Brands are media companies these days, many marketers would argue. That's a huge shift in thinking from an older world where third parties did "media," and then brands simply advertised in those media.
These days, more and more companies are becoming publishers or content providers in their own right, bypassing "media" outlets.
"The fundamentals of media business are toppling as their 20th century foundations crumble," says Mark Mulligan, Forrester Research VP. "Consumers are falling out of love with paying for media and striking up illicit affairs with free content, not just because it is free, but also because it is on their terms."
This is great news for consumers but terrible news for media businesses that have spent years building revenues upon near-monopolistic control of supply of content, says Mulligan.
"Why all this matters to brands is because the tectonic shifts in media value chains are creating exciting new opportunities for non-media companies to become media companies themselves," Mulligan says.
Just as Apple transformed from hardware company to media services company with the launch of the iTunes Store, so too are brands such as Procter and Gamble with BeingGirl.com, Tommy Hilfiger with Tommy TV and Audi with its UK TV channel.
Why are brands such as these choosing to become media companies? Because they can. Blogs, Web publishing, smartphones, tablets, e-book readers, netbooks and other tools providing access to the Internet allow firms to create media sites as easily as old-line publishers can.
It takes a Web site, but every firm has one these days. It takes an ability to create or aggregate content, but that's easier these days as well, with real simple syndication and other news feeds. But brands also are simply creating their own writing staffs as well.
And the logic of doing so likely makes more sense as well, as audiences fragment. If specialized audiences are what you want to reach, Web publishing makes lots of sense. Instead of creating and placing advertisements that might or might not hit the target audience, brands can create their own content sites, producing their own "media" and then placing messages and interacting in other ways with their intended audiences.
In the new world, the dividing line between "media" and "brand" is more fuzzy.
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Brands ARE Media These Days
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Gary Kim has been a digital infra analyst and journalist for more than 30 years, covering the business impact of technology, pre- and post-internet. He sees a similar evolution coming with AI. General-purpose technologies do not come along very often, but when they do, they change life, economies and industries.
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