Charles Wigley
Oct 10, 2017

Has branded content lost the plot?

BBH's Asia chairman frets that content marketing is based on a fundamental fallacy about attention, but also sees a potential six-second solution.

Is this the most time people are willing to give to a brand?
Is this the most time people are willing to give to a brand?

Have you noticed that we are not in the advertising business anymore, but rather the content creation one?

Indeed, content appears to be as prevalent in the current lexicon as engagement was a short time ago.

I wonder if its fashionability is in part because it seems to santise the mucky business of actually selling things?

But at a deeper level I worry that it misunderstands a fundamental truth about people's relationship with brands.

Specifically, that they don't much care.

A bit, sure. But not much.

The digital revolution led to considerable talk of the nasty business of interruption giving way to the softer, cuddly, 'two-way' one of engagement.

But it was based on a fallacy that we were naive enough—or perhaps just plain hopeful enough—to swallow. Namely that people want to engage with brands. In the main they do not. They want to engage with their friends. The clue is in the name: social media.

Unfortunately a lot of content is based on exactly the same fallacy.

Obviously not all of it is bad. If you create something of genuine entertainment, utility or beauty to its audience it is likely to work very well indeed.

Red Bull, Nike, Burberry and a number of others are masters of it. But most brands produce stuff that ends up just filling the gaps—and sails past people like a ship in the night.

Do you really want to watch a three-minute branded film?

Probably not, because it is disproportionate to the amount of time in your life you want to give to a brand that, at the end of the day, is just trying to sell you something.

There has been much recent grumbling about Facebook's new six-second formats. But I think they herald a new honesty about the true nature of advertising. They feel proportionate to what I, as a consumer, am willing to exchange with a brand in return for a 'free' medium.

We are currently co-hosting a series of sessions with Kult exploring the potential role of GIFs in commercial communication. GIFs are even shorter. I love them.

Charles Wigley is Asia chairman at BBH.

 

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

10 hours ago

40 Under 40 2024: Mamaa Duker, VML

Notable achievements include leading VML through a momentous merger, helping to reel in big sales, and growing WPP’s ethnic and cultural diversity network by a mile.

10 hours ago

Will you let your children inherit a world without ...

A raw, unflinching look at the illegal wildlife trade, starring Ray Winstone, will force you to confront the horrifying truth... and act.

11 hours ago

Campaign CMO Outlook 2024: Why marketers still want ...

In the second part of the Outlook series, global marketers weigh in on Amazon Prime’s move into ad-tier streaming, how video-on-demand will reshape strategies, and where it's still falling short.

13 hours ago

Jaguar's identity crisis: A self-inflicted wound ...

Jaguar's baffling attempt at reinvention from feline grace to rock-based abstraction is a masterclass in brand self-sabotage, says Resonant's Ramakrishnan Raja—and it risks destroying the marque entirely.