FEED DDB India's posterous

FEED DDB India's posterous

Feed DDBIndia  //  

Feb 3 / 1:39am

macro-trends and the collective consciousness

Macro trends and the collective consciousness

Gone are the days when Ramayan meant pin-drop silence and staring at the TV in rapt attention. Gone are the evenings when gullies would be vacant as everyone wished Sachin a century.

With proliferation of media and tailor-made everything, India’s collective conscious has reduced to the size of a pea. There was a time when what everyone watched on TV last night was Close-up Antakshri or Philips Top 10. That’s what kids spoke about, that’s what mothers discussed and that’s what years later endured in all their memories.

Entertainment, advertising and media in general, accounts not just for our present but helps build memories for tomorrow and provides a country with a collective consciousness that binds them together. Brands that have been a part of that, live on.

But in today’s India not only is the divide between the rich and the poor excessive to say the least, it is also just as extreme between a metro-mini-metro, metro-metro, north Bombay- south Bombay, Sidhi garden-mahavir enclave…

When was the last time Bollywood, India’s dream generator, gave the country a nation-wide hit? When was the last time a movie had people queuing up not only at multiplexes but at that run-down theatre in Bathinda too?

People are busy opposing Telangana and Gorkhaland when the boundaries in their collective experiences have long been formed and have led to a disintegration of the collective consciousness of India. No wonder today, that Phir Mile Sur Mera Tumhara doesn’t give you goose bumps. No wonder, today then, that not everyone has even seen Phir Mile Sur Mera Tumhara.

But then how does it affect us in advertising?

Sample the current twitter tag of ‘#iconic ads’ and you’ll find people reliving ads that spoke to them all. From Deepikaji to ‘papa ki karan petrol khatam hi nahin hunda’. Ads that they all remember. Ads they all enjoyed. Ads that form a part of this collective consciousness.

If there really is very little that binds us all, then perhaps this is both a challenge and an opportunity for brands to bring us together. To be the common thread that expands these silos.

With advertisers spending a lot of time identifying the exact target group right down to the underwear they wear, there seems to be a serious risk of dividing people into boxes that probably exist only in our heads.

So then would it serve the brand right if advertisers were to kill themselves (and their planners) in trying to narrow down to this perfect consumer? ‘Contraceptive for the busy woman who works in a BPO or is an air-hostess’, said a client to me. He wants it in the body copy. Must we really bother with telling people that this product is for them? Can they not figure that out for themselves once they know what it does. Why must we specify it in such detail that perhaps even reduces the spill-over effect?

Enough has been said about the increasingly unhealthy silos people have created for themselves. They say social networking is pulling us apart instead of bringing us together.

If the product is customized, should the advertising be? Advertising tells stories. Interesting, warm, funny, engaging stories. Stories that people want to share. Stories they want to, perhaps, hear again.

Perhaps then there is merit in using your exact definition of the TG in deciding your media plan. 

And leaving brand planners to find that elusive culture sign that brings people together. Picking up that macro cultural trend that isn’t found in excel sheets but instead in the pulse of the nation.

Surely a brand can narrate a convincing story based on what it has to offer instead of getting too muddled up in who it is for. Perhaps one needs to define the media and sales TG real close. But the creative TG… the broader the better?

Considering the decline of the collective consciousness thanks to micro-targeting, is it then time for us to not scoff at the client who says ‘my product is for all women’? Instead, find him a story to tell that brings people together and not just take the easy way out by micro-defining his TG for him. No wonder most average advertisements today are 30 second definitions of the TG, than what the brand’s story is.

 

Feb 2 / 4:02am

Guardian - whole picture ad

In case you haven't already seen it...

It was created in 1986 by The Paul Weiland Film Company for BMP (Boase Massimi Pollitt) - now rebranded as DDB London. 

 

John Webster created this ad and here's a little bit about him http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2006/jan/17/guardianobituaries.advertising
Jan 29 / 1:40am

Colours, Music and Emotions

Click here to download:
blog post.doc (21 KB)
(download)

Hi,

Please find attached the blog post. I have written about Colours, Music and emotions and how paint brands can leverage this opportunity to bring the three together.


regards,
gaurav

Jan 28 / 2:50am

In search of the great nothing

I have a hypothesis. which is really an extension of thought. but to present it, i must develop a context.(or trend-spotting as they call it)

1. nucleated world -> people are connected to more people far more thinly. (a lot of hi's, hello's, how are you's.. very few hugs, time-spent-together's, ILUs.)
2. people removed from cause-effect ->  most of us have no clue what their salary paying job's effect is in the world around, due to matters of scale and transferability of work. (did my work as biz develpment for a media company went into funding the owner's accentuated war advocating rhetoric?; did my design for valve go into the bombs that shelled afghanistan's villages? is all that incessant printing in office and penchant for cleanliness causing felling of millions of trees?)

this ignorance of cause-effect also alienates us from what we consume. take that burger out of your mouth and see what's inside. can you name all that goes into it? did u know where it came from? do u know who all touched it? do u know how many people were involved to get that burger to your mouth which would go down in minutes without you yourself noticing it, being lost in staring at this screen?

this increased distance between us and things is definitely a child of industrialization. what we consume is nothing more than its price, and the pleasure of having it. we live a life never having had the pleasure of having created anything at all.

and this brings me closer to presenting the hypothesis...

We identify with abstract ideas more than concrete things around us. because media has brought the abstractness closer, and industrialization has sent the alive things (trees, soil, fresh air) far and replaced them with dead things (table, concrete, plastic) around us.

people have forgotten the joy of consuming. instead joy is found only 'around' the act of consumption.
( imagine a dinner without TV! :O or with friends in fancy gimmicky theme based restaurant.) (imagine drinking water. hmm .. or.. drinking fizz water with thousand static images of drinkers you see all around...on hoardings, on tv, on point of consumtion.)

(and probably its this joyless consumption that is leading to the worldwide epidemic of over eating and consequent obesity)

and finally.....

and hence, abstract brands that have no physical evidence stand to grow humongously, while palpable, consumable, substantiated brands will have to try much harder. so brands that essentially sell nothing, will be most valuable. lesser the substance, higher the value (not necessarily price).

from tea, iron supplements to computer peripherals.. all are selling emotions these days. (To planner -> While doing some category analysis, you might come across that only vacant positioning that is left to occupy is probably the ones that talk of what the product simply is .. physically.)
brand activism is on rise these days. in a few years realising that people can't take the hypocrisy anymore, the brands will move to some other area perhaps.. wonder where are brands headed...

physicality -> emotions -> morality -> ? 
next is what.

[also published at http://brandpimp.blogspot.com ]
Jan 20 / 8:56am

Social Media is No Holy Grail

Media_httpthenextwebc_cebjx

For everyone who tries to oversell you social media...show em this...oh and tell those companies who tell you they want you to do something cool on social media, that there's a code...its not the bro-code, but its a code. Follow it to #win...oh and also...you may #fail if you try shortcuts or lying. :P

spotted by Uditvanu Das, Planner, Tribal DDB India

Jan 19 / 8:12am

Now there truly is no wire..no plugging in!

via eye.fi

If you're like me, and you'd rather say LOL than laugh during a conversation, and say 'sigh' rather than heave a sigh, then this product is totally for you!

Imagine the greatest problem of our times : You click a photo...an awesome photo. And then....disaster strikes...you have to upload it to Facebook/Flickr, and to do so...wait for it...you have to PHYSICALLY CONNECT your camera to your PC, or wait...even worse you have to put the memory card in a READER. ZOMG!!!!
Who will save us from this physical labour & allow us to be the couch potatoes we aim to be???

Presenting the Eye Fi, memory card with built in Wi-Fi. It works in any cam, and all you have to do is just put it in your camera, select the photos you wanna upload online or to your PC and voila! You're set to recline on that chair again...

Oooh yes it connects to your wireless router or any wireless router you specify.

I've already ordered mine, and if you want yours well then head on over to Amazon and look for the Eye-Fi card :)

Found by Uditvanu Das, Planner, Tribal DDB India

Jan 12 / 2:23am

Levi's PR

here's something interesting that Levi's did to get attention of top fashion journalists.

Jan 7 / 2:05am

The New & Final Feed DDB India Logo Debuts

Fdilogo_new

Hope you like it :D 

Designed by Milind Rangale at Tribal DDB India :D
Jan 6 / 11:13pm

VW on Storyboard :)

Just spotted by Uditvanu Das, Digi Planner @ Tribal DDB India. Seems this appeared on CNBC TV18's show, Storyboard, in November.

Filed under  //  DDB   advertising   automobile   campaign   german   india   media   mudra   print   volkswagen