Digital Marketing
Digital ≠ Marketing
Digital + Marketing
Marketing Leadership =
  Digital Leadership
Call to be
Creative/Innovative
 and Marketable!
   The Impetus for Change
What is Marketing?
• Every bit of contact any part of your
  business has with any segment of the
  public
• Goes beyond the 4Ps of Marketing
• Evolve into the 4Cs
  – Customer
  – Cost
  – Convenience
  – Communication
Product     Customer



Price       Cost



Place       Convenience



            Communication
Promotion
Traditionally..
• The three kings
  – Print
  – Radio
  – TV
• Most used because
  – Highest reach
  – Familiarity
  – Force of habit
But now…
• It has become a game of response
• It‘s all about the numbers
  – Awareness
  – Trial
  – Purchase
  – Repeat Sales
• It‘s all about ROI
Marketing
• All about
  – Efficiency
  – Being entrepreneurial
  – Doing the impossible
• Shift
  – Away from tri-media
  – Rise of below the line marketing
Spot the difference

Traditional Marketing   Guerilla Marketing

• Money                 • Energy and
• Advertise               Imagination
                        • Look at marketing
• Aim at groups           weapons
• Hard to measure       • Aim at individuals
                        • Easy to measure
A Look into
Non-Traditional Marketing
• Only three ways to communicate
  – Telephone
  – Telegraph
  – Tell a woman
• Concentrate marketing efforts on gift-with-
  purchase, purchase with purchase,
  sampling, in-store appearance, and make-
  up artists
General Motors
• Biggest auto advertiser, since 2002
  – Spending in traditional spending going down,
    now at 50%
  – Increase in Internet spending
  – Increase in CRM
  – Increase in direct mail
  – Heavy increase in incentives (dealer and
    customer cash rebates, sales bonuses, etc.)
Automakers have used celebrities to peddle their
  products before. Country music star Toby Keith
  promotes Ford; Grammy winner Celine Dion did ads
  for Chrysler, and golf legend Tiger Woods pitches for
  Buick
Powerful realities in marketing
      We are Moving!
Check out the
numbers,
Love!!!
New Technology

• The internet has revolutionized how
  we live and and how we conduct
  work. Its conceptualization is leading
  new discoveries in technology.
• Since then, it has also begun to change
  how consumers relate to brands.
• It has made information access easy,
  making consumers marketing savvy…
• …and more demanding.
Consider this…
• The number of internet users in the
  U.S. went from 6.5 million in 1994 to
  62 million in 1999.
• Worldwide, it went from 19 million to
  129 million during the same period.
• In 2002, it was estimated that between
  85 to 175 million people in the U.S.
  would have access to the internet…
• …and at least twice
  that number
  worldwide.
Consider this…
• Looking at it another way, it took
  13 years for television to be in the
  50 million homes, 10 years for
  cable TV to do the same.
• The Internet on the other hand,
  from its origin in 1994, achieved
  the same growth in only 5 years!
• It has exploded from a ―techy‘
  novelty to an accepted tool of
  communication and commerce.
Closer to Home…
• Aside from the 30% user growth year on
  year
• There are 1,500 internet cafes. The pre-paid
  internet market is getting bigger and is
  currently estimated to be almost 1 billion
  pesos
• Internet penetration is expected
  to pursue its continuous growth
  rate in the Philippines.
A New Breed of Consumers
• In a study by Euro RSCG
  Worldwide, they saw the emergence
  of a new group of consumers.
• Their Global research papers
  confirm the shaping of new attitudes
  and behaviors.
• Goodbye, passive consumers.
• Hello, marketing savvy and
  demanding…

           PROSUMERS!
The Prosumer
• A prosumer is simply a proactive, empowered
  consumer. The term suggests that the balance of
  power has shifted from the manufacturers,
  retailers, and marketers toward the end user.
• Characteristics common to prosumers:
  – Get a rush from discovering new things
  – Are transporters of trends
  – Pursue timeless value
  – Seek out challenges and new experiences
  – Recognize their value as consumers--and expect their brand
    partners to recognize it too
  – Are marketing savvy and plugged in to multiple media sources
  – Demand top-notch customer service and unlimited access to
    information
Is this for real?
The Prosumer
    THEN                NOW

Media                Multi-media

Passive Media        Participative media

Standard messaging   “Infotainment”

Mass advertising     Permission marketing/
                     Whisper campaigns/
                     Buzz marketing

Broadcasting         Narrowcasting

Fragmented Society   Connected Society
Marketing
Convergence
www.ryanair.com
New Wave in
Retail
What Industry Are You In?
Information Technology
• Information Technology takes over our
  lives… literally….
Information Technology
• Everything is IT!
• Falling in price, increasing in power
  – Small and cheaper
• IT will break the class barrier – information
  and communication will be for poor and
  rich alike
• Will not mean democracy and freedom,
  but more surveillance capability
$100 Laptop
New Media is NOW media
NOW Media
  Cellphones
  i-Pods
  Blackberry‘s
  Internet
  Video Games
  Wi-Fi
Implications
• Cheaper IT will mean more competitors
  – Goliath, meet David
• Focus on service, not technology
  – To know more about…, press 168
• Ecommerce will be everywhere
  – Ecom component in every bite
Technology Reloaded —
The Rise of Human Media
The Great Divide
Millenial Requests
• You be the leader. This generation has grown up with
  structure and supervision, with parents who were role models.
  The ―You be the parent‖ TV commercials are right on.
  Millennials are looking for leaders with honesty and integrity.
  It‘s not that they don‘t want to be leaders themselves, they‘d
  just like some great role models first.
• Challenge me. Millennials want learning opportunities. They
  want to be assigned to projects they can learn from. A recent
  Randstad employee survey found that ―trying new things‖ was
  the most popular item. They‘re looking for growth,
  development, a career path.
• Let me work with friends. Millennials say they want to work
  with people they click with. They like being friends with
  coworkers. Employers who provide for the social aspects of
  work will find those efforts well rewarded by this newest
  cohort. Some companies are even interviewing and hiring
  groups of friends.
Millenial Requests
• Let’s have fun. A little humor, a bit of silliness,
  even a little irreverence will make your work
  environment more attractive.
• Respect me. ―Treat our ideas respectfully,‖ they
  ask, ―even though we haven‘t been around a
  long time.‖
• Be flexible. The busiest generation ever isn‘t
  going to give up its activities just because of
  jobs. A rigid schedule is a sure-fire way to lose
  your Millennial employees
Millenials at Work
The New People Power
Top News Website in the
       World?
‗Vlogging‘
Case Studies
Security Camera Shot
My Suggestion
Leadership is not an accident,
       but a choice.
So is Innovation and Creativity
And Spearheading Change
Challenge Everything
The Future is in Your Hands.

   Thank you for your attention.

Digital marketing & new media.ver3

  • 1.
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4.
    Marketing Leadership = Digital Leadership
  • 8.
    Call to be Creative/Innovative and Marketable! The Impetus for Change
  • 10.
    What is Marketing? •Every bit of contact any part of your business has with any segment of the public • Goes beyond the 4Ps of Marketing • Evolve into the 4Cs – Customer – Cost – Convenience – Communication
  • 11.
    Product Customer Price Cost Place Convenience Communication Promotion
  • 12.
    Traditionally.. • The threekings – Print – Radio – TV • Most used because – Highest reach – Familiarity – Force of habit
  • 13.
    But now… • Ithas become a game of response • It‘s all about the numbers – Awareness – Trial – Purchase – Repeat Sales • It‘s all about ROI
  • 14.
    Marketing • All about – Efficiency – Being entrepreneurial – Doing the impossible • Shift – Away from tri-media – Rise of below the line marketing
  • 15.
    Spot the difference TraditionalMarketing Guerilla Marketing • Money • Energy and • Advertise Imagination • Look at marketing • Aim at groups weapons • Hard to measure • Aim at individuals • Easy to measure
  • 16.
  • 17.
    • Only threeways to communicate – Telephone – Telegraph – Tell a woman • Concentrate marketing efforts on gift-with- purchase, purchase with purchase, sampling, in-store appearance, and make- up artists
  • 19.
    General Motors • Biggestauto advertiser, since 2002 – Spending in traditional spending going down, now at 50% – Increase in Internet spending – Increase in CRM – Increase in direct mail – Heavy increase in incentives (dealer and customer cash rebates, sales bonuses, etc.)
  • 20.
    Automakers have usedcelebrities to peddle their products before. Country music star Toby Keith promotes Ford; Grammy winner Celine Dion did ads for Chrysler, and golf legend Tiger Woods pitches for Buick
  • 39.
    Powerful realities inmarketing We are Moving!
  • 40.
  • 41.
    New Technology • Theinternet has revolutionized how we live and and how we conduct work. Its conceptualization is leading new discoveries in technology. • Since then, it has also begun to change how consumers relate to brands. • It has made information access easy, making consumers marketing savvy… • …and more demanding.
  • 42.
    Consider this… • Thenumber of internet users in the U.S. went from 6.5 million in 1994 to 62 million in 1999. • Worldwide, it went from 19 million to 129 million during the same period. • In 2002, it was estimated that between 85 to 175 million people in the U.S. would have access to the internet… • …and at least twice that number worldwide.
  • 43.
    Consider this… • Lookingat it another way, it took 13 years for television to be in the 50 million homes, 10 years for cable TV to do the same. • The Internet on the other hand, from its origin in 1994, achieved the same growth in only 5 years! • It has exploded from a ―techy‘ novelty to an accepted tool of communication and commerce.
  • 44.
    Closer to Home… •Aside from the 30% user growth year on year • There are 1,500 internet cafes. The pre-paid internet market is getting bigger and is currently estimated to be almost 1 billion pesos • Internet penetration is expected to pursue its continuous growth rate in the Philippines.
  • 45.
    A New Breedof Consumers • In a study by Euro RSCG Worldwide, they saw the emergence of a new group of consumers. • Their Global research papers confirm the shaping of new attitudes and behaviors. • Goodbye, passive consumers. • Hello, marketing savvy and demanding… PROSUMERS!
  • 46.
    The Prosumer • Aprosumer is simply a proactive, empowered consumer. The term suggests that the balance of power has shifted from the manufacturers, retailers, and marketers toward the end user. • Characteristics common to prosumers: – Get a rush from discovering new things – Are transporters of trends – Pursue timeless value – Seek out challenges and new experiences – Recognize their value as consumers--and expect their brand partners to recognize it too – Are marketing savvy and plugged in to multiple media sources – Demand top-notch customer service and unlimited access to information
  • 47.
  • 48.
    The Prosumer THEN NOW Media Multi-media Passive Media Participative media Standard messaging “Infotainment” Mass advertising Permission marketing/ Whisper campaigns/ Buzz marketing Broadcasting Narrowcasting Fragmented Society Connected Society
  • 49.
  • 52.
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 55.
    Information Technology • InformationTechnology takes over our lives… literally….
  • 56.
    Information Technology • Everythingis IT! • Falling in price, increasing in power – Small and cheaper • IT will break the class barrier – information and communication will be for poor and rich alike • Will not mean democracy and freedom, but more surveillance capability
  • 57.
  • 58.
    New Media isNOW media NOW Media Cellphones i-Pods Blackberry‘s Internet Video Games Wi-Fi
  • 59.
    Implications • Cheaper ITwill mean more competitors – Goliath, meet David • Focus on service, not technology – To know more about…, press 168 • Ecommerce will be everywhere – Ecom component in every bite
  • 60.
    Technology Reloaded — TheRise of Human Media
  • 62.
  • 63.
    Millenial Requests • Yoube the leader. This generation has grown up with structure and supervision, with parents who were role models. The ―You be the parent‖ TV commercials are right on. Millennials are looking for leaders with honesty and integrity. It‘s not that they don‘t want to be leaders themselves, they‘d just like some great role models first. • Challenge me. Millennials want learning opportunities. They want to be assigned to projects they can learn from. A recent Randstad employee survey found that ―trying new things‖ was the most popular item. They‘re looking for growth, development, a career path. • Let me work with friends. Millennials say they want to work with people they click with. They like being friends with coworkers. Employers who provide for the social aspects of work will find those efforts well rewarded by this newest cohort. Some companies are even interviewing and hiring groups of friends.
  • 64.
    Millenial Requests • Let’shave fun. A little humor, a bit of silliness, even a little irreverence will make your work environment more attractive. • Respect me. ―Treat our ideas respectfully,‖ they ask, ―even though we haven‘t been around a long time.‖ • Be flexible. The busiest generation ever isn‘t going to give up its activities just because of jobs. A rigid schedule is a sure-fire way to lose your Millennial employees
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 69.
    Top News Websitein the World?
  • 75.
  • 77.
  • 79.
  • 81.
  • 82.
    Leadership is notan accident, but a choice.
  • 83.
    So is Innovationand Creativity
  • 84.
  • 86.
  • 87.
    The Future isin Your Hands. Thank you for your attention.