Sunday, October 18, 2009

What is your Media Saying about You?


A brand’s media choices say as much, if not more, about a brand as the ads written for it.

Yet it’s the area marketers tend to pay least attention to.

How do you decide whether your media strategy is aligned to your brand or not?

The starting point is to look at what your brand promises or stands for and ensure that its values are reflected in the media choices you make.

One brand that gets this idea and has implemented it beautifully is Mini Cooper
Mini has long been representative of all that is fun and quintessentially British. When Mini featured in the movie “Austin Powers - the Spy Who Shagged Me” (whether consciously or not), it used the script, the characters in the film and the actors (Michael Caine and Mike Myers) to supreme effect – bringing alive in a way few ads could – its core values – its quirky sense of British humour and fun.

Mini has done that for a while though. Right from the time it was chosen by Mr Bean as his choice of transport as he went about his wild and whacky capers. Quintessentially British – Mini has exercised its media options intelligently and well – using them to strengthen its brand, its core imagery and values.

Brands differ and so their media choices must too

The Catholic Church - authoritarian, strict

Two brands that are similar yet different are the Catholic Church and the Episcopal Church.

The Catholic Church is not a liberal brand. On the contrary, it is authoritative, strict and intolerant of many practices considered okay in today’s society.

The Catholic Church forbids sex before marriage, for example, it is against homosexuality, opposed to female priests as well as the use of condoms.

Given the stance the brand has chosen to adopt, there are some media options that would work for it and others that would not. It would not be appropriate for the Church to market its message in adult chronicles like Playboy or Penthouse for example. Alternative lifestyle magazines like Blue or even popular shows like Oprah that deal in a fairly open manner with issues that would be contentious with the stand taken by the Church.

To do so would be to condone behaviour, values and lines of thinking it has long decided it must live in fundamental opposition to. The Catholic Church’s conservatism as a brand prevents it from exercising many media options another brand might.

The Episcopal Church - here for sinners not saints
The Episcopal Church is a very liberal brand compared to the Catholic Church. Its ideology was beautifully brought to life by an award winning campaign by Fallon McElligot in the mid eighties which some of you may have seen.


The campaign featured many different ads. One of them shows a picture of Christ nailed to the Cross and said “we welcome people with piercings.”

Another showed a picture of Henry VIII with a headline that read “In a Church started by a man with 6 wives, forgiveness goes without saying.”

What the Episcopal Church tries to do as a brand is preach “forgiveness”, and “compassion”. Its premise, “that all of us are in need of the redemption that only Christ can provide” gives the brand a “non-judgemental” quality that greatly broadens the media options at its disposal.

Simply by virtue of the stance the brand has chosen to adopt, it can use media – including all the options detailed above – that the Catholic Church cannot. Its justification is simple – as a brand it’s not here for saints but for sinners – and they are to be found in media more conservative brands like the Catholic Church will invariably frown upon.

Your media communicates more about your brand than just its values

It can sometimes communicate your brand’s fundamental beliefs in business and strategy.

Let’s take a brand like Google for example. Let’s say Google suddenly decides to launch a mainstream advertising campaign for its products on television. What does it say about the brand...that it has departed from one of its core beliefs...that the future of advertising is not in the area of contextual relevance any more? Such a move would belie and go against everything Google has stood for so far and the brand would suffer as a result.

Google hasn’t decided to launch a mainstream campaign just yet (thank goodness!) but Yahoo has.

Yahoo’s new campaign “Yahoo it’s You” is all about the personalisation options the brand offers users in terms of its portal and search. The trouble with this campaign is that the media it uses is predominantly offline (ie television, print and outdoor). We all know Yahoo is trying to buy itself out of trouble. But I don’t think they’ve thought about the message their decision to go mainstream in such a big way will send to the market about their brand.

The message it sends about Yahoo the way I see it is this – the brand does not believe that it (and therefore any other brand) can market itself successfully using the online space alone. It therefore needs mainstream television, print and outdoor.

There are two issues with this stance:

One – in a time when more dynamic brands are walking away from mainstream channels to more targeted and efficient ones, Yahoo is doing the opposite. In the process, it is depositioning itself as far as its dynamism and progressiveness as a marketer is concerned.

Two – in a time when the brand’s sales people are trying to convince marketers of the value of putting more money into the online channel - Yahoo itself is doing the exact opposite! It can't be easy for Yahoo's sales people to sell on the platform the brand has chosen to adopt.

Yahoo's approach could have been a lot cleverer in terms of reaching out to its audience. By developing a traditional, straightforward and somewhat uninspired marketing approach it raises questions on its direction and the strength and dynamism of its leadership. All through the media channels it has chosen for itself.

Choose your media carefully - it says more about you than you can imagine

The media choices you make for a brand communicate how it thinks as well as the key values it epitomises. These media choices also cue the strength of an organisation's leadership, its belief in its direction as well as the clarity with which it has defined it.

When you use a particular media to say something about your brand - the interesting thing is this - it does!

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