Archives for December 2015

December 29, 2015 - Comments Off on The Fantasy And Fallacy Of ‘Organic’ Growth

The Fantasy And Fallacy Of ‘Organic’ Growth

Let’s say you are a brand. And let’s say, for fun, that you’ve hired a social-media-slash-digital agency to help your brand grow and prosper on the vast interweb. You want people to come to your website, check out your tweets, like and share your Facebook updates and eventually, buy your product or service from your online store. Your social-media-slash-digital agency promises you all these things and more, and starts your online campaign. They throw acronyms at you like SEO, SEM, SMM, TG, ER, CPC, CPM, CPA, CPF, and a million others. You are sufficiently impressed with their jargon and you approve a certain budget to spend on these acronyms. A month or two later, your sales haven’t moved, but your agency comes back to you with large smiles and tells you that your brand has achieved an impressive ‘organic’ growth and it’s only a matter of time that the sales start rolling in. Don’t fall for this swindle.

To be fair, it’s not completely the agency’s fault; it’s the kind of world we live in right now. But I’ll get to that a bit later. When someone says any of the following things to you, they are bullshitting you:

  1. Our organic reach is x Million.
  2. We are trending organically on Twitter!
  3. There’s a difference between ‘organic’ and ‘paid’ reach.

There is no such thing as organic growth anymore. At least for brands on social media. If you are paying a bunch of people to tweet to you, and if this is a fairly large bunch, and you happen to get listed as one of the trending topics of the day on Twitter, it’s not considered an ‘organic trend’. If you pay for ads on Facebook and your ad is shown to 10 people, then your so called ‘organic’ reach is automatically the total number of friends these 10 people have.

If there is money going out for a particular activity on digital, the returns you get for that activity aren’t organic. This is the fantasy that exists in the industry today. This trend was probably introduced as a way to placate the dinosaurial marketing managers who are stuck in the cusp of today’s intangible ‘reach’ and ‘engagement’ and yesterday’s TRPs and ‘press clippings’. If you tell a guy that he’s getting more bang for his buck, he’s always happy.

Social media marketing, today, has become a numbers game. And the only number that counts, is unfortunately, the amount of money that’s being spent. Very few brands have managed to achieve true organic growth, and this has taken them years of perseverance and hard work.

This is just me – one person’s opinion – on this trend. What do you think? Give me your opinions in the comments section

December 14, 2015 - Comments Off on A Brave New World

A Brave New World

Sometime in the latter half of the first decade of the new millennium, the advertising industry took a giant leap of faith and killed itself. I don’t mean self-immolation or anything, but traditional advertising died in that fateful decade. It was a leap, which ended in a thud that was heard around the world.

And it forgot to invite you to its funeral.

It was a time of societal upheaval – a chaotic era that will go down in the history books as The Smartphone Era. I think it was around this time that the collective intelligence of the world dropped a notch. The term ‘social’ stopped living up to its definition around this time. During the glorious years of the Internet in the late 90s, people touted the fact that the world was becoming smaller, when in fact, the opposite happened. People found a way to ensconce themselves in their pillow fortresses in their basements and avoided each other like the plague. Don’t get me wrong – this isn’t a random generalization, but rather a very scary reality that happened. ‘Facebook Anxiety’ has caused more suicides in the past decade than the number of shark attacks.

In this millennial age, where armchair activists are a nation’s freedom fighters, traditional advertising techniques like TV commercials and newspaper advertisements have lesser clout than a well-timed tweet of 140 characters. Brands are starting to realize this, albeit a bit slowly, and ‘digital agencies’ have sprung up around every corner, joining in the feeding frenzy. I still remember a time, not too long ago, when brands poured in money and resources to make sure their Facebook and Twitter pages had a constant stream of content flowing, without caring much as to whom it was reaching. Naturally, they failed. A lot of them failed. Five years ago, it was a nuclear winter, and the only ones who could survive were the ones who could evolve the fastest.

Brave New World is an idea that was born in this wasteland – a radical new idea that aimed to resurrect the principles and values of traditional advertising and combine it with the fleeting power of the modern ad, and create a mutant that would survive any number of nuclear winters. We are creating experiences that cut across the miasma of mediocrity floating around and aim to straddle the physical and digital worlds in a way that’s never been done before.

This is our blog. Welcome.