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THE SAINTHOOD OF ENGAGEMENT
When Belief Trumps Reason Can it Still be Research?
By Erwin Ephron
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Yet engagement has not been defined in any usable way except as a higher consumer score in IAB’s internet-based TV measurement. Engagement has not replaced reach/frequency as was originally promised by the ARF. Nor has engagement significantly improved our planning models. How did so many smart people get led so far astray? THE BIG IDEA We were ready for a
big idea. There was mounting evidence that advertising, especially TV advertising,
was not working as well as it once did. The easy explanation
was “consumers are not engaged.” Then ARF offered its landmark
definition and promised to make it right. Engagement, ARF explained, is simply “Turning
on a prospect to a brand idea, enhanced by the surrounding context.” If
we can learn to do that, we’ll be fine. COMFORTING WORDS
What is “a brand idea?” Brands don’t usually have ideas. People do. Do we simply mean the advertising’s message? What is “surrounding context?” Is that good old “media environment?” And if it is media environment, how do we measure whether it is enhancing? Or do we assume media environment is enhancing if it helps turn on the prospect to a brand idea. As measured by a blushometer. Sorry. That’s not research. It’s Abbott and Costello. DO YOU BELIEVE?
ISN’T THE PROBLEM DIS-ENGAGEMENT?
The way to solve that is to define what we mean by “consumers are not engaged” determine under what circumstances they are not engaged, and see if we can fix that. The job in not to add engagement. It’s to reduce dis-engagement. But that means we have to acknowledge that too much indiscriminate advertising is a big part of the problem. TUNEOUT IS DIS-ENGAGEMENT Our traditional TV advertising model is “programs attract audience which is delivered to the advertising.” Here there is media engagement which is people attracted by media as measured by things like audience size, targeting, duration, loyalty, all obtainable from audience data. Hidden here are measures of disengagement in tune-out. And there is advertising engagement, which is people attracted by the advertising as measured by things like brand recall, likeability, intent to purchase, all from creative testing. These are two different kinds of engagement. And we have many useful measures for each. But engagement with a program need not spill over to the advertising it carries. Most evidence is that the frequent and long interruptions of programs breaks the spell. PREACHING TO THE CHOIR?
We need to focus less on describing engagement and think more about how to identify and fix what is preventing it. Or am I preaching to the Choir?
1 Worse yet, “Turning On” was seriously defined by ARF as “Activating associations and metaphors to co-create personalized brand meaning.” - February 19, 2008 -
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