Title: Information Inspiration Innovation
1We build digital markets
2WHO WE ARE
Zentropy Partners is a global digital
consultancy and marketing firm We strike a
balance between a history of effective branding
combined with business strategy and
implementation. This delivers on the promise to
provide clients with a customer centric approach.
3GLOBAL CLIENTS
4McCann-Erickson World Group
5McCANN-ERICKSON WORLDWIDE EIN WELTWEITES NETZ
6McCANN-ERICKSON WORLDWIDE DIE WELTWEIT FÜHRENDE
AGENTUR
1 McCann-Erickson Worldwide 1.865 2
BBDO Worldwide 1.415 3 J. Walter
Thompson 1.270 4 Euro RSCG Worldwide
1.269 5 Grey Advertising 1.193 6
DDB Needham Worldwide 1.078 7
Publicis 1.009 8 Leo Burnett 958
9 Ogilvy Mather Worldwide 938 10 Young
Rubicam 905 11 Foote, Cone Belding
897 12 Lowe Lintas 888 13 TBWA
International 796 14 DArcy Masius Benton
Bowles 664 15 Saatchi Saatchi 568
7 McCANN-ERICKSON WORLDWIDE MULTINATIONALE KUNDEN
Boots Healthcare Cathay Pacific Parker
Pens Grundig Reckitt Benckiser Lucent
Technologies Cargill Maybelline Motorola Gateway
Evyap Glaxo Wellcome Pioneer Deutsche
Bank Lufthansa Microsoft Braun
Black Decker Buitoni Canon Chesebrough-Ponds Wa
terman United Parcel Service AGFA Tiffany
Co. Cereal Partners Worldwide London
International Yoplait Perfetti Air
Canada Timex Levi Strauss
Braun
MasterCard
- Exxon/Esso
- General Motors
- Gillette
- Nestlé
- Coca-Cola
- Goodyear
- Unilever
- William Grant Sons
- Bacardi / Martini Rossi
- LOréal
- Casio
- R.J. Reynolds
- Interbrew
- Johnson Johnson
- Vistakon
- Ferrero
- Agilent Technologies
8CONNECTING CITIZENS TO ISSUESIndividualisierte
Politik-Kommunikation
9- Sex scandal involving President Clinton
released first to the Internet
10POLITICAL USE SURVEY FORRESTER RESEARCH
- Survey respondents were split into three age
groups - 34 and younger
- 35 54
- 55 and over
11For the upcoming presidential, congressional,
state, and local elections in November, which of
the following sources will you use to become
informed about the candidates?
Source Forrester Research
12Have you ever visited a political portal?
Source Forrester Research
13What have you used a political portal for?
Source Forrester Research
14What do you see as the benefits of getting
political information online?
Source Forrester Research
15What is stopping you from using political sites
online?
Source Forrester Research
16SOME INITIAL CONCLUSIONS
- Interestingly 46 of likely voters will turn to
at least one online channel to help make up their
minds. - Political Portals like Grassroots.com and
Voter.com the newest online channels for
political informationhave generated a lot of
hype. - But just 11 of likely voters plan to check them
out. - And only 11 of Net users have already done so.
- It was found that users interest in and usage of
political portals vary depending on age.
17GROUP SEGMENTATION
- Youngest users go online, but lack interest in
politics. - Baby boomers have made the most use of portals.
- Older voters are interested in politics, but do
not see the Nets benefits or advantage.
18POPULISM CONCEPT
Source Til Mette, Stern
19THE IDEAS HERE INVOLVE
- Increased citizen-to-government communication
- Increased influence by individuals
- Decreased influence for parties, interest groups,
mass media, professionals. - Creates unmediated communication between
citizens and government.
20THE IDEA IS THAT
- The greater the ability for citizens to
communicate with the government or a political
party - The more likely they are to be engaged in
politics. - The more engaged they are, the more likely they
are to be influential! - The idea is that the Internet is democratising
it is a very popular idea!
21POPULISM CONCEPT
- The populism concept relies on the assumption
that the motivation to become engaged in public
affairs exists, and that all that stands in the
way of better democracy is the means to
communicate. - The assumption is, give people the Internet, and
their underlying desire to become involved will
be released, drawing new citizens into public
life, and empowering individuals.
22THE PROBLEM WITH POPULISM
-
- In the US especially and Europe, most
people,most of the time, are not interested in
most political issues that is a big reason why
politics looks the way it does in the US and the
UK.
23A REASON TO PARTICIPATE?
- The Internet does not change that fact that
people most of the time are not interested in
politics. - The Internet does indeed give people a wonderful
new way to communicate, but it does not give them
a reason to participate or a motivation to behave
differently.
24THE ANSWER...
- The key to making populism work
- Governments will have to work to connect
citizens to issues. - The responsibility does not lie with sites
trying new gimmicks (Tricks) to generate
interest - it rests on the shoulders of governments that
have kept their doors closed to citizens for far
too long.
25POLITICAL JUNKIES
- Political portals are hoping that their election
coverage will generate an interest in politics
and lock in loyal eyeballs - but unless sites cater offerings to specific
demographics and compel others besides political
junkies/enthusiasts to visit, they will not be
effective.
26ANOTHER VIEW ON VOTING DECISIONS
- voting behaviour Party identification
- (Wählerverhalten) candidate (image)
- issues
-
Source Bürklin/Klein Wahlen und
Wählerverhalten, p.70
27MEDIA INFLUENCE
- The mass media are aware of that (otherwise they
dont sell papers). - Mass Media has to select according to attention
rules.
28ATTENTION RULES
- In this sense the media constricts the reality
of the issues according to certain new values
(whatever locks in the most eyeballs). - conflict
- prominence
- proximity
- topicality
Source Schulz Die Kommunikation von Realität in
den Nachrichtenmedien
29 MEDIA GATEKEEPERS
- Harald Schmidt Show (SAT1)
- Beckmann (ARD)
- Biolek
- Zimmer Frei (WDR)
- Morgen Magazin (ARD/ZDF)
- Johannes B Kerner Show (ZDF)
- Sabine Christiansen (ARD)
- Berlin Mitte ( ZDF)
- Mitläufer Mindset
30THE MAGIC TRIANGLE
production (Herstellung) eg. Political programmes
conception (Vorstellung) e.g. candidates issues
representation (Darstellung)
31THAT MEANS
- The representation of a political issue by the
mass media is the bottleneck that dictates the
end result in the eyes of the voter. - Knowing the rules and selection mechanisms of
the mass media means knowing how to influence the
voters. - Production of political issues is nothing
without carefully thought out representation!
32 THAT MEANS FOR THE INTERNET
- The market penetration of TV is over 90.
- The market penetration of the Internet is
rapidly catching up - 46 of the 14-69 years olds are now using the
Internet.
33Internet-Nutzung
Reichweitenentwicklung seit Beginn des GfK
Online-Monitors
34
14
43
28
42
36
8,4 Mio
10,8 Mio
4,4 Mio
6,0 Mio
15,9 Mio
18,0 Mio
24,2 Mio
34THE INTERNET AS A MEDIUM
- Besides the reach and monitoring aspects, the
Internet offers interesting features - It allows technology assisted targeting of
voters. - It empowers voters to select according to their
needs. - Its unbeatable in terms of efficiency (cost per
contact).
35THE REMAINING QUESTIONS ARE
- How do we encourage the electorate to use
political sites? - How can we use the Internet in order to maximise
a political parties opportunities of winning an
election?
36HOW TO ACHIEVE GOALS- VOTER LOYALTY...
- LOYALTY
- Trust Credibility / Intimacy / Risk
- CREDIBILITY (Providing Information in context,
Knowledge, Insights) - INTIMACY (Together/Closer Relationship)
- RISK (Delivering what has been promised)
37WHAT SHOULD BE MEASURED ABOUT THE ELECTORATE?
VOTER PROFITABILTY Interaction/Voting (HOW MUCH?)
VOTER LOYALTY What party was voted for in
previous elections Or Is someone part of a
party? (HOW OFTEN?)
VOTER LIFECYCLE Lifelycles change according to
personal circumstances and experience! (HOW
OFTEN?)
VOTER LATENCY How often are people involved (HOW
OFTEN?)
38KEY POINT
- Define the target Voter base
- Quantify the current and full potential value of
these relationships. - Commit the entire political party to closing the
gap between the two.
39ERM CONCEPTS
- PROFILING
- Segmentation (Age, Marital Status, General
attitudes and expectations) - Risk (Location, demographics)
- Propensity (Neigung) inclined in which
direction?
40ERM CONCEPTS
- PROMOTIONS
- Campaign Management
41ERM CONCEPTS
- PERSISTENCY
- Loyalty
- Retention (What makes voters loyal?)
- Churn ( Rate at which new or existing voters are
lost and why?)
42ERM CONCEPTS
- PERFORMANCE VOTER ACQUISITION BY
- ISSUES OR TOUCHPOINTS
- Product - which issues?
- Telephone
- Information point
- Roadshow Campaign
43ERM CONCEPTS
- PROFITABILTY
- Gross
- Net
- Political Party Brand
44ERM CONCEPTS
- PROSPECTING (prospektierung)
- Voter Acquisition (target specific issues)
- Cross Sell (deregulation tax cuts)
45THE CONCEPT OF DISSAGREGATION
- VOTER SEGMENTATION BY
- Product (issues)
- Value (number of votes)
- Demographics (Age, Family, Income)
- Psychographics (Why voters believe what they
believe) - Behaviour (Voting behaviour)
- Geography (Location)
- There is no such thing as an average voter
there is no longer any such thing as a mass
market
46EVENT ORIENTATED PROSPECTING (EOP)
- The key to EOP is to learn of the events in a
voters life that have relevance and then market
to that event - Change of address (Move from rural to urban)
- Birthday (Incentive)
- Marriage (taxation, move house, bigger car)
- Change of Job (GF, Selbständig)
- Birth of Child (incentive/issues)
- Retirement (Issues / Can be used as multiplier)
47A POLITICAL MEMORY FOR MARKETING
POLITICAL MEMORY BANK
48MASS MARKETING Vs PRECISION MARKETING
- Mass marketing of possible electorate targets
results in - A great deal of effort
- Indifferent results
- Little or no increase in intelligence
- A lot of collateral damage
- Fighting for increased market share can be a
highly visible, expensive and confrontational
tactic.
49MASS MARKETING Vs PRECISION MARKETING
- Precision targeting of customers requires
- A focused effort
- Vastly improved results
- An ongoing enrichment of the voter information
environment - Achieving an increased share of the voter is
cheaper, more profitable and less visible to
competitors.
50CONNECTING CITIZENS TO ISSUES
political party B
political party A
mass campaigning
intelligence campaigning (understand the
individuell voter)
vote
cross-sell
loyalty
vote
(increased chance of winning more votes )
51CONCLUSION
- The means to communicate exists the Internet.
- The reason to communicate does not exist... YET!
- Information in context to self - delivers reason
to communicate. - Information collected from Internet on voters
allows analysis and development of loyalty
programmes.
52END RESULT
- INCREASED SHARE OF THE VOTER
- Thankyou for your time...