Facebook Places? Nah! just try the games | Advantage social

2011 Honda CR-Z photographed at the 2010 Washi...

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This is where Bloomberg caught it

Honda Motor Corp.’s campaign for its new CR-Z car features the hybrid vehicle in some colorful roadside billboards that can’t be seen from a freeway.

The ads are on display in Facebook Inc.’s virtual game “Car Town,” as Honda advertises on the social-network site for the first time today. The game, which allows users to collect and customize cars, has 3.1 million users. It was released on Facebook two weeks ago by Cie Games Inc.

Brands are turning to social networks to reach an audience with leisure time on its hands and the patience to sit through branded messages. Walt Disney Co., Electronic Arts Inc. and Google Inc. have all bought games makers in recent months to benefit from millions of users signing up to play.

Honda joins the august company of Starbucks, Pepsi, P&G and not to forget Coke’s brilliant virality as brand spends on social media increased by two times their 2009 budgets and the resultant Facebook executives are trying hard to keep all the gaming revenues on board as well apart from being one happy property for all brands seeking to reinventing their digital self. Most social brand offshoots are a distinct stream of thought and social conscious hoping to merge into their brands mainstream value for a ‘new me’ that is more persistent. Meanwhile even in conservative markets interactive product placement times and budgets are also likely to jump from $3.6 billion in the US and $600 million in Europe. (Europe has new laws on Product placement as designated by the common market execs).

Making social media a focal point for your brand | Advantage social

How brand spend is shooting the moon for Facebook

We just finished connecting the dots on how the facebook’s like button is catching up as any brand’s main character. Having defended and hoped for FB and Twitter to make 30% of global budgets for brands, it was great to hear

One year of display ads and social apps, and Facebook’s commercial graph is skyrocketing. Here’s the Warc push posting FB COO Sheryl’s take as planning season gets underway for 2011

According to Sheryl Sandberg, the company’s chief operating officer, the outlay of several key clients has expanded at least ten times over during the last 12 months, and often doubled this rate of growth.

“Two years ago the big brands were experimenting with us. They started buying with us a year ago. Now, they’re going big,” she said.

“A movie studio last year that did three movies with us; this year, if they’re releasing 12 movies, they’ll do ten of them with us. A company that did one product launch with us; this year, they’re going to do half of their product launches.”

The cost of purchasing inventory has remained largely static, despite the fact Facebook’s audience stands at more than 500m netizens, Sandberg added.

Prices may rise as the site enhances its “value” to marketers, having leapfrogged Yahoo in terms of the number of display ads served the US, leading the sector on a share of 16% in Q1 2010, according to comScore.

The Chase campaign on Facebook. the like button shows 3 million subscribers!

Coca Cola, Adidas and JP Morgan Chase have been publishing the paper for Facebook budgets for their brands.

Meanwhile, Unilever has also found an exclusive outlet for its brand spend innovation getting large inventories on the iPad platform for its bouquet and spending $300million in a multi modal deal with Time Warner, covering Online, print and TV. Sounds juicy, right! yup that’s the one led by the Mad Men spoof

China’s “superbrands” | Advantage Brands

From Warc

China Mobile, the biggest wireless network provider in the world, has been named as the most valuable brand in China by a new report.

According to figures from Interbrand, the consultancy which is part of Omnicom Group, the China Mobile brand is worth 202.8bn yuan ($29.9bn; €23.9bn; £19.7bn).

The telecoms company had 549 million customers as of May 2010, and has added an extra 27 million subscribers to its user base since the start of 2010.
China Life Insurance took second spot in the rankings on 99.5bn yuan, with the financial sector as a whole dominating the top ten.

The China Construction Bank, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, Bank of China, Ping An Insurance, China Merchants Bank and China Pacific Insurance all featured in this group.

The only organisations to break this near-monopoly were Tencent, which operates a range of web portals, and Kweichow Moutai, the liquor specialist.

Looking more broadly, the consumer electronics category performed strongly, with Midea, Suning, Haier, Gree, Gome and Hisense all representing this industry.

In contrast global brands haven’t featured mobil players since 2006 when Motorola returned with the RAZR and Google and Microsoft continue to jostle in the Top 10 with Coke, Starbucks and Burger King. Coke tops the global list with a brand valuation of $69 billion compared to China Mobile’s $25 billion, while in India also Airtel would lead the brand sweepstakes with 550 million subscribers

China Mobile’s valuation also pips global brands like Gillette and Mercedes Benz on the Interbrand list, jostling in behind Disney at $28 billion. China Life by itself would also makee a Global top 20 just behind Honda and Samsung in the 2009 list

Mining Brand Capabilities in a recession? | Advantage Brands

Significantly, during 2009 Measured media spending at Leading National Advertisers in the US and the Domestic Industry overall was down 10%. It could have been higher in terms of the cuts as most advertisers would have asked agencies to hold and at least part of the blame, even after restructuring, lies in the leading national advertisers plying their trade across myriad offices and brands, each brand manager trying to guard hs turf and avoiding significant decisions. Diktats from HO finally mean much less even at a GE organisation and unless objectives are v ery clear deeper cuts are unlikely.

Also as the world goes digital, the budgetary cuts next time will be tougher especially if social forms like facebook and twitter are able to   de-google-ise the generation and deliver higher yield where like in emerging markets today, prices may continue moving north along with increases in spending on the media on the web. That promise is however a significant distance further down as we continue to delievr customization and freemium benefits to a growing generation of unemployed entrepereneurs unable to measure, support or evince interest in rebuilding the large corporations.

However, closer home there are lessons in the sustained brand support during 2009 not in China alone but right in Uncle Sam’s backyard/warehouse/main street.

Among the Top 100 advertisers, one in four spent more, betting on opportunity in the Great Recession. While there is no easy way to prove cause and effect, the sales gains at spending boosters should help reinforce the idea that advertising delivers.

If 25% decided their advertising yielded higher benefits during the dull season. the prime cuts ofcourse landed with such advertisers, Walmart pipping Macy’s in spending and sscoring a net 1.1% increase in sales in a brutal market beating the national sales graph by 3.2% s it went south in that same dull season. Even as a proportion of global sales, Walmart spent 0.59% on advertising against 0.52% in 2008 and that is a substantial investment in 2009.

The other interesting story from the crisis we featured here has been Bank of america, which plastered itself on FOX History as part of programming on American History, living a great showcase presence as it came out bleeding and needed to shore up loyalty

Good briefs.

Translating Brand Value to Financial Performance | Advantage Brands

Account             Social Media and New Markets

If you are following the unfolding of the pain in Spain on the news ticker, (the showing is currently in Greece), you will have noticed already. Scroll through your favorite personal finance web site or ask your advisor, today’s alternatives for well performing stocks are one of your top 10 super brands: McDonalds, Coke and Proctor & Gamble. Similarly JNJ ( Johnson & Johnson) continues to command a market based valuation of $170 bn on a measured brand spend of $2.60 bn, very similar to Coke’s $2.67 bn. These three brands interestingly also have significant sports spend for brand sustenance across Football, Soccer and the Olympics and depend significantly on Television, outdoors and limited print advertising.

Of these, both Coke (KO) and P&G (PG) have a Market Capitalization of $120 bn and $170 bn respectively. Coke has other international stocks that share its brand value in COKE and the erstwhile CCE. McDonalds single stock ticker MCD accounts for its market value of $74 bn as of Friday.

McDonalds for example continues to innovate on its menu, grow same store sales consistently with new additions in premium coffees, angus burgers and even new ranch sauces with red curry eggplant if things work out for its Director – Culinary innovation (Bloomberg Business Week, Sept 2009) Its brand is also sustained  by aspects of naive “word of mouth” apart from marketing spend, product management and innovation. almost all these brands invest in “wellness and good health” important to every family, even Coke(Fruit Juices, Water and Teas) . Quarterly Sales of $5.6bn with only 61% Cost of Goods sold obviously add financial value, as do $33bn in fixed assets including appreciating real estate all across the world. However, none of that explains completely its pull as a desired financial stock without its foremost calling as the brand that represents America. Apart from reporting more than $5.5 billion Sales in each quarter of 2009, McDonalds also spent $2billion for brand spend according to Adage, as much as European star “Mars” or half that of the fashion accessory / women’s personal brand L’Oreal and ahead of Citibank, ING and Bank of America by a $1 billion each in just measured-media spending.

Coca Cola spent $2.67bn and P&G a huge $9.73 billion on its brand(s). If Adage is to be believed, these brands also spent a significant amount from the same in new Emerging Markets, important Financial growth destinations. For each of these brands Marketing is the most significant spend item in the SGA expenses on the Income statement. McDonalds brand carries it to new markets effectively competing with YUM KFC and Subway brands that report at most 20-25% of the sales at a McDonalds. As a stock, Carl’s Jr owner CKE has been doing very well recently, concurrent to its launches in Asia an emerging markets giving it a brand growth opportunity even with a smaller brand value of $2-3 bn.

Coca-Cola Co. allocates just 16.5% of its $2.67 billion measured-media spending to the U.S. market but spends nearly three times as much in Europe. Three-quarters of Coca-Cola’s sales come from outside the U.S.

Procter & Gamble Co., the world’s biggest advertiser since overtaking Unilever in 2002, devotes 65% of its $9.73 billion measured-media spending to international markets, slightly ahead of the 61% of P&G revenue that comes from outside the U.S. P&G is the biggest advertiser in all regions except Latin America and Africa, where Unilever reigns.

The biggest marketers are investing ad dollars wherever they can find revenue or potential for growth in a tough global economy—and increasingly, that’s China. And some 39 of the Global 100 had measured-media spending in China last year. Five of them already invest more than 10% of their budgets there—Yum Brands, Pernod Ricard, Avon Products, Colgate-Palmolive Co. and P&G. For fast-food seller Yum Brands, China represents 20% of the company’s worldwide measured spending of $1.41 billion. The parent of KFC and Pizza Hut generated 31% of 2008 revenue from its China division, where sales surged 36%.

P&G, China’s biggest advertiser at about $1.1 billion, accounts for more than one in four dollars—27%—of the Global 100′s China measured-media spending. Overall, China represents 3.4% of total ad spending for the Global 100, slightly below ZenithOptimedia’s estimate that China accounted for 4.1% of 2008 worldwide ad spending.

There had been earlier attempts at harnessing this brand value directly in the balance sheet but their proxy from revalued real estate or goodwill from sold and bought brands is well near a disservice to the value these brands represent. Apart from that, the Financial Statements reflect only book value of assets and the Market valuation that is closer to its value in the Financial markets always attempt to make up the gap in undue leverage and lend a hand to the eventual bubbles that characterize one off black swan events or even recessions. These Consumer staples brands however remain great “defensive” plays even as peers like Starbucks, continue to attempt financial market transactions and financing expansions leveraging the same brand value. Financial valuations and Sales also do not correspond one  to one in each case with JNJ creating $15.6 bn in Sales each quarter with COGS of 40% including 10% R&D spend, and SGA with a higher participation of Sales staff related expenditure to $4.5bn agst a Quarterly marketing spend allocation of roughly $750 mn

Notably, brand spends in Europe, that are sizable in the above 3 brands ( $1.2 bn for Coke) have not translated in any significant gains whereas their existing brand values have created and fueled unprecedented growth in Asia and emerging markets creating a disproportionate yield in Sales growth outside China, Europe and USA.

The Top Ad spenders

The Adage 100 is out. No, this one is not a listing of marketing blogs. It is that paid list I do not have access to this year. The top global marketers. Coke is pretty high on the list with $2.6 spend on it by it. China is pretty high too, in fact higher than one coke or the #1 P&G , most probably I am bang on there because the sneak blurb on the subscription is 62% of the top 100 spend was outside the US and a lot of it in China. IBM is the other culprit. As a corporate marketer caught in a mostly suds and soda campaign they were mostly in print and their TV ads never appealed to the same audience. We were going somewhere when I was with IBM, now I am not so sure.

CBS has sold off all its Superbowl inventory – almost all of it, with money going after a recessionary rate card and most marketers opting to roll last years budget spends. Hyundai is added to that count. Citi, ING and HSBC made it to the Top 100 list but considerably lower ranked. Especially as they can count less of the sports sponsorships from here. GM and J&J both may not come back to the Top 10 in 2010, but I have a feeling Reckitt Benckiser will only make it bigger. Witness here:

‘Our Home Our Planet’ is the next step in Reckitt Benckiser’s Carbon 20 programme which aims to reduce by 20% the Total Carbon Footprint from cradle to grave of all Reckitt Benckiser’s products by 2020. (RB site)

I haven’t seen many people talk about spending on their creative/design houses this year but hopefully 2010 will see a lot of them coming back with niche houses bagging the $1 billion plus accounts. MCD and Burger King need to take over war cries from Pepsi and Coke, that one is a definite #1 wish on my list and no video games from Coke please..or the elves in the machine second life stuff, which is much the same. The European and Latam campaigns are now being pushed to Asia, i think bad deal.

This year will see even more from HSBC as they are going to find the time and energy to capitalise on their strengths and continue on the ‘Think Global, Act Local’ vector and maybe General Mills will get together with Kraft and get a joint campaign..that one would be for the wish list. I guess one of these properties like NFL, Superbowl and more would easily outdo any of these individual networks if it comes to higher yields but it won’t happen in a hurry. The Olympics would have got on to the Top 100 by themselves though and IPL would be competing for some of that $200 million the Superbowl will again outdo in Feb. In all, an insipid much the same 2010 awaits this list. It’s a boring world, I can already see everyone having shifted to electric cars.

Social Media spends, all said and done are unlikely to be more than 2% for any of these brands..

[Categories Branding, Superbowl, Ad spending]

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