Thad McIlroy - The Future of Publishing

Print this page

The End of Advertising as We Know It

Friday, November 23, 2007
Category: Advertising

An extraordinary monograph has just been published by, of all the unlikely sources, the IBM Institute for Business Value. The End of Advertising as We Know It is a publication that is everything you would not expect from a large corporation's public information efforts: it's informative, well-researched and well-written, and often provocative, all the while portraying no bias towards IBM, nor making even the slightest attempt to sell IBM services.

The four well-qualified authors base many of their observations and conclusions on a series of surveys and interviews with both consumers and a range of advertising executives (both from the agencies, and from within large corporations). The result is must-reading for anyone interested in the impact of changing technologies and media on the future of advertising.

The core text is 21-pages long, so I won't attempt an extensive recap here: just read the original. Here are several reasons why you must; mostly just direct quotations from the report:

● "…our analysis shows that the actual growth of Internet advertising has outpaced forecasts by 25 to 40 percent over the past two years."

● "…This is the first study I've read that intelligently challenges what the future role of advertising agencies will be, and, even more directly, asks "Will advertisers still need a traditional agency?"

● "…amateurs and semi-professionals are now creating lower-cost advertising content that is arguably as appealing to consumers as versions created by agencies."

● "…advertising inventory is increasingly bought and sold through efficient open exchanges, bypassing traditional intermediaries."

● "…relevancy outweighs creativity in TV commercials. The ads least likely to be skipped were well-tailored to their audience."

● "Will consumers reject outright the concept of interruption marketing in the future?"

This is the first advertising report I've read that dares to ask the really tough questions about the future of advertising. As they say, you may agree or disagree, but you're guaranteed to be challenged and provoked.

add to del.icio.us - :The End of Advertising as We Know It digg it - :The End of Advertising as We Know It reddit:The End of Advertising as We Know It
posted by Thad at 9:32 PM Permalink | Read Comments: (1) | Post Comment

Comments

Relevancy outweighs creativity in TV commercials. The ads least likely to be skipped are well-tailored to their audience.
That's a little scary. It reminds me of Brave New World or Farenheit 451. Super creepy. But it's true isn't it: TV creativity entertains but I'm not going to buy insurance because some neanderthal has thin skin. You see that in Minority Report.

posted by Steve on December 13, 2007 4:05 PM (Reply)

Add Comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

=
  To format text as bold, enclose it in asterisks (*bold text*). To format text with an underline place an underscore before after after the text (_underlined text_).
Standard emoticons such as :-) and ;-) are converted to images.
 
 

© 2008 Arcadia House.
All Rights Reserved

Design and support
Rossul Design