OPEN2 | Page 167

I N T E R AC T W IT H M E Luke Chess, Creative Director, MJW Australia ... Every year, approaching Australian television’s ‘night of nights,’ the Logie Awards, a promotional competition is run – the prize being a seat for you, the average punter, at one of the tables among the stars on the night. I imagine this would be thoroughly awful. After all, you’d be sitting there as ‘the competition winner’ among a group of A, B and C-list celebrities, not because you’d worked to get there, or were a genuine part of that community, but only because you’d bought a certain magazine or called a 1900 number. After a cursory chat establishing your complete lack of credentials, I reckon you’d be ignored by all; overlooked and lonely for the rest of the evening. “A competition you say? How lovely. Anyway Rove, as I was saying …” Which brings me, in a roundabout way, to the subject of advertising. There’s currently much agitation among marketers and ad types, particularly stimulated by the impact of digital technologies, about the relative merits and features of ‘bought’ vs ‘earned’ media. Now it goes without saying that digital has affected practically every industry on earth. Photographers no longer use film. Libraries have done away with books. Bank robbers no longer use masks and crowbars etc. And while the impact upon advertising media is perhaps more subtle, it’s equally forceful. As we know, access to the ears, eyeballs and brains of ‘consumers’ (referred to from now on more correctly as ‘people’) has become democratised. Via web, mobile, or invisible codes that materialise only in a virtual world, practically anyone can now start a conversation. And with a smartphone in the pocket of nearly every Australian, practically anyone can participate. This means that to any real degree the only distinction between ‘bought’ and ‘earned’ media exists on a brand’s balance sheet. People know not and care not for the difference. They simply experience the clamour of thousands of voices wanting their attention. Howard Gossage’s oft-quoted observation from half a century ago has never been more relevant: “Nobody reads ads. People read what interests them. Sometimes it’s an ad.” Sitting in the public spaces of Melbourne’s Federation Square during the 2011 Melbourne Writers’ Festival, which would interest you more? An expected advertising message on the enormous billboard opposite? Or a clever short story embedded into your phone’s WiFi selection options – DRAGON SLAYER PURSUED BY ANIMAL RIGHTS ACTIVISTS – to promote the festival? (Along with many other stories that made up the festival’s Wi-Fiction campaign.) When a company doesn’t even need to pay for bricks and mortar stores – as Chinese retailer Yihaodian proved by opening 1,000 virtual ones in augmented reality overnight – why should they pay for any media to promote themselves? The answer is, like winning that Logies’ competition, paid media at least guarantees a seat at the table. And visibility is still crucial to making an impact – it’s just that it’s no longer sufficient (if indeed it ever was). When you’re appearing in paid Out-of-Home (OOH) advertising nowadays, it’s not enough to be the most interesting poster in town. You need to be more interesting than the skywriter overhead, the bus driving past, the smartphone in my hand … or, perhaps, more interesting with the smartphone in my hand. In the US, clothing behemoth GAP now supplements its traditional bus stop ads with 163 /