Digitas' NewFront: Current TV's Gore Touts Viewer Created Ads

June 3, 2009

Mike Shields


Ad agency creative executives beware: if Al Gore is right, your services might not be needed much longer.

The former U.S. vice president and co-founder of the cable network Current TV, in delivering the keynote address at Digitas’ Digital Content NewFront event in New York on Wednesday (June 3), spoke about what he perceives as a rapidly changing advertising and media landscape. Gore predicted that traditional ad models were set to radically change, and as evidence, he presented a series of VCAM ads or Viewer Created Ad Messages (30-second spots created by Current TV viewers).

As part of its VCAM program Current provides viewers with creative briefs and a set of assets (such a logos and taglines) for participating advertisers, which have included HP and T-Mobile. Gore said that viewers now produce more than half of Current’s ads and that those ads are most preferred by the network’s audience by a ratio of nine to one, according to the net’s research. “We’ve had zero negative results,” said Gore. “And viewers are much more interested.”

Gore believes these ads have major implications for the advertising creative process going forward. He described the end of the industrial-revolution-like era of advertising, which produced ads that are “big, blunt, expensive and very intrusive…[And] audiences have begun to resist that old model.”

Going forward, advertising needs to become more nuanced, authentic and peer-to-peer, said Gore. “People want a different kind of feeling toward brands which they give their money.”

That means being more up front about ad messaging, rather than attempting to squeeze marketing messages into content through branded entertainment. According to Gore, one of the reasons that Current viewers like VCAM ads is that they are straightforward in their intent. “People are interested in what someone like them is going to do, and they're not going to have something slipped by them,” Gore said. However, with ads that have been disguised as entertainment, “There is some resistance to those models; we believe that intelligent empowerment of the audience is the key.”

However, audience empowerment likely means less power and control for agencies, particularly creative executives. For one thing, user-created ads are cheap. “Instead of spending $350,000 and up...that’s not the process here,” said Gore. For VCAMs, “advertiser pays a nominal sum. As little as $1,000.”

So what can traditional ad agencies do? Perhaps change their core expertise, from serving as creative drivers to brokers and brand shepherds. “The role of agencies is changing,” said Gore.

“The Internet…is dis-intermediating long established functions. Some agencies fight against this trend and are still successful. I’m not sure how long that will be sustainable.”

Sustainability was a key theme during Gore’s speech, as he drew a parallel between the ad business to the needs of the environment, long one of the former VP’s most passionate causes. Yet Gore was somewhat thrown by a bizarre environment-related question posed by an audience member at the close of his address. “Do you believe that the extraterrestrial technology that documents indicate has been discovered at the China lake facility in California can indeed significantly reduce levels of CO2 as to halt global warming by 2099?” asked the NewFront attendee.

After having the man explain to him that “extraterrestrial” meant UFO, Gore responded, “I personally do not. I don’t.”

Digitas' NewFront: Current TV's Gore Touts Viewer Created Ads

June 3, 2009

Mike Shields


Ad agency creative executives beware: if Al Gore is right, your services might not be needed much longer.

The former U.S. vice president and co-founder of the cable network Current TV, in delivering the keynote address at Digitas’ Digital Content NewFront event in New York on Wednesday (June 3), spoke about what he perceives as a rapidly changing advertising and media landscape. Gore predicted that traditional ad models were set to radically change, and as evidence, he presented a series of VCAM ads or Viewer Created Ad Messages (30-second spots created by Current TV viewers).

As part of its VCAM program Current provides viewers with creative briefs and a set of assets (such a logos and taglines) for participating advertisers, which have included HP and T-Mobile. Gore said that viewers now produce more than half of Current’s ads and that those ads are most preferred by the network’s audience by a ratio of nine to one, according to the net’s research. “We’ve had zero negative results,” said Gore. “And viewers are much more interested.”

Gore believes these ads have major implications for the advertising creative process going forward. He described the end of the industrial-revolution-like era of advertising, which produced ads that are “big, blunt, expensive and very intrusive…[And] audiences have begun to resist that old model.”

Going forward, advertising needs to become more nuanced, authentic and peer-to-peer, said Gore. “People want a different kind of feeling toward brands which they give their money.”

That means being more up front about ad messaging, rather than attempting to squeeze marketing messages into content through branded entertainment. According to Gore, one of the reasons that Current viewers like VCAM ads is that they are straightforward in their intent. “People are interested in what someone like them is going to do, and they're not going to have something slipped by them,” Gore said. However, with ads that have been disguised as entertainment, “There is some resistance to those models; we believe that intelligent empowerment of the audience is the key.”

However, audience empowerment likely means less power and control for agencies, particularly creative executives. For one thing, user-created ads are cheap. “Instead of spending $350,000 and up...that’s not the process here,” said Gore. For VCAMs, “advertiser pays a nominal sum. As little as $1,000.”

So what can traditional ad agencies do? Perhaps change their core expertise, from serving as creative drivers to brokers and brand shepherds. “The role of agencies is changing,” said Gore.

“The Internet…is dis-intermediating long established functions. Some agencies fight against this trend and are still successful. I’m not sure how long that will be sustainable.”

Sustainability was a key theme during Gore’s speech, as he drew a parallel between the ad business to the needs of the environment, long one of the former VP’s most passionate causes. Yet Gore was somewhat thrown by a bizarre environment-related question posed by an audience member at the close of his address. “Do you believe that the extraterrestrial technology that documents indicate has been discovered at the China lake facility in California can indeed significantly reduce levels of CO2 as to halt global warming by 2099?” asked the NewFront attendee.

After having the man explain to him that “extraterrestrial” meant UFO, Gore responded, “I personally do not. I don’t.”
MORE NEWS LIKE THIS


More than a few attendees complained about how tough it was in the current economic climate—not to mention early life stage of the medium—to get advertisers' attention Full Story
 
 
Of the broadcast lineups, ABC is the most aggressive, CBS and Fox are the safest, NBC has improved, and The CW is on the right track.

 
Mediaweek's Marc Berman takes on the new programming season night by night. Which networks are the real winners?

 
Fox this fall will be the only broadcast network to offer prime-time shows featuring primarily African-American casts.

 
Relentless optimists, the two major Hispanic broadcast networks, Univision and Telemundo, continue to aggressively pitch the power of national TV—or at least their particular brand of it—to advertisers in the current upfront sales marketplace. The problem is, just as with their English-language network competitors, both networks realize it’s most likely going to be a down year in revenue.

 
With more than $18 billion of marketing dollars looking for the right vehicles to deliver results in this year’s upfront marketplace, there’s no better time than now to have a road map of the relative strengths and weaknesses of this year’s major media players. We’re happy to provide you with a cheat sheet of sorts, featuring those companies with either the most to offer or the biggest changes from last year. (Considering the volume of content working for share of the upfront marketplace, this is by no means an exhaustive list.) 

 
While our latest annual look at ad spending in major consumer categories is full of predictable bad news that follows this trickle-down effect, keep reading. The fact is, while a rosy picture is hard to find, there are glimmers of hope in many segments. While it may be true that Big Pharma has decided to cut much of its ad spending (Americans who've lost their jobs are also, the reasoning goes, losing their health benefits), other categories are -- albeit cautiously -- buying air time.

 
As the television industry’s big and small players prepare to paint themselves in the most positive light for the annual $18 billion upfront buying bonanza, the early bets are on the cable industry to come out pretty well as a whole.

 
Discovery wants Animal Planet to become a top-tier cable network by giving its programming some teeth to get the job done.