The Voice of Demand

Posts Tagged ‘Audience’

Studeo

Marketing messages need to be presented in a form that’s easily consumed by the audience. Tweet Bite

To understand form of consumption a little better, lets take a look at a coconut.  Locked inside a coconut is milk and fruit that is used to make tasty drinks and treats.  The problem is, its locked inside and is not in a form that is easily consumed.  If you are trying to open a coconut that has come straight off a tree, you had better have a machete.  It takes considerable work to get to the milk.

Coconut

Coconut

In contrast to the hard inaccessible coconut, think of a Pina Colada.  Both have coconut milk, but one is much more easy to consume than the other.

Pina Colada

Pina Colada

My point is, that there are many forms of media and communications that we can use to communicate with our audience.  Not all forms are right for all audiences.  To some audiences, certain forms of media are going to seem like a coconut, filled with something they want, but in a form too difficult for them to access.

For example, lets say a person has a pipe that has just broken in their house and their basement is filling up with water.  They need a solution ASAP.  A long form blog post on plumbing is a coconut, while a phone book with the name of a plumber is a Pina Colada.

Marketing messages need to be like Pina Coladas Tweet Bite, filled with what an audience needs and in a form they can easily consume.  To do this we have to know our audience and know the form they need their information in.

Studeo

Understanding Consumption

April 16th, 2009 - By LJ Jones

The internet is evolving at a rapid pace and it is changing the way people consume information.  As marketers, we need to understand how the consumption of information is changing to make sure that our messages to consumers are in a form that they understand.

One platform that is greatly changing the way peoeple consume info is Twitter.  So whats the big deal and why all the buzz?  While it took a little over a year for Twitter to reach about 5 million users, it was able to reach its second 5 million users in about a month.  Whether its the race between Ashton Kutcher and CNN to be the first in the history of Twitter to reach 1 Million followers, or the rumor that Oprah is going to send her first Tweet tomorrow, people are flocking to Twitter and its effecting how masses of people consume online.

Two things about Twitter are changing the way we consume.  First, Twitter only allows people to post short bits in 140 characters.  This is causing people to get right to the point and say exaclty what they mean.  140 characters is quite the opposite to the long 3 page in depth blog post.  More and more people are getting used to consuming info in this short, tell me exactly what I need to know, 140 character form.  They read a few short tweets and move on.  And my guess is their attention span for a long blog post is changing.

The second thing about Twitter is its shear volume.  Many people follow hundreds, if not thousands of people and recieve all of their tweets in a constant stream.  Its a firehose of information, and who has the time to read it all.  Anthony calls this the Twitter Paradox in that “I read more but I read less.”  The amount of posts, info and links that we are exposed to has gone way up.  But we don’t have the time to read it all, so we scan, much like we do with search results.

Now this isn’t to say that Twitter is going to make all other forms of communications and media disapear.  It is simply one platform that is having an effect.  The point is that there are many types of media that we can use to communicate and they are changing as we speak.  To reach an audience, we need to understand each of these forms and identifiy which forms are best for communicating with a particular audience.  We are currently thinking about the the different demand states of an audience and the different forms of media that would be best to reach them.

Studeo

Advertising Technology

February 4th, 2009 - By Chip

I could be wrong here, but bear with me: advertising technology is not fundamentally different than advertising any other product. In the end, it’s still all about people.

A technology company that gets this is Apple. Here’s an example.

There are lots of MP3 players on the market. But iPods dominate.

Why? Is the technology better? Did they get to market first? Are they less expensive?

No, no and no. But here’s the difference. Apple made them cooler. And they did that by first understanding the relationship people have with music. That understanding enabled them to make ads that were more culturally relevant. That made the consumer think that company gets me.

Apple knew that even though an iPod is whiz-bang technology, the connection people have with it is emotional.

Apple leveraged this insight with advertising that wasn’t about them. It was about consumers. How music makes them feel. How it lets them escape. How it shapes their identity.

And further how the technology gives them control by allowing them to make play lists. And how it enables them to find other people with similar tastes. The Arcade Fire tribe, the Bruce Springsteen tribe, etc.

So when Studeo begins work for a technology client, that’s where we start.

We try to engage our audience. We try to be relevant in their world. We try to be “cool” within the right culture.