Cutting through the information clutter and facilitating customer
relationships is vital to effectively marketing your brand in the new
"attention economy."
"Anybody who still thinks we're operating in an
information economy, think again. In this Internet world, there is too
much information and it's not getting any better," said Dave
Hutchinson, president, Conversion Partners, said at AD:TECH.
"This fact is placing an escalating premium on consumer
attention. Which, in turn, is making attention itself the new common
currency for modern marketing," he said, in this noisy,
hyper-competitive digital media landscape that we live in, attention is
becoming the ultimate common currency for modern marketing. If you think
of attention as a medium, it is the first medium where the consumer
controls the inventory of this medium, not the Fortune 500 advertiser or
the major media company or the ad agency," Hutchinson said.
David Tokheim, senior director of consumer intelligence for
Brisbane, CA-based IGN/GameSpy, agreed the volume of the messages have
become a problem, adding that consumers demand relevancy to the
information being provided.
"If you want to reach our audience ... it is so important that
you don't [tick] them off. And how do you not [tick] them off?
Through relevance," Tokheim said.
"One of the programs we put together for the gaming companies
and for the retailers was this framework from which they build their
media plan. We call it the crescendo campaign. First you whisper, then
you murmur, then you rap, then you preach then you scream. One of the
problems we saw was everyone was screaming. All they wanted to do was
scream [their message]," he said.
Excerpted from MediaPost, 7/14/04
COPYRIGHT 2004 Sarah Stambler's Marketing with
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