• Marketing Mag Website
  • COMMUNITYFORUMS

  • posted Aug 15th 2008...
This discussion is related to the article The results are in ... are the tables turning on TV?
May I quote Harold Mitchell?

"Internet is no threat to TV, it is a great ally. The passions that TV fires are satisfied with the informational depth the internet provides. Never before have we had the opportunity to influence the emotional and the rational as we have with this communications combination.”

Smart marketers combine old and new, rather than choose one or the other.
  • posted Aug 15th 2008...
Snap! Excellent quote Tony.
  • posted Aug 15th 2008...
Yep...I agree!
  • posted Aug 18th 2008...
Radio still wins over TV for me...but I'm from a radio background and still very passionate about the medium.
Nothing beats an integrated Radio and Web campaign at the moment though, just look to what Austereo is doing across Australia with it's radio and online bundling...

The bottom line is you can't watch telly and the Internet at the same time.

But as you said Tony, smart (and wealthy) marketers would be combining all the media available.
  • posted Aug 19th 2008...
If the commercial TV networks continue to treat their viewers they way they have been, then theyll continue to see their ratings plummet. For example, in the USA, NBCs Olympic Games coverage debacle has put another nail in the coffin, simply driving increasing numbers of their viewers online.
  • posted Aug 19th 2008...
Would you be prepared to elaborate a bit on this Wags? Have you got a link to some info on the NBC debacle?
  • posted Aug 19th 2008...
Try this for starters: ClickZ - The Gods of Olympus.
  • posted Aug 19th 2008...
Amazing stuff Wags - can't believe that NBC still haven't understood the different consumption patterns of users online. We keep talking about how the game has changed so rapidly and how the big networks are having to catch up, but seriously, how long is it going to take these lumbering oafs to reorganise their ideas, reformat their businesses?

Simply taking your existing TVC real-estate and jamming it at the front of every piece of video you put up online is just plain greedy, not to mention short-sighted. To me the whole thing smacks of laziness.

"Oh, cool, another space to stuff our ads into. Let's get some TVCs compressed for the web ..."

"uh ... don't you think, er, that you should, um ... consider the way people like to access content online. Perhaps. I dunno, just putting it out there."

"What's that? People like to access content online? Hell yeah, that's just what I was saying!"

"Um, no, what I mean is ..."

"My teenager is always on the interweb doing the Facebook and stuff. All her friends will find it so cool when they can watch our ads online."

"Have you considered, perhaps, the, uh, idea that maybe they don't want to see your ad again?"

"Don't want to see our ad? Don't want to see OUR ad? Are you kidding? Do you know how much our ad cost to produce? Have YOU seen our ad? You should watch this ..."

"Eurrghhh ..."

And to make things more interesting, here's another global sign o' the times:

ITV reassesses strategy as it slashes revenue forecasts.

This isn't the doom and gloom, apochryphal end of the road for TV. This is an impassioned plea from someone who hopes that the quality of TV will improve in the future, and that the quality of thinking about advertising solutions around online content also improves.

And no, it's not just the networks who are at fault. Brand managers of the world, unite and start driving for innovation around your brands. Force the rest of the industry to keep up with your demands, rather than just rolling over and letting the same tired old rerelease stand in for genuine, consumer-driven innovation.

This has been a public service rant, brought to you by the editor of marketingmag.com.au. Please feel free to wake from your slumber, pull your fingers out of your proverbials, and tell me where to go.

To have your say, login at the top of the page or register free and start commenting.