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© 2012 PROPRIETARY & CONFIDENTIAL   March 9, 2012
EMERGING MEDIA


A Request to talk about Emerging Media sent me searching for its meaning - It seemed redundant
Professor W. Russel Neuman
                           University of Michigan




                 Emerging Media
                 Change the meaning of geographic distance
                 Increase the volume of communication
                 Increase the speed of communication
                 Enable interactive communication
                 Allow different forms of communication to merge


Neuman’s definition dates back to 1991 and my conclusion after reading it was - yep, media’s emerged
Professor W. Russel Neuman
                            University of Michigan




                  Emerging Media
                  Change the meaning of geographic distance
                  Increase the volume of communication
                  Increase the speed of communication
                  Enable interactive communication
                  Allow different forms of communication to merge

...but when I interrogated brand behavior through this lens, I was left questioning whether brands today interact well with people and whether they do a good job at merging
different forms of communication.
EMERGING__________


My conclusion is that they don’t and the reason they don’t is that in order to do so, brands need to understand peoples’ motivations and brand ecosystems need to function
in new ways. It’s hard to focus on these when there are so many distractions for marketers in their effort to be the most favored, shared, bought brand ...
...Everything’s emerging, which makes it easy to be caught up in the shiny box syndrome.
A shiny box like Pinterest that’s got every brand team rushing to find their role on the site even at the expense of working out how to ensure their best visual representation
is available to pin.
EMERGING                                    BEHAVIORS


So today, I want to talk to the emerging behaviors we need to understand and act upon to get the most out of the relationship between brands and people.
I’ll be focusing on three key areas - People: How to fast-track behavioral science to be several steps ahead of your current position. Brands: How you can break down brand
silos and find new opportunities through applying APIs. Work: How the brand ecosystem has to function in new ways to capitalize on the emergence on the mashing of
product and communications.
Media was a brand's tool to pull consumers along - to persuade them to buy their brand and later on to buy in to their brand. People were passive recipients of brand
messaging.
Today, people are leading the engagement and brands are desperately trying to keep up.
Adoption Lags Shortening




                                                                                                                SOURCE: HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW



This transformation is probably less a result of the advances in technology and more to do with the pace of these advances - brands move more slowly than people in
engaging in new ways of doing things today.
2 Seconds
                                                                                                   NOT 4 SECONDS




These numbers illustrate a shift in behavior that highlights shoppers impatience - A 2009 study by Forrester found that online shoppers expected pages to load in 2 seconds
or fewer - and at 3 seconds, a large share abandon the site. In 2006, a similar study found the average expectation for page load times were four seconds or fewer.
People are looking for tangibles from a brand - functional benefits, which I would call the brands as apps mentality
People are looking for shared values - which has been perhaps true for a long time but today the demand on action by a brand to demonstrate true belief in a value is that
much greater - look at the success of Tom's shoes - and the simplicity of the messaging - Buy one pair; we give one pair away. That took 2 seconds to explain.
People are looking for experiences beyond the ownership of the product - Look at Converse or Ray Ban with Mix tracks
R.I.P. Bad Products


And of course they are looking for all the product benefits and smart design and aspirational aesthetics of a brand like never before. There’s no place for bad products today.
INFORMED                                                           OBSERVED




                                                                               BORROWED




So we believe brands need to be more in synch with people’s behavior in order to stay relevant and successful. I want to focus on three areas of behavioral study to consider.
The first is informed.
First, I need to cover off an immediate potential distraction - big data. It’s the current silver bullet but...
Five out of four people
                 have problems with
                 fractions


...beware those who get excited with numbers.
McKinsey Global Institute



                                         140,000 - 190,000



                                            1.5 Million
Here’s the real challenge with Big Data - According to McKinsey by 2018, the United States alone could face a shortage of 140,000 to 190,000 people with deep analytical
skills as well as 1.5 million managers and analysts with the know-how to use the analysis of big data to make effective decisions.
To me, the first and second data points here show the real tension in dealing with Big data.
Big Data certainly will provide answers but my suggestion is to lean against it with notions and see whether the data supports pursuing the notions.
It.er.a.tion
             Noun

             A problem-solving or computational method in which a succession of
             approximations, each building on the one preceding, is used to
             achieve a desired degree of accuracy.




For Big Spaceship working in digital gives us a tremendous advantage in gaining an understanding of behavior because we can launch with notions and learn from them.
The learning mechanism has to be thoughtfully built in to the product and the product has to be flexible enough to evolve over time.
CONSTANT
                                                                    BETA

We have a culture built on Beta behavior and it’s good to capitalize on this. To look to every launch as the start of a sustainable relationship rather than a launch and leave
approach.
KPIs


                                                                                                        KLIs
For us, KPIs are critical and have to be understood and agreed upon up front but we also put an equal emphasis on what we call Key Learning Indicators - behavioral
touchpoints that provide feedback on actions by users, content preference, etc, so we can constantly augment the experience.
Here’s an example of work we did for GE’s Healthymagination, where we introduced an App called Morsel that had a number of iterations, updating the engagement with
users via behavioral touchpoint feedback.
The Skittles Facebook engagement is a prime example of KLIs informing content development - most liked, most shared enabled us to focus our content and get the site over
20 million likes.
It’s never been
                                   cheaper to fail

This is a statement we constantly tell our clients - don’t be in fear of failure when connecting with consumers. Just don’t put stuff out there that betrays the consumer’s
relationship to the brand.
INFORMED                                        OBSERVED



                                                                            BORROWED




Big Spaceship’s DNA has always been focused on behavior. Understanding the behaviors that exist, challenging what behavior we want to affect and what behaviors we can
play to. This requires us to broaden our perspective beyond digital and look at total behavior...
By getting out there and studying behavior beyond the screen, we are able to create rich personas and deliver engaging deep experiences that augment the relationship
between brand and person beyond a simple digital interaction.
INFORMED                             OBSERVED




                                              BORROWED



The final approach to behavioral understanding is to look to what behaviors can be borrowed.
Brands can’t create
                     new behaviors  *


                                                                                                                                            * 99.9% of the time
The smartest thing for a brand marketer or advertising partner to do is to look at other categories that exist in their consumer’s life and see what behaviors they can borrow. It
can be as simple as looking at gamification and rewards with Mint.com to people’s interaction with their smartphone while waiting. While thinking about tackling a challenge,
think about behaviors you can replicate rather than forcing them to learn new behaviors. It almost never works and requires tremendous patience is essential.
How can we apply new behaviors to brands?
Stuff. Stuff. Stuff.


We live in a world of phenomenal products - Reference Louis C K’s “Everything is amazing and nobody is happy”. Great products keep being invented...
From the iPad to the new intelligent Nike+ Hyperdunks to Orbit Strollers that adapt with your growing family...
...to apps like Mint, Strava and Plex’s digital media console...
...to Lynx’s one spray emergency deodrant for guys, Tide’s all in one - no mess - washing powder to... OK, maybe lime flavored beer pushes it too far.
156,125 new products
     introduced by cpg companies in 2005

     Only        4 percent of these products achieved annual sales of more
     than $50 million.


    Estimates of new product innovation failures range from                                         53% to 86%

                                                                                          SOURCE: BOOZ ALLEN HAMILTON STUDY 2005


Invention is incessant but how effective is it in maximizing the success of a business?
FFUTS LUFESU GNIKAM
            MAKING STUFF USEFUL


Big Spaceship’s call to brands is to focus less on making more stuff and instead focusing on making the stuff that exists more useful.
Nike                      BAND EQUITY
                                Performance


                        SHOES                ATHLETES                  TRAINING                   NIKE+                                              EQUIPMENT
                    Athletic               Sponsorship             Routines                  Running data                                            Golf
                    Fashion                Learning                Health                    Running maps                                            Clubs
                    Basketball             Connections             Encouragement             Demographics                                            Balls
                    Football               ...                     Expertise                 Community data                                          Training
                    Tennis                                         ...                       Individual's relationship to community                  ...
                    Golf                                                                     Individual competitive challenges
                    ...                                                                      Competition pulse
                                                                                             ...
                    MATERIALS
                    Leather                                                                  RECENT ADDITIONS
                    Rubber                                                                   Basketball shoes
                    Synthetic                                                                Jump height
                    ...                                                                      Length of play
                                                                                             Intensity of play
                                                                                             Challenges
                                                                                             ...

                                                                                             Training shoes
                                                                                             Training data
                                                                                             Levels of engagement
                                                                                             Duration
                                                                                             Length of commitment
                                                                                             Role of encouragement
                                                                                             ...

Please excuse the simplicity of this example but I wanted to share our thinking on how you make what exists more useful. Imagine you are looking across the business units
at Nike and seeing a way to combine elements to create a new or enhanced engagement.
Applying APIs
 INTERNAL HORIZONTAL




We do an audit of a brand by stripping the brand down to its individual pieces. We can then apply behavioral understanding and see if there’s an opportunity to layer an API
across silos.
Nike                       BAND EQUITY
                                 Performance


                 SHOES                 ATHLETES                 TRAINING                   NIKE+                                              EQUIPMENT
             Athletic                Sponsorship            Routines                  Running data                                            Golf
             Fashion                 Learning               Health                    Running maps                                            Clubs
             Basketball              Connections            Encouragement             Demographics                                            Balls
             Football                ...                    Expertise                 Community data                                          Training
             Tennis                                         ...                       Individual's relationship to community                  ...
             Golf                                                                     Individual competitive challenges
             ...                                                                      Competition pulse
                                                                                      ...
             MATERIALS
             Leather                                                                  RECENT ADDITIONS
             Rubber                                                                   Basketball shoes
             Synthetic                                                                Jump height
             ...                                                                      Length of play
                                                                                      Intensity of play
                                                                                      Challenges
                                                                                      ...

                                                                                      Training shoes
                                                                                      Training data
                                                                                      Levels of engagement
                                                                                      Duration
                                                                                      Length of commitment
                                                                                      Role of encouragement
                                                                                      ...

So let’s look at basketball as a focal point. What do guys care about beyond the shoe? How about training routines that build body fitness? How about connections to key
players - Nike has the contacts - and share their fitness regimes? How about a way to encourage progress through some form of social layer that enables people to share
their progress on and off the court.
Applying APIs
 INTERNAL TO EXTERNAL




...and how about going one step further and stepping outside of Nike’s own product offering and tapping in to nutrition - advising users on the best nutrition for basketball. You
could even tie this to the celebrities. A whole new engagement platform is created without actually having to invent any new product advancement.
Google Creative Labs

                     What do you love?


Here’s an example of this thinking applied to our client Google, who asked for our help with their options page. We chose a strategy of Show don’t Tell, which brought to life all
the individual products offered in the options page through a simple question that begged to be answered - What do you love?
This is how the Options page looked...
...and in case of any profanities, we built in a way that the page would go respond with kindness by suggesting the search to be on kittens.
Finally, we believe none of these new behaviors can be adopted long term without a shift in the way we work as marketers and advertising partners.
If it’s uncomfortable,
               you might be on to
                     something.
It should be no surprise based on what I’ve suggested with borrowed behaviors, adopting new behaviors is hard. It requires a level of discomfort that many in our business
don’t want to experience. Two typical patterns emerge. A reluctant dive in followed by the emergence of old behaviors, which eventually create frustration and an assessment
that the new behaviors don’t work. Or a slow transition to new behaviors that require patience but with a north star defined and understood, the transition eventually results in
a changed approach.
COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                    BRAND


                     PRODUCTS




I want to look particularly at our industry to give an example of how behaviors have to shift. In the past, a product was developed - a tangible piece that would be wrapped in a
brand through packaging and advertising messaging. An advertising partner would be brought in to handle the communications piece. A brand used to be created by the
advertising - it shaped perceptions, made connections with a desired audience. It appeared to make sense for the separation. Today, we believe a brand is the sum of its
actions - everything it does from its inception, through to the manufacturing and finally its disposal is in one respect under scrutiny and in another, an opportunity for
engagement with consumers. So why do we have a wall existing between communications and product?
COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                    BRAND


                     PRODUCTS




For us a brand's advertising partner should sit firmly between product and communications and in truth few clients see it this way. I use advertising partner loosely here as this
is not what I would say our role was with either Google or GE. For an advertising partner to succeed, it has to live with the product and be a potential contributor to the
creation of products or even the creator of products - being able to pivot between productizing a brand communication such as an app or social platform. At the same time it
has to find ways to deepen the relationship through communication as people seek more of an understanding in a brand.
COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                     BRAND


                     PRODUCTS




What I would like to call the old way of doing things only because I want to ignore that this is still very much how things are done. A product is conceived, prototyped, focus
grouped, manufactured and somewhere in this space, communications are engaged to think about branding, advertising and launching the product.
COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                    BRAND


                     PRODUCTS




An advertising partner is then briefed and tasked with creating a campaign against this product to try to engage potential consumers. Everything lives in isolation of each
other. Everything is based on a shallow relationship with consumers. There might be a logo or even a tag line that connects different endeavors but they live separately.
Advertising campaigns are these peaks that use sporadic nudges for engagement and the goal of that engagement is immediate sells.
(narrative)     COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                   BRAND


                    PRODUCTS                  (behavior/UX)




You have to seek out advertising partners who show a curiosity for the product and who look at consumer behavior and can find opportunities to deliver useful interactions
with that behavior.
(narrative)      COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                 BRAND


                    PRODUCTS                 (behavior/UX)




I want to share a couple of examples where we are seeing this new behavior coming to light. If we label Products as the behavior/UX of a brand and Communications as the
narrative of a brand, you can see interesting mash ups between the two putting more narrative in to the product and its development and engaging behavioral/UX through
communications.
(narrative)       COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                     BRAND


                     PRODUCTS                   (behavior/UX)




I’ve chosen two brands to focus on. The first is Mail Chimp, which I believe has done an excellent job of putting the product behavior/UX in to their narrative. Literally creating
a publishing like aesthetic and ethos around the product and even having a ton of fun with it at the same time.
(narrative)      COMMUNICATIONS



                                                                                 BRAND


                    PRODUCTS                 (behavior/UX)




The second example is Warby Parker who tackled a behavioral challenge straight on in their communications with choosing 5 pairs online, receiving them and getting
feedback via Facebook from Warby Parker experts and sending back the ones that didn’t work for you. They also created an awesome social business core to their offering
and then they’ve done a great job of telling their story through their annual report - one of the best designs in annual reports out there in my opinion.
Cross Disciplinary Teams




Finally, to really make this all work, you need to work in new ways. At Big Spaceship, we chose to eliminate departments and instead create fully functional teams. It
eliminates inefficiencies in most operational areas. It eliminates the need for meetings. What it brings is ownership across a team. It brings immediate response to a moment
of inspiration. It creates a team conversant beyond their skill set. Ideas come from anyone and their success is through collective ownership.
Four Principles
                                 Collaborate.
                                 Produce exceptional work.
                                 Take care of each other.
                                 Partner with your client.

                                 The rest is up to you.


We also don’t believe in management down where processes are institutional. Our teams are provided with these guiding principles and through working together for a period
of time, processes unique to the team start to bubble up. There’s complete autonomy and financial transparency in the teams. It’s been a powerful contributor to our shift in
engagement with clients and the clients are very much part of the teams.
Thanks...
PRESENTATION BY:
Alasdair lloyd-Jones, Chief Operating Officer, Big Spaceship

CONTACT:
alj@bigspaceship.com
@alasdairllj

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Emerging Behaviors: Understanding People in a Changing Media Landscape

  • 1. © 2012 PROPRIETARY & CONFIDENTIAL March 9, 2012
  • 2. EMERGING MEDIA A Request to talk about Emerging Media sent me searching for its meaning - It seemed redundant
  • 3. Professor W. Russel Neuman University of Michigan Emerging Media Change the meaning of geographic distance Increase the volume of communication Increase the speed of communication Enable interactive communication Allow different forms of communication to merge Neuman’s definition dates back to 1991 and my conclusion after reading it was - yep, media’s emerged
  • 4. Professor W. Russel Neuman University of Michigan Emerging Media Change the meaning of geographic distance Increase the volume of communication Increase the speed of communication Enable interactive communication Allow different forms of communication to merge ...but when I interrogated brand behavior through this lens, I was left questioning whether brands today interact well with people and whether they do a good job at merging different forms of communication.
  • 5. EMERGING__________ My conclusion is that they don’t and the reason they don’t is that in order to do so, brands need to understand peoples’ motivations and brand ecosystems need to function in new ways. It’s hard to focus on these when there are so many distractions for marketers in their effort to be the most favored, shared, bought brand ...
  • 6. ...Everything’s emerging, which makes it easy to be caught up in the shiny box syndrome.
  • 7. A shiny box like Pinterest that’s got every brand team rushing to find their role on the site even at the expense of working out how to ensure their best visual representation is available to pin.
  • 8. EMERGING BEHAVIORS So today, I want to talk to the emerging behaviors we need to understand and act upon to get the most out of the relationship between brands and people.
  • 9. I’ll be focusing on three key areas - People: How to fast-track behavioral science to be several steps ahead of your current position. Brands: How you can break down brand silos and find new opportunities through applying APIs. Work: How the brand ecosystem has to function in new ways to capitalize on the emergence on the mashing of product and communications.
  • 10.
  • 11. Media was a brand's tool to pull consumers along - to persuade them to buy their brand and later on to buy in to their brand. People were passive recipients of brand messaging.
  • 12. Today, people are leading the engagement and brands are desperately trying to keep up.
  • 13. Adoption Lags Shortening SOURCE: HARVARD BUSINESS REVIEW This transformation is probably less a result of the advances in technology and more to do with the pace of these advances - brands move more slowly than people in engaging in new ways of doing things today.
  • 14. 2 Seconds NOT 4 SECONDS These numbers illustrate a shift in behavior that highlights shoppers impatience - A 2009 study by Forrester found that online shoppers expected pages to load in 2 seconds or fewer - and at 3 seconds, a large share abandon the site. In 2006, a similar study found the average expectation for page load times were four seconds or fewer.
  • 15. People are looking for tangibles from a brand - functional benefits, which I would call the brands as apps mentality
  • 16. People are looking for shared values - which has been perhaps true for a long time but today the demand on action by a brand to demonstrate true belief in a value is that much greater - look at the success of Tom's shoes - and the simplicity of the messaging - Buy one pair; we give one pair away. That took 2 seconds to explain.
  • 17. People are looking for experiences beyond the ownership of the product - Look at Converse or Ray Ban with Mix tracks
  • 18. R.I.P. Bad Products And of course they are looking for all the product benefits and smart design and aspirational aesthetics of a brand like never before. There’s no place for bad products today.
  • 19. INFORMED OBSERVED BORROWED So we believe brands need to be more in synch with people’s behavior in order to stay relevant and successful. I want to focus on three areas of behavioral study to consider. The first is informed.
  • 20. First, I need to cover off an immediate potential distraction - big data. It’s the current silver bullet but...
  • 21. Five out of four people have problems with fractions ...beware those who get excited with numbers.
  • 22. McKinsey Global Institute 140,000 - 190,000 1.5 Million Here’s the real challenge with Big Data - According to McKinsey by 2018, the United States alone could face a shortage of 140,000 to 190,000 people with deep analytical skills as well as 1.5 million managers and analysts with the know-how to use the analysis of big data to make effective decisions.
  • 23. To me, the first and second data points here show the real tension in dealing with Big data. Big Data certainly will provide answers but my suggestion is to lean against it with notions and see whether the data supports pursuing the notions.
  • 24. It.er.a.tion Noun A problem-solving or computational method in which a succession of approximations, each building on the one preceding, is used to achieve a desired degree of accuracy. For Big Spaceship working in digital gives us a tremendous advantage in gaining an understanding of behavior because we can launch with notions and learn from them. The learning mechanism has to be thoughtfully built in to the product and the product has to be flexible enough to evolve over time.
  • 25. CONSTANT BETA We have a culture built on Beta behavior and it’s good to capitalize on this. To look to every launch as the start of a sustainable relationship rather than a launch and leave approach.
  • 26. KPIs KLIs For us, KPIs are critical and have to be understood and agreed upon up front but we also put an equal emphasis on what we call Key Learning Indicators - behavioral touchpoints that provide feedback on actions by users, content preference, etc, so we can constantly augment the experience.
  • 27. Here’s an example of work we did for GE’s Healthymagination, where we introduced an App called Morsel that had a number of iterations, updating the engagement with users via behavioral touchpoint feedback.
  • 28. The Skittles Facebook engagement is a prime example of KLIs informing content development - most liked, most shared enabled us to focus our content and get the site over 20 million likes.
  • 29. It’s never been cheaper to fail This is a statement we constantly tell our clients - don’t be in fear of failure when connecting with consumers. Just don’t put stuff out there that betrays the consumer’s relationship to the brand.
  • 30. INFORMED OBSERVED BORROWED Big Spaceship’s DNA has always been focused on behavior. Understanding the behaviors that exist, challenging what behavior we want to affect and what behaviors we can play to. This requires us to broaden our perspective beyond digital and look at total behavior...
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  • 32. By getting out there and studying behavior beyond the screen, we are able to create rich personas and deliver engaging deep experiences that augment the relationship between brand and person beyond a simple digital interaction.
  • 33. INFORMED OBSERVED BORROWED The final approach to behavioral understanding is to look to what behaviors can be borrowed.
  • 34. Brands can’t create new behaviors * * 99.9% of the time The smartest thing for a brand marketer or advertising partner to do is to look at other categories that exist in their consumer’s life and see what behaviors they can borrow. It can be as simple as looking at gamification and rewards with Mint.com to people’s interaction with their smartphone while waiting. While thinking about tackling a challenge, think about behaviors you can replicate rather than forcing them to learn new behaviors. It almost never works and requires tremendous patience is essential.
  • 35. How can we apply new behaviors to brands?
  • 36. Stuff. Stuff. Stuff. We live in a world of phenomenal products - Reference Louis C K’s “Everything is amazing and nobody is happy”. Great products keep being invented...
  • 37. From the iPad to the new intelligent Nike+ Hyperdunks to Orbit Strollers that adapt with your growing family...
  • 38. ...to apps like Mint, Strava and Plex’s digital media console...
  • 39. ...to Lynx’s one spray emergency deodrant for guys, Tide’s all in one - no mess - washing powder to... OK, maybe lime flavored beer pushes it too far.
  • 40. 156,125 new products introduced by cpg companies in 2005 Only 4 percent of these products achieved annual sales of more than $50 million. Estimates of new product innovation failures range from 53% to 86% SOURCE: BOOZ ALLEN HAMILTON STUDY 2005 Invention is incessant but how effective is it in maximizing the success of a business?
  • 41. FFUTS LUFESU GNIKAM MAKING STUFF USEFUL Big Spaceship’s call to brands is to focus less on making more stuff and instead focusing on making the stuff that exists more useful.
  • 42. Nike BAND EQUITY Performance SHOES ATHLETES TRAINING NIKE+ EQUIPMENT Athletic Sponsorship Routines Running data Golf Fashion Learning Health Running maps Clubs Basketball Connections Encouragement Demographics Balls Football ... Expertise Community data Training Tennis ... Individual's relationship to community ... Golf Individual competitive challenges ... Competition pulse ... MATERIALS Leather RECENT ADDITIONS Rubber Basketball shoes Synthetic Jump height ... Length of play Intensity of play Challenges ... Training shoes Training data Levels of engagement Duration Length of commitment Role of encouragement ... Please excuse the simplicity of this example but I wanted to share our thinking on how you make what exists more useful. Imagine you are looking across the business units at Nike and seeing a way to combine elements to create a new or enhanced engagement.
  • 43. Applying APIs INTERNAL HORIZONTAL We do an audit of a brand by stripping the brand down to its individual pieces. We can then apply behavioral understanding and see if there’s an opportunity to layer an API across silos.
  • 44. Nike BAND EQUITY Performance SHOES ATHLETES TRAINING NIKE+ EQUIPMENT Athletic Sponsorship Routines Running data Golf Fashion Learning Health Running maps Clubs Basketball Connections Encouragement Demographics Balls Football ... Expertise Community data Training Tennis ... Individual's relationship to community ... Golf Individual competitive challenges ... Competition pulse ... MATERIALS Leather RECENT ADDITIONS Rubber Basketball shoes Synthetic Jump height ... Length of play Intensity of play Challenges ... Training shoes Training data Levels of engagement Duration Length of commitment Role of encouragement ... So let’s look at basketball as a focal point. What do guys care about beyond the shoe? How about training routines that build body fitness? How about connections to key players - Nike has the contacts - and share their fitness regimes? How about a way to encourage progress through some form of social layer that enables people to share their progress on and off the court.
  • 45. Applying APIs INTERNAL TO EXTERNAL ...and how about going one step further and stepping outside of Nike’s own product offering and tapping in to nutrition - advising users on the best nutrition for basketball. You could even tie this to the celebrities. A whole new engagement platform is created without actually having to invent any new product advancement.
  • 46. Google Creative Labs What do you love? Here’s an example of this thinking applied to our client Google, who asked for our help with their options page. We chose a strategy of Show don’t Tell, which brought to life all the individual products offered in the options page through a simple question that begged to be answered - What do you love?
  • 47. This is how the Options page looked...
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  • 54. ...and in case of any profanities, we built in a way that the page would go respond with kindness by suggesting the search to be on kittens.
  • 55. Finally, we believe none of these new behaviors can be adopted long term without a shift in the way we work as marketers and advertising partners.
  • 56. If it’s uncomfortable, you might be on to something. It should be no surprise based on what I’ve suggested with borrowed behaviors, adopting new behaviors is hard. It requires a level of discomfort that many in our business don’t want to experience. Two typical patterns emerge. A reluctant dive in followed by the emergence of old behaviors, which eventually create frustration and an assessment that the new behaviors don’t work. Or a slow transition to new behaviors that require patience but with a north star defined and understood, the transition eventually results in a changed approach.
  • 57. COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS I want to look particularly at our industry to give an example of how behaviors have to shift. In the past, a product was developed - a tangible piece that would be wrapped in a brand through packaging and advertising messaging. An advertising partner would be brought in to handle the communications piece. A brand used to be created by the advertising - it shaped perceptions, made connections with a desired audience. It appeared to make sense for the separation. Today, we believe a brand is the sum of its actions - everything it does from its inception, through to the manufacturing and finally its disposal is in one respect under scrutiny and in another, an opportunity for engagement with consumers. So why do we have a wall existing between communications and product?
  • 58. COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS For us a brand's advertising partner should sit firmly between product and communications and in truth few clients see it this way. I use advertising partner loosely here as this is not what I would say our role was with either Google or GE. For an advertising partner to succeed, it has to live with the product and be a potential contributor to the creation of products or even the creator of products - being able to pivot between productizing a brand communication such as an app or social platform. At the same time it has to find ways to deepen the relationship through communication as people seek more of an understanding in a brand.
  • 59. COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS What I would like to call the old way of doing things only because I want to ignore that this is still very much how things are done. A product is conceived, prototyped, focus grouped, manufactured and somewhere in this space, communications are engaged to think about branding, advertising and launching the product.
  • 60. COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS An advertising partner is then briefed and tasked with creating a campaign against this product to try to engage potential consumers. Everything lives in isolation of each other. Everything is based on a shallow relationship with consumers. There might be a logo or even a tag line that connects different endeavors but they live separately. Advertising campaigns are these peaks that use sporadic nudges for engagement and the goal of that engagement is immediate sells.
  • 61. (narrative) COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS (behavior/UX) You have to seek out advertising partners who show a curiosity for the product and who look at consumer behavior and can find opportunities to deliver useful interactions with that behavior.
  • 62. (narrative) COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS (behavior/UX) I want to share a couple of examples where we are seeing this new behavior coming to light. If we label Products as the behavior/UX of a brand and Communications as the narrative of a brand, you can see interesting mash ups between the two putting more narrative in to the product and its development and engaging behavioral/UX through communications.
  • 63. (narrative) COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS (behavior/UX) I’ve chosen two brands to focus on. The first is Mail Chimp, which I believe has done an excellent job of putting the product behavior/UX in to their narrative. Literally creating a publishing like aesthetic and ethos around the product and even having a ton of fun with it at the same time.
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  • 69. (narrative) COMMUNICATIONS BRAND PRODUCTS (behavior/UX) The second example is Warby Parker who tackled a behavioral challenge straight on in their communications with choosing 5 pairs online, receiving them and getting feedback via Facebook from Warby Parker experts and sending back the ones that didn’t work for you. They also created an awesome social business core to their offering and then they’ve done a great job of telling their story through their annual report - one of the best designs in annual reports out there in my opinion.
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  • 74. Cross Disciplinary Teams Finally, to really make this all work, you need to work in new ways. At Big Spaceship, we chose to eliminate departments and instead create fully functional teams. It eliminates inefficiencies in most operational areas. It eliminates the need for meetings. What it brings is ownership across a team. It brings immediate response to a moment of inspiration. It creates a team conversant beyond their skill set. Ideas come from anyone and their success is through collective ownership.
  • 75. Four Principles Collaborate. Produce exceptional work. Take care of each other. Partner with your client. The rest is up to you. We also don’t believe in management down where processes are institutional. Our teams are provided with these guiding principles and through working together for a period of time, processes unique to the team start to bubble up. There’s complete autonomy and financial transparency in the teams. It’s been a powerful contributor to our shift in engagement with clients and the clients are very much part of the teams.
  • 76. Thanks... PRESENTATION BY: Alasdair lloyd-Jones, Chief Operating Officer, Big Spaceship CONTACT: alj@bigspaceship.com @alasdairllj