service would be a success.  To me, though, the “Big Idea” can be two things:  giving people want they want (whether they know it or not) in a way that is more enjoyable than the competition and/or creating emotion that motivates them to an action.  Right now, the web needs the “Big Idea” more than at any other time to date!

As I see it you can have all the good content in the world, but you can still fail without a great idea.  Case in point are the sites with great content (pets.com, drugstore.com) but had flawed “Ideas”.   All the content in the world could not save them.

bk chickenMy line of thinking is if you combine valuable “Content” with a “Big Idea” you are almost guaranteed success.  On the web, Crispin Porter produced a great example combining the two.  The subservient chicken site, was built a few years ago for Burger King (ironic) to launch their new chicken sandwich and also build the brand slogan, “have it your way”.  Without the “Big Idea” I could easily see this site having been just pictures or descriptions of the many different ways to get your BK Chicken Burger (I’m sure we have all sat through those briefings)…. Instead it was an early micro site viral success!

Most times I will take the “big idea” over “content” (though I would take a million dollars over the idea of a million dollars in a second).  To say that there needs to be no “Big Idea” for successful marketing and websites as long as you have good content is rather foolish.  You are just keeping the door open for the competition to come eat your dinner.  Statements like “Content OR Idea” need to be refined to “Content AND Idea” in order to position yourself best for success.  I am almost thinking that the “Content Is King” line of thinking doesn’t consider monetization of the product? Am I misguided? Maybe I’m just not seeing the King for what the King is?

SW

Scott Westerlaken

Scott Westerlaken

Scott Westerlaken

With over 25 years of award winning experience in marketing, television commercials, film, video, communications, web, radio, print, and events, Scott has the ability to maintain focus on the big picture and offer a wide range of solutions appropriate to the clients message and budget. He has been recognized with dozens of awards in business, communications, and filmmaking from around the world. For the client, this means a truly unique balance of hands on technical knowledge and high level strategic experience that always leads to unique and creative solutions.

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