2. Today we are continuously exposed to competing media
messages….
Process 3,000
Pay attention to 52
Remember 4
2
Source: From Insights to Action – DMA Strategic Summit 2011
3. Where does print fit in within that 3,000?
3
Source: Royal Mail Tracker Survey 2010
4. What percentage of 18-24 year olds prefer reading
from paper than from a screen?
A. 0-20%
B. 21-40%
C. 41-60%
D. 61-80%
E. 81-100%
0% 0% 0% 0% 0%
%
%
%
%
0%
0
0
0
20
-4
-6
-8
0
0-
-1
21
31
61
81
4
5. Young People like receiving mail
Young people want mail, they want post, and they want print
5
Source: Prinovis Customers
7. Newspapers aren’t just for “grown ups”
“We were told that children weren’t
interested in news and that if they were
they’d read it on the internet”
63,903
50,441
38,075
2007 2010 2011
First News UK circulations
7
Source: First News
8. Many assume that email and social media should be the priority
channel for teenage shoppers – That is not always the case.
As a result of receiving a
posted customer magazine,
more than any other age
group, 18-24 year olds are
more likely to…
…fulfil a transaction online...
..pass the title to their friends..
…and are twice as likely to
notice brand advertising.
8
Source: APA 2011
11. What is the number one reason for mail order
returns?
A. It was the wrong size
B. It wasn't the same colour
as on screen
C. I just didn't like it
0% 0% 0%
it
z e
e
.
l..
si
lik
co
ng
t
n'
e
ro
m
id
w
td
sa
e
us
th
he
Ij
tt
as
n'
w
as
It
w
It
11
14. Right-click here to download picture.
Layout
Digital has to compete with different screen
resolutions, different operating systems, internet
browsers, all affecting the impression that the
consumer gets. And all adding cost to adapting each
layout to suit the device.
14
15. Do you right click to download pictures in emails?
A.Yes
B.No
s
0% 0%
o
Ye
N
15
20. Print has a number of unique benefits, the qualities of the printed
page can influence the consumer throughout the purchase cycle.
20
Source: Lavidge Steiner Model
21. Print ENGAGES our minds unlike any other channel
21
Source: Millward Brown
22. Print acts as a PRIMING AGENT
The Physical connection
of print encourage higher
levels of activation in the
readers brain - creating
place which increases
memory.
22
Source: Bangor University Study for The Royal Mail in association with Millward Brown.
23. Print encourages higher levels of EMOTIONAL connection
Print results in high
levels of activation in
emotional centres.
fMRI images show neuron
activation when reading a
“favourite” magazine similar to
that of looking at images of a
loved one.
23
Source: Neurensics
24. Print gets your ATTENTION – and keeps it!
Material presented on screen
evokes responses associated
with greater difficulty in
maintaining attention.
24
Source: Bangor University Study for The Royal Mail in association with Millward Brown.
25. Print encourages better DECISION MAKING
Print results in more
fluent decision making.
This ease of reading
from print generates a
positive feeling effecting
our decision making
process and allowing up
to make a decision
easier.
25
Source: Bangor University Study for The Royal Mail in association with Millward Brown.
26. We’ve spoken about some of the unique
qualities of print that enhance and
complement customer experience.
In a multichannel world Print is one of many
important means of communicating with our
audience.
26
27. Print drives you to digital content
Print can help you stand out
from the crowd, it is a tool to
drive your customers online.
27
Source: The Guardian – Who Says Print is Dead
28. Print enhances multi channel campaigns – it makes us
purchase
28
Source: Magazine Publishers of America 2008
29. Print enhances multi channel campaigns – it makes us
purchase
Without brand you are just another
commodity on the internet.
29
Source: Magazine Publishers of America 2008 & Dynamic Logic 2009
30. Do you fast forward TV adverts at home?
A.Yes
B.No
0% 0%
s
o
Ye
N
30
31. The print experience is different – over 50% of readers see
magazine adverts as an experience enhancer
TV advertising skipped by 83% of
viewers
Only 2% of online surfers feel that
online video adverts are memorable
Mobile users are even more resistant
to advertising, only 1% can recall a
banner ad on an iPhone or iPad.
Even the mighty Facebook is
struggling to monetise mobile
advertising
Source: Millward Brown: Measuring the effect of magazine advertising and Synergies with Television and Online
31 Source: The Guardian
32. Publication printing does have a future
but,
don’t just take it from me…
32
Source: Cathie Black, President Hearst Magazines
33. 33
Source: Cathie Black, President Hearst Magazines
34. The publication printing business faces challenges,
however the future of print is bright:
Print continues to gain peoples attention
Younger generations continue to engage with print
Neuroscience indicates that print impacts consumer are engagement
Print has unique benefits, and we have to make sure that
these benefits are heard
34
Source: Cathie Black, President Hearst Magazines
35. Richard Gray – Managing Director UK
Richard.Gray@prinovis.com
+44 (0)151 494 4544
Notas do Editor
The rise of digital media has led to a rapid increase in available information. The amount of material available on online has risen at a staggering rate. How then in this media landscape can you make your brand stand out. Remember only 1 in 70,000 searches clicks through past page 3 on google.
Within this 3000, 2.5 pieces of print are delivered to homes each day, 74% of these are opened and 78% of those opened are opened immediately. Now we have your attention we would like to discuss some of the unique qualities of the printed page that can greatly help your marketing plan.
Where young people are constantly online, using social media, shopping and doing school or university work, they do not want this to be interrupted.They do not however receive post, print is an effective way to reach this target group as they pay attention to it.
Fashion and Beauty magazines attract about 50% more young readers than they did in 2001! The celebrity magazine has more than doubled its readership among young people in the past 10 years.
“Kids find the website and then realise there’s an actual printed version, and then move onto the paper,” Cox said. The editor of children's newspaper First News believes its impressive ABC figures show an appetite for print among a generation brought up with the internet.The weekly paper was one of the best performers in last week's ABC consumer magazine figures, recording a year-on-year circulation rise of 18.5 per cent."When we first launched First News I think everyone thought we were crazy," she said. "We were told that children weren't interested in news and that if they were they'd read it on the internet."But I felt in a country where we have such a culture of newspaper-reading adults, it seems strange that there wasn't a newspaper for kids so we launched it anyway."Cox also claims the newspaper has far more readers than its circulation figures suggest, as nearly 30,000 copies are distributed to schools.She said: "The readership is high - well over a million because a lot of copies are in schools. That's been a big part of our success."We work quite closely with schools - we do a lot of school campaigns - and so our popularity has spread by word-of-mouth."According to Cox, "awareness" is the key issue behind First News' extra 12,000 readers in 2012."Our issue at the beginning was awareness and it still is," she said."But people who find us tend to stay because they like the paper [and] we're consistently adding people as more and more find out that the newspaper exists."Despite the growth in readership, the newspaper's editorial team size has not been changed since its launch, with six journalists working on the print copy.Meanwhile, two extra staff now work on the website, which forms a big part of First News's success."Kids find the website and then realise there's an actual printed version, and then move onto the paper," Cox said. "The paper is only weekly so the website is updated all the time and we tell children who read the newspaper to check out the website."
Content. The printed page is fixed,you have control over what you want to put in it,what colours you will use, what font types and what paper you will use.Digital has to compete with different screen resolutions, different operating systems, internet browsers, all affecting the impression that the consumer gets. And all adding cost to adapting each layout to suit the device. In Mail order – the number one reason for returns as stated by Scots of Stow is the item is the incorrect colour. RG- you are viewing this on screen so the quality is not exactly how I wanted – using a projector I have never used before. I have left a copy on your seat of content which I am delivering exactly how I planned you to view it.
“just going to talk about a few…..”
Print is accessible. Often delivered directly to the consumer. Print can be picked up, moved around and shared with friend. You don’t need an internet connection, battery power or mobile phone. Picked up, flicked through and returned to time after time. When browsing and buying from IKEA, the consumer wants to look at the product in the room they want to buy the furniture.
Brands influence consumers at each stage through different meansPrint can have a strong influence at various stages
Reading from the printed page can influence our minds without us even realising it. The unique experience influences awareness, motivation, emotion, memory, recognition and visual perception.
Because the printed page is something we can touch, fold, crease and scribble on it is much easier for our brains to remember. The printed page creates a place in our minds, this place increases memory and recall.
Print is personal – activity when reading a favourite magazine is similar to when looking at pictures of loved ones “I trust the advertiser more when they are advertising in a magazine I trust”
Supported by research from Oxford University Press – On how reading speed, proofing, comprehension, and tangibility are effected when reading on screen.
People prefer things that are easy to think about, things that have an easier cognitive fluency. Cognitive fluency refers to the subjective experience of the ease or difficulty of completing a mental tsk. It refers not to the mental process itself, but rather the feeling people associate with the process.Fluency is important because of its power and influence over how we think about things, importantly it effects pervasiveness.
In a digital world, print can help you stand out from the crowd.Physically placing your brand in a readers hand, the printed page can act as a clear call to action driving a reader online to digital content. And the good news for print is that, despite all the hype about mobile and social media, print still has a part to play when it comes to creating successful, cross-media campaigns.But getting the mix right is crucial. For example, email marketing is understandably popular, due to its relative cheapness, but earlier this year Pitney Bowes published research that pointed to falling email open rates in cases where email was the only contact point with consumers, with 53% of some 5,000 respondents reporting negative perceptions about email intrusiveness – more than double that for direct mail.61% of marketers use Print to increase traffic to a brands website; firms often find that good old print offers a cost-effective and reliable way of breaking the iceResearch by the UK’s PPA (2008) showed that reader exposure to a magazine campaign will increase a products sales revenue by 11.6 percent.EXPORESS GIFTS!!!
Digital will always have an advantage when it comes to purchasing - online purchase, next day delivery and online returns means mail order shopping is far easier. The difficulty which exists now is making customers take notice– this is where print plays a crucial role.Adding magazines to a mix of TV and internet increases purchase intent by 15% (Dynamic Logic 2009) Adding magazines to a mix of TV and internet increases brand favourability by 44%