Brands at risk of self-destruction as marketers
miss the mark
95 per cent of
advertising spend in 2009 had no impact on the consumer
London, UK – 18 May 2010 – Alterian (LSE:
ALN), the leader in customer engagement technology and solutions,
today published a new report illustrating a major social change in
the way consumers listen to and engage with brands. Only 5 per cent
(4 per cent UK and 6 per cent US) of consumers surveyed in the
report trusted advertising and 8 per cent (9 per cent UK and 6 per
cent US) believed ‘what the company says about itself’. This
equates globally to nearly $426 billion spent on ineffectual
advertising activity in 2009 alone.
In stark contrast, the research found that
consumers actively engaging in the use of social media feel more in
control of relationships and more positive about their connection
with brands in general. A third (31 per cent UK and 35 per
cent US) of respondents using social media believe that ‘companies
are genuinely interested them’.
“The report highlights that the majority of
marketers are simply not hitting the right note with their target
audience,” commented David Eldridge, CEO, Alterian. “Consumer trust
is at an all-time low. What we are witnessing is an era of
individualisation. It is no longer adequate to adopt a strategy of
mass broadcast and one-way conversations. Brands should be trying
to understand communities rather than focusing on siloed
communication channels.”
The report highlights that many organisations
still do not recognise the need to change, with 58 per cent of
respondents believing that the lack of a social media strategy was
due to the absence of board support. As global advertising levels
are predicted to increase by 0.8 per cent in 2010, the report calls
for businesses to redirect their marketing spend into better
understanding their audiences, which means investment in
appropriate skills across every department to make the most of the
opportunity that new media affords them.
Eldridge concludes, “Traditional marketing is
dead. To know and communicate to individuals, to a specific
individual, should be the strategic and tactical goal of all brands
and organisations. This will present the number one marketing and
wider business challenge over the coming decade. The question
is how quickly can brands evolve their marketing strategy? If
brands are ready to increase marketing budgets let’s ensure that we
focus that resource in the right places.”
Author of the report, Your Brand: At Risk or
Ready for Growth? Professor Hulme, said: “Meeting the challenge of
individualisation will require new thinking in the collection of
customer information/data for an organisation to be able to
interact at a personal level. This will call for a
commitment from the business to both structural and skill changes,
arising from the need to break down silos, both departmentally and
functionally to address the ‘single view’ of information but to
also understand how the information is being used at any one time
across the organisation.”