“Advertising is dead,” they say. Is it really?
So you hear a lot of new marketing revolutionaries say that advertising is dead and that traditional ad agencies will die with their cherished methodology. While I may be considered part of this revolution, I don't agree with the notion that advertising no longer has a place at the table. To remain relevant, advertising has and will evolve to meet the demands and desires of its intended audience. After all, advertisers have heard the message - consumers don't want marketing messages forced on them. They are more responsive towards marketing which connects with them on a personal and emotional level.
So, many advertising agencies have taken a page from the experiential marketing handbook and are creating ads which are more relevant, interactive and engaging. However, it's how those ads integrate into an overall marketing plan, that is the secret of its success. Even the most innovative concepts still need the support of other marketing components and tactics in order for the ad to work. Just take a look at this out-of-home concept from McDonald's in London. They strategically combined social media, experiential and out-of-home into an innovative marketing strategy. McDonald's Piccadilly Circus Facebook fan page describes their campaign as follows:
"McDonald’s recently launched a new interactive sign where passers-by can interact with images displayed on McDonald’s giant LED screen, and visitors can take an interactive role at one of London’s most photographed locations in London.
We want to see what kind of pictures you come up with, and what you think about the sign. So please add your pictures to this group or check out the photo pool on Flickrhttp://www.flickr.com/groups/mcdonaldspiccadillycircus"
Surprisingly, the Facebook fan page is not as populated as one would expect. Perhaps it's a case of a great idea with a flawed execution?
Staffing. Take the word out of your vocabulary.

Something that has puzzled me over the years of working in this industry is the common use of the word "staffing" when referring to the services provided by a company which supplies brand ambassadors, promotional event staff, field representatives, market managers, etc. to experiential and event marketing agencies. It's quite possible that many companies are worthy of such a limiting label for the commoditized service they provide. However, I am certain that agencies planning for a flawless execution, do not wish to entrust their field labor to a company that views their support service simply as human resources. Right?
Arguably, the field personnel in any experiential marketing program are the most vital components. After all, no matter how innovative your concept or how perfect your strategy may be, a lackluster team of brand ambassadors can send any program to oblivion fast. A poorly trained or screened brand ambassador can potentially ruin the brand's reputation and value. Not only must special care and attention be placed on the training, screening and casting of these brand ambassadors but they must also be professionally managed during the course of the execution, preferably by a team of people who are experienced marketers.
Words of advice to brands and their agency partners - make sure that the assembly the brand team is handled by a reputable company with marketing experience and that a realistic budget is allocated in order to ensure that only the best people are selected to represent the brand in the field. Anything less can unnecessarily place both the brand and program at risk.
Push Marketing Causes Consumers To Pull…Away!
Traditional agencies beware! The marketing landscape has changed and for agencies to survive today, they need to change with it. The one-way push marketing model is no longer effective.
Consumers, many of whom are brand skeptics, have evolved. They publicly exchange brand and product opinions on the Internet, are much more adept to the marketing process and technology has helped them filter unwanted marketing messages. Word of mouth and viral marketing are stronger than ever before and a consumer's personal brand or product experience trumps any commercial spot or ad. After all, can you blame them? They were told by their parents and grandparents that most advertising is false and an exaggeration of the truth. In the past, many products purchased as a result of clever ads or commercials, did not live up to their claims. As a result, today's consumers want to experience a product and try before they buy. Product sampling and trial programs are one of the most popular experiential marketing tactics used today.
Recently, I've read many articles and blog posts which speculate on what the future of advertising will be like. Many feel, and I agree, that traditional advertising agencies must become marketing agencies. Moreover, these agencies should adopt a holistic approach towards creating solutions for their clients, because successful marketing requires a complete and deep understanding of the intended audience. I commend those agencies who have gone the extra mile to add sociologists and the like to their team, because they get it. They understand that in order to connect with consumers, they must understand them; not just on the surface but deep within their hearts and minds.
Brands must invest in building relationships with their consumers and like most successful human relationships, it's more important to be a good listener than talker. Since we now know that today's consumers are cynical and not so easily persuaded, it's important that respect them and not insult their intelligence. I often tell people that it's a consumers world and most brands are considered uninvited guests. As a result, brands need to establish some trust before they become well received in the consumer world.
Brands That Give, Win
For me, one of the most exciting parts of this journey through the new world of brand marketing, is watching how brands are focusing their efforts on various community outreach programs. We've seen it demonstrated with P&G's Tide Clean Start Mobile Laundry and Charmin Restroom Experience, Target's Book Festivals and several others. My peers and I repeatedly preach that in order for brands to connect with their audience, they must be relevant and provide an inherent benefit to the consumer. One-way self-serving brand messaging is dead.
Brands are finding new ways to deliver brand experiences to the consumer which are community-centric and speak to their needs and interests. I am very passionate about what Unilever has been doing over the years with its Dove brand. You probably wouldn't expect it from the company that has been responsible for the racy and edgy Axe Effect marketing. Then again, you have to admit that they clearly know their audience. Well, the most recent Dove commercial spot really speaks to the hearts of young girls and women everywhere. I caught this on TV recently and even as a male, I was affected and inspired enough to write this blog.
Check it out...
And here's another one from 2006. Pretty dramatic!
The Experiential World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando Resort
Few will argue against the fact that Disney World and Universal Studios are experts at creating and implementing multi-sensory brand experiences. Just step inside any of their theme parks and resorts and you will find yourself part of a branded experience that was strategically planned to leave visitors with deep and lasting emotional connections.
The new Wizarding World of Harry Potter, is certainly nothing short of the same experiential strategy. The creators of this new attraction discuss the details of this extraordinary experience in a recent webcast. To view this, click here...
College Students Make Great On-Campus Brand Ambassadors
It's no secret that college students are some of the greatest influencers and trend setters. It's also nothing new when brands put their experiential program in the hands of active students, converting them into their brand ambassadors. This recent article published in Forbes, outlines P&G's strategic use of college brand ambassadors to pitch brands such as PUR, TAG deodorant and Herbal Essences. You can read this article by clicking here...
Beloved Experiential has a network of thousands of college brand ambassadors that it uses to help activate on and off campus promotions and experiential campaigns. For more information, click here...
Guerrilla Marketing Demonstrates How Crime Does Pay

Anyone that knows me will tell you that I am passionate about being in the experiential and engagement marketing space. Being able to literally touch and emotionally impact people with a relevant brand message is rewarding.
It's also incredibly exciting to see the methodology evolve through the shift in time, culture and technology. As with many other marketers, I continually seek out new and innovative ways to connect my clients with their audience.
McCann Erickson Romania ran this clever guerrilla marketing campaign using an innovative tactic of put pocketing. It's a very creative spin on pick pocketing but just the opposite. Put pocketing uses the same techniques but, as the name suggests, carefully inserts something in the pocket or purse of the person.
Check this entertaining video out which demonstrates the tactic very nicely.
For information on Beloved Experiential's guerrilla marketing solutions, click here...
The 5 Dimensions of Brand Personality by Jennifer Aaker
The Brand Personality Dimensions of Jennifer Aaker (Journal of Marketing Research, 8/97, pp 347-356) is a framework to describe and measure the “personality” of a brand in five core dimensions, each divided into a set of facets. It is a model to describe the profile of a brand by using an analogy with a human being. I believe that it's imperitive that a brand be carefully "humanized" in order to connect with the audience.
Here's what Ms. Aaker, and her father before her, researched:

THE FIVE CORE DIMENSIONS AND THEIR FACETS
These are:
- Sincerity (down-to-earth, honest, wholesome, cheerful)
- Excitement (daring, spirited, imaginative, up-to-date)
- Competence (reliable, intelligent, successful)
- Sophistication (upper class, charming)
- Ruggedness (outdoorsy, tough)
Each facet is in turn measured by a set of traits. The trait measurements are done using a five point scale (1 = not at all descriptive, 5 = extremely descriptive) rating the extent to which each trait describes the specific brand.
AN EXPLANATION OF THE TRAITS BELONGING TO EACH OF THE FACETS
These traits are:
- Down-to-earth
- Down to earth,
- Family-oriented,
- Small-town
- Honest
- Honest
- Sincere
- Real
- Wholesome
- Wholesome
- Original
- Cheerful
- Cheerful
- Sentimental
- Friendly
- Daring
- Daring
- Trendy
- Exciting
- Spirited
- Spirited
- Cool
- Young
- Imaginative
- Imaginative
- Unique
- Up to date
- Up to date
- Independent
- Contemporary
- Reliable
- Reliable
- Hard working
- Secure
- Intelligent
- Intelligent
- Technical
- Corporate
- Successful
- Successful
- Leader
- Confident
- Upper class
- Upper class
- Glamorous
- Good looking
- Charming
- Charming
- Feminine
- Smooth
- Outdoorsy
- Outdoorsy
- Masculine
- Western
- Tough
- Tough
- Rugged
A Student’s Interview Questions Are Answered
A couple of months ago I was invited to speak to students at the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale on the subject of Experiential Marketing. Shortly after I received several e-mails from students, teachers and advertising professionals alike. One that stuck out was an e-mail from an eager student who was disappointed that she missed me because she had several questions she wanted to ask for her school paper. I found her questions to be quite interesting so I thought I would share the questions and answers here. They are as follows:
Interview Questions for Wagner
1) Did Gladwell’s “The Tipping Point” influence the Experiential Marketing movement?
While “The Tipping Point” was certainly inspirational in many ways, I don’t believe any one thing served as a primary influencer. Moreover, I wouldn’t consider experiential marketing a movement. I believe this marketing methodology is the result of mass media fragmentation, human evolution and the manner in which today’s consumers are affected by brands and marketing messages. Consumers today are marketing savvy and mostly influenced by their peers and personal experiences. As a result, brands need to develop a sincere, relevant, personal and lasting relationship with consumers in order to connect with them.
2) What are ways to make target audience prospects aware of opportunities to attend and participate in these relevant experiences?
Traditional media advertising, online and social media marketing and guerilla marketing tactics, just to name a few. However, sometimes no pre-promotion is required or desired and simply “popping up” in the market with an innovative and relevant tactic, will suffice. If the experience provides an inherent benefit to the audience, they will participate and the experience will be successful.
3) Can this form of marketing be delivered in “mass marketing” ways? Specifically, can you use the internet to let people self-select to “experience” products? Can you use print or TV to drive people to such “experiences?”
Some of this was touched upon in question #2. House Party, Inc. does a really nice job in pre-qualifying consumers who express interest in hosting experiential house parties. Brands recruit consumers to act as their brand ambassadors with the trade-off being that consumers get to keep or consume a sampling of goodies and host a fun party for their friends with items provided by the brand.
4) Isn’t the ultimate “experiential marketing” simply trialing? Let someone try your product and see if they like it?
That’s one example of a very popular tactic. However, creating a true experience starts with a clear understanding of consumer behavior, psychographics and ethnographics. The resulting strategy and concept should deliver a 360 degree brand immersion for the consumer. I believe that the brand experience should be multi-sensory and personal much the same as when human beings interact with one another. Aaker’s 5 Dimensions of Brand Personality, truly identifies the humanistic layers which should exist in order for a brand to make an emotional impact on the consumer.
5) How could you apply Experiential marketing to an upscale restaurant? What sort of events/promotions/experiences would you create to get a “buzz” about a restaurant in a local area?
First of all, it is of utmost importance that the restaurant itself be a positive experience for the consumer the second he/she opens the door. Then the restaurant can deliver the brand experience to their audience outside of the restaurant. What makes the restaurant special beyond their menu? Determine the brand’s DNA and create an experience or event in the target market which immerses the consumer in the positive feeling which influences them to patronize the establishment. Sampling the menu items offsite may or may not be appropriate due to issues of quality control. However, diners go to restaurants for more than the menu items so capitalizing on what that is and delivering it to the target audience in the event is key.
6) Do you believe that experiential marketing have the potential to be a discipline by itself?
It already is. The question to ask is whether or not the discipline can function as the sole solution for a brand’s marketing strategy. I believe in a full marketing mix which encompasses multiple disciplines and mediums. It would be short-sighted for anyone to suggest that any one discipline can replace all others as a blanket solution. The new marketing world is very complex and sophisticated, so a “one size fits all” approach does not work.
7) Do you believe that marketers will return to traditional product-centric due to the current economy and base their purchasing decisions on rational comparisons?
Absolutely not. This is why traditional marketing alone no longer works as it once did many years ago. While traditional methods persuade consumers by invoking rational factors, experiential marketing modifies behavior through emotional persuasion. Everyday we are influenced by personal experiences which are visceral, emotional, mental and physical. Over the years, consumers have grown suspicious of exaggerated product claims and false comparisons, causing them to seek out trusted advice from their peers who can cite their positive or negative experiences with a product or brand.
Love at First Step
The summer I was 12, my mom bought me my first pair of name brand shoes. They were black Reeboks with white detail and they were absolutely hideous. It didn’t help that my height hadn’t caught up with my size 9 feet yet or that my mother insisted on buying shoes a size too big “to grow into.” I’ve always wondered if this had not been her mantra, would my feet would have gotten that big in the first place? Despite the fact that it looked like I was wearing snow shoes…in Florida…in July, I was thrilled with the purchase.
I had never been the kind of girl to care about tags and titles, especially not shoes, but that previous school year, I’d experienced the shame of wearing no names. They fit me and they were cute, which was more than I could say for the cheapest pair of name brand shoes my mother could find to appease me, but they weren’t enough. I’d worked hard to fulfill my side of the bargain of straight A’s to get me to the promised land of labels, but my reward was less like milk and honey and more like cheap and ugly. Next time I needed new shoes, I got Pumas and then Adidas, leaping from brand to brand with no commitment to anything but the little red sign that said “Sale.”
A few years later, I got into running. I ran when I was happy. I ran when I was sad. I ran when I was angry and that was often considering the teenage angst my hormone-riddled self inflicted upon me. It was on the pavements of my hometown of DeLand that I discovered true brand evangelism—Nike is my homeboy. Whether the shoes actually fit better, wick away sweat differently, or more effectively absorb the shock of 5’8” girl slamming into the ground for three miles than comparable brands, I do not know. What I do know, is I feel like they do. This feeling was brought about not by careful study and research, nor by that catchy slogan, “Just do it,” but by my cousin who loved his Nike’s too. Three years older and so much wiser at his 17 years, Ben was a star track athlete at his high school. He lived in another state and I only got to see him once a year, but I adored him. He told me if I was going to be a real runner, I better get some Nike’s--they were the best. Two months of babysitting later, I was lacing up my first pair of Nike’s, but had been a certifiable convert long before I ever test-ran the product thanks to my cousin’s fervor.
When the sneaker meets the pavement, it isn’t the color, the price, or even necessarily the brand that is initially responsible for true brand commitment—it’s the relationship. My Nike’s aren’t just shoes to me; they’re memories of my cousin. It’s just like how Tide isn’t just detergent, but the smell of my childhood. Every brand I care about comes not from how fabulous it is in and of itself, but the associations that give it context in my life. In this crazy world of fad and fashion, being committed to anything is a rarity. A brand that finds its audience through its relationship to them is the brand that makes it through the chaos of change.













