Creation in the Age of Sisomo

Saturday, 16 December 2006 - Meribel, France

Sisomo Kevin Roberts

Presentation Summary

Every year France’s Méribel Ad Festival attracts hundreds of advertising clients, producers, directors and media representatives to celebrate the best work within the industry. This keynote speech made during the 2006 Festival looks at winning in the world of sisomo.


The pace of change keeps accelerating.

Three years ago Second Life and MySpace weren’t even on the horizon. Today Second Life has one million residents and MySpace at least 100 million accounts.

Just 18 months ago the creativity of millions was unleashed by YouTube. From zero to 100 million video streams.

Three weeks ago the Nintendo Wii was launched. Its intuitive motion interface is showing that fun wins.

This new world demands new language.

Let’s welcome the sisomo revolution at the crossroads of technology, marketing and creativity.

sisomo is the powerful combination of Sight, Sound and Motion on screen.

sisomo is an idea at Saatchi’s core.

A new word that powers our creatives, our interactives, our media thinkers, our planners, our account lines.

sisomo is the great melting pot of creative communications and digital technologies.

Life gets more fun when you think sisomo.

Winning in the sisomo World

sisomo is not about tools and technologies. It’s about people, ideas and creativity.

OLD WORLD ► SISOMO WORLD
Reflective ► Immersive
Technical ► Creative
Armchair ► Anywhere
Lean back ► Lean forward

The idea with the most attitude, personality, authenticity and truth, wins.

Here are six secrets to help you connect with the sisomo generation.

The First Secret is Emotion

When everything is in motion, what’s unchanging becomes more valuable.

People are powered by emotion, not by reason. They want to be listened to, to share stories, to hang out together.

Think Sight, Sound and Emotion.

Our job is to be inspired by what people are passionate about – rather than know everything about their age, gender, education, spending patterns.

Neurologist Donald Calne sums up: “Reason leads to conclusions. Emotion leads to action”.

The Second Secret is Attraction

From Information Economy, Knowledge Economy, Interruption Marketing (aka the Mass Market), Permission Marketing, the Experience Economy, Attention Economy to the ATTRACTION ECONOMY.

Our job is to attract consumers, not demand their attention.

ATTENTION ECONOMY ATTRACTION ECONOMY
Interruption Engagement
Directors Connectors
One-to-many Many-to-one
Reactive Interactive
Return on Investment Return On Involvement
Heavy Users Inspirational Consumers
Big promises Intimate gestures
What you need What I want

The Third Secret is Lovemarks

From products to trademarks, from trademarks to brands. From brands to Lovemarks. Lovemarks are the future beyond brands.

  • Lovemarks are built on Love and Respect.
  • Lovemarks inspire Loyalty Beyond Reason.
  • Lovemarks are owned by the people who love them, not by companies or marketers.

Our job is simple. To help our clients transform their brands.

From Irreplaceable, to Irresistible.

The Fourth Secret Dreams of Screens

The media landscape is shifting rapidly from mass media to intimate sisomo.

FACT: There are more than one billion people online – all connected, creating, searching, playing, shopping. It’s the biggest market the world has ever seen.

Telcos and media must bet billions on which screens and formats will win.

We don’t have to play that game.

Our job is to come up with sisomo ideas that can bring any screen to life.

The uniquely intimate mobile phone is moving up in the sisomo world. Science fiction writer Bruce Sterling calls mobiles “remote controls for life”.

It’s not about repurposing a TV spot for the web or a phone. It’s being inspired by what matters to the people we care about. Consumers.

FACT: More people are entertaining themselves on the Web than buying things. – Pew Internet Life Survey, 2006

The sisomo generation loves convergence – as long it converges on them. They want technology to stay behind the screen.

The great news?

Clients are stepping up. The more technology options they face, the more they focus – on great ideas that come alive on many platforms.

The Fifth Secret is TV – Still

TV is still the No. 1 global medium and the best selling tool ever. 2.5 billion households in the world have one.

Any creative, ambitious person is drawn to TV. You want to attract as big an audience as you can. With sisomo as your inspiration you can.

Inspiring the most successful technology will be fantastic sisomo with:

  • More emotion, pace and interactivity.
  • More live programs.
  • More local shows, more reality shows.
  • Many more irresistible program franchises. The packaging of 24 and American Idol are just the beginning.

COUNTER-EXAMPLE: When the producers of the TV show ‘How Clean is Your House’ tried to expand the show to Germany, they had to give up. They could not find enough dirty houses! – Financial Times

The difference between sisomo on a TV set and sisomo on the internet is not what’s it’s about. It’s not TV or the Internet. It’s and/and.

Mainstream TV shows are on iTunes and Google Video and Amazon and on the Network’s own website.

Our job is to make what people want to watch more engaging, more interactive, more irresistible.

The Sixth Secret? Share the Love

sisomo will animate the future, but consumers will shape it. Consumers are active participants, not passive receivers.

FACT: Product reviews and ratings are the most used form of consumer generated content – and have one of the most direct impacts on purchasing. – Forrester 2006

The fastest-growing media is one consumers create and share among themselves.

EXAMPLE: Four years ago French rap radio station Skyrock launched a free blogging service. Today Skyblog has 27% market reach and left US heavyweight MySpace in the dust at 5.5%. Sites in Spanish, German and English coming up.

Getting consumers to make ads is table stakes. If GM and Frito-Lay are doing it for the next Super Bowl – it’s mainstream.

A G. Lafley recently suggested it’s time for marketers to “let go”, “Consumers are beginning, in a very real sense, to own our brands and participate in their creation”.

EXAMPLE: One fan of “24” used Google to create the Jacktracker, a map showing every place the show’s hero, Jack Bauer, visits in a single episode. He then analysed whether the trip was physically possible. – WSJ

Prove to them that you truly understand them and what they care about.

Our job is to come up with sisomo formats, stories, characters and ways for people to communicate, participate and to explore. To be involved. Creative. Inspired.

The game is changing. Craft is not enough. Breakthrough creativity is grounded in paradox. It’s and/and. Work with two complex opposites at the same time so they enhance each other.

Wind-Up

Let’s develop ideas with clients and champion those ideas together. Let’s generate ideas that have never been seen before, and not back away because they are tough to test and tougher to measure.

We need:

  • Creative thinkers, dreamers, problem solvers, and innovators … as clients!
  • Agency creatives who can connect ideas, emotion, technologies with deep consumer desire.

And let’s start now – before it’s too late.


The Power of Love

Speech

An address to the Adtech Europe 2000 Conference. A provocation aimed at the dot com deadpool: several arguments in favour of television, mass marketing, building billion dollar brands, becoming a Lovemark, the Evernet, moods, brains, Xena and Maximus, research vampires, respect, trust and love.

At the Edge

Speech

An address to the Resource Management Law Association Conference. Ideas about: creating the conditions for peak performance; re-framing “the New Zealand story” to create a compelling national identity;· creating the right focus among all New Zealanders to elevate New Zealand to Lovemark status; taking the world on from the edge and winning!

Emotional Rescue at Adtech

Speech

An address to the Adtech Conference. If the internet is posed as a challenge to advertising, then emotion is the challenge for the Internet. Emotion is no longer ‘nice-to-have’ icing but the critical underpinning, the beating heart of any business whether it is operating online or offline.

Nine Muses

Speech

Keynote address to the Makati Business Club. The structure of global business is in flux. The next few years are going to be filled with massive opportunities all around the world. The successful companies will be a new kind of company. Optimistic, creative companies that make peak performance their goal.

Tongamazing!

Speech

An address to the Tongan Tourism Industry. Tonga has retained it’s uniqueness and vibrancy in an era when many small nations are swamped by the influences of global culture. However, it must be careful to develop tourism in a way that celebrates all that is wonderful and unique, and does not encourage a Tongan experience to become just another holiday.

What’s Love Got to do With It?

Speech

A keynote address to the World Magazine Congress. Naysayers who prophesize the demise of the print media miss the point. In the Attention Economy, when all communication must strive to make an emotional connection with consumers, the narrowcast and intimate nature of the magazine will become more valuable than ever.

The New Consumer

Speech

An address to the VISA EU Member Conference. The banking environment of the last thirty years has been obliterated. Consumers now hold the power to drive change through the choices they make. Banks must respond with a new attitude if they are not to succeed.

New Rules

Speech

A keynote address to the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland Annual Conference. The key to wealth creation today lies with the intangible – ideas and relationships rule supreme. Accountants have negotiated the transition to the Age of Ideas better than many other industries, but the challenges of change continue.

Making Magic

Speech

A speech to the European Advertising Agencies Association Conference in Budapest. Kevin Roberts’ response to an address by Mr Niall Fitzgerald, CEO of Unilever, to the 1997 EAAA conference, in which Mr Fitzgerald questioned the ability of advertising agencies to lead interactive marketing strategies. Building brand equity, says Kevin Roberts, is still the main event, and the foundation of long term business success.

Brand China, Shanghai

Speech

An address to the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai. Brand China is Saatchi & Saatchi’s vision for making the “Made in China” label into a premium global brand. The latest consumer insights reveal that the Brand China values outlined in this speech match certain pervasive trends in Western consumer values.