MEDIACOM Marketing Digest 22 September 2004
MEDIACOM Marketing Digest 22 September 2004
22 September 2004
The Number 8 Wire Approach South Korea is a fascinating example of what happens when the political will exists to "boldly go where no man has gone before". Two generations ago the entire Korean peninsula was one of the poorest places on earth. Today, the South at least, is one of the richest countries. And on one measure, internet connectivity, it is streets ahead of anywhere else.
There are 30 million internet users among South Korea's 49 million people, and 23 broadband connections per 100 people. At the end of 2003, New Zealand boasted just 2.4.
Nearly 80 per cent of South Korean homes have broadband connection, and it is truly broad. Most connections are rated at 2 Mbps (megabits per second) or higher. The Government's Ministry of Information and Communications (MIC) expects that 70 per cent of internet connections will exceed 20 Mbps by the end of 2006, and that most will be at 100 Mbps by the end of the decade.
At these speeds, and with this level of penetration, the internet pervades South Korean society to a level unknown in the rest of the world. Video-on-demand is commonplace, and TV channels let you download shows you've missed for about a dollar.
Sound enticing? Sorry, NZ "broadband" doesn't quite deliver the necessary bandwidth at an affordable price. The vast majority of residential consumers with 'broadband" are limited to a maximum download speed of 256K (an eight of the speed of the South Korean average). At that speed, a typical hour-long TV show (48 minutes without the commercials!), 350Mb in size, takes a full 24 hours to download. In South Korea, such a download would currently take as little as 3 hours - and just three-and-a-half minutes by the end of the decade.
The limit, by the way, is not technological. If you sign up for full-speed JetStream, you can get download speeds of 6Mb or more. The only problem: the pricing plans, which kick in after a mere 500Mb or 1000Mb of downloads. With typical plans, that's 15-20 cents extra per megabyte. So your fabulous 350Mb TV show, purchased from the broadcaster for "about a dollar", would cost you $70 to download!
The world is rushing towards using the internet to deliver TV channels to viewers in their lounge rooms - except not in New Zealand.
Broadband TV needs 4 Mps to work. Soon that will drop to 2mbps because of new compression technology.
HongKong's PCCW has a service called Nowbroadband TV offering an a la carte menu of 59 channels (which you can buy one at a time). ESPN was added this month. It has 300,000 customers.
In Paris, the French phone company is offering 17 TV channels on broadband as part of its standard internet/telephony package.
There is some activity in Australia too. The ABC is already producing content with eight separate broadband TV channels: news, sport, business, kids, music, comedy, media watch and, curiously, Basil Brush. And a company in Canberra, TransACT, sells 37 TV channels streamed down the copper wires.
OK, maybe streaming TV channels and downloadable programmes aren't the most worthy side-effect of the Knowledge Economy. But they'd be a great way to drive the uptake of broadband, and justify the infrastructure investment required to implement faster speeds nationally.
Video On Demand has long been considered the killer app of broadband internet - and it turns out to be true. An early adopter family of our acquaintance are already hooked on Season Two of The Apprentice. The show won't air in NZ until around November, but the first two episodes have been screened in the US, captured via digital PVR (Personal Video Recorder) and shared on the web. Virtually any TV show of note is available for download - no charge, no ads. It ain't a Napster-sized problem yet, but it won't go away - and it makes a mockery of selling TV rights by territory.
As the recording industry discovered, once the downloading genie is out of the bottle, the best solution is to offer a legal alternative. Fast, affordable broadband required, fast (did we mention quickly and cheaply?). .
>From Web To Print We're just over a week away from the launch of the initial, third, issue of the new monthly fashion magazine, Lucire, due to hit the streets October 4th.
If you think we're confusing you more than usual, allow us to explain. Lucire.com has existed as a global fashion website since 1997, NZ-based but communicating to the world. Magazine aspirations exist in the heart of many a website publisher, and Lucire's principals are no exception.
In May this year, Lucire "published" the first, first issue of Lucire the magazine, as a downloadable PDF file, and encouraged their website visitors to download and review the would-be mag.
Based on feedback from that inaugural issue, Lucire put together a second emagazine, which you can download here: www.lucire.net/images/0408-lucire.pdf.
Now Lucire are set to launch their third issue - but the first printed issue. They'll be publishing monthly, to give themselves a clear differentiation from Fashion Quarterly - not a problem from a supplying current content point of view, given that they've been constantly refreshing their website for the last seven years, but something of a leap of faith when it comes to attracting advertising revenues. Still, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
Lucire is the first fashion magazine to make the jump from web to print, and one of the first-ever magazines to make the transition. As you'll note if you download issue 2, the publishers intend to start in print in New Zealand, and then go international (to unspecified destinations) during 2005.
The initial print run is 20,000, and the NZ cover price is $9.45.
If your favourite website suddenly spawned a print version of itself, would you buy it? Actually, yes. Would advertisers support it? If they can be convinced that the readers love the mag as much as they love the website. So - first port of call, reader feedback please.
WE LOVE NEW
SUBSCRIBERS You are welcome to forward this newsletter to
colleagues or friends. If this newsletter has been forwarded
to you, we encourage you to subscribe - it's FREE. Simply
send an email with SUBSCRIBE in the subject line to
subscribe@mediacom.co.nz
TVNZ
January Ratecard Out TVNZ released their January ratecard
today (which is why we held back until Wednesday to keep our
readers up-to-date). Cutting to the chase: the big news
is that there's been no increase in peaktime average rates
for TV2 this month! Yay! And some programme costs have
actually fallen - the 6-7pm hour is down 30%, and Shortland
Street is down 12%. Inevitably, to achieve a zero result,
some timeslots have increased, in particular the 8.30pm
slot, up 15%. TV One peaktime rates have increased, by an
average of 7%, a fact that we'll grimace about and then move
on. The news that Coronation Street will increase by 30%,
however, rates far more than a grimace. Would a protest to
the World Trade Organisation be out of line? TVNZ are
flagging an average increase of 6% for the February-April
ratecard, which they'll be releasing on November 11. We'll
be sending our standard stern letter to the usual
suspects. Initial bookings for January open on the first
of October - in other words, next Friday. If you haven't
already told us your requirements for 2005, now would be a
good time ... Trash Yr Brnd Wth Txt Text messages are
twice as likely to irritate recipients as cold calls,
according to the latest UK research, released last week by
Cable & Wireless. The research was conducted among 2,000 UK
consumers to understand their attitudes to technology-based
marketing campaigns. The research, which focused upon the
retail, travel and financial sectors, reveals that whilst
technology creates new opportunities for interacting with
consumers, the pitfalls of misapplying these techniques can
be severe. Unsolicited text messages were more than twice as
likely to irritate their recipients than a cold call if
received outside working hours. The research, which
covered the entire purchase process, identified outbound
marketing as the biggest bugbear of consumers, with 21%
profoundly dissatisfied with this area, more so than
after-sales service at 11%. New media marketing techniques
such as text messaging and email, whilst still a small
proportion of outbound marketing spend, are growing rapidly
at 17% per annum and already constitute a £525 million
industry. By 2005 it is expected new media marketing
techniques will have cannibalised 13% of the direct mail
market. "I'm inundated by text messages from my mobile
phone operator, it's rubbish. I just delete them" - Mr X,
35-44, London Short messages, shorter fuses The research
reveals that time and place are critical to the manner in
which consumers receive marketing communications. Whilst the
always-on nature of email and text messaging make them ideal
for instant updates, the timing of receipt must be much more
carefully considered than in the case of direct mail which
drops through the letter box once a day. According to the
research, text messages become unpopular once they extend
outside the working day and into consumers' leisure hours.
On average consumers were 8% less responsive after 5pm. Over
393 complaints regarding SMS advertisements were made to the
Advertising Standards Agency in 2003, an increase of 500%
over 2002. "I kept getting the same message, twice a day,
three days running. It was really annoying" Mrs Y, 35-44,
Yorkshire Appropriate to the brand The research also
uncovered a link between marketing campaign success and the
association of the brand with the chosen marketing channel.
For example, brands most closely identified with online
activities, such as Amazon.com and Lastminute.com, were far
more successful in communicating via email and text message
than traditional retailers: text messages from online brands
were 13% better received than traditional retail brands.
This was especially pronounced for brands selling simple
consumer goods such as CDs or flights. Outbound marketing
for flights by online travel brands proved twice as popular
as that carried out by high street travel agencies.
"Following an email from Amazon, I bought a book they
recommended. I was impressed by how well they judged my
taste." Mr Z, 35-44, Motherwell Protecting New Zild Spam
via text-messaging is, thankfully, not currently a problem
in New Zealand, despite the all-pervasive adoption of the
medium by our younger consumers. We just need to convince
our mobile providers not to succumb to desperate pressure
from marketers unable to find effective means of
communicating with the 15-24s through traditional media.
Regional Press Online Seven of APN's regional New Zealand
newspapers - from Whangarei to Christchurch - launched
websites this morning, promising to deliver daily updates of
local news and sport. Three of the newspapers - the
Northern Advocate APN (publishers of the
NZ Herald, y'know) are moving away from the centralised
Fairfax model (where newspapers pool their news at
stuff.co.nz.) and towards local content centres. Six of the
seven papers are using the same basic template, and, in the
first phase carrying only local news, local sport and a
once-over-lightly guide to the attractions in their local
region. Not exactly state of the art, but it's a start.
The lone holdout from the standard template? The
Wairarapa Times-Age, which already offers a more
comprehensive range of editorial and supporting
information. The surprising omission from this first step:
online classifieds. Given that classifieds are where the
money is, and where the online competition is fiercest, we'd
have thought that APN would post those online first, even
before local editorial. Guess they aren't quite as crassly
commercial as us ... ABOUT MEDIACOM MEDIACOM, with
offices in 80 countries (and now part of the WPP Group of
companies), is one of the world's largest and most respected
media service companies. We create media solutions that
build business for a wide range of local, regional and
worldwide clients. With $13 billion in global billings, a
commitment to strategic insight, total communications
planning, tactical media brilliance and tough but creative
media negotiating, MEDIACOM provides unsurpassed value in
today's chaotic media marketplace. ENDS