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	<title>BBH Labs &#187; Garrick Schmitt</title>
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	<description>Marketing Skunkworks - new models around technology, entertainment and brands</description>
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		<title>&#8220;Information Wants To Be Free&#8221; &#8211; The Razorfish FEED report</title>
		<link>http://bbh-labs.com/information-wants-to-be-free-the-razorfish-feed-report</link>
		<comments>http://bbh-labs.com/information-wants-to-be-free-the-razorfish-feed-report#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Nov 2009 18:45:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mel Exon</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Brands]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[data]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[digital]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Garrick Schmitt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Razorfish FEED report]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://bbh-labs.com/?p=3716</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Last week saw the publication of FEED 2009 and an accompanying Ad Age article by its primary author, Garrick Schmitt. The third year of this annual, US-based report, the 2009 edition makes a bit of a departure, with the emphasis squarely on brands and the degree to which digital brand experiences shape &#38; drive purchase.  [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-3731" title="picture-111" src="http://bbh-labs.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/picture-111-600x586.png" alt="picture-111" width="600" height="586" /></p>
<p>Last week saw the publication of <a title="FEED site &amp; pdf" href="http://feed.razorfish.com/feed09/hello/" target="_blank">FEED 2009</a> and an accompanying <a title="Garrick Schmitt in Ad Age" href="http://adage.com/digitalnext/post.php?article_id=140388" target="_blank">Ad Age article</a> by its primary author, <a title="Garrick Schmitt on Twitter" href="http://twitter.com/gschmitt" target="_blank">Garrick Schmitt</a>.</p>
<p>The third year of this annual, US-based report, the 2009 edition makes a bit of a departure, with the emphasis squarely on brands and the degree to which digital brand experiences shape &amp; drive purchase.  It&#8217;s received a mix of <a title="Guy Kawasaki blogpost" href="http://holykaw.alltop.com/you-need-feed " target="_blank">high praise</a> and some <a title="Ben Kunz Thought Gadgets post" href="http://www.thoughtgadgets.com/2009/11/silly-bias-of-razorfish-feed-report.html" target="_blank">criticism</a>. We&#8217;ve found the report itself and the reactions to it thought-provoking stuff, so caught up with Garrick who kindly agreed to mull over a few questions with us. Here&#8217;s a run-through of what particularly caught our attention.</p>
<p><span id="more-3716"></span>1. The <a title="FEED data " href="http://feed.razorfish.com/feed09/the-data/" target="_blank">numbers</a>, which taken at face value suggest:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">i. The growing role of digital brand experiences in driving purchase decisions amongst connected consumers (&#8220;digital brand experiences create customers&#8221;).</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">ii. How digital is collapsing &amp; accelerating the path to purchase, not just making it easier to track. As FEED puts it: &#8220;social networks become the outlet malls of the future.&#8221;</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">iii. A migration towards more sophisticated levels of participation &amp; interaction (&#8220;<a title="FEED report: Digital Primacy" href="http://feed.razorfish.com/feed09/digital-primacy/" target="_blank">digital fluency</a>&#8220;) in digital media.</p>
<p>2. As we see it, when put alongside other research examining macro trends in online behaviour (from the likes of <a title="Forrester research The Broad Reach of Social Technologies" href="http://www.forrester.com/Research/Document/Excerpt/0,7211,55132,00.html" target="_blank">Forrester</a>, for example), some interesting challenges to conventional wisdom are thrown up:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">i. Jakob Nielsen&#8217;s <a title="www.90-9-1.com" href="http://www.90-9-1.com/" target="_blank">90:9:1 rule</a> (the concept of <a title="participation inequality / Jakob Nielsen" href="http://www.useit.com/alertbox/participation_inequality.html" target="_blank">&#8216;participation inequality&#8217;</a>) starts to look outmoded.  Nielsen has always maintained it&#8217;s a moveable feast dependent upon a number of variables, but perhaps the starting point now needs to indicate a much more <span style="text-decoration: underline;">even</span> distribution of participation.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">ii. If *active* online experiences of a brand are key drivers of purchase, this supports brands exploring platforms &amp; programs, leaving display advertising to be deployed as smart sign-posting and/or simple promotional tactics, or, conversely, made as rich and interactive as possible &#8211; providing mini brand experiences, if you will.</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">iii. If the interactions people seek with brands online relate to <a title="FEED Brand Culture section: The language of love for brands? Deals" href="http://feed.razorfish.com/feed09/brand-culture/" target="_blank">&#8216;deals/offers&#8217; and &#8216;service&#8217;</a> to a significant degree, it follows that:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 60px;">- the silo walls between marketing &amp; customer service teams in particular need breaking down; they are increasingly one and the same thing, or need to work together as a <a title="Adaptive brand marketing Labs post" href="http://bbh-labs.com/so-what-exactly-might-adaptive-brand-marketing-be" target="_blank">genuine network or eco-system.</a></p>
<p style="padding-left: 60px;">- most provocatively, this challenges a one-dimensional interpretation of what commercial &#8216;creativity&#8217; means online. Whilst we&#8217;d be the first to leap on the figure of c.20% of respondents looking for &#8220;entertaining or interesting&#8221; interactions with brands, nonetheless we still need to broaden our definition of creativity when the rest are looking for something else entirely. We can&#8217;t put this better than a statement <a title="Ben Kunz on Twitter" href="http://twitter.com/benkunz" target="_blank">Ben Kunz</a> recently made about the nature of creativity in a social media age on <a title="Creativity Unbound / Edward Boches blog" href="http://edwardboches.com/creativity-and-social-media" target="_blank">Edward Boches&#8217; blog</a>:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 60px;"><span style="color: #888888;">&#8220;The ability to recast a cold hard brand into a warm human face is a miraculous change, yet it takes immense creativity to pull it off. By creativity, I don’t mean a brand position or message or high concept, but a creative use of a real team of humans to get on Twitter and other channels and present themselves as the real heart of a brand. It’s creativity with a shitload of effort. It’s risk and human souls. Perhaps that’s the most creative endeavor of all.&#8221;</span></p>
<p style="padding-left: 60px;">Equally, witness the rise and rise of <a title="Labs blogpost R/GA" href="http://bbh-labs.com/campaigns-programs-platforms-the-way-forward-according-to-rga" target="_blank">platforms and programs</a> versus short term message-based campaigns.  As Garrick puts it, &#8220;the experience *is* the message.&#8221;</p>
<p>3. The radical openness with which the data set has been shared.  What would be locked away as proprietary information in many organizations was published front and centre in a <a title="FEED site &amp; pdf" href="http://feed.razorfish.com/" target="_blank">freely available pdf and slideshare</a>.  Garrick cites transparency first and second, a desire &#8220;simply to share&#8230;if our work could help shape the conversation and direction that our industry takes it would be good to contribute.&#8221; We would add: this manages to be at once a generous and a calculated, smart move: giving valuable information away in this way serves to accelerate its distribution and is reputation-enhancing for the provider. Sending out hard copies to a few influential industry types <a title="Big Spaceship tweet" href="http://twitter.com/bigspaceship/status/5660057941" target="_blank">clearly didn&#8217;t do any harm</a> either.</p>
<p>4.  The <a title="FEED blog comments" href="http://feed.razorfish.com/2009/11/welcome/#comments" target="_blank">debate</a> about <a title="Wikipedia entry for survey sampling" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survey_sampling#Bias_in_Probability_Sampling" target="_blank">coverage bias</a> &amp; how the data has been reported. Some heated points of view <a title="Thought Gadgets blogpost" href="http://www.thoughtgadgets.com/2009/11/silly-bias-of-razorfish-feed-report.html" target="_blank">here</a>.  We&#8217;d agree headlines around the online behaviour &amp; size of the sample could have been brought in earlier in the report, so the reader could &#8216;weight&#8217; the findings in their own mind from the start.  Nonetheless, we buy the principle that a &#8216;connected consumer&#8217; is key to many client businesses, historically an indicator of things to come &amp; only swelling in size / representational value.  We also hadn&#8217;t assumed purchase decisions would be so heavily influenced by experiences of a brand online, just because the sample are relatively heavy users of the internet &#8211; they do have lives offline too&#8230;</p>
<p>5. Finally, the care with which the report, its accompanying blog and illustrations were designed (the latter by <a title="David Fullarton site" href="http://www.davidfullarton.com/" target="_blank">David Fullarton</a>) and produced, not to mention the <a title="Roger Wong / Lunarboy blog post" href="http://www.lunarboy.com/blog/post/designing-feed-2009/" target="_blank">story around it</a>.  Easy to dismiss as style over content, but how many reports have we all read which ignore the importance of UX, visual impact, wit &amp; brevity in an ADD-raddled world?</p>
<p><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-3762" title="picture-4" src="http://bbh-labs.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/picture-4-577x600.png" alt="picture-4" width="577" height="600" /></p>
<p>Download the pdf and/or slideshare <a title="FEED site &amp; pdf" href="http://feed.razorfish.com/" target="_blank">here</a></p>
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